Trouble is, that depending on which military
professional youre talking to, the magic ratio of
troop to civilian is between 1 trooper per six
civilians and 1 trooper to 10 civilians. This is
considered the ratio that transforms an army
from an occupying force subjected to combat to
a pacifying force-- in other words the occupying
force is so ubiquitous and dominant that further
struggle is obviously useless. Making the math
easy , using the lower 1 to 10 ratio, we would
need about two million troops there, or roughly
18 times what we currently have. Obviously
there's no way of doing that without reinstituting
the draft, and even then, there are nowhere near
enough training officers and noncoms to
process all these raw, sullen, don-t-wanna-be-
there new troops. The process would take
years.The reason the US military brass is concerned
about all these different factions in Iraq has
nothing to do with political correctness. It has
everything to do with anxiety about the potential
of a sort of urban Tet Offensive, a sudden
organized swarm over US controlled firebases
and such. "Just getting the job done" in an
urban setting will mean unfathomable civilian
casualties, which fuels, rather than dampens,
the ardor of the average, mostly reluctant
insurgent. But kill a man's family, and he's
suddenly in play as a potential terrorist,
regardless of how lazy or pacifist might be his
nature.
B
Baerwald
(view)
Trouble is, that depending on which military
professional youre talking to, the magic ratio of
troop to civilian is between 1 trooper per six
civilians and 1 trooper to 10 civilians. This is
considered the ratio that transforms an army
from an occupying force subjected to combat to
a pacifying force-- in other words the occupying
force is so ubiquitous and dominant that further
struggle is obviously useless. Making the math
easy , using the lower 1 to 10 ratio, we would
need about two million troops there, or roughly
18 times what we currently have. Obviously
there's no way of doing that without reinstituting
the draft, and even then, there are nowhere near
enough training officers and noncoms to
process all these raw, sullen, don-t-wanna-be-
there new troops. The process would take
years.The reason the US military brass is concerned
about all these different factions in Iraq has
nothing to do with political correctness. It has
everything to do with anxiety about the potential
of a sort of urban Tet Offensive, a sudden
organized swarm over US controlled firebases
and such. "Just getting the job done" in an
urban setting will mean unfathomable civilian
casualties, which fuels, rather than dampens,
the ardor of the average, mostly reluctant
insurgent. But kill a man's family, and he's
suddenly in play as a potential terrorist,
regardless of how lazy or pacifist might be his
nature.
