Peter D. Feaver is a Professor of Political Science and Public Policy at Duke University. He is Director of the Duke Program in American Grand Strategy and co-PI of the America in the World Consortium. Feaver is also the author of Armed Servants: Agency, Oversight, and Civil-Military Relations (2003) and Guarding the Guardians: Civilian Control of Nuclear Weapons in the United States (1992). He is co-author of Paying the Human Costs of War (with Christopher Gelpi and Jason Reifler, 2009); Getting the Best Out of College (with Susan Wasiolek and Anne Crossman, 2008, 2nd edition 2012); and Choosing Your Battles: American Civil-Military Relations and the Use of Force (with Christopher Gelpi, 2004). He has published numerous other monographs, scholarly articles, book chapters, and policy pieces on grand strategy, American foreign policy, public opinion, nuclear proliferation, civil-military relations, and cybersecurity. Feaver served on the NSC staff in both the Clinton (as a Director for Defense Policy and Arms Control, 1993-1994) and Bush (as Special Advisor for Strategic Planning and Institutional Reform, 2005-2007) administrations. He is a member of the Aspen Strategy Group.
This important book provides data that is going to fuel a decade of civil-military scholarship. Peter Feaver is the lighthouse for all of us in the field and shows conclusively that our military needs to work harder to keep its feet out of the wolf trap of partisan politics if it is to remain broadly respected by Americans. * Kori Schake, Director of Foreign and Defense Policy Studies, American Enterprise Institute * Peter Feaver is one of academe's most acute observers of American civil-military relations—and this book demonstrates both his scholarly rigor and his practical sense of how policy is actually made. A pathbreaking piece of scholarship. * Eliot A. Cohen, Robert E. Osgood Professor, Johns Hopkins SAIS * This searching analysis of the sources and impacts of our public's regard for its military provides a hard-eyed, unsentimental examination of potential dangers ahead. With currency, clarity, and rigor into how and why the military holds public confidence, this masterwork will be the go-to book providing both warning and direction at a crucial point in our history. * General Jim Mattis, US Marines (ret.) and 26th Secretary of Defense * No one—and I mean no one—knows more about the relationship among the military, our elected civilian officials, and the general populace than Peter Feaver. An insightful, important, and timely work. * General Martin Dempsey, 18th Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff *