• Research
  • Diwan
  • About
  • Experts
Carnegie Middle East logoCarnegie lettermark logo
PalestineSyria
Collection

Civil-Military Relations in Arab States

The Program on Civil-Military Relations in Arab States (CMRAS) is an initiative to develop policy tools, build civilian and military expertise in defense affairs, and enable civil-military dialogue. It aims to foster civilian oversight of defense sectors in Arab states, and to support the modernization and professionalization of Arab armed forces. Key stakeholders include defense sectors, academic networks, civil society and research organizations, government officials, the media, and parliamentarians.

Background

An unprecedented number of Arab states are at war or at risk of relapsing into armed conflict. Several face the challenges of rebuilding national armed forces and reintegrating militias, while others experience interventions by armed forces in politics and economies. In addition, the role of women in defense sectors remains largely unaddressed across much of the Arab world.

Collectively, Arab states account for some of the highest rates of military spending in the world, but many struggle to provide peace and security to their societies. Instead, militarization fuels authoritarianism and human rights abuses, and generates gender violence and humanitarian crises. It has created dependence on military employment for social welfare, and increased defense sector corruption.

Genuine civilian and military capacity in defense affairs is necessary to reverse these trends. It enhances the planning capacity of Arab defense sectors, improves military performance by generating internal accountability, and enables absorption of international military practice and assistance.

Starting Points

Public Discourse on Defense

Military restructuring and reform plans must be anchored and ratified in public debate, or else they will reproduce the same problems.

The Need for Civil-Military Partnership

Building mutually beneficial civil-military relations requires civilian expertise and institutional involvement in defense affairs—among civil society and research organizations, parliaments, civil services, and defense ministries.

The Future of Defense Policy Planning

Building mutually beneficial civil-military relations requires civilian expertise and institutional involvement in defense affairs—among civil society and research organizations, parliaments, civil services, and defense ministries.

Activities

Comparative Defense Atlas for Arab States

Building a knowledge base to shape positive military and civilian engagement, inform policy analysis, allow public scrutiny, and enable cross-regional comparison.

Foster Future Civil-Military Leadership

Developing civilian and military expertise in defense affairs and contributing policy recommendations and country-specific roadmaps as a basis for informed dialogue and professional civil and military parity.

Establish Trust as a Civil-Military Cornerstone

Engaging with civilian and military stakeholders in non-adversarial, win-win dialogue to transform attitudes, enhance civilian oversight, and complement international assistance aimed at professionalizing Arab armed forces.

READ MORE >
Download the Program Brochure
Download the Research Manual