Abolish the Army
"Standing armies are dangerous to liberty," Alexander Hamilton wrote in Federalist No. 29.

The people who created the U.S. Army did not want it to last forever. George Washington, the first commander of the Continental Army, wrote that "a large standing Army in time of Peace hath ever been considered dangerous to the liberties of a Country," though he supported a small frontier force. Other Founding Fathers struck similar notes.
"Standing armies are dangerous to liberty," wrote Alexander Hamilton in Federalist No. 29. "A standing military force, with an overgrown Executive will not long be safe companions to liberty. The means of defense against foreign danger have been always the instruments of tyranny at home," warned James Madison at the Constitutional Convention. "What, sir, is the use of a militia? It is to prevent the establishment of a standing army, the bane of liberty," said Elbridge Gerry during the debates over the Bill of Rights.
No wonder, then, that they put an expiration date on any American army. Article 1, Section 8, Clause 12 of the U.S. Constitution states that Congress has the power "To raise and support Armies, but no Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years." The next clause, authorizing the U.S. Navy, imposes no limits on spending. The message was clear: America needs a peacetime defense force at sea, not on land.
Before World War I, the U.S. Army didn't even have permanent division--level units. But things have shaped up quite differently since then. The Army is now the largest branch of the military, with nearly half a million active duty troops, plus another 176,000 reservists.
The "militia" that was supposed to "prevent the establishment of a standing army" has now been absorbed into it. Since the early 20th century, all state-level National Guard units have been subordinate to the U.S. Army and the U.S. Air Force. Since 2001, more than a million guardsmen and guardswomen have been sent overseas, sometimes for multiple tours of duty, rather than defending their home states.
Fortunately, the Founding Fathers' worst fears about "tyranny at home" were not realized. There has been no military coup d'etat in American history. But the standing army has still come at a cost—and not just a financial one. It has made it easier for the president to launch invasions of foreign countries without any declaration of war or real democratic debate, and it has helped police departments enforce tyranny on a local scale. And a large, permanent land army may be sucking up resources that America needs to prepare for real threats.
The United States launched an average of one military intervention abroad per year from 1776 through 1945, according to Monica Duffy Toft and Sidita Kushi's book Dying by the Sword: The Militarization of US Foreign Policy. Since then, the number has grown to 4.6 interventions per year. "While in the past the United States often relied on diplomacy, economic tools, and threats or displays of force, its modern-day self has resorted to more direct militaristic tactics, rather than reserving force as the policy of last resort," write Toft and Kushi.
Meanwhile, the standing army has been the handmaiden of a more heavy-handed, less accountable police force at home. In response to the unrest of the 1960s, the Army built training centers known as Riotsvilles, teaching law enforcement officers how to wage counterinsurgency on Americans. After 9/11, over $1.6 billion of surplus military equipment flooded into police departments through the 1033 program, according to a Brown University Costs of War Project study.
Given these drawbacks, what is the benefit of a standing army? Americans face fewer threats to their territory than they did when the Founding Fathers warned about standing armies. (Canada and Mexico, after all, are friendly now, and Native Americans are U.S. citizens.)
The U.S. has commitments to defend treaty allies in Europe and Asia, and an interest in making sure global trade routes are free for Americans to use. But responding to those challenges quickly requires naval and air power more than it requires a large ground army. The largest threat U.S. allies face today is China, and any future conflict with that country would likely be waged in the Pacific Ocean, with little role for ground forces. A 2020 paper by the Cato Institute, examining what a truly defensive posture for the U.S. military would look like, concluded that the Army is severely bloated, especially in comparison to the Navy and Air Force.
"Above all, the active-duty U.S. Army should be substantially smaller and postured mostly for hemispheric defense," the paper states. "A grand strategy of restraint would eliminate most permanent garrisons on foreign soil and rely more heavily on reservists and National Guard personnel for missions closer to the U.S. homeland."
