Posted on 01/19/2008 12:09:10 AM PST by neverdem
Militaries may begin wars confident in their existing weapons and technology, but they generally win only by radically changing designs or finding entirely new ones. The Union military started the Civil War with muskets and cannonballs, but ended it using bullet-firing repeating rifles and explosive artillery charges. Ironclads, observation balloons, rubberized ponchos, canned meats, and elaborate telegraphic communications followed—some of the inventions enriching peacetime America for decades.
In 1940, a B-17 Flying Fortress bomber was considered an indestructible aerial behemoth; by the end of 1945 even its huge replacement, the B-29 Superfortress, was deemed obsolete in the new era of rocket-armed jet fighters.
In the 1939 Blitzkrieg, Germany invaded Poland with armored columns spearheaded by Panzer Mark III tanks equipped with a 37 mm gun. But by war’s end even beefed-up high-velocity 75 and 76 mm tank guns were overshadowed by 88 mm cannon—and finally by larger 122 mm models. During the five-year course of World War II, sonar, radar, ballistic missiles, and atomic bombs evolved from speculation to battlefield-proven, deadly reality. We entered the Vietnam War with World War II– and Korean-era “dumb” bombs and ended it with laser-guided aerial and antitank munitions.
Things are not much different in the present Iraq war. In March 2003 the United States attacked Saddam’s Iraq confident in our superior Abrams tanks, GPS- and laser-guided aerial munitions, and fast-moving mechanized columns powered by Humvees and Bradley armored vehicles.
Four years later, the U.S. military’s prewar land arsenal has been radically altered in reaction to Iraqi terrorists and insurgents. As in all our prior wars, two kindred developments occurred.
First, what was once considered adequate quickly proved impotent. Light-skinned, troop-carrying Humvees, in a new war without identifiable fronts, were soon shredded by ever-larger roadside improvised explosive devices (IEDs).
A $10 IED might blow up a $500,000 robot. A suicide bomber can take out an affluent American along with the hundreds of thousands of dollars invested in his equipment and training.
Subsequent up-armored kits, with expensive electronic jamming devices, resulted in only marginally safer vehicles. The military then rushed in even heavier-armored Humvees. And now it is sending over Stryker and MRAP (Mine Resistant Ambush Protected) vehicles that use new defensive mechanisms such as deflector shields to thwart land mines—even as new Iranian-made shaped charges, with liquefying copper heads, show an ability to penetrate these vehicles.
Second, entirely new weapons systems appeared. We had experimented with drones for much of the 1990s, but they were never considered critical components of the military’s battlefield arsenal. But in Iraq—with its vast expanses, open borders, nocturnal terrorists, and constant enemy mining of thousands of miles of roads—Predator and Predator B aerial drones, along with a variety of other pilotless airborne surveillance craft, suddenly became vital to monitor and kill once inaccessible terrorists.
In past wars, the spiraling wartime evolution of military technology led later to notable peacetime benefits—from large-scale adaptation of penicillin and airline navigation systems to prefabricated housing. It is hard to predict in the middle of a war what new medicines or conveniences will follow from the current military innovations of the Iraq war. Pilotless drones may one day lead to cheaper air shipping, or better private security and border protection. Law enforcement will benefit from breakthroughs in body armor and widespread biometric systems for identifying terrorist detainees.
Yet something else is changing the face of 21st-century wars that may affect civilian life in ways we can’t foresee. The sheer excellence of large conventional American weapons systems—planes, ships, tanks—means few enemies now challenge them directly.
Instead, the rope-a-dope insurgent tactic is to kill individuals in urban environments, often in an asymmetrical equation of investing many terrorist lives and little money to take out single Americans and millions of dollars of their supporting infrastructure. A $10 IED might blow up a $500,000 robot, in the same fashion that a lone suicide bomber might get close enough to blow up both himself and an affluent American who has hundreds of thousands of dollars invested in his training, equipment, and education.
General weapons parity—in rockets, small arms, body armor, computers, and weapons manuals and tactics—is easily obtained by private purchase from mail-order weapons outlets, just as instructions are freely downloaded off the Internet and enhanced within the protective landscape of urban warfare.
For now, this disturbing challenge from the Iraq war has no answer: in a globalized world of instant communications and easy commerce, how do we prevent ever-increasing enemies from acquiring sophisticated weapons and tactical manuals to nullify ours quickly and cheaply?
