no way man! they weren't evil. we were, for using the bomb!
11/18/2009 1:15:07 PM
11/18/2009 1:15:25 PM
^^^That sounds like a plausible explanation, but we shouldn't have negotiated a surrender that allowed them to keep occupied land or anything like that. Obviously, we wouldn't have let the surrender include whatever conditions they wanted. Just the retention of the emperor.^^I already concluded that "evil" and "good" are useless concepts.^History also tells us that humans are capable of killing large numbers of other humans, when that violence could have been avoided. I think we could have proceeded with Japan just like we did, as far as helping them rebuild and restructure, without dropping the bombs, through a surrender that allowed retention of the emperor.I do understand the difference. The emperor post-WWII is mostly a symbolic/cultural position, not totally unlike the Queen or King of England. I think that allowing him to retain that position through a conditional surrender, as insignificant as it may seem, could have ended the bloodshed. We'll never know, because we fired away without bothering to find out.
11/18/2009 1:25:10 PM
11/18/2009 1:43:09 PM
11/19/2009 10:59:49 AM
that's not truethey actually began the war thinking that they would be knocking the US navy out of the fight for a longer period than they actually didwhile the US was rebuilding it's Pacific fleet they would be conquering and fortifying the western Pacific as well as quickly increasing their military strengththey planned on making the cost of defeating them high enough to discourage any allied attempts to do so.
11/19/2009 6:40:48 PM
certainly what you're staying is truebut I don't think the Japanese thought we were not going to fight AT ALLI know that they thought we were a bunch of playboys who could not handle a protracted conflictso the "cost" thing was correct, but I'm pretty sure that they planned on giving up some of their conquests (Probably acquired US territory) in the process of a negotiated peacein any case, these idiots who throw surprise attacks at ENORMOUS countries, whether or not they thought they could achieve ultimate victory, we're certainly not in the correct strategic mindsetI still don't know that Russia would of caved in with the lose of Stalingrad. I would be awesome if someone knew if there were usable oil fields, other than the Caucasus, for the Russians. If the Germans would of captured those oil fields, would the Russians have been oil starved? (I know that an oil rich German Army would of been good to go... BUT IT'S STILL RUSSIA, SO BIG)[Edited on November 19, 2009 at 8:26 PM. Reason : .]
11/19/2009 8:25:46 PM
Here's an interesting article that came across the wires. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) identifies four key cost drivers for future budgets:1) continued real growth in pay and benefits for troops and civilians2) growing operations and maintenance costs3) plans for advanced systems4) investments in new, high-tech spy capabilitiesI think people forget the first one, but the military, like many companies, is also struggling with traditional issues like the cost of health care (Tricare), pensions, and trying to stay competitive in other pay and benefits for key skill sets with the private sector.Operations & Maintenance costs are continuing to be a big problem. I can't speak for other systems, but I know that on the aerospace side, the continuing use of aging platforms (50+ years) like the KC-135's and the B-52's are driving up O&M costs as the airframes are being stressed to the brink.Advanced systems goes into the prior article I posted about the fubar that our acquisition system is.As for the spy capabilities... well... I shouldn't really speculate on such things.
11/20/2009 11:02:53 AM
i haven't been reading this thread so this will be a really long post...
11/21/2009 4:56:20 PM
11/21/2009 5:26:54 PM
11/21/2009 6:22:11 PM
i would just like to post that i am all for military spending....thanks for the 3.4% raise.
12/30/2009 12:24:22 AM
One thing that needs to be noticed is that a fair number of defense programs become congressional pork projects.You could build it for 10 billion, but if they fund it with 15billion then the contractor is willing to build a new factory making widgets in their district.Another problem is many defense programs and developments happen on scales longer than the staff that may start with them, as well as the congress and goals that orignally approved them.There is an immense strive in the government to get the promotion and move on. Completion of a project really does not matter. People need to be assigned to projects and not allowed to leave until its completion.These solutions to problems are left to linger long after their problem no longer exists.The other side of that is some projects that do need to be completed never are because of political changes.I know alot of you feel like the cold war is yesterday, and war like that can never ever never ever happen again, but if history has shown us anything, is that large scale war is a constant for humanity.Currently we have an immediate need to properly respond to gorilla type tactics. The classical solutions to that kind of combat are total war, which we are unwilling to wage.[Edited on December 30, 2009 at 3:49 PM. Reason : dd]
12/30/2009 3:28:08 PM
12/30/2009 4:12:00 PM
1/21/2010 10:35:32 AM
I think the question depends upon whether or not this same level of spending, this same level of courtesies is provided to senior military officers and senior DoD officials. If so (and it could very well be), then I don't see this as being anything particularly scandalous; if anything, I bet Congress would be in an uproar that they're not being treated with the same level of respect as the Executive branch officials.I could also see a case where Congressional members and their staff maybe bitched in the past about the rough transport by the military and strongly "suggested" that the military improve the quality of their transport. After all, they are civilians, so you can't simply strap them into a C-17 next to palates of explosives.
1/21/2010 12:15:45 PM