My relationship to military service:
Displaying poll results.27646 total votes.
Most Votes
- What's the highest dollar price will Bitcoin reach in 2024? Posted on February 28th, 2024 | 8470 votes
- Will ByteDance be forced to divest TikTok Posted on March 20th, 2024 | 6308 votes
Most Comments
- What's the highest dollar price will Bitcoin reach in 2024? Posted on March 20th, 2024 | 68 comments
- Will ByteDance be forced to divest TikTok Posted on March 20th, 2024 | 20 comments
Missing option (Score:5, Interesting)
Where is the option: I have been bombed by the US military? How about twice?
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Funny)
And you lived?! Unpossibru!
Re:Missing option (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Informative)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999_NATO_bombing_of_Yugoslavia#Civilian_casualties
Re:Missing option (Score:3, Insightful)
Why is it that whenever NATO does something wrong it is only the US that is blamed..whether they had a presence or not.
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Interesting)
Why is it that whenever NATO does something wrong it is only the US that is blamed..whether they had a presence or not.
Because:
1) NATO is mainly made up of US military (correct me if wrong but the impression is that the States have a bigger military than other country's - so by percentages, most soldiers/sailors/airmen tend to be US service personnel
2) Where the US military go, the US media follow - and the world sees it.
3) The US is not a signatory to an international treaty that requires military incidents where people other than a legitimate target (my phrasing) to be tried by an international judge/jury in The Hague, Holland.
I was going to add that the US military is seen as being a little 'free and easy' with bombs, etc. I was in Italy when a NZ observer (and others) was killed by a US aircraft dropping bombs ahead of the target, When I mentioned that to my Italian workmates, they mentioned that a few years back, an F14 pilot had bailed out of his aircraft while being close to a ski-run in the north of Italy. The pilot was ok. The F14 sliced through a cable-car cable on the way to the earth and about a dozen people died from the fall.
The rest of the world also gets coverage of all the college rampages, workplace shootings, etc that the US have. Our impression - rightly or wrongly - is that the US is a little over-relaxed about guns.
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Informative)
The pilot did not eject from his craft. ...
He flow in a no fly zone at a low altitude (it was anyway forbidden to fly that low) 20 dead, the craft landed with minimal damage on a nearby airport.
Both pilots got accused by an usa military court and found: not guilty.
Even in the heart of europe in NATO allied countries the USA behaves like a supreme emporer
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Interesting)
I think it's this sort of thing that's at the heart of people's hatred of the US military, even amongst the US' allies, the fact that even when the US military does do wrong there's no accountability. I've no idea why that's even the case, why any organisation would want to cover up incompetence because that only encourages people to continue to be incompetence because there's no penalty for fucking up.
We similarly had an incident here in the UK where a number of British soldiers were killed/injured by two retarded A10 pilots who strafed their convoy (apparently telling the difference between the union jack and the iraqi flag is a bit beyond US military training) in Iraq and as is standard in the UK we hold enquiries when these types of incidents happen to find out what went wrong, in part to give the families closure, and in part to learn from our mistakes. As part of the inquiry we requested the footage from the aircraft from America, but of course no, they closed ranks, wouldn't give the pilots name and so on and so forth.
Thankfully, someone with some understanding of why accountability matters leaked the video regardless and it was all sorted, but the fact that the American response to accidently killing their own allies is "Fuck off we don't care" rather "Shit, we're really sorry, we'll do everything we can to figure out what went wrong" means it's hard to have any sympathy for the US military when they get blown up by IEDs trigged by nothing more than pissed off civilians and so forth - the hatred they create for themselves is entirely their own doing.
Similarly in Iraq, numerous incidents of rape and murder went unpunished by US soldiers - I can't comprehend why you'd ever allow that. That makes the US soldiers akin to the Japenese soldiers that raped Nanking in my eyes, if you want to play the good guy you don't just go into a country and arbitrarily rape and murder people with little or no punishment.
It's shocking how many Americans will also then defend this sort of thing, as if they're oblivious to the fact that in defending it they only create more hatred of their nation and create an even bigger army of extremists abroad that will be out trying to kill them at every opportunity. No one's saying that accidents don't happen, but don't just fucking sweep them under the carpet, actually investigate to see what went wrong, whether anyone was at fault, and try and right the wrongs with your allies by bringing closure and learning from the mistake, and if someone was at fault, then bring them to justice, don't let them get away with it, because in doing that, the US has effectively legalised murder/rape by it's soldiers which isn't a good place to be.
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Informative)
Similarly in Iraq, numerous incidents of rape and murder went unpunished by US soldiers - I can't comprehend why you'd ever allow that. That makes the US soldiers akin to the Japenese soldiers that raped Nanking in my eyes, if you want to play the good guy you don't just go into a country and arbitrarily rape and murder people with little or no punishment.
I would appreciate even one link to a rape that happened that was not punished. I am not going to touch on the murder thing since that is always debatable in a war zone; although I assume you are talking about Haditha... links please.
To the parent, IIRC, it was a pair of EA6B electronic warfare jets that were flying "map of the land" which means extremely low. Their charts did not show the ski lift line but it was NOT a no fly zone. The tail of one of the planes managed to cut the cable supporting the ski lift. Neither plane was damaged.
The pilots of both planes were administratively disciplined (read their careers were over and were unemployable). Americans do not allow their soldiers and airmen to be tried in foreign countries because of politics never allowing a fair trial.
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
Americans do not allow their soldiers and airmen to be tried in foreign countries because of politics never allowing a fair trial.
Bit of a blanked statement don't you think? You are basically claiming that the rest of the world runs kangaroo courts.
Re:Missing option (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, I guess the US policy of simply not having trials at all and just detaining "enemy combatants" indefinitely without any legal hearings is much more fair.
