Good stuff thanks for sharing.![]()
Good stuff thanks for sharing.![]()
Japanese culture was very unique and obedient to ultimate authority (the Emperor was a God, remember). It was this principal, more than any other that allowed their society to survive over 1000 years.
Contrast this with post war Germany.... The Werwolf, Edelweiss Pirates and other insurgent groups murdered pro-Allies government officials and civilians, committed acts of sabotage and by some accounts over 3,000 deaths of occupation troops and subsequent reprisals 1945-46, though this figure has been brought into question. Over 40 US personnel were killed in an explosion in the Occupation Police HQ in Bremen June 1945. This was claimed to be the work of Werwolf, but never proved (or disproved).
See: Perry Biddiscombe's Werwolf!: The History of the National Socialist Guerrilla Movement, 1944–1946
"The trouble with the internet is validating sources"-- Abraham Lincoln
"Don't believe everything you read on the internet. That's how World War One started"-- Gen. Curtis E. LeMay
It isn't comparable purely based upon the cutlures (Japan compared to anyone in the middle east) gcrookstron is right.
If you make something idiot proof, someone will make a better idiot... Forget youth, what we need is a fountain of smart. There are no stupid questions, just a lot of inquisitive idiots.Life is pleasant. Death is peaceful. It's the transition that's troublesome. --Isaac AsimovLike, where's spyder been? That guy was like, totally cool and stuff. - foxtrot
I think that one reason we have continued to suffer casualties in Iraq, and Afghanistan is due to excessive meddling of the media, politicians, and too few of combat troops to do the job. Since written history, war has been hell. People die, thats the point of it. Lots of terrible things happen. Lots of those things happen to strike fear into the enemy. Lots of war crimes were committed by all sides in every war up to now. The difference has been, the loser is the criminal, the winners are not brought up on charges on the scale that the loser, aka bad guys are. Now, we have the media up our butt, in about every conflict since, and including vietnam, and everytime our guys try to do their job, we have Jane Fondas crying foul. Then we have politicians with these retarded rules of engagement, to make everyone feel warm and fuzzy. Fight, but dont hurt anyone's feelings. WTF? Then we have insufficient numbers sent there. We relied on locals to help with the hunt for Bin Laden back at Tora Bora. Look how that panned out. Had we used the right number of troops for the job, Bin Laden's head would of been paraded in Washington in 2002. Someone dig up Patton, clone him, and let Blood'n Guts run it like it should be. There wont be any more problems after that. Even the Chinese and Russians would be scared of us,lol.
Street makes some pretty good points. We (American Citizens), primarily receive our information through the media. Bad news sells. Good doesn't. When we set ourselves up as the world police, we aren't going to make anyone happy, at home or abroad, especially with all the cameras focused on the minutia of our operations.
But to point a finger at one facet of this complex engagement and say, "ahah, that's the problem, if we only got rid of [insert anything here], we could win this thing." is overly simplistic.
We are involved in cultures with hugely differing value systems. I doubt seriously there was anything like a majority in either Afghanistan or Iraq that wanted the USA brand of democracy. We wonder why we aren't welcomed by the whole of the population, why the insurgencies are so strong and why there systems are so corrupt. We stand their like some unwelcome big brother messing up their happy little game of marbles trying to enforce new rules in their game that's been played out for thousands of years and we wonder why they attack us instead of being thankful for showing them the error of their ways?
"The trouble with the internet is validating sources"-- Abraham Lincoln
"Don't believe everything you read on the internet. That's how World War One started"-- Gen. Curtis E. LeMay
unfortunately comparing japan to islamic extremists isn't practical. sure, theyre both "extreme" by western standards, but thats about it. anyone ever have significant dealings with asian nationals? very interesting society over there. china, korea and japan really aren't that different in their basic social habits and beliefs. my father in law does research over there most of his life, and i can tell you they submit to authority like you wouldn't believe. far more than western society. it has good effects but also bad, they aren't nearly as creative or ambitious. but when they have a clear authority, they bow to it quickly. additionally, japan had EXTREME national pride. what that meant was that once the destruction had occurred and they were defeated, they knew one thing: they wanted to have pride again. this time, they wisely chose to avoid military pride and simply rebuild economically (with our help), and so thats what they did.
in the middle east, the problem isn't generally the iraqi's or the afghani's. its a bunch of crack pots from other countries. they come in, stir up problems, recruit some people, and cause havoc. it would be like if we had gone into japan and made peace and meanwhile the chinese were shipping over nut jobs to blow us up and stir up trouble. iraq and afghanistan really don't have much national pride because theyve never had much to be proud of. theyve been ruled by dictators and generally been at the bottom of the barrel when it comes to world affairs. the general citizen is more concerned with living and getting by any way possible than getting national pride. remember, they just recently (in the grand scheme of things) had their first elections. ever.
i don't think you can sit back and criticize specific political or military philosophies as the reason for failures in the middle east. the problem over there is that if you don't completely eradicate the enemy (which often means killing many, many civilians) you will never get rid of the problem. you can't reason with them, you can't use rebuilding and economic stability as reasons for peace because many of the people fighting aren't even nationals!
I do agree with one aspect of the subject of Japan.
Every Japanese national was an enemy, there were no "hands off" targets
we went in, firebombed them to boost our morale and show strength after PH. then we dropped 2 atomic warheads to show them our our resolve to win.
Don't ever forget, we didn't start it, but we will finish it.
Sounds like a cool book, Pancho. I will have to read it.
I missed this before, but shortly:
After the 2nd Punic War, carthage was done waging aggressive war. It submitted to the authority of Rome, stopped foreign adventures to expand its empire, crucified pro-war leaders and concentrate on what it did best; trade. the 3rd Punic war was simply Roman paranoia; Carthage submitted to them at every step, up to and including disarming themselves and giving all their weapons to the Romans. Didn't stop the Romans from burning Carthage down to the ground, but Carthage itself was not responsible for the 3rd Punic war and didn't deserve what it got.
Point was, the 2nd Punic war settled the matter, for all intents and purposes. Carthage held no major grudges against Rome, didn't attempt to usurp Rome's power and stopped military expansion.
Edit: And for those asking how this compares to today's conflicts, people who think that we're fighting primarily against Al-Qaeda, the Taliban, or "terrorists" would have been thinking that we were fighting Aviation, the SS and Rommel's troops. ie, they miss the actual center of financial and ideological expansion for Islam as a Political System (Iran and Our Buddies the Saudis.)
To be fair, no public figure has been saying that, lest we wage a war based on national interests with a clearly defined enemy and win condition instead of "yeah we're basically gonna be over there off and on forever."
We've handed the enemy two gigantic wins in the past 10 years - helping them rebuild Afghanistan while handing the country over to the Taliban v2.0, and turning Iraq, which however brutal was not in the main part of the Islamic political system, over to them as well. Now we're spending billions of dollars helping our enemies build up the countries, which we will leave and which will become very quickly more radical until they resemble the old Taliban and/or Iran.
We continue to hand them victories by supporting largely Islamic revolutions which will result in countries much more eager to support attacks against Israel and the US.
In my view the last 10 years has basically been a string of political blunders turning the massive resources and firepower of the US against itself.