
Richard Bennet and Alexander Noyes, "War at Arm's Length: How America Can Build Effective Partners Through Military Assistance" (Yale UP, 2026)
From New Books in Political Science by New Books Network
June 12, 2026 · 40 min
About this episode
The episode discusses how the U.S. can effectively build partner militaries through military assistance, as explored in the book by Richard Bennet and Alexander Noyes.
An in-depth examination of how the United States can build more effective partner militaries. Military assistance has a bad reputation. Large-scale attempts to build partner militaries in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Vietnam cost the United States billions of dollars and ended ignominiously, with the collapse of local forces as American troops withdrew. Arms transfers of sophisticated, American-made weapons often appear to do more harm than good. Yet military assistance and support—operating indirectly through partners—when done right, can deliver remarkable strategic results for the United States and its partners. Working effectively with partner militaries is one of the most pressing national security challenges for the United States today. In their latest book, War at Arm's Length: How America Can Build Effective Partners Through Military Assistance (Yale University Press, 2026), Richard Bennet and Alexander Noyes offer a systematic look at military assistance in the twenty-first century, examining a frequently deployed but often misunderstood set of tools that allows the United States to leverage partner militaries to achieve national security objectives. Bennet and Noyes posit…
People in this episode
Host: New Books Network
Guests: Richard Bennet, Alexander Noyes
Topics covered
- military assistance
- national security
- partner militaries
- strategic results
- institutional capacity
Keywords
- military assistance
- national security
- partner militaries
- strategic results
- institutional capacity
- arms transfers
- security issues
Mentioned in this episode
Organizations: Yale University Press
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