![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "Yama" wrote in message ... Falklands war was a colonial war, type of conflict where professional armies perform better. Do you think Brits could have invaded Argentina mainland? Didn't think so either. Which is irrelevant, Of course it's not. First off, conscripts hardly can be expected to have a good morale when dragged to fight over some irrelevant rocky islands. Second, distant deployment seriously limits conscript army's main advantage - number. As for Republican Guards putting up a fight, I seem to have missed it. In more recent war most resistance came from militias. In DS RG was more involved, but even then their performance was not markedly better than that of some regular army units. They seem to have been somewhat better than the bulk conscript divisions But was it because they were professionals or only because they got more training funds and better equipment because they were politically more trustworthy? In other words, pretty similar training period as what equivalent conscripts receive. I dont believe many army conscripts get 32 weeks of training but even assuming they do thats pretty expensive if the guy is only in the army for a year or even two. What do you think conscripts do in the Army? Honestly, 32 weeks is quite short for conscription time. Where does it say that conscripts have to be ill trained? Have you ever SEEN an European conscript army? For example, German conscripts routinely used to win NATO tank crew competitions. IIRC US Army managed to win once. Competitons of course involve all nations putting their best crews forward, I'd be interested to see what the average performance looks like. I know some people who have operated with US and various European professional forces in Kosovo and Bosnia. Let's just say that they haven't exactly been in awe about their performance. And this includes such forces like airborne brigades which are supposed to be more élite. Um, do you seriously think this is true for all conscript armies? I certainly know _very well_ how to clean and maintain my rifle and I wasn't even an infantryman. Its symptomatic of what happens when an army has to process more men than it has the resources to train and equip properly. Quite simply, I have a hard time believing the story as true. Taking care of personal weapon is amongst 2 or 3 first things any soldier is taught. If this was not done in Argentinan army, then the quality of it's training must have been truly atrocious. Its certainly true that conscript armies CAN be extremely competent but that doesnt come cheaply. The Swiss and Scandinavians certainly seem to have good home defence forces but that is built on around an active reserve system with the conscription being essentially viewed as training for the reserves. ....so? "Cheaply" is relative. Having an army equally capable as all-professional force would cost many times more. In the main the opinion among many military leaders is that a small professional force is more useful in todays environment than a larger conscript army. Well, as long as "todays environment" comprises of various bush wars (pardon the pun) around the globe, I certainly agree. But not all nations have that sort of requirements... If just by some weird turn of events Warsaw Pact makes a comeback, you bet many European nations would go back to conscription. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Yama" wrote in message ... "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "Yama" wrote in message ... Falklands war was a colonial war, type of conflict where professional armies perform better. Do you think Brits could have invaded Argentina mainland? Didn't think so either. Which is irrelevant, Of course it's not. First off, conscripts hardly can be expected to have a good morale when dragged to fight over some irrelevant rocky islands. Those irrelevant islands were thought important enough by the masses who demonstrated their fervent nationalism before the war and who overthrew the government after it. Second, distant deployment seriously limits conscript army's main advantage - number. Trouble is it was the British army that was deployed 8000 miles from home, the Falklands are rather closer to Argentina. As for Republican Guards putting up a fight, I seem to have missed it. In more recent war most resistance came from militias. In DS RG was more involved, but even then their performance was not markedly better than that of some regular army units. They seem to have been somewhat better than the bulk conscript divisions But was it because they were professionals or only because they got more training funds and better equipment because they were politically more trustworthy? One tends to go with the other. In other words, pretty similar training period as what equivalent conscripts receive. I dont believe many army conscripts get 32 weeks of training but even assuming they do thats pretty expensive if the guy is only in the army for a year or even two. What do you think conscripts do in the Army? Honestly, 32 weeks is quite short for conscription time. In which army ? Conscripts only serve around 18 months in Greece and that would