Connexion
  • Mon espace
RDN Association loi 1904, fondée en 1939 RDN Le débat stratégique depuis 1939
  • Panier - 0 article
  • La Revue
  • e-RDN
    • Tribune
    • e-Recensions
    • Cahiers de la RDN
    • Débats stratégiques
    • Florilège historique
    • Repères
    • Brèves
  • Boutique
    • Abonnements
    • Crédits articles
    • Points de vente
    • Conditions générales de vente
  • Bibliothèque
    • Recherche
    • Auteurs
    • Anciens numéros
  • La RDN
    • Présentation
    • Comité d'études
    • L'équipe
    • Contact
    • Lettre d'infos
    • Agenda
  • Liens utiles
  • Mon espace
  • Connexion
  • Connexion

    Email :

    Mot de passe :

  • La Revue
  • e-RDN
    • Tribune
    • e-Recensions
    • Cahiers de la RDN
    • Débats stratégiques
    • Florilège historique
    • Repères
    • Brèves
  • Boutique
    • Abonnements
    • Crédits articles
    • Points de vente
    • Conditions générales de vente
  • Bibliothèque
    • Recherche
    • Auteurs
    • Anciens numéros
  • La RDN
    • Présentation
    • Comité d'études
    • L'équipe
    • Contact
    • Lettre d'infos
    • Agenda
  • Liens utiles
  • Accueil
  • e-RDN
  • Revue n° 733 October 2010
  • Hyper-Professionalized Armed Forces

Hyper-Professionalized Armed Forces

Lionel Delort, "Hyper-Professionalized Armed Forces " Revue n° 733 October 2010

The French military apparatus has been constantly evolving, over the last 15 years, towards an increasingly sophisticated model that required a qualitative leap for both men and equipment. The author illustrates the strengths and the limitations of this transformation, which could distance the military from society.

In February 1996, President Jacques Chirac surprised even the military by announcing the move to a professional army and the suspension of national service. The problems inherent in such an in-depth change and the solutions that have enabled it to be implemented have been widely debated: the impact of wage costs on military operating and equipment budgets; how to maintain the bond between the armed forces and the nation; the status of the military and the exercise of authority. The reform’s greatest success has without doubt been the acceptance by the military themselves of the substantial changes they have undergone. Their broad approval of the process was less informed by their natural duty of obedience than by hopes of creating more effective armed forces. They also expected greater recognition of their role in national defence. In short, it was a matter of creating a valid defence tool, adapted to the true demands of the new strategic situation. The great enemy no longer existed, and the call-up of all male French citizens for national service had ended. In future, French armed forces would depend entirely on volunteers and ‘career personnel’.

Most of the reforms that have followed the publication of the White Paper on defence and national security (2008) can thus be seen as a furtherance of this policy: having drafted the broad outlines of the new armed forces, this ‘instrument’ has to be refined (statement of our aims, tasks and means assigned) so that it can be incorporated in the catalogue of national assets aimed at ensuring the security that the general public expects. The key is to sustain technological progress, funded by a realistic reduction in size. Taking the logic of a ‘professional army’ to its limits, national defence could only be the exclusive concern of highly trained men and women. That which is valid at operational level, the ‘front line’, also applies to senior commanders, the almost exclusive repository of defence doctrines. As such doctrines become more complicated, they become unfathomable to both the citizen and his representatives, who cannot understand them and lose interest.

Hyper-professionalism of the armed forces grew out of this change, unremarkable as far as the citizen is concerned, but of capital importance for the military and decisive for our political masters, for whom the military tool has evolved more profoundly than they might sometimes have imagined.

Il reste 81 % de l'article à lire

L'article a bien été ajouté au panier.

Mon panierContinuer mes achats

Partagez...

  • Accéder au sommaire du numéro

Juin 2026
n° 891

Révolutions et changements en cours dans les affaires militaires

Je participe au débat stratégique


À vos claviers,
réagissez au dossier du mois

 

Actualités

25-06-2026

La DGA livre le SNA De Grasse à la Marine nationale

23-06-2026

Panthéonisation de Marc Bloch : l’historien et résistant reçoit la Croix du combattant volontaire de la Résistance

12-06-2026

La DGA livre à l’AAE le dernier des 8 Caracal destinés à l’outre-mer

11-06-2026

La DGA commande le développement du missile hypersonique ASN4G à MBDA

11-06-2026

Freedom 250 : participation de la Marine nationale au 250e anniversaire de l’indépendance des États-Unis

Adhérez au CEDN

et bénéficiez d'un statut privilégié et d'avantages exclusifs (invitations...)

Anciens numéros

Accéder aux sommaires des revues de 1939 à aujourd’hui

Agenda

Colloques, manifestations, expositions...

Liens utiles

Institutions, ministères, médias...

Lettre d'infos

Boutique

  • Abonnements
  • Crédits articles
  • Points de vente
  • CGV
  • Politique de confidentialité / Mentions légales

e-RDN

  • Tribune
  • e-Recensions
  • Cahiers de la RDN
  • Florilège historique
  • Repères

Informations

La Revue Défense Nationale est éditée par le Comité d’études de défense nationale (association loi de 1901)

Directeur de la publication : Luc de Rancourt

Adresse géographique : École militaire,
1 place Joffre, Paris VII

Nous contacter

Tél. : 01 44 42 31 90

Email : contact@defnat.com

Adresse : BP 8607, 75325 Paris cedex 07

Publicité : 01 44 42 31 91

Copyright © Bialec Tous droits réservés.