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
If you need a link, you must be unable to read a newspaper or the link if it is supplied. There have been so many that the media is awash with such incidents but you demand a link as if by demanding it you somehow discredit the comment and then you refer to one incident as if it is the only one you know of.
Your response to the low flying incident is equally dumb. There should have been an inquiry in Italy by an Italian court and if the US is too arrogant to comply with that they should not be there. It is that arrogance, that you display, that is the downfall of the US. A once proud nation that had the whole world behind them not too long ago has become despised because of the way they look down on everyone. A soldier who kills innocent people may not get a fair trial so the rights and lives of people in other countries mean nothing. That is exactly why there are so many people around the world trying so hard to kill Americans. It was a lesson from Vietnam that the US still has not learnt. You used to bomb villages to kill a couple of enemies and in doing so kill countless innocent people who had relations who now became enemies. Kill 2, create 20. Now in Pakistan the US uses drones to murder suspects and in doing so take out a whole city block killing countless innocent women and children and creating many new enemies. Kill 1, create 10. How can such a once proud country be so stupid?
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
If the US allowed Canada to try US Troops you must necessarily allow Iran to do so in the same circumstances. The basic principle undergirding international law is the equality of states. Moreover in this instance you wouldn't be allowing a country with sane courts to run the trial, you'd be letting Italy do it. Guy Stair Sainty relied on this, and was ruled liable for 20,000 Euros for making statements the Courts admitted were entirely true; apparently mostly because his opponent managed to convince said courts to send all legal correspondence to his old address in the US rather then his actual current British address. Instead of ruling logically, that if you (the ostensible King of Portugal) can't find the guy you can't sue him, they gave the moron everything he asked for.
It's also important to keep in mind that civilian courts of any kind are not very good places to hold a military trial. To most Italians this ski lift incident is clear-cut because most Italians have never flown 200 MPH a few feet above the ground in a mountain range. At that speed a pilot who focuses on the air right ahead of him goes splat in roughly 30 seconds (or 1.66 miles). He's not gonna see a 2-inch cable until it's too late. The fault in this case lay either with a) the Italian government for not informing the guy who does aerial charts that you can't fly there, or b) the guy who does the charts for not putting the ski-lift on his chart.
But the only way to guarantee the Judge is open to this line of reasoning is make the entire Court military...
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
It's not fair, it's just what needs to happen. They're not criminals, because they were caught as combatants in a war zone, but they can't be considered POWs because there is no government that can take responsibility for their actions. The Geneva Conventions only work because if you follow them, the other government is likely to follow them to protect their soldiers who have been captured.
In this war, if US troops are captured, they either get beheaded or have some other sort of non-POW thing happen to them. If the US captures a combatant, they simply go to Gitmo. Not a great place to be, but since technically being a combatant who is not under the Geneva Conventions, we'd have every legal right to shoot them on sight and throw them in a ditch, because it's war and that's what they'd do to our soldiers.
We *don't* shoot them and throw them in ditches because we don't consider that acceptable behavior for civilized people, but at the same time, these guys aren't POWs, and they don't act like an organized or honorable military. So, if these guys are plucked off the battlefield and put in Gitmo, I'm not overly worried about them, and what's more, I don't see any violation of customary or formal international law. There is a hole in the Law of War that these people fit into, and since their own countries of birth are unwilling or incapable of stopping them from attacking our troops, then it becomes a matter of war.
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
Who were caught as combatants in a war zone? I do hope you are not referring to those in Guantanamo as the majority of them were not combatants in a war zone and even if they were that war is over. There is no war and no logic reason to hold them. America has not followed the Geneva Convention in any way in that regard. Most of those taken were not from any war but from a witch hunt. Of the 4 returned to Britain, only one had even been to Afghanistan. The US offered rewards to intelligence services that gave up terrorists and for a couple of thousand $$$ policemen in places like Yemen would point to their neighbour and say "he's a terrorist". After a couple of months torture in an unknown country the evidence is obtained.
In Afghanistan, the US had invaded a country and a lot of people in that country defended themselves. I for one respect that. They are then called terrorists for doing so. That is ridiculous propaganda and the US has become worse than Stalin for that. Defending against a US invasion does not make someone bad. The US leafleted the battlefield saying "surrender and we will let you go home"... Those that surrendered are the ones from the battlefield that are in Guantanamo... It is a great shame that any country can behave so cowardly.
You obviously have not being following the news either as the US forces do shoot them and leave them and their women and children in ditches for minor things like driving badly or not being able to read English. Wake up while you still have some friends left and start to really defend your country from its demise. You are currently a great example of why the US is in so much shit...
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Informative)
There's a semi-hidden cemetery in France filled with executed US WWII solders who raped and murdered the locals. The military has such disrespect for them that they are only marked with numbers, not names. We don't execute quite so much anymore, but we still do proper military criminal investigations into such allegations.
There are two sides to this. On one, we talk as you do about making sure justice is done for crimes committed, and the damage inherent in not fully investigating. On the other hand, there's the concern about railroading troops who were doing the best they could in a bad situation. A soldier fighting for his life in a firefight shouldn't have to ask to for a time-out so he can consult an attorney to avoid potential Monday-morning legal quarterbacking. This is all the harder with an enemy who doesn't wear a uniform and blends in with the locals.
And, yes, every friendly fire incident gets a full investigation. Criminal charges are unlikely since most of these are truly accidents with multiple contributing factors. However, we once railroaded a colonel out of the Army over a friendly fire incident, using the fact that he'd violated some local command policy by going up that day when they couldn't find an actual violation of law in the friendly fire incident itself. Because of feelings just like yours, there is a LOT of political pressure from the very top to convict for friendly fire incidents, and in those cases we have to be extra sure that justice, not mob justice, is done.