mean training absorbed 1/3 of their time in the army. In Finland the maximum term of servive eben for specialists was 330 days, if they received 32 weeks of training then that would represent 2/3 rds of their service. Hungary, France and Germany all have a 10 month period of service. Its rather expensive to spend 8 months training people who only serve in combat units for 2 months afterwards. Where does it say that conscripts have to be ill trained? Have you ever SEEN an European conscript army? For example, German conscripts routinely used to win NATO tank crew competitions. IIRC US Army managed to win once. Competitons of course involve all nations putting their best crews forward, I'd be interested to see what the average performance looks like. I know some people who have operated with US and various European professional forces in Kosovo and Bosnia. Let's just say that they haven't exactly been in awe about their performance. And this includes such forces like airborne brigades which are supposed to be more élite. Ah mysterious sources only you have access to, how impressive. Um, do you seriously think this is true for all conscript armies? I certainly know _very well_ how to clean and maintain my rifle and I wasn't even an infantryman. Its symptomatic of what happens when an army has to process more men than it has the resources to train and equip properly. Quite simply, I have a hard time believing the story as true. Taking care of personal weapon is amongst 2 or 3 first things any soldier is taught. If this was not done in Argentinan army, then the quality of it's training must have been truly atrocious. Its certainly true that conscript armies CAN be extremely competent but that doesnt come cheaply. The Swiss and Scandinavians certainly seem to have good home defence forces but that is built on around an active reserve system with the conscription being essentially viewed as training for the reserves. ...so? "Cheaply" is relative. Having an army equally capable as all-professional force would cost many times more. Only if you insist on it being the same size. The simple fact is that the lower throughput of a professional army means that a greater percentage of your force is combat ready. In the main the opinion among many military leaders is that a small professional force is more useful in todays environment than a larger conscript army. Well, as long as "todays environment" comprises of various bush wars (pardon the pun) around the globe, I certainly agree. But not all nations have that sort of requirements... If just by some weird turn of events Warsaw Pact makes a comeback, you bet many European nations would go back to conscription. I recall already making the point that high intensity mass warfare does require conscription, that however is hardly likley in Europe at present. The traditional British and US approach has been to maintain rather small but well trained and equipped professional forces expanded by conscription on those rare occasions it is required. I see no reason to change that approach and mant other European nations seem to be at least considering its adoption. Keith |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "Yama" wrote in message ... Second, distant deployment seriously limits conscript army's main advantage - number. Trouble is it was the British army that was deployed 8000 miles from home, the Falklands are rather closer to Argentina. Falklands are islands, so deployment problems remained regardless of distance. Again, do you seriously think that British Army and Royal Marines could have taken Argentinian army on their mainland? But was it because they were professionals or only because they got more training funds and better equipment because they were politically more trustworthy? One tends to go with the other. Exactly - volunteer, selected palace guard was obviously better instrument of power for Saddam than draftees. Their military prowess was not particularly relevant... What do you think conscripts do in the Army? Honestly, 32 weeks is quite short for conscription time. In which army ? Conscripts only serve around 18 months in Greece and that would mean training absorbed 1/3 of their time in the army. In Finland the maximum term of servive eben for specialists was 330 days, if they received 32 weeks of training then that would represent 2/3 rds of their service. Hungary, France and Germany all have a 10 month period of service. Its rather expensive to spend 8 months training people who only serve in combat units for 2 months afterwards. Ah, I see the confusion. Most conscript armies do not have "combat units" in the sense you talk, because there is no need to deploy them anywhere as we do not have former, current or future colonies to fight over. Should the need arise, combat formations are formed either expanding the training units or from scratch according to mobilization plans. Currently Finnish conscripts serve 180 to 360 days, depending on their task or rank. That time is almost wholly spent on training. I know some people who have operated with US and various European professional forces in Kosovo and Bosnia. Let's just say that they haven't exactly been in awe about