Navigator wrote: Tue Jun 29, 2021 6:58 pm
What has happened is basically this: all organizations are on a scale with extreme competence of leadership on one extreme (lets say this side is the right side), and extreme incompetence born of cronyism on the other extreme (lets say this is the left side). An example of extreme competence might be something like those leading Intel in the 1980s. The other extreme would be Maduro's cronies in charge of the Venezuelan oil company. Over time, any organization will move from the right to the left unless EXTREME caution is taken. This is even more so the case in governmental organizations that don't produce any kind of measurable output (hence they are missing the feedback that the organization could get from profit or market share). Over time, competence is less and less valued. What becomes more and more valued are your personal connections and ability at "office politics". Competent people are even removed or pushed aside, as those who are less competent and above them get rid of them as threats.
What has happened in the US Military is that to get to the top you have to belong to a specific "club". This club is Airborne (82nd Airborne specifically) Rangers. Without this background, you have serious difficulty getting to the top. Nothing is done to vet or prepare people for strategic thinking other than sending them to the service schools like the War College, which is a joke because no-one fails. You show up, you write papers, you pass. I personally had to tutor a number of people going through this. Their lack of basic military knowledge was appalling.
I'll argue that there has always been a ruling clique in every military organization. For the current US Army, having the tower of power helps a lot. Previously, it would have been armor. Before that cavalry. Cavalry was traditionally the most prestigious branch of any military because the rich horse owning people tended to go there rather than the infantry filled with peasants and other undesirables... For the USN it used to be the
black shoe battleship captains that got to be admirals and a regulation had to be passed to ensure brown shoe aviators could get a ship command. In the US Air Force it's still the fighter mafia that runs things. You seem to be suggesting this is something new when it isn't.
I'll agree that the US military does not put as much emphasis on military history as it should. There is some of that in the ROTC program and more at the service academies, bur little on a formal, ongoing basis. Continuing ed may be a worthwhile addition.
To move on to the examples I gave. Here are better ones (or ones better explained) since I have put more time into thinking about it, and it gets more to your point about "poisoning the well".
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These may be better examples, but they're still somewhat one-dimensional. Using Sukhomlinov as an example, you're ignoring much of the power dynamics of Russian imperial society. For one, there was a tension between proponents of infantry vs cavalry and fortress artillery, the latter mostly filled with the upper class. Sukhomlinov tried to enhance the former but with only limited success. There were too many competing interests and the Tsar, the only one who could have actually forced a change, was limited by those same dynamics. Also note that Sukhomlinov was replaced as Minister of War by Guchkov, one of the people who denounced him most fiercely. Perhaps that might help explain some of the opprobrium he faced.
There was little Sukhomlinov could have done or not done as an individual that would have drastically changed the road Russia was on. John likes to repeat that history is led by the sentiment of the people, not individual politicians. I think the same applies to the examples you're offering.
I mostly picked WW1 commanders as a consequence of my opinion that our next war will be similar to that. That is because WW1 was a shock due to rapid technological advances which were not understood (though they should have been). For us now, there has not been a force on force conflict with competent forces on both sides since the Arab Israeli War of 1973. Technology has obviously advanced a LOT since then, but no one knows for sure how it will influence the battlefield until it gets used in a major power vs major power conflict.
Every major conflict since the Civil War was supposed to "end quickly". The experience of world history is that they don't, and then they turn into giant attritional affairs that take years before one side is completely spent.
I don't expect to have changed your mind on any of this, but it is good to get both sides out there. No one is going to be able to "prove" anything until we actually experience what is coming. I just hope I have done a better job of explaining my position.
There were some rapid technological advances in WWI, but they didn't radically change the course of war on land; the differences were more in scale than in type. The big failures in leadership were in not examining what had happened in the US Civil War and Franco-Prussian war. Submarines, while not new, did achieve a exponentially greater lethality than previous versions and that was a major change. Aircraft also developed rapidly, but other than reconnaissance were not significantly useful yet.
For a modern war between great powers+, operations cannot last for long at high levels due to the fact that supplies of munitions are not large enough to do so and production time is too long. A LRASM looks to be a great anti-ship missile, but at $4 million a pop we're not buying many of them and it could take months to fill a new order. Once they're all fired off there are only inferior alternatives left. China is in the same boat plus the fact that, while is is modernizing its forces rapidly, a lot of its equipment is old and needs replacement.
On top if this is the fact that nuclear weapons do make a difference. I do believe that the leadership in China values their comfortable lives quite highly and wants to enjoy them for a long time. Despite some of the bluster in announcements, I don't think they'd use WMD unless facing utter defeat because the US would be sure to respond to any use and it has more weapons with longer ranges and better accuracy.