I agree.Scarecrow1001 said:Someone has been playing to much Call of Duty.....
That is an exceptionally narrow definition of honor, one I do not agree with.Daystar Clarion said:'Honour' is a code of rules an individual chooses to follow.
Expecting others to follow the same code is naive at best, especially in a combat situation.
Pretty much the same here in the US. Not sure of exact rank, but a 4 year degree starts you off as an officer of some sort.Champthrax said:Well I am not sure rank is exactly reflective of your martial skill. Its really more a leadership / hierarchy thing. I mean, here in Canada, if you join the army with a university degree you are pretty much automatically a 2nd lieutenantEsotera said:I'd disagree. Yes, combined arms is a big thing, but that doesn't mean skill isn't involved. How much training does it take you to become a lieutenant? It's not exactly easy.
]TheIronRuler said:*cough* European Standard *cough*DJjaffacake said:There's gonna be a lot of shit flying about the honour part. But my answer is no to the former and the latter, because a man who would behave honourably a millenium ago has no less reason to do so now. And as someone who has actually made use of a modern assault rifle and practiced fencing (which I know is not the same as real old swordfighting but shut up), I can tell you the assault rifle was much harder to use.
Seriously though, An untrained Danish priest shot a European Standard rifle and killed a few Taliban warriors.
Ok, I have to step in here. Unless the insurgents got a massive drop on the SAS, and the likely hood of that happening is very slim as they are primarily Recon outfit, I don't think the SAS would lose a man in combat. You haven't seen these boys work, and you never will because if the SAS had taken Osama Bin'larden we wouldn't have heard about it. More SAS have died in training than they have in warfare; They are trained in geural warfare and small unit tactics, you have 300 of them I would think the entire 1st US marine Expeditionary Force would have a hard time.theparsonski said:I'd personally rather fight a war with swords and spears and shit instead of guns, because it's true, nowadays you can have the most experienced, hardened soldier that there is, and all it takes is for him to step on an IED and it's game over. Look at the battle of Thermopylae, where 300 Spartan warriors held off an army of Persians estimated to be around the million mark. If that was, say, 300 SAS men against even 2000 Taliban insurgents, I reckon the Taliban would end up winning.
It's actually a huge amount more about luck than it is skill nowadays.
.Da Orky Man said:]TheIronRuler said:*cough* European Standard *cough*DJjaffacake said:There's gonna be a lot of shit flying about the honour part. But my answer is no to the former and the latter, because a man who would behave honourably a millenium ago has no less reason to do so now. And as someone who has actually made use of a modern assault rifle and practiced fencing (which I know is not the same as real old swordfighting but shut up), I can tell you the assault rifle was much harder to use.
Seriously though, An untrained Danish priest shot a European Standard rifle and killed a few Taliban warriors.
'European Standard rifle'? Pray tell/
I direct you to this -bullet_sandw1ch said:they can move as a group, but even the SAS would get slaughtered by 2000 taliban. theres too many, in every senario they would be in a lethal crossfire. and they cant hide, 300 people is not a small amount of people. in the woods, the taliban woulod probably all climb in trees, bang. SAS dead in 5 min. or less.
The SAS are trained to fight in small groups of no more than a couple sticks' worth at most. So, in the scenario you give, in a straight up death match, the SAS will make themselves scarce over an area of several square miles and good luck digging them up before it gets dark, and once it gets dark, start shitting yourself. During daytime, they'll pick off small detachments and pairs before disappearing again, and the next time you hear of them, they'll be miles away. With communications and various aspects of environmental and circumstantial training, adaptation and improvisation that is more 'uniform' than that of the insurgents, shall we say, they can keep themselves in small groups but remain in supporting distance to devastating effect. So much so that I think even Royal Marines would have a hard time trying to survive 48 hours against them.Sargent Hoofbeat said:Ok, I have to step in here. Unless the insurgents got a massive drop on the SAS, and the likely hood of that happening is very slim as they are primarily Recon outfit, I don't think the SAS would lose a man in combat. You haven't seen these boys work, and you never will because if the SAS had taken Osama Bin'larden we wouldn't have heard about it. More SAS have died in training than they have in warfare; They are trained in geural warfare and small unit tactics, you have 300 of them I would think the entire 1st US marine Expeditionary Force would have a hard time.
