East European Military Reform after the Cold War. Implications for the United States
Abstract
The collapse of communist rule and the systemic reforms that followed in the former non-Soviet Warsaw Pact (FNSWP) countries caused major disruptions in the armed forces of these states. Overcoming the legacy of the communist era- the close regime-military ties and the Soviet-serving function of the armed forces-has been countries. Because of their roughly similar starting point and the similarities in their process of transformation, the militaries in all of the FNSWP countries have undergone similar process of reform and have faced similar problems. Only Romania, due to its maverick position in the Warsaw Pact, presents a partial exception to the general pattern followed by the other FNSWP states. In the realm of civil-military relations, the pattern of civilian control over the military exercised by the communist regimes has disintegrated but has not yet been replaced with new and effective channels of civilian control by the new democratic regimes. Much of the military reform process so far has been designed to impose full civilian control over the military and eliminate the unintegrated and largely autonomous status of the military in society.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Jan 01, 1995
- Accession Number
- ADA286781
Entities
People
- F. Stephen Larrabee
- Thomas S. Szayna
Organizations
- RAND Corporation