That sounds a lot like the vision the Founding Fathers had: a navy and a militia, but no standing Army.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Yup. Let the locals deal with the potential for invasion such as the millions (and Millions!) or raiders that Biden-Harris have allowed to cross the nation’s borders stealing hundreds of billions while also killing thousands, raping thousands more, and engaging in human trafficking.
Something tells me that Petti is against fighting an actual invasion.
An actual invasion? By whom? Across what ocean? All such noise is as dumb now as it was after Pearl Harbor. The Japanese carriers could only mount two waves before they ran out of serviceable aircraft and daylight. Another two raids and they would have had barely enough to defend themselves. And you think China, with three half-assed carriers, could protect an invasion convoy clear across the Pacific?
The US is immune to a coastal invasion. Canada will never have the population to invade. The locals near Mexico could handle the drug cartels and coyotes easily if they weren't held back by government.
Of course, abolishing the Army means completely redoing American and the Western world's foreign policy and political arrangements, which will be see as the US becoming isolation isn't instead of the leader of the Western countries. The support for this outside of cranky libertarian "no war" oddballs, is what?
If you don’t want to be seen as a cranky oddball, go mainstream, join the DNC or GOP.
If you think we need to police the world, go do so. Plenty of nasty people you could go fight on your own without even needing to join the army.
If you think you have a right to steal my taxes to pay for sending someone else overseas to fight your battles, you’re just another fucking slaver.
The only people who support and profit from the current permawar status are the MIC. Six of the 10 richest counties in the US surround DC and it is because of 'Defense' and the various think tanks and lobbies and such not because of clerks at Social Security HQ. Two of the 10 are Silicon Valley which gets a shit-ton of money from 'Defense'. Add those counties around NYC that get rich based on bond trading/etc - because debt too is mostly 'defense' based. A whole bunch of MAGA commenters here talk 'no war' but at core they are mostly very pro perma-war and will never question the R's on that.
The main anti-war critters in Congress is the Congressional Black Caucus. By far. They don't receive the MIC lobbyist/donor money - and they know who gets 'forced' (via conscription or lack of opportunity - same thing) into fighting the wars by a standing army - and who gets beaten by the transfer of military stuff to police. The MAGA commenters here will always oppose that group of critters - even when the issue is specifically war.
13% of the Federal Budget goes to Defense.
Yes. It should be Constitutional.
No. It isn't entirely UN-Constitutional.
Something, something about picking your battles.
No doubt there's room for efficiency and making it a smaller budget item, but do you really want to base the entire national security off the military norms of the mid 1780's?
There are plenty of countries that base their military mostly on the reserve/militia component. Those would include Israel, South Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam, Brazil, Philippines, Finland, Singapore, Switzerland. Even Russia to a degree. In each case, they have serious issues that they have to deal with re conscription, offense v defense, etc. But in all but two cases, they understand those limitations. In no case do those limitations prevent them from defending themselves.
What a large reserve/militia component does is it prevents what the US does in the world - act as a mercenary empire to engage in wars for others - far far away from the US - permanently. Has nothing to do with the 1780's except that we ARE a standing army that imposes tyranny. Focused outward - for now.
And lack of standing armies is even more dangerous.
Do you have a point??
https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/washington-blames-militia-for-problems
In a letter to his nephew, Lund Washington, plantation manager of Mount Vernon, General George Washington writes on September 30, 1776, of his displeasure with the undisciplined conduct and poor battlefield performance of the American militia. Washington blamed the Patriot reliance on the militia as the chief root of his problems in the devastating loss of Long Island and Manhattan to the British.
In his letter, Washington wrote, “I am wearied to death all day with a variety of perplexing circumstances, disturbed at the conduct of the militia, whose behavior and want of discipline has done great injury to the other troops, who never had officers, except in a few instances, worth the bread they eat.” Washington added, “In confidence I tell you that I never was in such an unhappy, divided state since I was born.”
The Army is the largest AND most useless branch of the military with almost no mission any longer.