Champthrax said:It seems like individual far less relevant, since any emaciated 14 year old can pick up an ak-47, and be a threat to even a modern warrior who has trained their whole life.
Well, i've never really known a battle to be won or lost based on individual acts of bravery or individual skill (albeit that of the generals in tactics and strategy) in the era before gunpowder weaponry became the norm. The Battle of Stanford Bridge, where apparently a lone Danish warrior wielding a Danish axe was able to, for a while, hold off the whole English army because they had to cross this narrow bridge.Champthrax said:As per the title, do you think that as we have advanced technologically, the honour and martial skill aspects of warfare have been greatly diminished?
By honour, I mean that old fashioned warfare was simple, up close and personal. You were often fighting to protect your lands and families from massacre, and a single skilled warrior could make a difference even against difficult odds. The battle made you stand face to face with your enemy. I do not want to label modern war as "cowardly" but I do think it required a different kind of guts to wade into a melee of death, or to charge across a battlefield, sword held high. I think the transition to warfare from close range to long range has affected this. Today, the conflicts our soldiers are involved in are much more complex, and often times an individual soldier has no stake in what the conflict is over.
By skill, I mean that a medieval or Roman warrior for example, could train all their lives in the art of warfare, and could become exceptional in single combat. Almost everything that kills you in ancient warfare was preventable, for example, you would not have been disembowelled if you had parried, or you would not have an arrow in the knee if you had had your shield up. Modern warfare on the other hand, can get you killed in a million and one ways that you have no way of stopping or preventing. You can step on a land mine, a plane can drop a bomb, artillery can blow you to kingdom come. There are far more things that can kill you just by being in the wrong place at the wrong time, so dumb luck has a far greater effect than skill.
But a squad of adequately trained soldiers will nearly always win against a squad of untrained child solders. Skill is just as relevant today as it was a thousand years ago in warfare. The thing is though it's always been about collective skill, not individual skill, even in the days before gunpowder weaponry and crossbows. The reason why i'm writing this in Latin script is due to the fact that the Romans well and truly understood that it was collective skill at arms that won wars. It's how we Europeans conquered most of the world.It seems like individual far less relevant, since any emaciated 14 year old can pick up an ak-47, and be a threat to even a modern warrior who has trained their whole life.
]TheIronRuler said:*cough* European Standard *cough*DJjaffacake said:There's gonna be a lot of shit flying about the honour part. But my answer is no to the former and the latter, because a man who would behave honourably a millenium ago has no less reason to do so now. And as someone who has actually made use of a modern assault rifle and practiced fencing (which I know is not the same as real old swordfighting but shut up), I can tell you the assault rifle was much harder to use.
Seriously though, An untrained Danish priest shot a European Standard rifle and killed a few Taliban warriors.
Oh man, so many factors to consider, but generally speaking warfare by Western states has become very risk-averse. No more conscription, so every soldier is an asset (an investment: training). Also, one of the lessons from the Vietnam war was: soldier casualties (bodybags), if they are too visible and too many, make the home front queasy.Champthrax said:As per the title, do you think that as we have advanced technologically, the honour and martial skill aspects of warfare have been greatly diminished?
By honour, I mean that old fashioned warfare was simple, up close and personal. You were often fighting to protect your lands and families from massacre, and a single skilled warrior could make a difference even against difficult odds. The battle made you stand face to face with your enemy. I do not want to label modern war as "cowardly" but I do think it required a different kind of guts to wade into a melee of death, or to charge across a battlefield, sword held high. I think the transition to warfare from close range to long range has affected this. Today, the conflicts our soldiers are involved in are much more complex, and often times an individual soldier has no stake in what the conflict is over.
By skill, I mean that a medieval or Roman warrior for example, could train all their lives in the art of warfare, and could become exceptional in single combat. Almost everything that kills you in ancient warfare was preventable, for example, you would not have been disembowelled if you had parried, or you would not have an arrow in the knee if you had had your shield up. Modern warfare on the other hand, can get you killed in a million and one ways that you have no way of stopping or preventing. You can step on a land mine, a plane can drop a bomb, artillery can blow you to kingdom come. There are far more things that can kill you just by being in the wrong place at the wrong time, so dumb luck has a far greater effect than skill.
It seems like individual far less relevant, since any emaciated 14 year old can pick up an ak-47, and be a threat to even a modern warrior who has trained their whole life.