Civil-military relations in low-intensity conflict: Switzerland's territorial defense during World War II

Switzerland's experience in the Second Wolrd War differs markedly from that of any other European nation and offers a unique historical oppurtunity to study civil-military relations in a democratic environment under the strain of a long-lasting existential threat. Entirely on its own and surrou...

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Main Author: Wegmueller, Hans.
Other Authors: Abenheim, Donald
Language:en_US
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/28028
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-280282015-05-27T15:59:06Z Civil-military relations in low-intensity conflict: Switzerland's territorial defense during World War II Wegmueller, Hans. Abenheim, Donald Kennedy-Minott, Rodney Naval Postgraduate School Naval Postgraduate School National Security Affairs Switzerland's experience in the Second Wolrd War differs markedly from that of any other European nation and offers a unique historical oppurtunity to study civil-military relations in a democratic environment under the strain of a long-lasting existential threat. Entirely on its own and surrounded by and extremely aggressive enemy block, Switzerland has to struggle in that hazy, difficult-to-define situation between war and peace, which in modern terms would be referred to as "low intensity conflict". Thus military and civilian authorites were literally forced to think in terms of modern national security policy and to adopt a holistic security philosophy. It becamse apparent that the disproportionate role of the military component did not measure up to the threat and was at odds with a modern, overall security policy. The results were not limited to the serious, practically insoluble conflicts between millitary and civilian authorities, the preparedness and the dissuasive power of the army itself was thus called into question. The historical experience showed clearly that modern territorial defense requires first and foremost a balance between the individual components of security policy carefully adapted to the political, economic, and psychological realities of the nation. The military component, on the other hand, can only fulfill its mission if it can concentrate the personnel and material resources at its disposal on it original task of military defense; in the terminology of World War II, the army is responsible for "warfare", not "national defense" 2013-02-15T23:30:24Z 2013-02-15T23:30:24Z 1994-06 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/28028 en_US Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
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language en_US
sources NDLTD
description Switzerland's experience in the Second Wolrd War differs markedly from that of any other European nation and offers a unique historical oppurtunity to study civil-military relations in a democratic environment under the strain of a long-lasting existential threat. Entirely on its own and surrounded by and extremely aggressive enemy block, Switzerland has to struggle in that hazy, difficult-to-define situation between war and peace, which in modern terms would be referred to as "low intensity conflict". Thus military and civilian authorites were literally forced to think in terms of modern national security policy and to adopt a holistic security philosophy. It becamse apparent that the disproportionate role of the military component did not measure up to the threat and was at odds with a modern, overall security policy. The results were not limited to the serious, practically insoluble conflicts between millitary and civilian authorities, the preparedness and the dissuasive power of the army itself was thus called into question. The historical experience showed clearly that modern territorial defense requires first and foremost a balance between the individual components of security policy carefully adapted to the political, economic, and psychological realities of the nation. The military component, on the other hand, can only fulfill its mission if it can concentrate the personnel and material resources at its disposal on it original task of military defense; in the terminology of World War II, the army is responsible for "warfare", not "national defense"
author2 Abenheim, Donald
author_facet Abenheim, Donald
Wegmueller, Hans.
author Wegmueller, Hans.
spellingShingle Wegmueller, Hans.
Civil-military relations in low-intensity conflict: Switzerland's territorial defense during World War II
author_sort Wegmueller, Hans.
title Civil-military relations in low-intensity conflict: Switzerland's territorial defense during World War II
title_short Civil-military relations in low-intensity conflict: Switzerland's territorial defense during World War II
title_full Civil-military relations in low-intensity conflict: Switzerland's territorial defense during World War II
title_fullStr Civil-military relations in low-intensity conflict: Switzerland's territorial defense during World War II
title_full_unstemmed Civil-military relations in low-intensity conflict: Switzerland's territorial defense during World War II
title_sort civil-military relations in low-intensity conflict: switzerland's territorial defense during world war ii
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/28028
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