ABSTRACT

It is now commonplace to state that we are living in an era of several simultaneous clusters of “revolutions in military affairs.” Command and control capabilities, in particular, are transformed almost daily by technological advances. At almost the same pace, traditional military missions are reframed and redefined in response to the challenges posed by the proliferation of new types of threats to national security, especially at the transnational and subnational levels. Equally profound, albeit less dramatic, are the changes that have also taken place in the composition and structures of national armed forces and, by extension, in the nature of their relationships with the societies that they are sworn to defend. In only a handful of countries does universal conscription remain on the statute books, and in even less is the relevant legislation enforced. Instead, almost everywhere “citizen armies” have been replaced by all-volunteer forces, a development that has all but dismantled the web of ties that once associated military service with civic duty. Remarking on the wider cultural context of that development – especially as manifest in the Western world – analysts now frequently talk of the emergence of “postmodern” armed forces, distinguished from their predecessors as much by the nature of their professional values as by the style in which they go about their professional business.