Military Autonomy and Balancing in Political Crises: Lessons from the Middle East

Citation:

Barak, Oren, and Dan Miodownik. 2021. “Military Autonomy and Balancing in Political Crises: Lessons from the Middle East.” Armed Forces & Society 47 (1): 126–147.
Military Autonomy and Balancing in Political Crises: Lessons from the Middle East

Date Published:

(Online July 17)

Abstract:

 

This paper argues that autonomous militaries can play a balancing role during major internal political crises. However, when militaries’ autonomy is curtailed by political leaders before the crisis, militaries cannot maintain the political balance between rulers and opponents, thereby increasing the risk of armed conflict. The paper first explains the main concepts relevant to the discussion (autonomy; political crisis; balancing role), exploring their possible inter-linkages and presenting several hypotheses. Subsequently, it discusses four relevant cases from the Middle East before and during the Arab revolts of 2010–2011: Egypt in 2011 and Lebanon in 1958, which demonstrate the balancing capacities of autonomous militaries during major political crises, and Lebanon in 1975 and Syria in 2011, which reveal that non-autonomous militaries cannot play a balancing role in such circumstances. The paper concludes with several observations regarding the military’s balancing role during major internal political crises in divided and homogenous states. 

 

Publisher's Version

Last updated on 02/02/2021