Military and National Security Scholar

Mackubin Thomas Owens

38 articles 1997–2017

Mackubin Thomas Owens is a military and national security scholar who serves as a professor at the U.S. Naval War College. He contributed extensively to The Weekly Standard from 1997 to 2017, writing on defense policy, military strategy, civil-military relations, and historical topics including the Civil War and the Lincoln presidency. A Marine Corps veteran of the Vietnam War, he is a widely published author and commentator on American foreign policy and military affairs.

The Morning After

May 11, 2017 · magazine_repost, Books and Art, military theory

The United States has been at war for nearly a decade and a half, and although American military forces achieved tactical success in Iraq and Afghanistan, they have not been able to convert military victory into political success. This failure to consolidate military gains into stable order has…

The Morning After

May 5, 2017 · Books and Art, War, military theory

The United States has been at war for nearly a decade and a half, and although American military forces achieved tactical success in Iraq and Afghanistan, they have not been able to convert military victory into political success. This failure to consolidate military gains into stable order has…

Some Faces of War

March 3, 2017 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, book reviews, Magazine

With his latest book, Bing West has reconfirmed his standing as one of the most intrepid and insightful observers of America’s wars over the past decade-and-a-half. Some have called him a latter-day Ernie Pyle. Embedded for the sixth time with soldiers and Marines in Iraq and Afghanistan, West…

For a New President, a New Blueprint for Defense

January 9, 2017 · magazine_repost, Donald Trump, Mackubin Thomas Owens

The late 1980s and early '90s were characterized by liberal optimism, if not triumphalism. The Berlin Wall had fallen and the Soviet Union had dissolved, marking the end of the Cold War. In 1989, Francis Fukuyama had written an influential article entitled "The End of History," which argued that…

Farewell, Obama

January 6, 2017 · Donald Trump, Mackubin Thomas Owens, Appropriations

The late 1980s and early ’90s were characterized by liberal optimism, if not triumphalism. The Berlin Wall had fallen and the Soviet Union had dissolved, marking the end of the Cold War. In 1989, Francis Fukuyama had written an influential article entitled "The End of History," which argued that…

Lessons Learned?

August 11, 2014 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, book reviews, Magazine

In his often-cited but little-read On War (1832), Carl von Clausewitz observes that “in war, the result is never final.” His observation can be applied to the historiography of war as well. A case in point is this study by Gregory Daddis, an Army colonel who earned a doctorate at Chapel Hill,…

Lessons Learned?

August 11, 2014 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, book reviews, Magazine

In his often-cited but little-read On War (1832), Carl von Clausewitz observes that “in war, the result is never final.” His observation can be applied to the historiography of war as well. A case in point is this study by Gregory Daddis, an Army colonel who earned a doctorate at Chapel Hill,…

Life After Wartime

June 2, 2014 · Features, Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine

What does America owe its veterans? Perhaps the best answer to this question I have ever seen came from a young woman named Julie Ponzi—wise beyond her years—in response to a review I had written of Karl Marlantes’s magnificent Vietnam war novel, Matterhorn. She observed that by providing a real…

Sea of Troubles

March 31, 2014 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine, Books and Arts

In 2005, Thomas L. Friedman published a book that had far too much influence on how Americans think about world affairs. The World Is Flat was a paean to the wonders of economic interdependence and “globalization”—the belief that interdependence and cooperation had replaced competition in…

Grant at Vicksburg

July 8, 2013 · Features, Unions, Mackubin Thomas Owens

While Robert E. Lee was whipping Joe Hooker at Chancellorsville in May 1863, there were ominous developments for the Confederacy in Mississippi. During that month, Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant’s Army of the Tennessee crossed the Mississippi River south of Vicksburg and then executed a lightning…

Leatherneck Tales

May 6, 2013 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, book reviews, Magazine

In 1957, the commandant of the Marine Corps, General Randolph Pate, sent a brief note to the director of the Marine Corps Educational Center, Brig. Gen. Victor Krulak, in which he asked, “Why does the U.S. need a Marine Corps?” Krulak, already a legend in the Marines, penned a lengthy reply: “The…

Coed Combat Units

February 4, 2013 · Leon Panetta, Features, Mackubin Thomas Owens

For over two decades, I have been arguing against the idea of placing American women in combat or in support positions associated with direct ground combat. I base my position on three factors. First, there are substantial physical differences between men and women that place the latter at a…

Anti-Defense Secretary

January 28, 2013 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine, Chuck Hagel

Much of the opposition to President Obama’s choice of former Nebraska senator Chuck Hagel to become secretary of defense has focused on his apparent hostility to Israel and his seeming indifference to a nuclear-armed Iran. As serious as these issues are, Hagel’s Senate confirmation ought also to…

Obama Dumps a Smart, Independently Minded General

January 22, 2013 · Pentagon, Military, Barack Obama

It seems clear that American civil-military relations have been healthiest when there is a high level of trust between civilian and military leaders, i.e. when there is mutual respect and understanding between them that leads to the exchange of candid views and perspectives between the two parties…

Aftermyth of War

December 31, 2012 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine, American history

As we mark the sesquicentennial of the Civil War, the publication of Allen Guelzo’s magisterial new account of that conflict is most timely. But given the fact that, by even the most conservative estimates, some 60,000 books and pamphlets have been written about what was once called the War of the…

Turning Point

May 14, 2012 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine, Books and Arts

The German assault against the Soviet Union, Operation Barbarossa, was the largest military undertaking in history. Adolf Hitler expected the Ostheer, the German Army of the east—organized into three army groups consisting of 136 divisions, the bulk of Germany’s panzer (armor) units and air forces,…

