Posted on 11/02/2011 8:30:47 PM PDT by DogByte6RER
Rome, Sweet Rome: Could a Single Marine Unit Destroy the Roman Empire?
It was a hypothetical question that became a long online discussion and now a movie in development: Could a small group of heavily armed modern-day Marines take down the Roman Empire at its height? We talked about the debate with James Erwin, the man who scored a movie writing contract based on his online response, and ran the ideas by Roman history expert Adrian Goldsworthy.
James Erwin was browsing reddit.com on his lunch break when a thread piqued his interest. A user called The_Quiet_Earth had posed the question: "Could I destroy the entire Roman Empire during the reign of Augustus if I traveled back in time with a modern U.S. Marine infantry battalion or MEU?"
The question struck a chord with the 37-year-old Erwin, a technical writer from Des Moines, Iowa, who happened to be finishing a book called The Encyclopedia of U.S. Military Actions (Through Facts on File). Erwin tells PM that he wasnt impressed by other users early attempts to answer this question, and so, posting under the username Prufrock451, he came up with his own response. Erwin wrote a 350-word short story chronicling the fictitious 35th Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU), which suddenly disappears from modern-day Kabul and reappears on the Tiber River in 23 B.C. Erwin posted the piece, finished his meal, and went back to work.
After work, Erwin checked reddit. Thousands of users had read his post and they demanded more. Excited and overwhelmed, Erwin continued submitting pieces of this growing Internet phenomenon. The next day, Los Angelesbased management firm Madhouse Entertainment contacted him about representation. Within the week, after Erwin had put just more than 3500 words to screen, Warner Brothers Studios bought the movie rights.
Erwins story, which he titled Rome, Sweet Rome, has a cult following among reddit members, its own subreddit on the site, and has inspired fan music and art. But from the beginning, his posts received comments critiquing the accuracy of his conjured tale. Other redditors commented. Historians commented. Marines commented. "You can definitely tell that the story was something that I dashed out on my lunch hour without doing a lot of research beforehand," says Erwin, an encyclopedia writer and two-time Jeopardy! champ. "Any Marine is going to see mistakes in it, and Im sure if there were Romans around, theyd say the same thing." He plans on doing intensive technical research during the screenwriting process.
Sodisregarding troubling questions about time travel and just why some temporally displaced Marines would feel compelled to destroy an empirecould a single MEU destroy the Roman Empire? To sort through the flood of online responses, PM talked to a Roman military expert and found out how the two sides would line up.
Infantry
An MEU typically contains about 2200 troops, along with their artillery and vehicles. According to Erwins original reddit story (which will be altered for the movie), the Marines are transported back in time with what they have with them, including M1 Abrams battle tanks, bulletproof vests, M4 rifles, and grenades.
The year Erwin chose (23 B.C.) falls in the reign of Augustus, great-nephew of Julius Caesar and considered the first Roman emperor. His legions numbered nearly 330,000 men. They wore heavy leather and metal armor, carried swords and javelins, and operated catapults. They would have never heard the sound of an explosion before. "Obviously, there is a massive difference in firepower," says Roman military expert and author Adrian Goldsworthy. "Not only would Roman armor be useless against a rifle roundlet alone a grenade launcher or a .50 caliber machine gunit would probably distort the bullets shape and make the wound worse."
In the reddit story, however, Erwin said the Marines would not be resupplied with bullets, batteries, or gasoline from the modern world. "There would be no way of obtaining replacements for these supplies in the ancient world," Goldsworthy says. "An average unit of Marines is not likely to be able to make an oil refinery, start generating electricity, or create machine tools to make spare parts for equipment." And even if they could figure it out, it would take many months or even years. So, as soon as the Marines ran out of gas, their tanks would become little more than hunks of metal.
"In the short term and in the open, modern infantry could massacre any ancient soldiers at little risk to themselves," Goldsworthy says. "But you could not support modern infantry. So all of these weapons and vehicles could make a brief, dramatic, and even devastating appearance, but would very quickly become useless. Probably in a matter of days."
Reinforcements
Erwins reddit story stipulates that no more Marines will come back in time, although they may recruit in the ancient world. The Marines would have to; even at their lowest periods, the Roman Empire could conscript hundreds of thousands of soldiers whenever it wanted.
"A Roman centurion would say Lets take 1000 of these guys. Five hundred of them dont come back? Get another 500 guys," Erwin says. "Americans have never been very good at sending people out as cannon fodder. Marines are better trained and are much harder to replace. No Marine sees himself as a cog, and no Marine is."
Both sides pride themselves on having competent leaders down to the smallest unit level. Goldsworthy says the battle would depend on who had the better officers. Erwin believes it would be shock and awe versus numbers.
"Marines are the best warriors ever trained," he says. "But they cant fight an endless wave of soldiers. No one can."
Tactics
The Roman legions and Marines are both highly trained with a clear unit structure and hierarchy of command. They emphasize aggression, dominating the opponent, unit cohesion, and being flexible on the ground. "Its easy to arrange people like chess pieces and march them in a direction," Erwin says. "But when youve got basically huge gangs of people going toward each other at knifepoint, its very hard to maintain a plan. So they have to improvise."
