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Contemporary Southeast Asia Vol. 41, No. 3 (2019), pp. 456–59 DOI: 10.1355/cs41-3h
© 2019 ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute ISSN 0129-797X print / ISSN 1793-284X electronic
Aristocracy of Armed Talent: The Military Elite in Singapore.
By Samuel Ling Wei Chan. Singapore: NUS Press, 2019. Softcover:
495pp.
Singapore’s military is exceptional in many ways. Although the
Singapore Armed Forces are relatively small and has never fought
in a large-scale conflict, the nation’s Total Defence doctrine, high-
tech edge, and deliberate decisions to gain operational experience
by involving the force in complex international operations such
as those in Afghanistan and the Gulf of Aden have earned it a
reputation as being highly capable. Among the Singapore Armed
Forces’ (SAF) most unusual traits is its system for recruiting
and retaining its military officers. Despite stiff competition with
opportunities in the private sector and well-paid civil service, the
incentives associated with military service has enabled the SAF to
attract some of the nations’ brightest and most ambitious leaders
during both the initial build-up period and in the current era. This
system has created a military officer corps institutionalized as a
highly-educated professional cadre that leads the military and feeds
the nations’ top civil service and political posts while avoiding the
civil-military tensions found in other Southeast Asian countries.
Central to the military’s leaders is a cadre of “scholars”, young
capable officers who are enticed by scholarships to the world’s top
schools for undergraduate education and are commonly seen as
standing a better chance to rise through the ranks more quickly and
with greater institutional support than the other officers (sometimes
called “farmers”, p. 3) whom they serve alongside. Although unusual,
perhaps even unique, the foundation and functionality of this
system had not been fully analysed until the publication of Samuel
Ling Wei Chan’s Aristocracy of Armed Talent. Well-researched and
balanced, this book delivers fresh ideas, plenty of new information
and sheds light on some misconceptions about the scholar system.
Furthermore, it ably situates its analysis of the Singapore’s military
leadership into the nation’s larger historical, defence posture and
civil-military landscapes. In doing so, it stands as an excellent
companion to Tim Huxley’s Defending the Lion City, another volume
that ably tackles the big picture. With Huxley’s volume now over
twenty years old, Aristocracy of Armed Talent is a welcome addition
to the literature.
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