Exporting professionalism: US efforts to reform the armed forces in the Dominican Republic and Nicaragua, 1916–1933

IF 0.9 Q3 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Small Wars and Insurgencies Pub Date : 2015-01-02 DOI:10.1080/09592318.2014.959771
Eric R. Rittinger
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Why did the United States, a country notorious for supporting coups and military dictatorships in Latin America during the Cold War, seek to depoliticize security forces in the Caribbean basin during the early twentieth century? Drawing from primary sources, I argue that this emphasis on military non-partisanship abroad stemmed from Progressive Era reforms popular at home. These reforms, which stressed bureaucratic efficiency via nonpartisan expertise, had become institutionalized within the US military and State Department and then channelled into the imperial administration of Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic. The State Department and Marine Corps attempted to replace local partisan armies with the kind of professional, nonpartisan armed forces that the US's own military had come to exemplify. That these civil-military reform efforts ultimately backfired should serve as a reminder of the difficulties inherent in using military interventions to transform coercive apparatuses and their societies.
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输出专业主义:1916-1933年,美国在多米尼加共和国和尼加拉瓜改革武装力量的努力
为什么美国,一个在冷战期间以支持拉丁美洲政变和军事独裁而臭名昭著的国家,在二十世纪初试图使加勒比盆地的安全部队非政治化?根据第一手资料,我认为这种对海外军事无党派的强调源于国内流行的进步时代改革。这些强调通过无党派专家来提高官僚效率的改革,已经在美国军方和国务院内部制度化,然后又被引入尼加拉瓜和多米尼加共和国的帝国政府。美国国务院和海军陆战队试图用专业的、无党派的武装力量取代地方游击队,美国自己的军队就是这种武装力量的典范。这些军民改革努力最终事与愿违,这应该提醒人们,利用军事干预来改造强制机构及其社会所固有的困难。
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来源期刊
Small Wars and Insurgencies
Small Wars and Insurgencies INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
25.00%
发文量
65
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