Rabid wrote:European defense strategies are from the ground up axed around their participation to NATO.
So it's a bit of a lol when people "criticize" us because we can't act alone without the US. That's the damn point of the Alliance in the first place.
From the US point of view, the 'point' of NATO is not, and was not for
at the least several decades, to prevent European militaries from acting alone without US support.
If European militaries
choose not to act alone without US support, that's their choice. It may have unintended consequences as the US domestic situation forces a scale-back in American willingness and ability to get involved in foreign wars.
And it seems like I can't even talk about this without getting jumped by people who feel that the honor of France/Germany/elsewhere has been stained.
Skgoa wrote:Block wrote:Skgoa wrote: Add to that that stupid meme about "Europe" not having succeded in Lybia without the US... reality check: the rebels won, your argument is invalid.
And rebels lose without outside help. Outside help doesn't do enough to slow down Qaddafi's forces without US support. How is that a reality check?
The US reduced their involvement after a short time. "Europe" stayed on the job. The rebels won. And if that wasn't enough to convince you that what actually happened in reality is also possible, we didn't even go to a wartime footing or cut back on other commitments. How exactly does that allow for a ""Europe" could not have done it without the US" thesis to hold up?
Because
someone had to launch a hundred cruise missiles in one night to make the battle plan work. Who, exactly, was going to do that? You do not get the same result in war from delivering 20% of the firepower every day for five days that you get from delivering 100% of the firepower in one day. There are times and places where one is better than the other, and when you're trying to save a bunch of ragtag guerilla freedom fighters from being annihilated by a well equipped but low-morale army, that's when you want to break out your
Sunday punch
Simon_Jester wrote:Skgoa, I think you're confusing me with other people.
No, I was summarizing how this thread comes across. I quoted you not because you are the worst offender, but due to the casual arrogance you displayed.
Then I must say that I resent your use of terms and arguments
I never used, as if you were responding directly to me, when you were in fact responding to a nebulous category of people who have as much to do with the shape of the strawmen you construct in your own mind as with the reality.
The military budgets of non-US industrialized nations don't reflect anything special. They are based on analysis and predictions regarding realistic future needs. E.g. Germany: we just built the priciest IFV ever. We are in the process of building the priciest frigates ever. (That don't do anything more than the frigates we have, but they can be forward deployed for 2 years at a time.) We only recently abolished conscription because we wanted to cut cost. Our navy run a very ambitious drone project in the 90ies that mostly died due to the tech not being there, yet. European armed forces aren't shrinking due to a "small government" type reduction, they are getting leaner to be better at expeditionary warfare. Because that is what we are going to do for the foreseeable future. Why exactly do you think Germany of all places would have put amphibs into their long-term naval planning, otherwise?
As I noted, European militaries are often well trained and equipped- they're just
small, or tend to be, and represent a medium to low share of GDP. In this case, size matters, because it has huge effects on what you can do with the force you've built: half the ships operating for twice as long will not achieve the same results as twice the ships fighting for half as long.
Because of the small overall sizes of individual European national militaries, and the lack of a coordinated scheme for fitting the militaries into a single continental force ("okay, Britain builds the carriers, Germany builds the amphibs, France builds the armored divisions, and everyone else chips in for the Eurofighters" or something like that), the militaries of Europe are only suited for expeditionary warfare when they're piggybacking with someone else. All the European militaries combined could, with a lot of pushing and shoving and 'figure it out as we go along,' support each other and work together... or they could piggyback on the US, individually or in groups.
Skgoa wrote:Simon Jester wrote:Skgoa wrote:I was actually more concerned with the implied surrender-monkey-ism and "amurrika has to have a strong military because those EUnuchs are cheap cowards", tbh. You are ascribing hidden meanings to our relatively low belligerence, that simply aren't there. The US wants to be world hegemon, we don't. It's that simple.
..."Implied surrender-monkey-ism?" "EUnuchs?" What the hell?
Once more: adressing the whole thread. Those are terms americans often use when they need to demonstrate their inherent superiority.
And yet no one in the thread said those things. You seem to
want us to have said them, but we didn't.