their performance. And this includes such forces like airborne brigades which are supposed to be more élite. Ah mysterious sources only you have access to, how impressive. Fine, if you don't want to believe then don't. If we go by that route, I could ask you what are YOUR sources for that dubious "Argies couldn't maintain their rifles" -story. If you can read Finnish I can google you some threads from Finnish NG where some of these people talk about their experiences. "Cheaply" is relative. Having an army equally capable as all-professional force would cost many times more. Only if you insist on it being the same size. Not at all. For example, current Finland's wartime field army is 430,000 strong. Having a volunteer force even just half the size would be outrageously expensive. The simple fact is that the lower throughput of a professional army means that a greater percentage of your force is combat ready. Of course, but that is not relevant advantage for everyone. I recall already making the point that high intensity mass warfare does require conscription, that however is hardly likley in Europe at present. The traditional British and US approach has been to maintain rather small but well trained and equipped professional forces expanded by conscription on those rare occasions it is required. I see no reason to change that approach and mant other European nations seem to be at least considering its adoption. I'm sure that approach has lots of merit for geographically safe and isolated nations with worldwide interests and committents. FWIW, I think that those people calling for re-introducing conscription in USA are quite wrong and it would result to a disaster. However this has nothing to do with respective fighting performances of pro vs conscription armies in modern war; it's just a matter of requirements and deployment issues. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Yama" wrote in message ... "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "Yama" wrote in message ... Second, distant deployment seriously limits conscript army's main advantage - number. Trouble is it was the British army that was deployed 8000 miles from home, the Falklands are rather closer to Argentina. Falklands are islands, so deployment problems remained regardless of distance. Horse**** Its a hell of alot easier for Britain to deploy troops to the Isle of Wight than it is for Argentina Again, do you seriously think that British Army and Royal Marines could have taken Argentinian army on their mainland? Again NO , but then that wasnt their mission But was it because they were professionals or only because they got more training funds and better equipment because they were politically more trustworthy? One tends to go with the other. Exactly - volunteer, selected palace guard was obviously better instrument of power for Saddam than draftees. Their military prowess was not particularly relevant... On the contrary it was a core requirement. The politically reliable force was his last defense against an army revolt. What do you think conscripts do in the Army? Honestly, 32 weeks is quite short for conscription time. In which army ? Conscripts only serve around 18 months in Greece and that would mean training absorbed 1/3 of their time in the army. In Finland the maximum term of servive eben for specialists was 330 days, if they received 32 weeks of training then that would represent 2/3 rds of their service. Hungary, France and Germany all have a 10 month period of service. Its rather expensive to spend 8 months training people who only serve in combat units for 2 months afterwards. Ah, I see the confusion. Most conscript armies do not have "combat units" in the sense you talk, because there is no need to deploy them anywhere as we do not have former, current or future colonies to fight over. Should the need arise, combat formations are formed either expanding the training units or from scratch according to mobilization plans. Which is a bit unfortunate if the enemy isnt considerate enough to give you advanced warning of his plans Currently Finnish conscripts serve 180 to 360 days, depending on their task or rank. That time is almost wholly spent on training. Which leaves exactly who guarding the interests of the nation ? I know some people who have operated with US and various European professional forces in Kosovo and Bosnia. Let's just say that they haven't exactly been in awe about their performance. And this includes such forces like airborne brigades which are supposed to be more élite. Ah mysterious sources only you have access to, how impressive. Fine, if you don't want to believe then don't. If we go by that route, I could ask you what are YOUR sources for that dubious "Argies couldn't maintain their rifles" -story. Multiple sources , here's just one http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/s2.cfm?id=341922002 "I was 19 when they sent us to the Falklands," he says. "I had done my military service, but I think I'd only touched a gun once for about 15 minutes. I didn't have a clue how to load a rifle." Keith |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Keith Willshaw wrote: "Yama" wrote in message ... "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... Trouble is it was the British army that was deployed 8000 miles from home, the Falklands are rather closer to Argentina. Falklands are islands, so deployment problems remained regardless of distance. Only because the RN was able to seize and maintain sea control while operating 8000 miles from its base. And because the Fleet Air Arm, operating from the carriers, were able to maintain at least partial air control in the face of land-based air opposition. This could be used as an arguement underlining the virtues of a professional, volunteer force (the RN, which proved highly effective) and a force made up of conscripts (the Argentine Navy, which proved pretty well useless). -- Andy Breen ~ Interplanetary Scintillation Research Group http://users.aber.ac.uk/azb/ "Time has stopped, says the Black Lion clock and eternity has begun" (Dylan Thomas) |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "Yama" wrote in message ... Falklands are islands, so deployment problems remained regardless of distance. Horse**** Its a hell of alot easier for Britain to deploy troops to the Isle of Wight than it is for Argentina Obviously yes, but it still much more difficult than moving them by trains or road. Again, do you seriously think that British Army and Royal Marines could have taken Argentinian army on their mainland? Again NO , Why not? I thought they were much more effective than ill-trained Argentinan military? Exactly - volunteer, selected palace guard was obviously better instrument of power for Saddam than draftees. Their military prowess was not particularly relevant... On the contrary it was a core requirement. The politically reliable force was his last defense against an army revolt. ....which is why they were given better equipment and more resources. Ah, I see the confusion. Most conscript armies do not have "combat units" in the sense you talk, because there is no need to deploy them anywhere as we do not have former, current or future colonies to fight over. Should the need arise, combat formations are formed either expanding the training units or from scratch according to mobilization plans. Which is a bit unfortunate if the enemy isnt considerate enough to give you advanced warning of his plans For most countries, it's rather unlikely that someone just invades them out of blue sky. If such threat exists, it can be dealt with longer conscription time or keeping separate high-readiness units. Currently Finnish conscripts serve 180 to 360 days, depending on their task or rank. That time is almost wholly spent on training. Which leaves exactly who guarding the interests of the nation ? Like what interests? Fine, if you don't want to believe then don't. If we go by that route, I could ask you what are YOUR sources for that dubious "Argies couldn't maintain their rifles" -story. Multiple sources , here's just one http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/s2.cfm?id=341922002 "I was 19 when they sent us to the Falklands," he says. "I had done my military service, but I think I'd only touched a gun once for about 15 minutes. I didn't have a clue how to load a rifle." Then Argentinian military training has been truly atrocious and tells absolutely nothing about actual battle performance of a proper conscript army. If anything, with that sort of training it's surprising they managed to put up even that much resistance. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 17 Feb 2004 23:08:04 +0200, "Yama"
wrote: "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "Yama" wrote in message ... Again, do you seriously think that British Army and Royal Marines could have taken Argentinian army on their mainland? Again NO , Why not? I thought they were much more effective than ill-trained Argentinan military? Are you trying to be obtuse? The RN in 1982 (and now), does not have the amphibious transports to land a divisional sized force in fighting order on a hostile shore. The fighting has nothing to do with it, it's the getting there. If on the other hand 1Div had magically arrived in Argentina, then they probably would have done pretty damn well against the Argentine forces. Chieftains (probably one of the two best tanks in the world in 1982), supported by TOW armed Lynxes, who had been training to fight the best Soviet Guards armies versus what the Argentines would be likely to have at the time (I'm afraid Google let me down on the OOB in 1982 except for the forces sent to the Falklands). It'd be slaughter. Can anyone help out with the OOB for 1982 in Argentina (and the UK come to that)? Peter Kemp |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Boeing Boondoggle | Larry Dighera | Military Aviation | 77 | September 15th 04 02:39 AM |
bush rules! | Be Kind | Military Aviation | 53 | February 14th 04 04:26 PM |
us air force us air force academy us air force bases air force museum us us air force rank us air force reserve adfunk | Jehad Internet | Military Aviation | 0 | February 7th 04 04:24 AM |
RV-7a baggage area | David Smith | Home Built | 32 | December 15th 03 04:08 AM |
USAF = US Amphetamine Fools | RT | Military Aviation | 104 | September 25th 03 03:17 PM |