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
There are two sides to this. On one, we talk as you do about making sure justice is done for crimes committed, and the damage inherent in not fully investigating. On the other hand, there's the concern about railroading troops who were doing the best they could in a bad situation. A soldier fighting for his life in a firefight shouldn't have to ask to for a time-out so he can consult an attorney to avoid potential Monday-morning legal quarterbacking. This is all the harder with an enemy who doesn't wear a uniform and blends in with the locals.
A huge difference between the US and other western countries is that the US soldiers prime directive is to keep themselves safe, while for other countries, civilians rank above soldiers, and are to be protected at high costs up to and including your own life - even civilians on the enemy side.
Protecting your own ass by firing at civilians from gunships or bombing from a safe height isn't valor, and it's downright scary that not only do they get away with it, they get fucking medals for it.
Re:Missing option (Score:4, Insightful)
-Written from Afghanistan
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
A huge difference between the US and other western countries is that the US soldiers prime directive is to keep themselves safe, while for other countries, civilians rank above soldiers, and are to be protected at high costs up to and including your own life - even civilians on the enemy side.
If this were actually true we wouldn't be 93% of non-Iraqi casualties in the Iraq war. We wouldn't be 65% of coalition casualties in Afghanistan.
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
The one that purposely targets civilians. If you'd like, we could go back to previous generations of warfare and just carpet bomb the cities that are giving us trouble,
Oh, like you did with Dresden?
or conduct regular executions of civilians until they give up the enemy operatives they are protecting,
Oh, like you did in Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
or purposely starve entire regions sympathetic to the enemy.
Oh, like you did during the Manifest Destiny years?
I'm sorry, but I have absolutely no sympathy for craven hired killers. There is nothing honorable whatsoever about the US military and its conduct, compared to any other military force.
I believe the base of the problem is, as earlier said, that the prime US responsibility of a US solder is to protect himself, not to protect civilians. This is barbaric, and the results are predictable.
Re:Missing option (Score:4, Insightful)
You're living in a dream world, one where war is waged by people who don't protect themselves against people who shoot at them from behind civilians, and live among civilians.
The examples you used from WWII are ones of horrific destruction, and yet they pale in comparison to the sheer scale of the conflict that they were in. I guess if you want to pretend that the US military has ever pretended to be a humanitarian NGO, you might have a point, but honestly, you're telling a boxer that he's more violent than other boxers because he threw bigger punches.
However, within the scope of what military forces do, they can be more or less honorable, and more or less concerned with the lives of civilians. The US military is more concerned with civilian casualties, but they remain a military force, and so if you apply the Florence Nightingale approach to judging them, they will always come up short. They are also in so many places that if you compare them to militaries that have had no scope for operations, they will also look worse. It's easy to look bad when you have fought for a long time in many places for many reasons.
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
Like the British-conceived and led bombing of Dresden did.
You mean the ones that saved an estimated ten million Japanese civilian lives by breaking the Japanese will to fight? They were literally planning to arm women and children with bamboo spears to fight the invaders.
More like the standard tactic in African conflicts, or what we did in the US Civil War.
But that's the point anyway. All those were long ago, and the US has made vast progress beyond that. But you'd like to bitch about the conditions now as if there had been no progress.
Instead of dropping a $250 bomb on an enemy entrenched in a civilian area that could land 100 meters off target, we use $20,000 bombs with a 9-meter accuracy. Yes, we're evil, I say we just don't worry and use the cheap bombs. Whey are we spending all this money to protect these civilians?
You want to compare? Okay, God's Army. Child soldiers, and rape and murder of randome civilians is standard policy. Have you seen what the Sudanese military does lately?
You remind me of that Indian Ocean tsunami. We were one of the first responders, with both a carrier strike group and an amphibious strike group parked offshore running 24-hour relief missions. We also sent a hospital ship and over a dozen other ships. Together they could produce over a million gallons of critical fresh water per day for the locals (lack of clean water is the major post-disaster killer). We also dispatched a fleet of Air Force cargo planes with supplies, and a squadron of military search and rescue planes.
With all that, we had relief workers onboard, eating our food, flying in our helicopters, distributing our supplies, and all they could do is talk about how evil the US military is.
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
Instead of dropping a $250 bomb on an enemy entrenched in a civilian area that could land 100 meters off target, we use $20,000 bombs with a 9-meter accuracy. Yes, we're evil, I say we just don't worry and use the cheap bombs. Whey are we spending all this money to protect these civilians?
How about dropping no bombs, and send in some troops, some of which will surely die? That's protecting civilians, and making a sacrifice.
Re:Missing option (Score:4, Informative)
It was a Nothrop Prowler, not a Grumman Tomcat. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cavalese_cable_car_disaster_(1998) [wikipedia.org]
They were flying too low and based on maps that did not mention the new aerial tramway. They were court martialed in the U.S.A., acquitted, then trialed a second time and were sentenced to a short prison time.
Re:Missing option (Score:4, Informative)
The US behaves according to the treaties, and they called for a US trial. There was sufficient reasonable doubt on the manslaughter charges, with the cables missing from maps, flight floor notifications not given or read, and aircraft malfunctions. Mistakes that led to this were went up to the commanders, yet people wanted only crew to be convicted. As is often true with military accidents, the actions of several people, and several intertwined conditions, coincided to create that accident.
Even then the two were railroaded out of the military, with loss of all benefits, because of pressure from the Italians. And in the end the US paid the agreed compensation to the families.
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Informative)
Believe me, Americans are not happy with the way NATO is going either. From a US point of view, Europeans are leaving most of the expense and dirty work to the US and then complain about how the US does the job.
