Columbia University History Department
HIST3455S - Empire of Liberty: A Global History of the U.S. Military
America’s wars in context, from King Philip's War in 1675 to present conflicts in Afghanistan and the Middle East.
This course charts the expansion of U.S. military power from a band of colonists to a globe-girdling colossus with over two million personnel, some 800 bases around the world, and an annual budget of approximately $598 billion — 54 percent of federal discretionary spending, and more than the next nine nations combined. It introduces students to the history of American military power; the economic, political, and technological rise of the military-industrial complex and national security state; the role of the armed services in international humanitarian work; and the changing role of the military in domestic and international politics. A three-point semester-long course compressed into six weeks.
Student Reviews
The primary goals for this class are:
Command of the materials — readings, lectures and discussions, and field trips.
Paradigmatic thinking — interpretive constructs, supported by evidence, for a global history of the U.S. military.
Rhetoric — persuasive speaking and writing, developed through class discussions, a research paper, and examinations.
Academic collegiality — intellectual teamwork through collective engagement with course materials.
Requirements:
Assigned readings (approximately 50 pages of reading per class hour: 150 pages per class meeting, usually in two books);
A 2,500-3,000 word research paper (approximately 10-12 pages);
A one-hour midterm and three-hour final examination, both open-book;
Two films;
Online field trips to a worldwide constellation of locations;
Class attendance and participation, including brief summaries of a few assigned readings;
Graduate students should read the entirety of all books assigned and write a paper of around 10,000 words (about 40 pages). They do not need to take the examinations.
Grading:
15% One hour Midterm Examination (open book)
35% Three hour Final Examination (open book)
35% Research paper
15% Class attendance and participation
Books:
BookCulture bookstore, 112th Street between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue, and Barnes & Noble Columbia bookstore.
Butler library reserves, and online through the library.
CLASSES:
Boots on the Ground
Reading: Jill Lepore (1998 rpt. 1999). The Name of War: King Philip’s War and the Origins of American Identity. Vintage. 3-18, 71-121 (65 pages)
Reading: Fred Anderson (2000). Crucible of War: The Seven Years' War and the Fate of Empire in British North America, 1754–1766. Faber and Faber. 94-123, 240-258, 400-414, 453-475, 729-746 (100 pages) (total 165 pages)
Field Trip: Please visit ONE of the following locations , and write a few sentences about your reaction to it: (a) "Roger Williams: King Philip's War," Providence, RI. National Park Service (2015). NPS.gov; OR (b) ”Great Swamp Fight Monument,” South Kingston, RI. Atlas Obscura (2020). AtlasObscura.com; OR (c) “Timeline.” Mashpee, MA. Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe (2015). MashpeeWampanoagTribe-nsn.gov.
Empire of Liberty
Reading: Russell Weigley (1973). The American Way of War: A History of United States Military Strategy and Policy. Indiana University Press. 3-55 (52 pages)
Reading: Frank Lambert (2005). The Barbary Wars: American Independence in the Atlantic World. Hill and Wang. 3-48, 123-155, 179-202 (100 pages)
Reading: Anthony F. C. Wallace (1993). The Long, Bitter Trail: Andrew Jackson and the Indians. HarperCollins. 50-101 (51 pages) (total 203 pages)
Field Trip: Please visit the Trail of Tears National Historic Trail in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, and Tennessee, and review the History & Culture page, then write a few sentences about your reaction to the way the U.S. military is portrayed there. National Park Service (2020). NPS.gov.
Guest Speaker: Nicole Perlroth, Reporter, The New York Times (2021). This Is How They Tell Me the World Ends: The Cyberweapons Arms Race. Bloomsbury. Chapter 2 "The Fucking Salmon" (approximately 10-15 pages)
America Rising
Reading: Anders Stephanson (1995). Manifest Destiny: American Expansion and the Empire of Right. Hill and Wang. 3-65 (62 pages)
Reading: Amy S. Greenberg (2012 rpt. 2013). A Wicked War: Polk, Clay, Lincoln, and the 1846 U.S. Invasion of Mexico. Vintage. 76-85, 95-110, 119-161, 168-175, 200-224, 229-240 (108 pages) (total 170 pages)
Field Trip: Please visit The Alamo, “A global cultural icon,” and “the Shrine of Texas Liberty,” according to Alamo Trust, Inc. Visit the “Battle and Revolution” page, and write a few sentences about your assessment of the history offered there. You might also find the “Mapping Texas History” page of interest. Alamo Trust, Inc. (2021). TheAlamo.org.
