The few soldiers I’ve spoken to, and these are special forces, want to go to a war. That’s what they trained for, not sitting around doing exercises. They want to know how they’ll do. Officers want to move up the ranks, make their mark and prove themselves. They want to be the ones to make the big move in Afghanistan, change the paradigm. — Brett
So these people are always there. They want leaders to engage in a war. They’re warriors. We are not. I’m guessing by the time they reach the level of advising the President or Prime Minister they’re going to be pushing for the opportunity.
This doesn’t have to make sense. — Brett
Officers are trained to prevent and limit the liability of warfare to themselves (a nation) and there subordinates, as are or moreso, generals. — Wallows
Sorry brett, but, not much of it makes sense insofar as to say that a police officer is there to shoot and kill bad civilians. — Wallows
How do you know that? I think they’re trained to win. — Brett
That’s not the same at all. — Brett
I know (a little) because I've been in the military, and if anyone in it wants to go to war for any... reason, then that's a sign of the derangement of the mind or some sort of illness. — Wallows
It's the job of the military to not engage in conflict, but, to be so battle-ready that any adversary would think twice before bombing one of your home cities. — Wallows
What can I say? I guess I was lied to. But that’s not my impression, nor is it from the reading I've done. — Brett
When was the last time you saw that happen? — Brett
If that was the theory then Britain would have waited battle ready for Hitler’s invasion? — Brett
No... the premise of WWII was that if Hitler invaded Poland, then England and France would retaliate. Nobody really thought Hitler would actually invade Poland; but, nevertheless, it happened. — Wallows
Though I can’t claim to be an expert. But I can’t go along with your thoughts. You haven’t really given me enough to think any differently. — Brett
Forget nuclear in this conversation. That’s just a means of smothering the conversation. We’re talking about military action to win not just as defence. That soldiers and generals want to fight. They want to win. To win the war requires many battles. Each battle has a different objective. How many of those objectives would be a posture of battle ready but no action? Not too many. I don’t know if it’s a military theory to wait for attack. It doesn’t seem that common. Your theory seems to be just scare off the enemy. — Brett
We can't really forget nuclear, because it is the (deterrent) from full-blown conflict... nowadays — Wallows
What prevents conflict, isn't the whim of some general or politician; but, the threat of the conflict itself and the losses incurred or instilled through deterrents. — Wallows
But meanwhile real wars are going on. — Brett
But it doesn’t happen, does it. That has never stopped a war. You’re talking constantly in terms of defence. That’s fine, but the world doesn’t operate like that. Of course no one wants a war. But we get them and soldiers, not conscripts, are interested in it. — Brett
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