Hello All,
I recently read an article produced by the Lexington Institute, which was authored by Daniel Goure, Ph.D. In it, he calls for the ressurection of the F-22 program, as he feels without increased numbers of this aircraft, the US would be overwhelmed in an air combat scenario against China. Now, it is not my intention to start an A versus B thread here. Far from it. What I found most interesting about his article is his statement right near the end:
"Ultimately, war has always been a numbers game. At some point, technologically inferior but numerically superior opponents will simply overwhelm the side with the better weapons. In conflicts between technologically equal adversaries numbers will determine the winner".
I strongly disagree with this statement. If war were simply a matter of numbers, how is it that brilliant commanders can have such an effect on the battlefield and/or operational theatre? I'm currently at work and unable to do the research, but I can almost guarantee that I would be able to find evidence of numerically inferior groups beating superior ones, superior tech or otherwise. The same goes for equal tech opponents.
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What are your thoughts?
Interesting thread, normally I just pass through but I’ll post a response to contribute my 2cents to the question.
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Ultimately, war has always been a numbers game. At some point, technologically inferior but numerically superior opponents will simply overwhelm the side with the better weapons. In conflicts between technologically equal adversaries numbers will determine the winner".
The premise he uses as a foundation to support his argument is false. War has not always been a numbers game, there is far more to war than simply numbers. Case in point the Patriotic War of 1812. Superior numbers did not help Napoleon in his invasion of Russia, and even if you increased Napoleon’s manpower by a few million and gave him inferior technology to be in line with the author’s argument I doubt the outcome would have been any different. The problem was in the assumptions Napoleon’s strategy was based on, not his troop numbers.
Now if he was here I’m sure the author would counter with something along the lines of, “but if Napoleon had more troops then he could’ve returned next year better supplied” to which I’d have to say something sarcastic along the lines of “Yes and the Zulu could have conquered Europe in the early 1900s if they had a few trillion people with pointed sticks”
I really dislike this type of thinking. War is more complicated than simple numbers. Give me 500 modern tanks and 50 modern combat aircraft and 500 pieces of mobile artillery, put me in a desert and about 700 miles away create an opposing force of a million tanks, Sherman’s T-34’s, Panzers, take your pick, then give me a week or two and I’ll give you a victory. Superior enemy numbers will mean little after my planes blow up their fuel depots, food stores and ordnance stockpiles. Despite the obvious credentials I feel that the author’s statement communicates a simplistic view of war. In my humble opinion if you want to think about war then think of it this way, military formations are structures, with the tip of each structure being the actual combat units and its leadership. These structures are dangerous because a portion (the tip) has the ability to cause damage to our structures, (our military units, our civilian government, our corporations etc, etc) To neutralize these dangerous structures you don’t necessarily have to destroy the tip, destroying the foundation which supports it is often just as effective and more permanent.
I can understand though where the author’s statements are coming from. Seeing the emphasis on superior numbers and China I’m going to infer that these concerns are embedded in the American experiences in both the Korean and Vietnam wars. I disagree with these concerns. Warfare is structural, Korea and Vietnam happened as they did because the support structures that made the Chinese army possible were located in China, a no go zone. It’s pretty easy to keep pouring in infantry when you have a population of a billion and the enemy is not attacking your training facilities, your munitions factories, your mines, your transportation infrastructure, your government. Again, warfare is structural. Since our political leaders would not give the go ahead to hit China directly our forces were only able to engage the stucture that was the Chinese army at its most dangerous point, the tip. Should another war with China happen and Western forces get the clearance to attack China directly then I think the next conflict will turn out very differently. Personally I’m looking closely at Chinese development patterns, sooooo many people, so clustered on that overdeveloped eastern seaboard. One nuke detonated high enough to EMP the entire region and snap, 1 billion people suddenly have more urgent priorities like food and water. I can’t see a Chinese repeat of mass infantry tactics being possible under these conditions, especially since they’ll likely be short 10-20 million soldiers just to maintain order on their now technologically impaired eastern seaboard.
Superior numbers in both troops and population simply means that there are bigger support structures at work, our forces just have to pull out enough supports and the entire structure will come crashing down. So long as we don't pull a battle of Britian of course and give the opposing military structures a chance to rebuild and grow much bigger teeth
Anyways though, tanget, sorry. In response to the question no, I believe there is far more to war than simply numbers.