President Emperor
Reading: James McPherson (1988). Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era. Oxford. 369-453, 718-773 (141 pages)
Reading: Max Boot (2002). The Savage Wars of Peace: Small Wars And The Rise Of American Power. Basic Books. 56-128 (72 pages) (total 213 pages)
Field Trip: Please visit the Antietam National Battlefield in Sharpsburg, MD, and look at whatever interests you on the History & Culture page. Write a few sentences on whether you think this field trip was worthwhile. National Park Service (2020). NPS.gov.
Crusaders Keen
Reading: Russell Weigley (1973). The American Way of War. 167-241 (55 pages) (74 pages)
Reading: Max Boot (2002). The Savage Wars of Peace. 205-230 (25 pages), 253-278 (25 pages) (50 pages) (total 124 pages)
Field Trip: Please visit the Polar Bear Expedition Collection at the University of Michigan's Bently Library, have a look around, and in a few sentences describe something unexpected that you found. Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan (2021). Bentley.UMich.edu.
Guest Speaker: Max Boot, Columnist, The Washington Post. See MaxBoot.net.
Discovery of the New World
Reading: Russell Weigley (1973). The American Way of War. 269-359 (165 pages)
Reading: John Ellis (1990). Brute Force: Allied Strategy and Tactics in the Second World War. Viking. 343-388 (45 pages)
Field Trip: Please visit the American Battle Monuments Commission's Cemeteries & Memorials page, choose a cemetery or memorial to investigate, and write a few words about which one you chose, and what you found there. American Battle Monuments Commission (2021). ABMC.gov.
Guest Speaker: Stephen Wertheim. Fellow, Center for Global Legal Challenges, Yale Law School. Recommended Reading: Stephen Wertheim (2020). Tomorrow, the World: The Birth of U.S. Global Supremacy. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. 47-79, 173-182 (41 pages
Stranger in a Strange Land
Reading: Richard Rhodes (1995). Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb. Simon & Schuster. III. 27-48, 482-512 (50 pages)
Reading: David Halberstam. The Coldest Winter: America and the Korean War. Hyperion. 395-502 (107 pages) (total 157 pages)
Prometheus Bound
Reading: Robert Neer (2013). Napalm, An American Biography. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. 1-108 (108 pages)
Reading: Neil Sheehan (1988). A Bright Shining Lie: John Paul Vann and America in Vietnam. Random House. 127-265 (138 pages) (total 246 pages). Optional: 617-699 (82 pages)
Guest Speaker: Marsh Carter, MIT Sloan School of Management.
Notes from Underground
Reading: Tim Weiner (2008). Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA. Anchor. 83-194 (111 pages)
Reading: James Bamford (2002). Body of Secrets: Anatomy of the Ultra-Secret National Security Agency from the Cold War Through the Dawn of a New Century. Doubleday. 1-91 (90 pages) (total 201 pages)
Field Trip: Please visit the campus of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, and write a few sentences about where you went, and what you thought about what you saw. U.S. Military Academy at West Point (2021). WestPoint.edu
Taking Care of Business
Reading: Andrew Feinstein (2012). The Shadow World: Inside the Global Arms Trade. Picador. 237-329 (92 pages)
Reading: Dana Priest (2014). The Mission: Waging War and Keeping Peace with America’s Military. W. W. Norton. 11-57 (46 pages)
Reading: Michelle Sandhoff and Mady Wechsler Segal (2013). "Women in the U.S. Military: The Evolution of Gender Norms and Military Requirements." In David M. Kennedy, Ed. The Modern American Military. Oxford University Press. 273-289 (16 pages) (total 154 pages)
To the Ends of the Earth
Reading: Rajiv Chandrasekaran (2007). Green Zone: Imperial Life in the Emerald City: Inside Iraq's Green Zone. Vintage. Part II Shattered Dreams Chapter 9: Let This Be Over, The Green Zone, Scene VII-Chapter 14: Breaking the Rules, 184-257 in 2006 Knopf first edition, pages numbers may be different in different editions (73 pages)
