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9789739432405

Romanian Military Reform and NATO Integration

by
  • ISBN13:

    9789739432405

  • ISBN10:

    9739432409

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2002-06-08
  • Publisher: Center for Romanian Studies

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Summary

This book provides a basis for comparative evaluation of Romania's military reform efforts, especially in comparison with the new NATO Alliance members, and highlights the progress made since the first round of NATO enlargement took place in 1997.

Author Biography

The editor, Larry L. Watts, is a noted specialist in civil-military relations in Romania.

Table of Contents

Introduction: The Convergence of Reform and Integrationp. 9
Historical Backgroundp. 10
Focusing Reformp. 14
NATO's Partnership for Peace and Membership Action Planp. 18
Evolving Reform Coordinates and Integration Criteriap. 20
Managing the 'Big Issues' in Civil-Military Relationsp. 25
Common Pathologies in Civil-Military Relationsp. 26
Poor or Weakening Democratic Control over the Armed Forcesp. 27
Politicization of the Militaryp. 29
De-Professionalization of the Officer Corpsp. 32
Insufficient Professionalization of Civilian Defense Managersp. 33
The Gordian Knot of Corruptionp. 34
Parliamentary Liaison and Public Opinionp. 37
The Ministry for Parliamentary Relationsp. 38
The Department for Parliamentary Liaison, Legislative Harmonization, and Public Relationsp. 39
Parliamentary-Ministerial Cooperationp. 40
The Contribution to Democratic Controlp. 42
Current Prioritiesp. 43
Public Opinionp. 45
Media Monitoringp. 48
Media Activitiesp. 48
Command Information Outletsp. 49
Public Relations Training and System Coordinationp. 50
Military Cultural Activitiesp. 50
The Image of the Military Institutionp. 51
Parliamentary Oversight: A Basic Outlinep. 53
Personnel Management and Reconversionp. 57
From Whence We Came: Political Control over the Army under Communismp. 58
Early Stages of Reform: Two Steps Forward, One Step Backp. 61
The Empirical Approach to Personnel Managementp. 64
The Modern System of Human Resource Managementp. 66
Objectives of Human Resource Managementp. 69
The Structure of Functions in the Pyramidal Systemp. 70
The Military Careerp. 71
Improving Civilian Defense Management Expertisep. 74
Personnel Downsizingp. 76
Professional Reconversionp. 77
Conclusionsp. 80
Education and Defense Managementp. 83
Introductionp. 83
Historical Backgroundp. 84
The Concept of Military Education Reformp. 88
Outreach and Restructuringp. 90
The Present System of Military Educationp. 93
Military High Schoolsp. 94
NCO and Warrant Officer Schoolsp. 95
The NCO Training Center (Within the Land Forces NCO and Warrant Officer School)p. 96
The "Nicolae Balcescu" Land Forces Academy and the "Henri Coanda" Air Force Academyp. 96
The Military Technical Academy and the "Mircea cel Batran" Naval Academyp. 97
The Military Medical Institutep. 97
The Military Faculty of Physical Educationp. 98
Branch Application Schoolsp. 99
The Academy for Higher Military Studiesp. 100
The National Defense Collegep. 100
The Training Center for Human Resources Management Personnelp. 101
The PFP Regional Training Centerp. 102
The Regional Center for Defense Resource Managementp. 102
The Defense Language Center in the Academy for Higher Military Studiesp. 103
Next Stepsp. 103
Annex 1p. 105
Annex 2p. 106
Joint Defense Planningp. 107
Backgroundp. 107
PPBES Proceduresp. 108
The Defense Planning Systemp. 110
Lessons Learnedp. 118
Force Restructuringp. 121
The Legal Frameworkp. 121
Goals and Objectivesp. 122
Achievementsp. 124
Human Resources Management and Policyp. 125
Officer Corps Career Program and Further Developmentp. 129
NCO Corps Career Program and Further Developmentp. 131
Recruiting for Military Servicep. 133
Conclusionp. 134
The New Procurement Conceptp. 135
General Contextp. 136
The Reform Process 2001-2002p. 138
Legislative and Regulatory Frameworkp. 142
Procurement and Alliance Interoperabilityp. 145
The Strain on Domestic Defense Industryp. 147
Current and Future Challengesp. 149
Military Interoperability with NATOp. 151
Achievements in the Interoperability Fieldp. 152
Priorities and Objectives in 2002p. 162
Conclusionsp. 167
Regional and Bilateral Military Cooperationp. 169
Regional Confidence-Buildingp. 170
Challenges, Obstacles, and Opportunitiesp. 172
The Current Situationp. 174
The Way Aheadp. 182
Conclusionsp. 183
Mechanisms of Alliance Contribution: Peace Support and Crisis Response Operationsp. 185
Policies and Perceptions during the Cold War Periodp. 185
Participation in Peace Support Operations, 1990-2001p. 186
Evolution of Military Involvement, Perceptions, and Attitudesp. 188
Mechanisms, Legal Background, and Policyp. 191
NATO Operations: A Unique Casep. 195
Rapid Decision-Making and Deployment: ISAF in Afghanistanp. 197
Conclusionsp. 200
NATO Accession Strategy from Madrid to Praguep. 203
The Pillars of Romanian Strategyp. 204
Evaluating the Causes of Failurep. 206
Strategic Errorsp. 208
Tactical Errorsp. 209
Restoring Credibilityp. 211
New Conditions of Enlargement since Madridp. 212
Refining Strategy before Praguep. 214
Conclusionp. 216
About the Authorsp. 217
Bibliographyp. 225
Table of Contents provided by Syndetics. All Rights Reserved.

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