AIMS

To Defend a Nation: An Overview of Downsizing and the U.S. Military

Vol. 2, 1999, n°3, p 221-232
John J. Gargan
Few institutions have as much experience with organizational downsizing as the United States military. The historic pattern has been one of a small professional military in peacetime, rapidly supplemented by a mobilization of civilians during war, followed by a rapid demobilization with the war's end. Decisions about military force sizing are critical political and strategic decisions. This article discusses the downsizing of the United State's Cold War military force. Each of the three major reviews of the military structure --Base Force, Bottom-Up-Review, Quadrennial Review-- are briefly discussed. Some of the claimed consequences of downsizing of the military are considered in the concluding section.

Accepted by : Guest Editor Jack Rabin

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