Reading: Andrew Bacevich (2016). America's War for the Greater Middle East: A Military History. Random House. 217-294, 342-370 (105 pages) (total 178 pages)
Galadriel’s Mirror
Reading: Daniel Immerwahr (2019). How to Hide an Empire: A History of the Greater United States. Farrar, Straus & Giroux. 355-401 (46 pages)
Reading: Nicole Perlroth (2021). This Is How They Tell Me the World Ends: The Cyberweapons Arms Race. Bloomsbury. Chapter 2 "The Fucking Salmon" (10-15 pages) (total 61 pages)
Course materials
Optional resources
General
Capps, Ron. "Not (Just) Another Reading List." Battleland. TIME.com
Marine Corps. Library, "CMC's Choice - Commandant's Professional Reading List"
Introduction
Tomgram: Andrew Bacevich, Giving Up On Victory, Not War | TomDispatch
How Many U.S. Wars Equal the One in Afghanistan? - Video - NYTimes.com
Where in the World Is the U.S. Military? - POLITICO Magazine
The US Has 761 Military Bases Across the Planet, and We Simply Never Talk About It | | AlterNet
Shipmap.org | Visualisation of Global Cargo Ships | By Kiln and UCL
The Lack of Major Wars May Be Hurting Economic Growth - NYTimes.com
Did U.S. spend $6 trillion in Middle East wars? | PolitiFact
Trump Sets National Security Strategy: An Outline For Military, Foreign Policy : NPR
Present - Google Trends - Web Search interest: military history - Worldwide, 2004 - present
Why Study War? by Victor Davis Hanson, City Journal Summer 2007
The Role of Military History in the Contemporary Academy - Foreign Policy Research Institute
1. Boots on the Ground
The Society of Colonial Wars in the State of Connecticut - 1637 The Pequot War
Roger Williams: King Philip's War - Roger Williams National Memorial (U.S. National Park Service)
Seven Years' War | Assassin's Creed Wiki | FANDOM powered by Wikia
2. Empire of Liberty
Trail Of Tears National Historic Trail (U.S. National Park Service)
1838: Cherokee Die on Trail of Tears - Timeline - Native Voices
3. America Rising
The U.S.-Mexican War . Prelude to War . Manifest Destiny | PBS
The theft of Native Americans' land, in one animated map - Vox
A Guide to the Mexican War (Virtual Programs & Services, Library of Congress)
Military Resources: Mexican War, 1846-1848 | National Archives
The Mexican-American war in a nutshell - National Constitution Center
4. President Emperor
The Civil War and Reconstruction - 1850-1861: A House Divided
The Civil War and Reconstruction - 1861 - 1865: A New Birth of Freedom
The Civil War and Reconstruction – 1865-1890: The Unfinished Revolution
5. Crusaders Keen
The War to End All Wars? Hardly. But It Did Change Them Forever. - NYTimes.com
1917 Liberty Sowing the Seeds of Victory, American War Poster
Military Poster / Print: They mutilate for... | Pritzker Military Museum & Library | Chicago
6. Discovery of the New World
7. Stranger in a Strange Land
MoMA | The Collection | Larry Rivers. Washington Crossing the Delaware. 1953
Animation shows the deadly evolution of nuclear weapons - YouTube
Command and Control | American Experience | Official Site | PBS
8. Notes from Underground
Nicholas Dujmovic, CIA. Review of Legacy of Ashes: The History of CIA.
9. Prometheus Bound
Robert Neer. Napalm, An American Biography.
10. Taking Care of Business
US, Britain planned to deny Mideast oil wells to Soviet invaders
Pivotal Moment for U.S. Nuclear Arsenal - Council on Foreign Relations
Sandhoff, M. Segal, & D. Segal, Gender Issues in the Transformation to an All-Volunteer Force
11. To the Ends of the Earth
MLA, Chicago, APA and other major academic citation systems are all acceptable for this class.
Plagiarism Reference
MLA Citations
Chicago Citations
APA Citations
Introduction: Scribbr Beginner’s guide to APA in-text citation