The Struggle to Transform the Military

Friday, February 25th, 2005

In The Struggle to Transform the Military, Max Boot cites the British example of how to run an empire:

Whether or not the United States is an “empire” today, it is a country with interests to protect and enemies to fight all over the world. There is no finer example of how to do this cheaply and effectively than the British Empire. In 1898, it maintained only 331,000 soldiers and sailors and spent only 2.4 percent of its GDP on defense, considerably less than the 3.9 percent the United States spends today. This puny investment was enough to safeguard an empire that covered 25 percent of the globe.

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