Gates put it pretty bluntly:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/06/10/world/main20070467.shtml?tag=contentMain;contentBody [cbsnews.com]
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Insightful)
That's because nobody else considers those countries a threat. If you guys want to start modern day Crusades, you can damn well do it yourselves.
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
Yes! This! All the damn whining and bitching by Europeans about the US Military why don't you kick us out? Please! I'm tired of my tax money going overseas to keep them safe from whomever so they can fund their socialism without having to actually defend themselves. I wish you'd send all the US soldiers home, twenty years later Germany will be running Europe again. It's the only European country that knows it's head from it's ass. (Figuratively Speaking of course)
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Interesting)
As a swiss citizen (we've got a lot of guns, but tend not to use them), I don't think you're over-relaxed about guns. I think you're rather obsessed with them, but over-relaxed in the USE of guns ;)
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
In the UK the coroner's verdict would almost certainly be recorded as "Unlawful killing by person or persons unknown", however.
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Insightful)
2 reasons :
A] NATO is essentially following US orders. The reason why a lot of european political parties in different countries have been opposed to the participation of their military in NATO. (Although to my knowledge only France has withdrawn from NATO and only for 30 years, they are back)
B] The United States of America as other great democracies such as China, Russia, Saddam hussein's Irak, Iran, Israel and North Korea, doesn't recognize the authority of the La Hague international Penal Court. Therefore No crime of war perpetrated by the US military can ever be trialed by an independant court.
cf : Vietnam, Kosovo, Irak 1 and 2, the contras, etc etc.. I'm not going to start listing the CIA black Ops it would take days.
The truth is mathematically simple : the US military is responsible for more civilian deaths since 1945 than any other military forces, and the number of crimes of war and crimes against humanity they perpetrated far surpasses any other nation. Yet they are the self-appointed judge of what is right and human on the planet, and have been for 70 years. Kind of makes me think of the bible : Satan kills 10 person in the whole book, God 2 millions and something. But God is good and love and satan is bad. Because fuck logic, right ?
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually the US can always re-sign and ratify the Rome statute, after which it will be possible to be tried for war crimes. As I understand it, they have problems with suspicion that American citizens who are brought to trial at the Hague may not receive due process, including a jury trial.
The US signed the Rome Statute at first under Clinton (but didn't ratify it), then the Bush administration revoked the signature (which would mean they really don't have to even pretend to abide by it). Now the current administration is showing signs of being interested in the ICC again, but they haven't directly stated that they want to sign or ratify it. It seems like a thin line the current administration is walking - they want other countries to be held accountable at the Hague, but not themselves quite yet. Maybe once the government isn't at war, they'll be more likely to ratify it (since war crimes prior to ratification can't be prosecuted).
I disagree with the statement that the US has perpetrated more crimes of war and crimes against humanity than any other nation. Although the US is by no means a saint, Sudan, Rwanda, Egypt, Syria, Cambodia, Iraq, North Korea, China, and others have had their share of crimes against humanity in the past 70 years, including genocide in some cases, without trial in an international court. Iraq 1 and 2, Kosovo, Vietnam, etc. aren't by their nature war crimes. War crimes do happen in every war, and I personally think people who commit them should be held accountable by the Hague (including Americans). But to say that the US as a whole has committed more crimes against humanity than, say Rwanda where 800,000 people were killed in 1994, or the Kmer Rouge which killed 1.7 million Cambodians in the late 1970's, is nonsense.
Re:Missing option (Score:2, Interesting)
That about sums up the US government's attitude towards "collateral damage" (voluntary manslaughter to those who accept reality), and underscores the reason why the US government "allows" it to happen (makes it happen to those who accept reality). Most of you probably aren't aware that the US government actually has a quota on civilian deaths -- if the number is less than 30 (if I remember correctly), they don't even need to call their superiors to "sign off" on it. If the number is greater than 30, they call the boss and the boss decides whether "it's worth it" to continue (to the US government obviously, not the victims) -- if the PR risk is low enough, they simply continue.
Re:Missing option (Score:4, Funny)
Everyone knows 1 US soldier is worth the entire population of whichever country they happen to be bombing at the time.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
got better things to do (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:got better things to do (Score:5, Interesting)
I spent 4 years in Uncle Sam's Air Farce. I lived in a dormitory, not a tent. I slept on a bed, not on a cot. I handled an M-16 a whopping total of 4 days of those 4 years. I spent those 4 years working on fighter jets (F-16, to be more specific) and was able to pass the exams for an FAA Airframe Mechanic's License when I got out.
I used my VA benefits to pay for expenses while I finished off a B.S. CompSci, after I got out.
Finished college over a decade ago. Making plenty more than I would've if I'd stayed in, or had never finished college.
If I'd joined the Army, I would've spent more time in a tent, more time on a cot, more time eating really lousy food. Just because I served my country doesn't mean I felt the need to do it the hard way.
Missing Option (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Missing Option (Score:3)
Yeah, think of the contractors! Oh, so many, many contractors! Working hard with all that unlimited overtime on cost-plus contracts. Maintaining those job security clearances so they can stay eligible for those corporate welfare programs they're entitled to.
Ah, fun times, and interesting people (particularly the servicemen who had the best stories of working with awesome technology). But in the end, I decided to finally leave the DC area because I didn't really want to be a beltway bandit my whole life.
Re:Missing Option (Score:3)
My brother was in the Navy and now he works for a contracting company fixing weapons systems. I would say my brother is doing good work and is in no way taking advantage of anything; he doesn't make a ton of money (living wage for Virginia).
I, myself, work outside of the beltway as a Contractor on-site, side-by-side with government employees; we do a lot of good work and we have never had a cost-plus contract where we say, "hey, we didn't finish, give us another couple million or you get shit." We also don't have unlimited overtime; we have money on a contract and that's all we get. If we need to spend it in three years and we have low manpower to do so, we are allowed to do overtime at straight pay (no time and a half or double time) to fill the void of man hours we're missing. I also don't have any corporate welfare programs; I have just as much medical/dental/etc as any other full-time employee I know in any software job.
