ray245 wrote:cosmicalstorm wrote:Israel was started by a group of smart Europeans with meritocracy and democracy firmly anchored in their culture. Arab culture is to speak in broader terms almost the opposite. At the height of the Syrian invasion of Israel during Yom Kippur one Syrian commander had almost all his important commanders dragged halfway back to Damascus for a meeting instead of leaving them to make good decisions at the front.
In that case it was probably for the better since I suspect Israel would have dropped atom bombs on any breakthrough Syrian tanks.
Although the notion is unacceptable to many posters here I believe Arab/Islamic culture in general is really poorly suited for modern warfare.
Hiz'bollah are kind of exceptions trying to break away from this rule. They nailed Israel pretty good the last time even if their countries infrastructure was flattened in return.
It's a pretty big claim to make by assuming that an entire culture is somehow incapable to fight a modern war.
SIDETRACK ANALOGY FOLLOWS: NO POINT IN RESPONDING DIRECTLY TO THE ANALOGY, IT'S JUST AN ILLUSTRATION OF THE CONCEPT, NOT AN ATTEMPT AT DERAILING.
It's a bit like arguing that the US is incapable of having a functional welfare state on the European model, even if it would arguably be to our advantage to do so.
One can claim, not without reason, that there is an undertone of condescension and disapproval toward the underclass in the US. A hatred and otherization of 'losers.' A reluctance to use the government as a central clearinghouse for the resources of society due to a traditional reverence for 'rugged individualism.' And that all these things become very counterproductive when we try to organize a welfare state, because even when all the bureaucrats involved are sincerely trying to do their jobs, half of them have this memetic unwillingness to do what any European social democrat could tell them will work. Or they try to do it, and do it
wrong, putting too much value on that thing (preventing fraud), and not enough value on this thing (the human dignity of the underclass).
As a parallel argument, one can argue that in the Arab nations, there are various things in play that make it hard to organize an army. Not
impossible, but hard- and to counter that you'd have to step in and deliberately disrupt and shake up the culture and the traditions of the officer corps. Most Western nations have had to do that as an ongoing process ever since, oh, the invention of gunpowder...
But the thesis is that the Arab nations specifically have not been doing a good job of adapting to 20th century advances in military organization, attitudes toward training, and management practices.
Bearing in mind that the many western countries were also not prepared to fight a modern war during the second world war. It took a while before those western countries learnt to fight a modern war. It would think that the Israeli army, with their experience of fighting a modern war in Europe would be much better prepared to wage a modern mechanised war than the Arabs, who did not fully experience this kind of warfare.
Except that relatively few of the Israeli soldiers had prior military experience fighting in large armies. A noticeable number did- but it wasn't like they were full to the brim with experienced staff officers and people who knew how to train and organize modern armies. If nothing else, there weren't that many such officers available to them, because of anti-Semitism in pre-WWII militaries.
I don't think it is a cultural issue as much as it is an institutional history issue. You don't need meritocracy and democracy as much as needing a cadre of lower level officers who are capable of making decisions on their own with proper support.
Well, I think you
do need meritocracy, but not democracy. However, authoritarianism
can undermine the quality and performance of the army under some circumstances. This is especially true if the rulers rely on the army as a major prop for their ability to rule their own state. Because the requirements for having a very politically reliable army, and having an army that is good at fighting wars, are kind of mutually exclusive. This is part of why the Stalinist purges did such damage to the Soviet army, for instance. They represented a very abrupt attempt to go from a warfighting army optimized for tactical and strategic effectiveness, to a political army optimized for loyalty to the state. Many of the existing officers 'had' to go for that to happen.
As a result, the Soviet military of 1939 had great paper strength, but struggled to overpower even a small nation like Finland.
Channel72 wrote:I understand your point, and I'm sure the factors mentioned in the article above play some role here. However, the Arab-Israeli wars are really the only example here. The Iraq/Iran war is somewhat of a counter-example, BTW, where the Arabs stalemated the Persians - and all the other wars were mostly internal civil wars/revolutions.
Well, the real question is, "when an Arab nation's army takes the field, what happens?" It's kind of irrelevant under what circumstances they take the field, as long as they're out fighting. The Gulf War is relevant- we can look at the Iraqi performance against the Coalition, but also the Saudi performance against the Iraqis.
The Iran-Iraq War is interesting because of the question of to what extent the same factors claimed to be a problem for Arabs (the Iraqis) were also a problem for the Iranians (who aren't Arabs).
So, we're really only talking about the Arab-Israeli wars here, like the 6-day war, etc. I'm not sure this one series of conflicts is significant enough to generalize broadly based on cultural factors. A cursory glance at the
military hardware used by both sides (Israel vs. Egypt/Jordan/Syria) seems to indicate somewhat of an edge for Israel. They had modern Western equipment, whereas the Arabs had a combination of Soviet-supplied aircraft and pre-WW2 vehicles. Perhaps someone on this board with a better comparative understanding of this equipment (Sea Skimmer?) can weigh in and explain how much of an advantage the Israelis really had here.
I'd go into this in some depth but I don't have time because I'm about to go to work. DARN.
The point is, I'm not necessarily disagreeing with you, I just question how much we can generalize here from cultural factors based on this one example. There may have been many other factors at play, including what ray245 brought up regarding the relative inexperience in fighting modern wars of the post-Ottoman Arab states.
Lack of experience is almost certainly a factor- but again, part of the question is trying to figure out how well they use what they DO have, which includes quite a lot of foreign training and advisors pouring into the region trying to teach them how to benefit from other people's experience.
Stas Bush wrote:Soviet equipment can be extremely deadly when used properly. Former Soviet servicemen were highly prized in post-collapse years since they knew how to use it. Also the Soviet Army inflicted huge losses on the enemy even by dumping obsolete equipment into the Third World where it was efficiently used against colonial powers.
This is quite true... although usually what they dumped was small arms and infantry weapons.
Almost any military can make effective use of infantry weapons
if they are well organized, and communist anticolonial forces of the 1950s were usually fairly well organized, motivated and unified in a way that made them effective. Or at least effective enough to accomplish what they needed to.
Making effective use of tanks, artillery, air support, and all the other heavy weapons of modern war, while coordinating tens or hundreds of thousands of soldiers against an enemy that has equal portions of all those things... it's a whole different level of difficulty. The Soviets worked extensively to be good at doing that with Soviet equipment, but a lot of the nations they sold military hardware to... didn't.
The Arab military problems are not technogenic; in fact, wars aren't even won by super-advanced wonder weapons bu rather through proper use of mainline weaponry and vehicles.[/quote]