Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog [7],
1. As a nation, we chose a professional volunteer military over a military of draftees in the 1970s. This has changed the nature of military service and reduced its role in civilian life. This has allowed our civilian leadership to send our military to war without directly affecting many civilian households. It renders war a distant abstraction for all who do not have active-duty family members.2. As a nation, we have chosen to maintain a state of high readiness and overwhelming force as deterrents. This requires a large, permanent force and an equally permanent expense--though it should be noted that as a percentage of GDP, U.S. military spending continues to decline.3. History suggests maintaining a hollow force with no real combat capabilities is a sure way to make bad decisions and suffer horrendous losses. Hollowing out the nation's military doesn't mean war is any less likely; it just means the losses suffered by those serving will be much higher should war come.4. There is no substitute for combat operations in terms of experience and lessons learned. That said, the lessons are wasted unless they are absorbed by the entire bureaucracy of war-fighting and the civilian leadership that makes the decisions of war and withdrawal.
5. War is not abstract; it it fought by individuals. We should be careful about tossing around abstractions such as 420,000 active-duty soldiers or our overseas commitments that end up falsifying the reality that sending forces into harm's way is sending individuals into harm's way. Reducing messy reality to a clean abstraction is a sure way to lose one's way.6. Simplistic ideologies such as neo-conservativism (neo-con) lead to ill-informed civilian leadership decisions.7. Wars are easier to start than to end.8. We increasingly demand the impossible of our military: every decision is examined with the infinite luxury of hindsight by critics with no combat or military experience, every action is expected to unfold as flawlessly as a Hollywood war sequence, and the military is supposed to perform non-combat duties such as nation-building, despite a paucity of resources and training.9. Our civilian leadership's ignorance of other cultures, their histories and the limits of war have led to catastrophically high levels of hubris and over-confidence.10. War is not diplomacy, nor is it nation-building. Confusing the three wastes our military forces on futile no-win quagmires.11. It's easier to disrupt an enemy's networks of communications and logistics than to defend one's own long supply chains.12. Wars without clear tactical and strategic goals that are achievable with military force cannot be "won" and should never be started.13. The world is not a suburb of Washington, D.C. and its inhabitants do not respond like policy-makers' suburban neighbors.
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And finally:
The responsibility for starting and ending wars, the way wars are fought and the losses we suffer all rest with our elected civilian leadership.