Don't blame all contractors when all you hear about is the big companies building satellites or aircraft who can't get things done on time; we're not all that way (and those instances make us upset, too).
Re:Missing Option (Score:3)
I know some people who went to Iraq and Afghanistan on contracts. They got paid a rather high set salary for the year, and within that usually worked 16 hour days, six days a week. And while being subjected to danger, they weren't allowed to carry a weapon.
uhmm, Wherefore art thou, Cowboy Neil? (Score:5, Interesting)
.
( ) -- Halliburton / KBR / Blackwater contractor
( ) -- Conscientious objector
( ) -- I'm still hiding out in Canada!
( ) -- Deferral for college, wink-wink
( ) -- I'm a holder of political office, and I got my son into the National Guard, he didn't have to show up, and then he became president.
( ) -- Sir, Cowboy Neil is my drill instructor, Sir!
Re:uhmm, Wherefore art thou, Cowboy Neil? (Score:5, Funny)
It means "why".
Mad Scientist Option? (Score:5, Funny)
Waning Conscription (Score:5, Interesting)
Some decades back the "past non-US military" option would have been a lot larger in a poll like this. But since then most European countries have phased out conscription, meaning it's no longer the norm for men.
Interestingly some have said this reduced gun crime in the past: when someone teaches you at the start of adulthood that guns kill and then teaches you how to kill only when ordered to kill you're less likely to use guns for your own purposes. I don't really believe it but it's an interesting viewpoint.
Another interesting thing is that a generation back you could probably have given an AK-47 to a random European male and there would have been a greater than 50% chance that he could use it. And by use I mean not just firing, but more like a rudimentary load-set to single fire-take aim-fire routine. Would it ever have repelled the Soviet Union? Probably not, but on the other hand tens of millions of riflemen can in principle do anything. It's good we never had to find out.
Re:Waning Conscription (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah, I managed to avoid conscription when I was 18 by simply acting sufficiently disinterested. Apparently there is a point at which even the (Swedish) army just sort of gives up on any hopes of turning you into a soldier.
Mostly I just didn't see the point in wasting a whole year running around in the woods when I could go straight to college.
Re:Waning Conscription (Score:4, Insightful)
Sure, because running around in the woods practicing how to repel a soviet invasion that was unlikely to happen since the USSR had already imploded on itself was much more useful for society than going to college...
Also, I didn't refuse to serve, I was simply very clear on my lack of interest and they chose to let me off the hook (technically up until we got rid of conscription they could've decided to reverse that decision and even now if a war pops up they can bring conscription back and make me go through Grundläggande Militärutbildning).
Re:Waning Conscription (Score:3)
Re:Waning Conscription (Score:3)
I seem to remember reading about a study where they found that a very large percentage of troops that end up in combat involving small arms deliberately aim to miss.
Okay, I went and found a link. http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/hope_on_the_battlefield [berkeley.edu]
The sad thing is that it looks like the military took it seriously and has taken steps to reduce the no-fire rate, such that in vietnam it was down to just 5% of soldiers not endeavoring to kill the enemy. In WW2 it was more like 80%
Re:Waning Conscription (Score:3)
Re:Waning Conscription (Score:2)
Another interesting thing is that a generation back you could probably have given an AK-47 to a random European male and there would have been a greater than 50% chance that he could use it.
Yet another interesting thing is that right now you can give an AK-47 to a random drug dealer in the US and there is a 100% that he can use it.
Although, he couldn't strip in down, clean it, and reassemble it blindfolded like the Russian grunts can do.
But, of course, nowadays kids can learn all they need to know about an AK-47 on YouTube.
Re:Waning Conscription (Score:3)
I'm writing this from the perspective of a former U.S. military person. The problem is too few of our political elite have served. When they get elected and are confronted with decisions of war and peace, or whom to kill or not to kill, they tend to defer to the military establishment. A little more front-line experience at the top would probably result in a more skeptical and more questioning civilian leadership.
To get more buy-in, or so that everybody has some skin in the game, some form of reverse draft might not be such a bad thing. A reverse-draft would imply that the children of the top 1-2% wealthy households would be automatically drafted for four a four-year enlistment in a deploying unit, i.e. the rich kids go first. Such a draft might even give the political elite a good high-pass filter to filter out all the unnecessary, stupid wars.
Re:Waning Conscription (Score:3)
Yet Another Missing Option (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Yet Another Missing Option (Score:2)
How is that a missing option? It's not a poll about your parentage. You either are or were in the military, or you never have been. For once a slashdot poll actually seems to have covered all bases. This is such a rare occasion that we should be celebrating! :)
Comment removed (Score:2)
Re:Yet Another Missing Option (Score:5, Insightful)
which is how I voted, but:
someone in a military family has a distinctly different relation to the military (and often to the surrounding community and to society at large) than does an equivalent person in a civilian family. Certain rules®s apply to families of military personnel and certain privileges apply to them as well. I recall going through a checkpoint to go to school, or having to carry my ID going to the pool or the beach, because I had to go back through the main gate to get back home. I remember dreading my father being transferred, and feeling both sad and guiltily relieved when he was sent overseas by himself, because it meant that I wouldn't have to leave my friends and home again. On the other hand, unlike most citizens of the US, I had free medical care - until my father retired. And really cool parades. And hands-on time in a tank.
Even today, when I doubt I could adjust to military life, I find some aspects of the civilian world irrationally chaotic. I tear up when I see a "missing man" flight overhead, or a military funeral. I even miss the sound of "Colours" at sunset.
