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Top Pentagon thinker bemoans civilian subjugation to the military.
Key Excerpts from Article on Website of Boston Globe


Boston Globe, March 26, 2013
Posted: April 2nd, 2013
http://www.boston.com/news/local/blogs/war-and-peace/2013/03...

Blistering charges of misplaced power and a morally bankrupt culture in the nations military-industrial complex are rarely leveled by one of the defense establishments own. But that is exactly what ... Gregory D. Foster, a former Army officer and West Point graduate who now teaches national security studies at the National Defense University in Washington [did] when he went after the top brass, political leaders, and defense company executives [at a recent defense budget conference]. He accused them of allowing the nearly sacrosanct principle of civilian control of the militaryan early building block of American democracyto be turned on its head. How? By virtually never questioning the key assumptions of military planning and allowing a largely unchecked, destructive and highly militarized foreign policy to pose as a properly subordinated military industrial complex. [Foster said] This is what I call civilian subjugation to the military. We face it in this administration, we faced it in the Clinton administration...we faced it in the Bush administration. It all makes for a national security establishment, in Fosters view, that perpetuates an approach to the world that is overly confrontational, lacks critical thinking about long term objectives, and even undercuts the strategic aims of democracy. For example, he said the accepted orthodoxy of never-ending global threats and the necessity to confront them militarily makes it nearly impossible to fashion a national security strategy that puts real security, crisis prevention, and the preservation of civil society ahead of institutional bias and private profit.

Note: For a penetrating analysis by a great general of the real purposes served by continuous war, click here.


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