Recent events in Mali, Libya, Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, and elsewhere
demonstrate that building professional indigenous forces is imperative
to regional stability, yet few success stories exist. Liberia is a
qualified "success," and this study explores how it was achieved by the
program's chief architect. Liberia suffered a 14-year civil war replete
with human rights atrocities that killed 250,000 people and displaced a
third of its population. Following President Charles Taylor's exile in
2003, the U.S. contracted DynCorp International to demobilize and
rebuild the Armed Forces of Liberia and its Ministry of Defense; the
first time in 150 years that one sovereign nation hired a private
company to raise another sovereign nation's military. This monograph
explores the theory and practice behind the successful disarmament,
demobilization, and reintegration (DDR) of the legacy military and
security sector reform (SSR) that built the new one.