My life is no longer bound up with the military, but my memories and emotions still inextricably tie me to it, and I greatly appreciate those who serve.
A small percentage are veterans (Score:5, Informative)
Re:A small percentage are veterans (Score:3, Insightful)
Presently, the numbers are much worse. Only .45% of the U.S. population has served in the military since 2001.
To make matters worse, the number of veterans in Congress is at an all-time low since WWII. [cnn.com] A Congress full of people like John McCain and Daniel Inouye could actually get things done, instead of this pointless bickering. Plus, Inouye is a complete badass. [badassoftheweek.com]
Re:A small percentage are veterans (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:A small percentage are veterans (Score:3, Interesting)
The 10,000ft view of that particular POV is this;
-Military service gives you a bullshit tolerance that's considerably higher than that of the average person.
-You gain a much better understanding of how to be a cog in a machine. Right now, we have a legislative body full of "mavericks" and "rebels" who couldn't pour piss out of a boot if the directions were on the bottom, mostly because working *with* someone else is perceived as a sign of weakness. You understand that whether you're a big cog or a little cog, none of you get anything done alone.
-The "we oughta bomb them fuckers" mentality gets tempered somewhat by service. To a legislator that didn't serve, actions like Grenda are considered 'saber rattling' and 'showing force.' To someone who served, Grenda is "that place where that guy from basic was killed. Man, what was his name? His sister was super hot and I think his Dad was the guy I talked to at graduation who served with my Uncle..." Different perspectives.
It's a blanket statement to say that they're somehow "better" qualified. Veterans can be total fuckheads as well (Hi there, Randy! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randy_Cunningham [wikipedia.org] ), and they can be ideologically polluted tools who spout nothing but party lines, but the general rule is that at least there *some* baseline for those folks.
Re:A small percentage are veterans (Score:3)
And you are exactly right that it is that direct connection to people who serve which helps to temper the desire for "saber rattling" because of the understanding of the true costs in lives and families affected. How's that for a TCO = total cost of ownership for a military plan of action.
An Army of One: (Score:3)
I keep my army up my sleevey.
Re:An Army of One: (Score:2)
I was an Army Sgt in Canada (Score:2)
I was an Army Sergeant in the Canadian Armed Forces, know quite a few people who fought in Afghanistan while the US went off mission, a few of who died, and I have US relatives who are in Afghanistan right now.
Now bring the troops home and stop whining.
I am in the Lord's Army. (Score:3, Insightful)
To the tune of The Old Gray Mare:
I may never march in the infantry
Ride in the cavalry
Shoot the artillery
I may never fly o'er the enemy
But I'm in the Lord's army!
Yes Sir!
I'm in the Lord's army!
Yes sir!
I'm in the Lord's army!
Yes sir!
I may never march in the infantry
Ride in the cavalry
Shoot the artillery
I may never fly o'er the enemy
But I'm in the Lord's army!
Yes sir!
NAVY (Score:2)
Never Again Volunteer Yourself!
Army Ant (Score:2)
I am an army ant type. :P
Didn't even register (Score:2)
I was actually born during the two-and-a-half year period where you didn't even have to register for the Selective Service. And since the most recent war at the time was the Vietnam War, I was not exactly motivated to volunteer.
Not sure of my status (Score:2)
I enlisted in the Marine Corps my senior year of high school. At boot camp, I had an accident on the confidence course and washed out due to the injury. My DD-214 is listed as an entry level separation.
To be on the safe side, I said that I am not a veteran. This was in 1982, so I probably wouldn't have seen any action had I stayed for my initial tour of duty anyway.
Re:Not sure of my status (Score:3)
At least you had the guts to give it a try. That makes you a veteran in my book, unlike 80% of the armchair Generals on here.
Re:Not sure of my status (Score:3)
I'm pretty sure that would count sufficiently to qualify as a veteran. You are a member of the military as soon as you sign the appropriate paper work. They make a big deal about being in for real once you graduate basic or whatever but they had to give you a DD-214 because you were already legally a service member.
Defended our way of life (Score:4, Funny)
If you haven't served, you don't really understand (Score:4, Insightful)
I left the Army a couple of years ago and I'm doing well as a civilian. I'd do it all over again if I had to choose.
Serving is something which can only be truly understood by those who have served. Judging from the polling results (and slashdot snark in general), a minority of people here have been in some form of service or another. The rest, whether they once desired to serve or not, just don't "get it". The people I've met are great, the memories we've had are unforgettable (for good or ill), and the places and cultures I've experienced are vastly different and unique. That's a whole lot of experience I gained which I never could have gotten as a college student or anything else. The choice is always an individual thing, at least in the USA, but there's nothing wrong with NOT donning a uniform and volunteering to fight.
To my brothers- and sisters-in-arms: thank you for your service. You have my respect.
Re:If you haven't served, you don't really underst (Score:4, Interesting)
I scored nearly perfect on the "placement" tests; and was offered a special assignment in a "technically advanced information gathering unit". I was looking forward to cool toys, a chance to travel, and doing something useful. Instead I ended up stateside in a large city in a unit where people went in and never came out.The internal politics in the unit -- which was 10 years past its prime, was desperately looking for a relevant future, and which senior NCOs ruthlessly culled the incoming recruits for small minded policy nazis -- let's just say it was a very depressing situation. The unit was over-weight in senior NCOs and could not keep new recruits past the 4 year mark. I rebelled and barely lasted past 2 years. A decade later I heard most of the unit was RIFed and the tasking sold to a civilian contractor. (Don't ask; can't tell).
I learned how to spot and avoid policy nazis. Was this useful to my country?
No pacifist option? (Score:5, Funny)
Why do we pacifists always get ignored?
I'm going to kill whoever chose these options for this poll.
