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The Minuteman
Returning to an Army of the People

Rating
Format
Paperback, 208 pages
Published
United States, 1 December 2011

A nation defines itself by the kind of army it creates for its protection. By that standard, America at the close of the twentieth century is large, powerful, and technologically sophisticated. But it is also muscle-bound, confused, wasteful, and desperately in search of a mission. In The Minuteman, former Senator Gary Hart proposes a provocative and radical restructuring of America's armed forces, asking the questions that have gone unanswered for too long: Why do we have 1.5 million men and women under arms with no major threat to our security? Why is our military budget at the same level as during the Cold War? Why are we spending more money for fewer weapons? Why are the best service personnel taking early retirement? Why is it taboo even to question the structure of our bloated military establishment?

Drawing on his long experience as a leader in the field of military reform (including twelve years on the Senate Armed Services Committee), Hart proposes a return to the oldest principles of the republic, making an impassioned case for replacing the present Cold War military with a smaller standing army and a much larger, well-trained citizen reserve -- an "army of the people." The professional nucleus would be a rapid-response force responsible for dealing with immediate crises and low-intensity conflicts, while the larger army of citizen-soldiers would be called up when national interests required a larger, sustained military presence.

From ancient times to the present, the heroes of democracy have consistently upheld two principles: that it is dangerous to maintain a large standing army in peacetime; and that free people have a civic duty to participate in their own defense. Contemporary America, by contrast, has sunk into "Eisenhower's Nightmare," beholden to a powerful military-industrial complex embracing the armed forces, military contractors, unions, Congress, and military communities economically dependent on military spending. The only way to break this cycle of dependence, Hart argues, is to restore a citizen military -- a true militia, like the one that defended Lexington and Concord. If we reject this path, he warns, we risk being truly ill-prepared for the challenges facing our nation in the century about to dawn.

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Product Description

A nation defines itself by the kind of army it creates for its protection. By that standard, America at the close of the twentieth century is large, powerful, and technologically sophisticated. But it is also muscle-bound, confused, wasteful, and desperately in search of a mission. In The Minuteman, former Senator Gary Hart proposes a provocative and radical restructuring of America's armed forces, asking the questions that have gone unanswered for too long: Why do we have 1.5 million men and women under arms with no major threat to our security? Why is our military budget at the same level as during the Cold War? Why are we spending more money for fewer weapons? Why are the best service personnel taking early retirement? Why is it taboo even to question the structure of our bloated military establishment?

Drawing on his long experience as a leader in the field of military reform (including twelve years on the Senate Armed Services Committee), Hart proposes a return to the oldest principles of the republic, making an impassioned case for replacing the present Cold War military with a smaller standing army and a much larger, well-trained citizen reserve -- an "army of the people." The professional nucleus would be a rapid-response force responsible for dealing with immediate crises and low-intensity conflicts, while the larger army of citizen-soldiers would be called up when national interests required a larger, sustained military presence.

From ancient times to the present, the heroes of democracy have consistently upheld two principles: that it is dangerous to maintain a large standing army in peacetime; and that free people have a civic duty to participate in their own defense. Contemporary America, by contrast, has sunk into "Eisenhower's Nightmare," beholden to a powerful military-industrial complex embracing the armed forces, military contractors, unions, Congress, and military communities economically dependent on military spending. The only way to break this cycle of dependence, Hart argues, is to restore a citizen military -- a true militia, like the one that defended Lexington and Concord. If we reject this path, he warns, we risk being truly ill-prepared for the challenges facing our nation in the century about to dawn.

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Product Details
EAN
9781451677089
ISBN
1451677081
Writer
Publisher
Dimensions
21.1 x 13.7 x 1.5 centimeters (0.20 kg)

About the Author

Gary Hart was a United States Senator from 1975 to 1987, during which time he served on the Armed Services Committee and the Select Committee on Intelligence. He was founder of the Military Reform Caucus in the Congress and was recently appointed to the Defense Policy Panel by the Secretary of Defense. He is currently a lawyer and strategic adviser who provides counsel to companies and governments on major infrastructure projects around the world. The author of eight previous books, including most recently The Patriot, Hart lives in Kittredge, Colorado.

Reviews

Major General Edward J. Philbin, U.S.A.F. (RET.) " Executive Director, National Guard Association of the United States Gary Hart asks the most important and contentious military-political question facing the nation since the outbreak of World War II: will the nation continue to support an anomalous Cold War military structure indefinitely into the twenty-first century -- well after its mission has ended -- or will it return to its historic reliance on trained, organized, and equipped citizen-soldiers? "The Minuteman" is must reading, not only for decision makers and opinion molders but for every citizen.

William Greider " author of "Who Will Tell The People" and "One World, Ready Or Not" Gary Hart prods us to think clearly about what national defense means without the Cold War, and he offers a powerful framework for reordering the U.S. military. His real subject is not weaponry but democracy, and he offers a solution that is both practical and grounded in American values and tradition. If Americans fail to engage the questions he raises, the gravest threat to our long-term security may not be foreign.

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