1st Edition

Liberal Wars Anglo-American Strategy, Ideology and Practice

Edited By Alan Cromartie Copyright 2015

     This book addresses the relationship between the 'liberal' values of Anglo-Saxon cultures and the way that they conduct themselves when they are fighting - or preparing to fight - wars.

    The United States and the United Kingdom are characterised by a consensus that their social and political arrangements are, in a very broad sense, ‘liberal’. Liberalism is not pacifism; nor are liberals necessarily respectful of traditional prohibitions that have set out to moderate excessive violence. But liberals do seek to understand their violent actions as part of a wider project of defending or expanding liberal freedoms. The perceived alternative is to undermine the will to keep on fighting. Sustaining a liberal picture of what is going on is an indispensable part of a liberal strategy.

    Contributors with disciplinary backgrounds in history, international relations, and strategic studies discuss what ‘liberalism’ means in this particular context and how it might relate to ‘strategy’, both in the recent past and in the future. The chapters consider how liberal states understand the wars they fight, the constraints liberal values place on these states, the role of public opinion and the appropriate strategies for modern liberal states. Topics addressed include civilian bombing, the nature of US military culture, the British ‘Iraq inquiries’, the effects of the erosion of Westphalian sovereignty and the rise of new ideas about ‘globalization’, and the decline in popular involvement.

    This book will be of much interest to students of strategic studies, political philosophy, foreign policy, security studies and IR in general.

    Introduction, Alan Cromartie  1. ‘Why we Bomb you’: Liberal War-making and Moral Relativism in the RAF Bomber Offensive, 1940-45, Richard Overy 2. The Liberal and Non-liberal Justification of Violence against Civilians, Jonathan Leader Maynard 3. Can there be a Liberal Military Strategy?, Lawrence Freedman 4. Enhancing American Strategic Competency, Frank G. Hoffman 5. War, Sovereignty and Civilization from Bodin to Rawls, Alan Cromartie  6. The Iraq Inquiries: Publicity, Secrecy and Liberal War, Owen Thomas 7. Maps of the Mind: Distance and Modern War, Patrick Porter 8. Not peace, Not War: America since 1945, Allan Silver

    Biography

    Alan Cromartie is Professor of the History of Political Thought at the University of Reading, and author of The constitutionalist revolution (2006) and editor of Thomas Hobbes, A dialogue between a philosopher and a student, of the common laws of England (2005).