I Consulted With The Military (Score:5, Interesting)
But I did not -- and would not -- have anything to do with occupation. That is a different story altogether, and had nothing to do with their "offensive capabilities".
Hell, if I'd been told the truth (i.e., that their actual "offensive capabilities" against the United States pretty much amounted to little more than peashooters), I would have had nothing to do with it from the start. We were all lied to. And we're still being lied to.
Re:I Consulted With The Military (Score:3)
I'm still waiting for operation Misunderestimate Legitimate Rape.
Really people? (Score:4, Insightful)
And apart from that, I find it appalling that a seeming majority of people think military service is some kind of noble endeavor. The biggest nations and military alliances aren't fending off invasions of their homes. They ARE the invaders. They go to foreign lands, meet exciting new people and MURDER them. Usually on the flimsiest pretexts. "I was following orders" is not an excuse for killing someone. "They shot at me first" isn't an excuse when YOU are the invader. That's akin to a burglar claiming self-defense in shooting a homeowner who tried to defend his property. "I joined to do good and defend my country but a bad president started a bad war" is NEVER an excuse. You chose to join knowing that could happen (and based on, oh, say all of US history, you should have known it was damn likely), and when it comes right down to it, you choose to fire a weapon and take a life. Military service is NOT noble, it's despicable. Whatever the intentions, the soldiers make possible the wholesale slaughter of foreign peoples. Until people stop glorifying the trained attack dogs of the state, and stop making excuses for their actions, governments will have a plentiful source of cannon fodder and bullet sponges to continue invading and slaughtering.
Re:Really people? (Score:5, Insightful)
And yes, it is slavery.
No, it is not. Please stop abusing that word to describe things that are not slavery. Slavery is a well-defined concept that does not apply here. I'm not saying it isn't bad or evil, just that it is not slavery. You don't become someone's property, your children don't become someone's property. It has a limited term, there are ways to leave, there are limits to what they can do to you and a million other differences.
Until people stop glorifying the trained attack dogs of the state, and stop making excuses for their actions, governments will have a plentiful source of cannon fodder and bullet sponges to continue invading and slaughtering.
Which is exactly why it is glorified. Without the glory, nobody sane would do it.
Re:Really people? (Score:3, Interesting)
No, it is not. Please stop abusing that word to describe things that are not slavery. Slavery is a well-defined concept that does not apply here. I'm not saying it isn't bad or evil, just that it is not slavery. You don't become someone's property, your children don't become someone's property. It has a limited term, there are ways to leave, there are limits to what they can do to you and a million other differences.
Your "well-defined" definition of slavery appears to be based specifically on the US system of African slave trade and exploitation, which is among the most extreme and horrific implementations of slavery in human history. However, slavery has appeared in many other forms, where there is no obvious racial "marker" to permanently deny humanhood to the enslaved population. When considering patterns of conquest and slavery in other societies, from Native American tribes to the Roman empire, the attributes that you ascribe to "not slavery" are often present. Slaves might be able to own property, buy their freedom, be freed/integrated into society after a fixed term of service, have free children, etc. The US military is certainly not as bad as the African slave trade, but shares key attributes (such as totalizing control of where a person lives, what their work is, who they can associate with, etc.) with many other historical social relations that have been termed "slavery." Whether you "become someone's property" is a matter of semantics --- while US military conscription is not codified under "property law," there is little practical difference between "having to obey the commands of your overlord because you are property" and "having to obey the commands of your overlord because you are subordinate" --- in either case, you are a tool for someone else's ends.
Re:Really people? (Score:3)
"The society that separates its scholars from its warriors will have its thinking done by cowards and its fighting by fools." ~Thucydides
Re:Given the current climate (Score:3)
Hmm... based on that maybe we should modernize it thus:
"The society that separates its politicians from its scholars and warriors will have its decisions made by foolish cowards."
Re:does draft board count (Score:2)
Re:does draft board count (Score:3, Informative)
Re:does draft board count?-- Yes there is a board. (Score:3)
.
"www.sss.gov/fslocal.htm" is the page for local draft boards [sss.gov] at the USA governmental Selective Service System web site. The wikipedia page does not state so specifically, and even if it had hey it's wikipedia and not so trustworthy. But I believe we can take a dot-gov page as a valid primary source. So two conclusions: ;>) )
-- yep, there is a draft board. (Learned my 12th new thing of the day, limit exceeded, core dump ensuing
-- nope, being on the draft board certainly does not count as "military service", even though it is "work in service of the military".
Re:only 18% government-sanctioned murderers (Score:3)
Uh, most of the military is in support positions like cooks, runway maintenance, admin weenies, and communications techies.
Re:End US Imperialism (Score:5, Insightful)
I did six years as an enlistee and overall I think I got more out of it than I lost.
I've actually wondered whether or not 100% mandatory conscription into military/civil service wouldn't do the US some good. I'm not talking about everyone being forced to be a soldier or some such. But I think giving everyone a more personal connection to the actual business of war and humanitarian aid would quite possibly help calm the national fervor that has led to some of our more recent military escapades.
And there isn't any good reason that such a thing couldn't be combined with obtaining a higher education. I knew a number of guys that spent most of their enlistment attending colleges classes in the evenings.
Re:End US Imperialism (Score:3, Insightful)
One of my biggest regrets in general is not being able to serve (chronic anxiety 4-F-ed me.)
However, one of the things I do champion is a military/civilian draft for a number of reasons. Not to force nationalism down people's throats, but to provide a win/win for people:
1: There are a lot of areas in the US where people's only routes of success are the big house or six feet under. Having a draft would at least give them a chance at somewhere else in the US.
2: The government needs to be able to rapidly haul people for emergency work. Take a disaster like Sandy, having people just a flight away to help with everything from restoring power to getting an IT structure going so emergency crews can communicate would help in mitigations.