Western businesses—as they compete with manufacturers abroad that have lower costs, far fewer regulations, and far less concern about the morality and ecology of how they operate—may think they are immune from this existential military lesson. But the Iraq war also shows us why and how, with parasitic technologies, without care for international law, and with little regard for human life, our rivals are making things off the battlefield far more quickly and cheaply than we can respond to them.
Victor Davis Hanson, a historian, is a recipient of the 2007 National Humanities Medal.
Ping
The guy who beats his sword into a plowshare will be plowing for the guy who didn’t.
Sorry Mr Hanson, thats wrong. Leave out the "Mark".
The question is,with a military capable of conquering the world,how far will America go to survive?
The empiracal evidence of world history demands that conquest requires brutal subjugation of the enemy in order to succeed.Overwhelming firepower over a weak opponent allows the moral to fight nice—but what if it is a life or death struggle for both?
Can America not fight nice if her life depended on it and if ruthless conquest is the only way to ensure the life of America and Americans can we do it?
God I hope so!
Lesson to be learned:
Bomb first, then rebuild.
Re: “how far will America go to survive?”
Thermonuclear trumps all.
With the Islamofascists—it’s exterminate first,then repopulate.
>>>Lesson to be learned:
Bomb first, then rebuild.<<<
Exactly. I miss the old fashioned barbaric American in warfare that didnt rely on technology to get our point across.
What nation would risk nuclear anihilation by attacking us with their limited nuclear capabilities? Even Russia has no idea how many of their old dilapidated Soviet nukes are still functional much less deliverable in their rusted ICBM hulks.Plus,I gurantee our “Star Wars” defensive shield is a lot further along than generally known—strategic defense projects usually are..
What I’m saying is,with our military technology and a pair of cojones,we could tell the world to make nice with us or die!
It’s the ultimate un-PC but what if our lives depended on it?
That would offend the United Nations, the monster we created.
The entire so called WOT could be ended for a generation with just one week of terror from the United States. Too bad we consider our children’s lives not worth the staining of our hands.
The superfluous parasites of the UN would make,in an America threatening crisis,perfect human shields—and should be told so as a courtesy.
Say China dumps her dollars—we give Taiwan nukes.
Say Russia objects and Saudi Arabia doesn’t increase oil production when we blockade Iran.We send nukes to Georgia and Iraqi forces to occupy Arabian oil fields.
Say we tell Pakistan to give up Bin Laden or we send ABMs and smart bombs to India.
Say we drop the 101st and 82nd on Cuba while Castro’s impotent and tell Chavez he’s next.
The possibilities are endless if we had a leader capable of recognizing opportunities.
One of my fav' cards back when I played in the mid 90s :)
When, exactly, was that? The US has never won a war through the use of greater brawn. We've won through better tech, smarter tactics, and more production every time.
The redcoats had muskets and marched in rank across open fields; the Americans had rifles and hid in the trees. Americans pretty much invented guerrilla tactics, though the Spanish resistance to Napoleon created the name.
The Nazis had General Rommel; we had General Motors. For every machine of war they could destroy, we could build three. Even before the US was an official combatant, lend-lease put the unmatched American productivity on the side of the Allies.
From the Revolutionary War to the Cold War to the War on Terrorism, we have never fought by sheer mass -- we have fought, and won, because we are smarter and better armed.
This is where "diversity" is really valuable. You say Germans have the best engineers? We have German engineers. UYou say the French make the best wines? We have French vintners. Irish cops? Yeah, we got a few. Name any specialty, any nationality, and we've got it. The Manhattan Project was a United Nations of genius.
...our rivals are making things off the battlefield far more quickly and cheaply than we can respond to them.
So? It has always taken time to respond to a new enemy threat. Germany never really responded to allied tanks in WW I, and the allies took a long time to effectively respond to Germany's use of chemical warfare. In WW II, how long did it take us to respond to Japan's fighter aircraft?
There is seldom a response that is 100% effective. A well placed shot from a .75 caliber Brown Bess musket can kill just as well as a shot from an AK 74.
We have a winner but implementation seems to be a big prob.
Lesson to be learned:FReepers watch to many action movies.
Bomb first, then rebuild.
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