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I have a burning need to know stuff and I love asking awkward questions.

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Want to Be in the “World’s Best Military”? Ask German Veterans

Excerted from Having the ‘Best Military’ Is Not Always a Good Thing

From William J. Astore for TomDispatch.com

July 21, 2008

It may come as a shock to some, but the American army wasn’t the best in the field in World War I, or World War II either. And thank heavens for that. The distinction falls to the Kaiser Wilhelm’s army in 1914, and to Hitler’s Wehrmacht in 1941. Even toward the end of World War II, the American army was still often outmaneuvered and outclassed by its German foe. Because victory has a way of papering over faults and altering memories, few but professional historians today recall the many shortcomings of our military in both world wars. But that’s precisely the point: The American military made mistakes because it was often ill-trained, rushed into combat too quickly, and handled by officers lacking in experience. Put simply, in both World Wars it lacked the tactical virtuosity of its German counterpart.

But here’s the question to ponder: At what price virtuosity? In World War I and World War II, the Germans were the best soldiers because they had trained and fought the most, because their societies were geared, mentally and in most other ways, for war, because they celebrated and valued feats of arms above all other contributions one could make to society and culture. Being “the best soldiers” meant that senior German leaders — whether the Kaiser, Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg, that Teutonic titan of World War I, or Hitler — always expected them to prevail. The mentality was: “We’re number one. How can we possibly lose unless we quit — or those [fill in your civilian quislings of choice] stab us in the back?” If this mentality sounds increasingly familiar, it’s because it’s the one we ourselves have internalized in these last years. German warfighters and their leaders knew no limitations until it was too late for them to recover from ceaseless combat, imperial overstretch, and economic collapse.

Today, the U.S. military, and by extension American culture, is caught in a similar bind. After all, if we truly believe ours to be “the world’s best military” (and, judging by how often the claim is repeated in the echo chamber of our media, we evidently do), how can we possibly be losing in Iraq or Afghanistan? And, if the “impossible” somehow happens, how can our military be to blame? If our “warfighters” are indeed “the best,” someone else must have betrayed them — appeasing politicians, lily-livered liberals, duplicitous and weak-willed allies like the increasingly recalcitrant Iraqis, you name it. Today, our military is arguably the world’s best. Certainly, it’s the world’s most powerful in its advanced armaments and its ability to destroy. But what does it say about our leaders that they are so taken with this form of power? And why exactly is it so good to be the “best” at this? Just ask a German military veteran — among the few who survived, that is — in a warrior-state that went berserk in a febrile quest for “full spectrum dominance.”

[What a very interesting point of view……..]

1 comment:

Ken Comer said...

Military leaders have been advocating training for the sort of "asymmetric warfare" that USA troops are fighting right now, but they also said that the job could not be done with anything less than three times the number of troops that were actually sent, and we can all see how that advice fared. Top it off with the fact that the "Shock and Awe" doctrine was not followed at all despite the fact that the name was invoked to give a little Hollywood to Dubya's little war.

The Shock and Awe doctrine is to deploy overwhelming strength and use advanced and rapid deployment to strike at an enemy's military before it has a chance to react. It specifically avoids attacks on strategic civilian targets such as bridges and power plants so as to make the post-invasion restoration of order as simple as possible. Contrast that with what actually occurred: 5+ years later and Baghdad still doesn't have 24x7 power.

The American military is still equipping to fight the last war, just like the French did after WW1, and the Americans did after Korea (and arguably, WW2).

USA Troop specifications don't specify "suicide bombers," but I don't much understand the philosophical difference between a suicide bomber and a cruise missile when they are aimed at targets in civilian areas. This horrid war was carried out by my country and the suffering has been much greater than it had to be even if we were to take for granted that there simply had to be a war because of the *way* it and the following period of occupation was carried out.

We now torture people, too. The USA Constitution has been used as toilet paper to wipe away any impediment to unfettered access to oil. Our military has been given unlawful orders and the judge advocate general's corps has been ordered to advise our forces that they are legal.

I don't hate my country, but I hate everything my country is doing now.