russ_watters
Of course you know this is false. Well- I can't speak for the Australian military, but in every other military I've ever heard of, your training ends the day you are discharged.
Okay, the bit they call "training". US marines: 11 weeks. Me: 9 months. Deal with it.
Of course you know this is also false. The US model of technology and tactics in leu of numbers is the model that the rest of the world follows (those who can anyway).
You are dreaming. Many nations have superior manpower to the USA, advanced technology, yet follow vastly different military idealogies. This amazing arrogance, thinking "Our military is the best, everyone wants to be like us", is what leads to 130 deaths from friendly fire, incidents like Blackhawk Down, and more. Let's look at a comparison:
USA
Personnel: 1.3 million.
Reserves: 1.3 million.
8,100 MBTs.
151 Naval vessels.
CHINA
Personnel: 2.48 million.
Reserves: 1.2 million.
8,300 MBTs.
2,000 LBTs.
790 Naval vessels.
Now the USA method has for a long time been to "take the fight to the enemy", to perform military actions away from the home soil. Better to fight them "over there" than "over here", thus keeping the USA itself unharmed and the people less disillusioned. With the massive growth of air power and cruise missiles and such, the USA has come to the method of absolute air dominion, ultimately resulting in the "Shock & Awe" doctrine (http://www.dodccrp.org/shockIndex.html ) which saw something like 800 cruise missiles fall on the civilian city of Baghdad over a period of about two days. The method works. It blows a lot of things up. It is also expensive. The USA uses carrier groups and amssive air power to project military force around the world; it has the world's largest mobile arsenal.
China, on the other hand, with superior numbers and some of the world's most advanced hardware (the ZM-87, for example), chooses to ignore the rest of the world, refrain from extending their force beyond their borders, and build up a massive force perfectly suited to defending their country.
Let's consider, which advanced military forces follow the USA military philosophy? Canada? No. China? No. Australia? No. Enland? No. France? No. Spain? No. Germany? No. So... who does?
And our performance speaks for itself - never before 1991 has such a large conflict been fought with so few casualties. The fact that statistically a soldier was safer in theater than at home on leave in 1991 is mind boggling.
Incorrect. Please read the list of past conflicts which I provided earlier.
Other western countries have drawn down their militaries becasue they know they don't need them except as a token show of strength. They know that the US will come to the aid of any western country that needs it - an idea they got from Japan after WWII.
Could it be that the rest of us simply aren't so eager for war?
The one service that the US has any advantage at all in size over our major enemies is the Navy. And the reason for that is it is used so much.
Indeed. The reason why, I explained earlier in this post.
The Army and Marine Corps are smaller (relatively speaking) because they aren't used as often. They for the most part just sit at home and train their whole careers - which presents a bit of a problem though when it comes to dealing with an Iraq type situation.
Incorrect. The USA currently has around 320,000 soldiers in other countries. Mainly army and marines.
... but it always seemed like they were upset about the fact that they didn't really defend their countries.
Don't get all hostile with other states, and you don't have to defend your nation.
It is a wonderful thing though that the US has created a world in which most countries don't need militaries.
1) Yet every nation has a military.
2) The USA created the world? Dude, what are you smoking?
You know there are exchange programs you can join? You won't really be a member of the US military, but you can pretend for a while.
I have worked with the military forces of several nations, and the only one I ever considered worthwhile for an exchange programme was England.
There were a handful (2 or 3) of wives killed at an army base when the first of the soldiers rotated back to the US. I haven't heard of any since then, and by now virtually everyone has been back at least on leave.
I've not heard anything either, on the matter of soldiers returning home and killing spouses. I'd be interested to learn if there have been more.
Soldiers don't become serial killers, they become passion/impulse killers.
Off topic, more a question of ethics. Why is a soldier on tour not considered a serial killer, if he or she kills a lot of people?