According to the definition, to be an armed force, an organization must ‘hav[e] the Objective to further the foreign and domestic policies of a Government and to defend that body and the nation it represents from external and internal aggressors’. However, sometimes a nation’s military overthrows its government precisely because it disagrees with that government’s policies (and hence, it seems, doesn’t have the objective to further those policies). Thus the definition implies that a military engaged in such a coup is no longer an armed force, but I’m inclined to think that’s false (though that’s not entirely clear).
Side question: What is it to have an objective, understood in the quasi-technical sense specified in the definition of ‘Objective’? Is it to be the agent mentioned in that definition, or something else?
According to the definition, to be an armed force, an organization must ‘hav[e] the Objective to further the foreign and domestic policies of a Government and to defend that body and the nation it represents from external and internal aggressors’. However, sometimes a nation’s military overthrows its government precisely because it disagrees with that government’s policies (and hence, it seems, doesn’t have the objective to further those policies). Thus the definition implies that a military engaged in such a coup is no longer an armed force, but I’m inclined to think that’s false (though that’s not entirely clear).
Side question: What is it to have an objective, understood in the quasi-technical sense specified in the definition of ‘Objective’? Is it to be the agent mentioned in that definition, or something else?