Romans depended on intimidation to psych out their opponents. They marched in unison and appeared as big and conspicuous as possible, overlapping shields to protect each other from attack. But wearing bright colors and lining up straight isnt going to do much good against a unit of Marines, who would be best off attacking guerilla-style while the Romans marched.
One advantage for the Marines: a knowledge of military history. The Marines would know from Romes history that its legions could be susceptible to ambushes, such as the one that led to their crushing defeat at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest. The Marines would have serious disadvantages such as navigation, Goldsworthy says. Besides losing all satellite navigation, their modern maps would be practically uselesseverything from the course of rivers to the placement of forests would be different. But, at least in their first encounters with the Marines, the Romans probably wouldnt know that.
The key for the Marines would be to stay on the move and avoid getting bogged down in one place. If they stood still, Goldsworthy says, the Romans could easily surround them and then take advantage of their huge numbers advantage. The Romans would probably use a variety of nasty siege weapons on the Marines, such as the scorpion, a large crossbow that rapidly fired long bolts. Romans were also known to cut off opponents from water and food supplies, forcing them to surrender or die.
Who Would Win?
Historian Goldsworthy says the MEU would probably lose in the long termwithout the ability to resupply their modern weapons, they simply wouldnt be able to overcome the Roman numbers. However, he says, they could destabilize the Roman Empire, encourage civil war, and initiate regional fracturing. "[The Marines] might discredit the Emperor by defeating the closest army to Rome," he says. "But they would lack the numbers to control Rome itselfwith a population of a million or solet alone the wider empire."
What about in the film? Erwin says he knows the ending, but wont reveal it anytime soon. Hes currently on leave from his technical writing job to work on the screenplay full-time. A release date for the film version of Rome, Sweet Rome, or what it will be called, is still unknown.
Because by 23 BC the Republic was a republic only in name?
By this point Augustus had done the following (in American terms): made himself the permanent President and Commander-in-Chief - no more elections, disbanded the House of Representatives, converted the Senate into a rubber stamp agency, made himself the Supreme Court, declared himself the permanent head of the State Religion (actually declared himself a god, outside Italy).
And after 50 years of almost continuous civil war fought all over the empire, the vast majority of Romans and their subjects were very happy he had done so.
I have no idea what your post has to do with democracy.
If nothing else you are describing a dictatorship.
I was just tossing out a wildcard. My point was that a single modern military unit just doesn’t have the number of rounds for guns, armor or artillery to take on a nation.
My point was the ONLY way a modern military unit could take over an ancient nation would be IF that nation surrendered to the invading “gods”. I just used the example of Cortez to give historical precedent for it.
This is all just hypothetical and I was tossing in my brain-stormed 2 cents.
Just spent most of the day reading 1632 - excellent read.
Thanks for the heads-up!
Don’t forget that each MEU is equipped with a field medical unit, too.
Not just tech as the game changer.
Dietary changes over the period would also have its impact. Modern folk are taller, bigger and heavier muscled than ancient folk. That, taken along with advances in medicine and such, modern folk would look like gods to the ancients.
Exactly.
The Roman Republic at the time in question was no longer a republic in anything but name, much less a democracy.
Therefore the Marines would have a lot to teach them.
A Viet Nam era supply chain study concluded that each trigger-puller was supported by 350 people, from Combat Service Support units back through the entire supply chain.
That MEU better be fully equipped!
I didn’t read the story, so I don’t know where the MEU starts off at Rome itself or far away in a province. My only point is that the Romans lost over and over again. Traditionally, and among eastern peoples including the Greeks, you’d simply surrender not wanting to endure more pain and incur more losses. The Romans didn’t do that. They put together another army and kept fighting.
The moral to the material is as 3 to 1. Being ‘game’ often wins the day.
You sound as if you think a democracy is preferable to a republic.
Not bad for the price eh?
Why would they do that and surrender all their advantages?
The strike capability of a MEU, including the air assets and artillery, would obviate the need to march to, say, Capua, and fight. You take Rome, expend some ammo smashing the first army that comes near you, and then send one jet or Cobra to pound out the forum. City father's quickly realize they can't resist, and you're in charge.
You don't need to conquer and hold the entire body. Just the head.
Are you saying we would show them how to destroy their republic via the ballot referendum like we have? /S
I agree. Like any good drug dealer, Baen lets you have the first couple of doses for free. If you get hooked in though, there is tonsof material there in the 1632 universe.
One of my favorite scenes is where Julie Sims demonstrates her shooting abilities to the king of Sweden. "Challenging the monarch to a duel just isn't done."
The nonfiction articles in the Gazettes really can make you think a bit about what we do, and do not know about the technology that surrounds us.
Tell you what. You try to state clearly what you’re trying to say, or what you think I’m trying to say, and I’ll be glad to respond to it.
For several centuries Rome was an aristocratic republic, with varying elements of democracy, and increasing elements of warlordism and corruption. By 23 BC Rome no longer had a genuinely republican form of government of any variety, aristocratic or otherwise.
Tell you what.
Go back to my first post and try again.
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