I call this a strawman.
The problem with that being of course, that "Europe" participated in Iraq 1, Iraq 2, Afghanistan, Lybia, Kosovo, Falklands... We are not only able, we are also willing. European armies are pretty badly equiped for stopping invading forces, we have based our procurement on participating in NATO. If what you claim were true, why would any european nation buy Joint Strike Fighters? Why would so many amphibs and carriers get built in Europe right now? Why would the A400m even exist?
1)
And I don't mean that as a personal attack, but when I read things like "when you have a military that is only big enough to defend yourself, you can't get into other people's business that easily", I want to reach through the monitor, shake whoever wrote that and scream "THAT'S THE FUCKING POINT!"
I know it's the point, I came right out and said so. As long as you are aware of the possibility that someone else's business will
become your business, and are willing to accept whatever cost comes from someone else meddling in your business in ways you can't respond to, that's your call.
Oh, don't give me that passive agressive bullshit. So european nations don't have the overkill at their disposal to unilaterly bomb anyone they don't like into the ground. Yet somehow european interests and interventions/peace keeping missions do succeed. Turns out, we are an alliance and are all willing to do our part.
Look, Skgoa, I'm trying to be realistic here.
The US is not in good shape. We've fucked up our domestic policy, we've fucked up our foreign policy. Our politics are a basket case, our economy is a shambles. That affects the armed forces now. Just maintaining the US military at the relative peak of dominance it enjoyed in the mid-1990s is
forcing us to spend an incredible amount of money: the whole reason this 'interactive budget cutter' exists is because we're reaching the limit. Just replacing the Cold War-vintage stuff on a one for one basis is getting too expensive, even for the jingoist chest-thumpers.
So if you're looking forward to 2030 or 2040, one thing that must be considered is that the US might simply cease to be in any position to act as a unilateral alliance-leader, that it will no longer be able to provide whatever assets and capabilities the European militaries choose not to cultivate because they can get those things from the Americans for free.
After that happens, Europe will have to be able and willing to look at a world where it cannot count on anyone else to provide it with the transport planes or intelligence-gathering or conventional airstrike capability it wants and chose not to pay for. Which means Europe must either accept a reduced ability to make its wishes relevant to hostile parts of the world, or must spend more money to keep that ability.
I live in a country I expect to be in decline for most of my adult life, and I don't want to see the bulk of the Western World shackled to it as it goes down that road.
If you think that's condescension, I can't help you.
And that right there is the disingenuous part. "Europe" could have committed more forces, since those exist. We didn't, because the US had anounced they would do what they did and because it would have cost more. Both in terms of money and political capital. But that the US participated in the operation is no prove that it would not have succeeded without US involvement.
If the assets were available to quickly demolish the Libyan air defenses, if the logistics permitted them to be fielded without the use of American equipment and ships and planes, then I am not being disingenuous; I am simply
wrong.
Am I wrong?
The problem is that without the missile strike, all the subsequent air operations over Libya would have been more dangerous and difficult. So without the presence of the US Navy, it would have been much harder for the other nations involved to protect the Libyan rebels and give them air support.
Which, if European nations want to be able to do what was done in Libya without American help, is worrying.
So? War is worrying, news at eleven!
This is totally incoherent. Did you just see "war" and "worrying" in the same paragraph and decide to make a one-line joke about it?
I'm not going to try and repeat or explain this bit, because I think it stands alone as it is. I may be flat-out wrong about what the European air forces and navies involved in Libya could have done without US participation, but that impacts the premises, not the reasoning, of the argument.
If European nations are quite content to leave such problems alone, treating them as some foreigner's internal domestic problem, then there isn't an issue for them and they don't need to worry about it.
Nice tautology there, but it doesn't actually have anything to do with what we are discussing.
Doesn't it? I thought we were talking about the size of the US military budget, the size of European military budgets, the fact that the large US military budget is unsustainably large and is going to be cut, and the fact that the European military budgets don't add up to give them capabilities to replace what they'll lose if the US stops providing free backup.
Which it may have to, because our domestic policy is a mess.