Alex Abella’s Soldiers of Reason: The RAND Corporation and the Rise of the American Empire (2008) offers a penetrating and often unsettling examination of one of the most influential yet secretive institutions in modern American history. Combining investigative journalism, intellectual history, and political critique, Abella traces the evolution of the RAND Corporation from its origins as a post–World War II think tank serving the U.S. Air Force to its emergence as a central node in the architecture of American power. The book’s subtitle—and the Rise of the American Empire—captures both its empirical scope and moral ambition: Abella situates RAND not merely as a research institution, but as a driving intellectual force behind the militarization of American policy and the global projection of U.S. hegemony during the Cold War and beyond.
The central thesis of Soldiers of Reason is that RAND served as the intellectual engine of the American national security state, translating abstract theories into strategies of domination and control. Abella argues that RAND’s mathematicians, economists, and strategists—“soldiers of reason”—were the architects of a technocratic worldview that privileged rational choice, quantification, and systems analysis over humanistic and moral considerations. Through this lens, war, deterrence, and governance became matters of strategic calculation rather than political or ethical judgment. The consequence, Abella contends, was the institutionalization of a form of “rationalized militarism,” in which technological mastery and policy modeling supplanted democratic debate as the basis of national decision-making.
The book is structured chronologically, beginning with RAND’s founding in 1946 as a project of the Douglas Aircraft Company under Air Force contract, and following its ascent through the Cold War, the Vietnam conflict, and the post–9/11 “war on terror.” Abella weaves together biographical sketches of key figures—such as Albert Wohlstetter, Herman Kahn, and Daniel Ellsberg—with analysis of RAND’s theoretical innovations in game theory, systems analysis, and nuclear deterrence. He shows how RAND’s intellectual culture—an amalgam of mathematical rigor, corporate efficiency, and ideological anti-communism—shaped doctrines such as “mutual assured destruction” and the “winnable nuclear war.” These doctrines, though presented as scientific, rested on deeply political assumptions about rationality, human behavior, and the nature of global order.
One of the book’s major contributions lies in its portrayal of RAND as both a think tank and a culture. Abella vividly depicts the institution’s unique ethos: a blend of academic freedom and bureaucratic discipline that attracted some of the most brilliant minds in mathematics, economics, and the social sciences. Within this environment, rationalism became not merely a method but an ideology—what Abella calls “the religion of reason.” RAND’s analysts, often insulated from public accountability, came to see themselves as the rational stewards of American global power. Yet, as the Vietnam War demonstrated, the same analytic tools that promised objective clarity often produced strategic delusion, as abstract models failed to capture the realities of political resistance and human suffering.
Abella’s account also highlights the continuities between RAND’s Cold War intellectual paradigms and the technocratic rationality that underpins contemporary U.S. policy. The book traces how RAND’s influence extended beyond defense strategy into economics, urban planning, and social policy, contributing to the broader rise of systems analysis and neoliberal governance. By the twenty-first century, RAND had become a central node in the “revolving door” between academia, the military, and government, exemplifying the fusion of knowledge production and power characteristic of what C. Wright Mills earlier termed the “power elite.” Abella’s argument thus situates RAND within the larger trajectory of American empire, where expertise functions as a mode of control and rationalization for global dominance.
From a methodological standpoint, Soldiers of Reason is more journalistic than strictly academic, yet it is grounded in extensive archival research and interviews with former RAND employees. Abella combines narrative storytelling with intellectual synthesis, making the complex ideas developed at RAND—game theory, deterrence logic, systems modeling—accessible to general readers while preserving analytical depth. His critique is not conspiratorial but structural: RAND is portrayed not as an omnipotent puppet-master but as a symptom of a broader historical transformation in which the technocratic management of power supplanted the democratic deliberation of policy.
Critics of Abella’s work have noted that its sweeping scope sometimes comes at the expense of theoretical precision. The book occasionally overstates RAND’s autonomy and influence, underplaying the reciprocal relationship between the think tank and the state apparatus it served. Moreover, while Abella’s narrative is compellingly critical, it occasionally lapses into moral dichotomies that simplify the intellectual complexity of RAND’s internal debates—particularly those involving figures like Ellsberg, who later became a critic of the very system he helped build. Nonetheless, these limitations do little to diminish the book’s value as a critical and accessible synthesis of an institution whose influence has often eluded public scrutiny.
Stylistically, Soldiers of Reason is lucid, vivid, and morally charged. Abella’s prose conveys both admiration for the intellectual brilliance of RAND’s thinkers and alarm at their detachment from ethical and political consequences. His writing evokes the tone of Cold War critiques by figures such as Hannah Arendt and C. Wright Mills, combining sociological insight with a humanistic warning about the perils of technocratic rationality. In doing so, Abella situates RAND within a broader critique of modernity itself—of the tendency for reason, when divorced from moral restraint, to become an instrument of domination.
Soldiers of Reason is a significant contribution to the study of American power, technocracy, and the military-industrial complex. It complements and extends the critical tradition of works such as Mills’s The Power Elite, Chalmers Johnson’s The Sorrows of Empire, and Annie Jacobsen’s The Pentagon’s Brain. Abella’s central insight—that RAND’s intellectual legacy reflects the fusion of knowledge and power at the heart of the American empire—remains both timely and unsettling. By exposing how ideas of rationality and efficiency were harnessed to the project of global dominance, Soldiers of Reason compels readers to confront the moral paradox of modern empire: that the pursuit of reason, when subordinated to power, may become the most dangerous irrationality of all.
GPT