Picking Up the Pieces

August 29, 2011 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine, Britain

Winston Churchill titled the final volume of his World War I memoir The Unknown War. The topic of that volume was the Eastern front, but the title could just as well have described the Great War against the Ottoman Empire in Mesopotamia (the present Iraq) from 1914 until 1918, and its aftermath.…

Repealing "Don't Ask" Will Weaken the U.S. Military

December 3, 2010 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Blog, Don't Ask Don't Tell

Long before the Pentagon’s report on the expected effects of repealing the current law prohibiting open homosexuals from serving in the U.S. military was released, the conventional “narrative” had already been established thanks to leaks by anonymous individuals “familiar with the report’s…

Repealing "Don't Ask" Will Weaken the U.S. Military

December 3, 2010 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Blog, Don't Ask Don't Tell

Long before the Pentagon’s report on the expected effects of repealing the current law prohibiting open homosexuals from serving in the U.S. military was released, the conventional “narrative” had already been established thanks to leaks by anonymous individuals “familiar with the report’s…

The Learning Curve

May 11, 2009 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine, Books and Arts

Baghdad at Sunrise

Lincoln, Obama, and Bush

December 23, 2008 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Blog

Long before the recent election, Barack Obama often liked to compare himself to Abraham Lincoln. An adoring press followed suit. Googling "Obama and Lincoln," results in over 14 million hits. Now many are of these are redundant and many have nothing to do with either Obama or Lincoln. But it is…

Americans Under Fire

May 26, 2008 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine, Books and Arts

Moment of Truth in Iraq

Barnett's Love Letter to Fallon

March 18, 2008 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Blog

Tom Barnett's piece in the April issue of Esquire is blamed--or credited--with bringing about the fall of Adm. William Fallon, who will step down soon as commander of U.S. Central Command. Barnett portrayed Fallon as a guy who stood up to the president on Iran. Barnett also portrayed Fallon as a…

The Fall of AdmiralGeorge B. McFallon

March 12, 2008 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Blog

DURING THE 1990s, a number of events led observers to conclude that all was not well with civil-military relations in America, generating an often acrimonious public debate in which a number of highly respected observers concluded that American civil-military relations had become unhealthy or even…

Democracy at Arms

November 5, 2007 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine, Books and Arts

While the average political scientist is lucky to make a name for himself in one area of the field, Samuel Huntington has made major contributions to three: civil-military relations, democratic theory, and international relations. And while most people think of The Clash of Civilizations when they…

Warrior at Sea

June 25, 2007 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine, Books and Arts

A Leader Born

A Winnable War

January 15, 2007 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine, Books and Arts

Triumph Forsaken

Rumsfeld and His Critics

May 3, 2006 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Blog

SECRETARY OF DEFENSE DONALD RUMSFELD has taken a serious beating recently. His critics, including several retired Army and Marine Corps generals, have accused him, in essence, of being personally responsible for perceived failures in Iraq. His critics charge that he ignored military advice and…

Transformation

January 23, 2006 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine, Books and Arts

Military Power

War and Peace

December 21, 2005 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Blog

IN JUNE of 1863, Abraham Lincoln wrote a letter to Erasmus Corning, who had sent him the resolutions of the Albany Democratic convention censuring the Lincoln administration for what it called unconstitutional acts, such as military arrests of civilians in the North. This letter remains the best…

Fighters, not First Responders

October 24, 2005 · Features, Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine

THE MAGNITUDE OF THE KATRINA disaster and the subsequent failure of local, state, and federal agencies to react in a timely manner have led some to call for an expansion of the military's role in domestic affairs. "The question raised by the Katrina fiasco," writes Daniel Henninger of the Wall…

Lost Victory

August 1, 2005 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine, Books and Arts

Vietnam Chronicles

Two, Three, Many Fallujas

December 6, 2004 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine

THE TAKEDOWN of terrorists in Falluja seems to have gone well. The terrorists, as expected, fought hard and mostly to the death, but U.S. and Iraqi casualties remain lower than the history of urban warfare would have led us to expect. Success in Falluja can be attributed to two factors: a…

Fahrenheit 1971

September 6, 2004 · Features, Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine

We will not quickly join those who march on Veterans' Day waving small flags, calling to memory those thousands who died for the "greater glory of the United States." We will not accept the rhetoric. We will not readily join the American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars--in fact, we will…

Soldier and Citizen

July 23, 2001 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine, Books and Arts

AMERICANS TAKE GOOD CIVIL-MILITARY relations for granted. The Constitution, military officers’ strongly ingrained acceptance of the principle of civilian control, and the fact that the services get their personnel from a broad range of the population have combined to give the United States a…

Bob Kerrey's Vietnam War

May 14, 2001 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine

VIETNAM IS THE WAR THAT JUST WON'T GO AWAY. The latest flare-up of that decades-old conflict is the admission by Bob Kerrey, the former senator from Nebraska and Medal of Honor recipient, that the Navy SEAL team he led in Vietnam killed women and children during a nighttime foray 32 years ago.…

The Real Gulf War Blunder

June 5, 2000 · Features, Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine

Seymour Hersh's allegation in the May 22 New Yorker that then-Major General Barry McCaffrey unleashed his 24th Infantry Division in an unnecessary attack that mercilessly pummeled retreating Iraqi soldiers two days after the Gulf War cease-fire in 1991 has created the usual furor. Even though the…

SEMPER FI?

November 24, 1997 · Mackubin Thomas Owens, Magazine, Books and Arts

Thomas E. Ricks