How military forecasting projects can ...
Type de document :
Article dans une revue scientifique
URL permanente :
Titre :
How military forecasting projects can promote exceptionalist militarism: The French Red Team project and the securitization of the future
Auteur(s) :
Sangar, Eric [Auteur]
Centre d'Etudes et de Recherches Administratives, Politiques et Sociales - UMR 8026 [CERAPS]
Centre Marc Bloch [CMB]

Centre d'Etudes et de Recherches Administratives, Politiques et Sociales - UMR 8026 [CERAPS]
Centre Marc Bloch [CMB]
Titre de la revue :
Security Dialogue
Nom court de la revue :
Security Dialogue
Éditeur :
SAGE Publications
Date de publication :
2025-02-10
ISSN :
0967-0106
Mot(s)-clé(s) en anglais :
Civil–military relations
CSS
France
militarization
military threat forecasting
securitization
CSS
France
militarization
military threat forecasting
securitization
Discipline(s) HAL :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Science politique
Résumé :
This article examines the puzzle of the French Red Team: how to make sense of the mediatization of a military threat forecasting project that is officially aimed at promoting internal innovation? Building a conceptual ...
Lire la suite >This article examines the puzzle of the French Red Team: how to make sense of the mediatization of a military threat forecasting project that is officially aimed at promoting internal innovation? Building a conceptual bridge between the civil–military relations scholarship and securitization theory, the article argues that the project should be understood as a securitizing movement with the aim of securitizing future threats to the integrity of the nation-state and thus justifying exceptionalist militarism in the present. A discourse analysis reveals how the project incorporates sedimentary discourses in contemporary French civil–military relations, constructing a future narrative in which the armed forces are the ultimate protector of the integrity of the nation-state, as civilian authorities are unable to fulfil this role. The performativity of this securitizing move can be illustrated with regard to its reception by mainstream French media, which portray the project scenarios as credible narratives of future threats due to the perceived independent nature of the mobilized artistic and scientific knowledge. The article thus contributes to an emerging research agenda that takes military institutions more seriously as securitizing actors, including via apparently apolitical, technocratic forecasting projects.Lire moins >
Lire la suite >This article examines the puzzle of the French Red Team: how to make sense of the mediatization of a military threat forecasting project that is officially aimed at promoting internal innovation? Building a conceptual bridge between the civil–military relations scholarship and securitization theory, the article argues that the project should be understood as a securitizing movement with the aim of securitizing future threats to the integrity of the nation-state and thus justifying exceptionalist militarism in the present. A discourse analysis reveals how the project incorporates sedimentary discourses in contemporary French civil–military relations, constructing a future narrative in which the armed forces are the ultimate protector of the integrity of the nation-state, as civilian authorities are unable to fulfil this role. The performativity of this securitizing move can be illustrated with regard to its reception by mainstream French media, which portray the project scenarios as credible narratives of future threats due to the perceived independent nature of the mobilized artistic and scientific knowledge. The article thus contributes to an emerging research agenda that takes military institutions more seriously as securitizing actors, including via apparently apolitical, technocratic forecasting projects.Lire moins >
Résumé en anglais : [en]
This article examines the puzzle of the French Red Team: how to make sense of the mediatization of a military threat forecasting project that is officially aimed at promoting internal innovation? Building a conceptual ...
Lire la suite >This article examines the puzzle of the French Red Team: how to make sense of the mediatization of a military threat forecasting project that is officially aimed at promoting internal innovation? Building a conceptual bridge between the civil–military relations scholarship and securitization theory, the article argues that the project should be understood as a securitizing movement with the aim of securitizing future threats to the integrity of the nation-state and thus justifying exceptionalist militarism in the present. A discourse analysis reveals how the project incorporates sedimentary discourses in contemporary French civil–military relations, constructing a future narrative in which the armed forces are the ultimate protector of the integrity of the nation-state, as civilian authorities are unable to fulfil this role. The performativity of this securitizing move can be illustrated with regard to its reception by mainstream French media, which portray the project scenarios as credible narratives of future threats due to the perceived independent nature of the mobilized artistic and scientific knowledge. The article thus contributes to an emerging research agenda that takes military institutions more seriously as securitizing actors, including via apparently apolitical, technocratic forecasting projects.Lire moins >
Lire la suite >This article examines the puzzle of the French Red Team: how to make sense of the mediatization of a military threat forecasting project that is officially aimed at promoting internal innovation? Building a conceptual bridge between the civil–military relations scholarship and securitization theory, the article argues that the project should be understood as a securitizing movement with the aim of securitizing future threats to the integrity of the nation-state and thus justifying exceptionalist militarism in the present. A discourse analysis reveals how the project incorporates sedimentary discourses in contemporary French civil–military relations, constructing a future narrative in which the armed forces are the ultimate protector of the integrity of the nation-state, as civilian authorities are unable to fulfil this role. The performativity of this securitizing move can be illustrated with regard to its reception by mainstream French media, which portray the project scenarios as credible narratives of future threats due to the perceived independent nature of the mobilized artistic and scientific knowledge. The article thus contributes to an emerging research agenda that takes military institutions more seriously as securitizing actors, including via apparently apolitical, technocratic forecasting projects.Lire moins >
Langue :
Anglais
Comité de lecture :
Oui
Audience :
Internationale
Vulgarisation :
Non
Établissement(s) :
Université de Lille
CNRS
CNRS
Collections :
Date de dépôt :
2025-03-16T11:23:31Z
2025-03-17T10:50:51Z
2025-03-17T10:50:51Z