An analysis of the authority of internationally-authorized armed interventions, considering experiences of nine democracies.In the democracies that fought World War II, elected governments were accountable and expressed the will of the people to wage war. Today, the nine democracies discussed in this book (France, UK, US, Canada, Germany, Japan, Russia, India and Norway) contribute to military operations sanctioned by the UN and NATO. On whose authority, and with what oversight?This is the first book to analyze the relationship of internationally-authorized armed interventions to democratic accountability. It raises issues that concern the future of the nation-state, international organizations, and democratic armed forces.In the democracies that fought World War II, elected governments were accountable and expressed the will of the people to wage war. Today, the nine democracies discussed in this book (France, UK, US, Canada, Germany, Japan, Russia, India and Norway) contribute to military operations sanctioned by the UN and NATO. On whose authority, and with what oversight?This is the first book to analyze the relationship of internationally-authorized armed interventions to democratic accountability. It raises issues that concern the future of the nation-state, international organizations, and democratic armed forces.The spread of democracy to a majority of the world's states and the legitimization of the use of force by multilateral institutions such as NATO and the UN have been two key developments since World War II. In the last decade these developments have become intertwined, as multilateral forces moved from traditional peacekeeping to peace enforcement among warring parties. This book explores the experiences of nine countries (Canada, France, Germany, India, Japan, Norway, Russia, UK and US) in the deployment of armed forces under the UN and NATO, asking who has been and should be accountable to the citizens of these nations, and to the citizens of statel#J