Morale to the Left, Morale to the Right, and Not
a Stop to Think
by
Fred Reed
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by Fred Reed: Reality
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Ever
wonder why the US military cant win wars? Why a few ragtag
guerillas could send it running out of Somalia (Black Hawk Down)?
Why one guy with a truck bomb could chase the Marines out of Lebanon?
Why the attempt to rescue the hostages in Iran was such a disaster?
Why the worlds most expensive military cant win its
unending wars against peasants with rifles? How is this possible?
Different jobs
attract different personalities. The Mike Tysons of the world do
not go into ballet, nor do the Mother Teresas become tank commanders.
The career military attracts people who run from the merely abnormal
to the frankly weird. For example, they place extreme value on ritual
and ceremony, on ribbons and medals and colored things more appropriate
to a Christmas tree than to a human being. They are authoritarian
by nature, comfortable in a rigid, hierarchical, and conformist
society that most of us would find equally unbearable and absurd.
Suppose your boss told everyone in the office that they had to wear
exactly the same clothes and stand at attention in the morning to
that he could determine whether they had dressed themselves correctly.
Militaries start with odd material.
Then they inculcate
in themselves an exaggerated sense of their own powers, a sort of
Terminator complex. This is done calculatedly in basic training
when men are in impressionable late or, in the case of officers,
extended adolescence. They absorb the notion of invincibility and
it persists into adulthood.
Examples abound.
When I was at Parris Island in a previous geological epoch, a large
sign in Third Battalion conspicuously said, The Most Dangerous
Weapon in the World: A Marine with his Rifle. This didnt
rise to the level of nonsense. Few Marines are as dangerous as a
hydrogen bomb, and Marines in general are just pretty good light
infantry, well-equipped as an expeditionary force.
But you cant
tell fresh young troops, Youre maybe a bit above average,
but the Afghans are much tougher people, having been raised fighting
and living on dried goat-meat, and they know the terrain, whereas
you will have no idea where you are and your equipment and tactics
are badly suited for the region, so its going to be hard slogging.
Not optimal for recruiting. More profoundly, men in combat arms
want to feel inexorable, deadly, the best. Whether they actually
are doesnt occur to them until the war starts. A satisfying
state of mind is what is wanted.
This preference
for mood over reality runs through their careers. Constantly they
are told that they are the best trained, best equipped, most
powerful and effective fighting force the world has seen.
This is not a statement of fact but of mandatory enthusiasm. The
Pentagons record since WW II has been a sorry one. Further,
effectiveness, training, and so on are relative to a particular
situation: a force well-equipped for desert war against aging Iraqi
armor is not necessarily equipped to fight guerrillas in Quang Tri
or Helmand.
But soldiers,
romantics pretending to be realists, do not think in these terms.
And so you hear from them unending expressions of fierceness. Crush
their skulls and eat their faces, and Oooo-rah!
The tee shirt of the 82nd Airborne said, Death from above.
(I saw a Marine cook whose shirt said, Death from Within.)
The Marine Corps Builds Men, or did until feminists
put an end to that. Now they are The Few, the Proud.
Well and good, but morale is no substitute for victory. (You can
quote me on that.)
The relentless
affirmation of their lethality leads to underestimation of the enemy.
Before you stick your hand into a hornets nest, it is well
to examine the hornets. We dont. The Taliban are primitive
mountain-crawlers with AKs. No problem, sir! We can take them.
Were the best equipped etc. In an ancient war of classical
antiquity, the Vietnamese were held in contempt as rice-propelled
paddy maggots. No problem, sir. Weve got fighter planes and
tanks and endless zip-wowees. Everything but understanding and curiosity.
Of course,
Saigon is now Ho Chi Minh City. In like fashion, the French also
got run out of Viet Nam, and from Algeria, the Russians from Afghanistan,
the Israelis from Lebanon, in each case a trained modern military
losing to angry and inventive amateurs.
The norm is
a wild overestimation of ones own powers, disdain for the
enemy, and inattention to tactical facts. Why? Not because soldiers
are actually stupid, but because they prefer martial ardor to thought.
The compulsory
belief that they are the best-trained, best-equipped etc. elides
quickly into the can-do-ism of the US military. A lieutenant does
not say, Colonel, this is a half-assed idea you have and isnt
going to work. Maybe you need to think a little more. No.
He says, Yessir! Can do, sir! Thus the glandular optimism
of Failure is not an option! when since World War Two
it has become the norm, and There is no substitute for victory,
when losing and going home has proved serviceable, and, The
difficult we can do today; the impossible takes a little longer.
Agreeably cocky, stirring, mindless, and rampant in the Pentagon.
Sir! Yessir! Can do, sir!
In their elevated
estimation of their powers, (which is not personal egotism) militaries
routinely underestimate the difficulty and duration of their wars.
The American Civil War, widely expected to end after First Manassas
(or, as I think Yankees call it, Bull Run), turned into four years
of ghastly bloodshed. In WW I the German general staff thought that
the Schlieffen Plan, keep to the right, to the right, would end
the war quickly, but it turned into four bloody and completely unexpected
years. The Pentagon had no idea that Vietnam would turn into a long,
ugly, losing war, nor that Iraq would present a struggle still not
over, nor that Afghanistan would turn into the ten-year-and-counting
monstrosity that it is. Sir! Yessir! Can do, sir!
Aggravating
the sense of omnipotence is the possession of impressive weaponry.
It is impressive, even the old stuff. (If
interested). The electronics, sensors, noises, flashes, the
sheer technological mastery, the thrill of speed and roar all
appeal to the male love of power and controllable complexity. They
do not elicit the crucial question, Yeah, but how is it going
to work in this war?
In Libya one
sees this touching innocence. Air power would save the day for the
rebels. Can do, sir. Wasnt Libya open desert where air power
should be decisive? The assumption apparently was the usual, that
Gaddafis forces were pathetic mugs who couldnt adapt.
So the Mad Colonels troops began riding in civilian cars and
mixing with civilians and the war is now being called a stalemate.
Who would have thought it?
Yessir!
Can do, sir! Yeah.
April
15, 2011
Fred Reed
is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well and A
Brass Pole in Bangkok: A Thing I Aspire to Be. His latest
book is Curmudgeing
Through Paradise: Reports from a Fractal Dung Beetle. Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2011 Fred Reed
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