3: It would give work to some people who might never be able to get hired on because their community just has no jobs available, period. Chicago and Detroit come to mind -- if someone can make a reasonable living, they wouldn't be on the streets hoping their 9mm will win a gunfight against some other gangbanger setting foot on their turf.
4: Getting people moving and paid means an economy, which is good for business in general.
5: As Iraq, Afghanistan, and Vietnam have shown us, just "shock and awe" won't win jack. You need boots on the ground inch by inch for a victory. You also don't win wars by making fortified structures and letting the enemy surround you. The Brits learned this in colonial times. Having the manpower to actually deal with an invasion does two things: It gets a justified war done, and because so many people have their lives on the line, a combat theater that is not justified will result in people actively taking a role and stopping it, unlike Iraq where few Americans had a stake in how the conflict went.
6: It would give employers people to train that have proven themselves. No H-1Bs needed.
7: It would give families a stake in what wars are being fought. No "oh, that's just some putz who couldn't find a job so he enlisted" crap. Everyone's sons/daughters might be on those front lines. Which means that a conflict better be a justified one.
Re:End US Imperialism (Score:2)
But I think giving everyone a more personal connection to the actual business of war and humanitarian aid would quite possibly help calm the national fervor that has led to some of our more recent military escapades.
I would doubt that. The more recent national fervor happened because the public wasn't told the truth, and even then, the general public didn't have the fervor, the leadership did. You could say that those that elect the leaders that choose war did, indirectly, choose war. But in a two party system it's mostly about voting not for who you believe in but against those you're afraid of.
Ignoring all that, I would find it easier to believe that conscription and mandatory service in the US would make it harder to curtail military spending. The US could cut it's military expenditures in half and still outspend the next three nations -- China, Russia, and the UK -- combined. Mandatory service will only make people more agreeable with spending even more. "Why not implement even more advanced XYZ, I was there, we sure could have used it." I don't see encouragement of the might-makes-right attitude to promote peace and humanitarianism, at least not in the same culture that celebrates sports tribalism and celebrities stomping on everyone else to come out on top instead of hard work, intellectualism, and cooperation.
Re:End US Imperialism (Score:3)
Heinlein has some great thoughts on conscription, and on 100% conscription. (For a militaristic guy, he really hated the draft) And I can see his point and even agree with him to an extent. There are advantages in the all volunteer force.
that said, I can see the other side of the coin too, the benefits of mandatory service. Though in my view, such service would not have to be military, or even be at the federal level. I would include the Peace Corps, local police and fire departments, doing missionary work in africa through your local church (and before the /.'ers go crazy, such work consists of very little preaching and a lot of medical care (dont need to preach to someone who already agrees with you, and actions (medicine) speak louder than words) ), etc.
All such work teaches you things:
-You learn about service to others for one thing.
-Develop a sense of community with those around you, and even the nation as a whole.
-And you're more likely (though not everyone does) to learn how to look past all the petty BS; the differences of political opinion, skin color, etc. From a military view, we dont only save our brothers who agree with us or look the same, we dont ask them who they voted for before we medevac them.
-Possible to learn a trade. I learned two, metrology and electronics, from the Marines. Four if you count giving classes to fellow Marines (education) and management. And a lot of former military do go into the education and management fields.
Now I know, its harder to say being a grunt teaches you a useful trade; but that's up to the individual. Each branch has plenty of opportunities for self education. There's the CLEP tests that give college credit by examination that colleges are damn near forced to accept toward a degree. Theres tuition assistance for education taken while serving, and GI Bill for after getting out. The stuff is there, its just up to each individual person to do it. That whole personal responsibility thing.
Re:End US Imperialism (Score:4, Interesting)
Heinlein has some great thoughts on conscription, and on 100% conscription. (For a militaristic guy, he really hated the draft) And I can see his point and even agree with him to an extent. There are advantages in the all volunteer force.
that said, I can see the other side of the coin too, the benefits of mandatory service. Though in my view, such service would not have to be military, or even be at the federal level. I would include the Peace Corps, local police and fire departments,
... which is just the way it was in Starship Troopers (the book). To become a citizen required doing two years of government service - but that service didn't have to be military. You could be police, fire, an inspector for some government agency, or even a postal worker and earn your citizenship. (There was only a single world government, and it wasn't clear whether there were federal and non-federal levels, but the actual requirement is stated as "government service".)
Now, because humanity had a major war going on, joining the military was the easiest route to getting your government service in... but it wasn't the only.
Re:5 years (Score:4, Informative)
I did ten years. It's the greatest job in the world... except for the people.
Re:Didn't want me (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Didn't want me (Score:3)
As a former computer-guy in the Army, all of those technical jobs are being occupied by contractors who make 3x what a soldier makes. What you say would make sense, however common sense is severely lacking in the DoD.
Re:Didn't want me (Score:3)
When I was in the Chair Force there was a large push to eliminate career fields that were not deployable or at least didn't have a reason to deploy.
A lot of the enlistment restrictions though aren't even so much about making sure you have combat ready troops, it's about cutting medical expenses. That is both in the present and in the future. For instance their pretty in uniform PT requirements were geared to reduce long term medical liability. Otherwise me being fat, despite excelling at all other PT goals and being an expert marksman, wouldn't have put me at risk of an untimely discharge.
Re:USMC (R) Veteran (Score:3)
Re:USMC (R) Veteran (Score:3)
I don't think it's appropriate to attack the "grunts on the ground", however; depending on who you ask [wikipedia.org] somewhere between 100k and half a billion people died as a result of the war in Iraq, including over 4k US servicemen/women.
I'm sure the vast majority of you and your brothers served with honor, but the entire operation was a cluster-fuck from start to finish.