ABSTRACT

This compendium on Europe's military situation is written by leading analysts of military studies representing every major nation of Europe. Also included are three overview chapters that set the tone for this volume. These chapters - Martin Shaw on the evolution of a ""common risk"" society, Christopher Dandeker on the military in democratic societies, and Wilfried von Bredow on the re-nationalization of military strategy - provide an introduction to the work.Although the Cold War is now two decades removed from Europe, the challenges of transition to new defense systems and institutional structures still confront those who plan the future for military establishments. The country studies as well as the final analysis of the trends and probable future developments in Europe should be required reading throughout the national security structure for politicians and decision makers seeking to understand the dilemmas facing European militaries and the societies they defend.The chapters cover a wide range of nations. Jean Callaghan, Christo Domoztov, and Valery Ratchcev examine the Bulgarian armed forces after the 1997 elections and Marie Vlachova and Stefan Sarvas review civil-military relations in the Czech Republic. Janos Szabo studies the defense sector in Hungary. Adriana Stanescu sees Romania as a case of delayed modernization. Vladimir Rukavishnikov studies the military in post-communist Russia. Paul Klein and Jürgen Kuhlmann review the German armed forces in the context of a peace dividend. Bernard Boene and Didier Danet consider France and the post draft situation. Marina Nuciari and Giuseppe Caforio consider the Italian military in a democratic context. Jan van der Meulen and his colleagues look upon the Netherlands military as a case study in post-modernization. The final contribution summarizes lessons learned in assessing the contemporary civil-military complex.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Armed forces and society in Europe — The challenge of change

part I|44 pages

Theoretical and Conceptual Framework

chapter 1|14 pages

The Development of “Common-Risk” Society

A Theoretical Overview

chapter 2|18 pages

The Military in Democratic Societies

New Times and New Patterns of Civil-Military Relations 1

chapter 3|10 pages

Re-Nationalization of Military Strategy?

New Challenges for the Armed Forces in a Changing Global Environment

part II|248 pages

Similarities and Differences — Country Case Studies

chapter 4|22 pages

Bulgarian Armed Forces after the 1997 Elections

Opportunities for and Challenges to Genuine Reform

chapter 5|29 pages

Civil-Military Relations in Modern Society

The Czech Case

chapter 6|26 pages

Transforming the Defense Sector in a New Democracy

Civil-Military Relations in Hungary — Facts and Tendencies

part III|30 pages

Lessons Learned: The Civil-Military Complex

chapter 13|28 pages

The Military in Common-Risk Societies

Elements of Comparison among Nine Countries of West, Central, and East Europe