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MyUncle

(924 posts)
Fri Jan 3, 2020, 04:17 PM Jan 2020

War would end if the Generals had to fight and die.

The killing of Soleimani is unique. He was instrumental in killing people and many of the people he commanded died based on his orders. This assassination was directed at a "General" and brought death directly to the person who was responsible for so much carnage.

A possible good outcome could be that those "Leaders" who would plant and reap death might hesitate if their very own lives were at stake.

The Trump Doctrine might be to kill the leaders (Qassem Soleimani, Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis and Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi) and not the soldiers. IF that is the Trumps plan, I am for it.

31 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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War would end if the Generals had to fight and die. (Original Post) MyUncle Jan 2020 OP
Actually, many generals have died in wartime. MineralMan Jan 2020 #1
Your post showed 22 Generals who died in WWII. MyUncle Jan 2020 #6
How is that relevant? Those Generals died. MineralMan Jan 2020 #8
And there were approx 1100 generals hardluck Jan 2020 #31
Generals don't just sign up as a General, look at their military careers and check the life braddy Jan 2020 #2
MineralMan , you are right, but how about since WWII ...? MyUncle Jan 2020 #3
One General died in Afghanistan that I know of. MineralMan Jan 2020 #10
Generals do fight and die, sarisataka Jan 2020 #4
OK, Generals AND Politicians. MyUncle Jan 2020 #5
No, you see. That isn't how it works. MineralMan Jan 2020 #7
My answer was tongue in cheek sarisataka Jan 2020 #12
Children of politicians keithbvadu2 Jan 2020 #13
bad example.. trump doesn't care about his kids getagrip_already Jan 2020 #28
+1 2naSalit Jan 2020 #14
Conflict of the future will leave no fingerprints. harumph Jan 2020 #9
For anything bigger than security maintenance and brief police actions, Hortensis Jan 2020 #11
Warriors are young because of the physical requirements, 50 year old bodies can't do it in the first braddy Jan 2020 #16
:) I don't buy it. I'm a grandmother and way too experienced Hortensis Jan 2020 #17
As a vet and a contractor I can tell you it is the fact, the combat arms life is hard and wrecks our braddy Jan 2020 #18
No, I don't begin to know what you do. But our friend who Hortensis Jan 2020 #19
This theory of old people replacing the young as warriors is so silly that it has never been done braddy Jan 2020 #21
Lol to your notions that 30 is old and worn out. Hortensis Jan 2020 #22
I never included 30 year olds and the discussion is about combat arms, not finance, legal, and braddy Jan 2020 #23
+1. dware Jan 2020 #24
One word matt819 Jan 2020 #15
Trump doesn't care who dies as long as it's not him. Vinca Jan 2020 #20
History shows us the opposite is true. Mariana Jan 2020 #25
+1 sandensea Jan 2020 #27
The Trump Doctrine is: if war can get you re-elected, provoke it any way you can sandensea Jan 2020 #26
Most of them become generals because of their combat records. cwydro Jan 2020 #29
No, it would not. The Velveteen Ocelot Jan 2020 #30

MineralMan

(146,308 posts)
1. Actually, many generals have died in wartime.
Fri Jan 3, 2020, 04:26 PM
Jan 2020

Here's a link to a page that lists WWII Generals and Flag Officers who died in such circumstances:

https://ww2gravestone.com/american-general-and-flag-officers-killed-in-world-war-ii/

Perhaps you are thinking, but not checking the facts. I don't know.

MineralMan

(146,308 posts)
8. How is that relevant? Those Generals died.
Fri Jan 3, 2020, 04:43 PM
Jan 2020

Generals are always fewer in number than people of other ranks. Your statement was simply incorrect. War would not end if Generals fought and died. They have done so without wars ending.

Your statement is simply incorrect.

hardluck

(638 posts)
31. And there were approx 1100 generals
Sat Jan 4, 2020, 12:30 PM
Jan 2020

That served in WW2. So a death rate of 2%.


16,112,566 served in WW2 so a death rate of 2.5%.

I’d say roughly equal.

 

braddy

(3,585 posts)
2. Generals don't just sign up as a General, look at their military careers and check the life
Fri Jan 3, 2020, 04:32 PM
Jan 2020

expectancy of 2nd lieutenants in combat.

MyUncle

(924 posts)
3. MineralMan , you are right, but how about since WWII ...?
Fri Jan 3, 2020, 04:33 PM
Jan 2020

In the past 50 years war casualties have mainly been the soldier and civilian. Countries, organizations send their young mostly men to fight and die, while they plan, fund raise, create the plots that kill their own people and so many civilians.

Let the price of "modern" war be on the heads of states and terrorist groups. We might see an outcome that is not the same as it ever was.

MineralMan

(146,308 posts)
10. One General died in Afghanistan that I know of.
Fri Jan 3, 2020, 04:52 PM
Jan 2020

Generals don't usually take the field at all any longer. My point still stands, though.

sarisataka

(18,655 posts)
4. Generals do fight and die,
Fri Jan 3, 2020, 04:35 PM
Jan 2020

Just not as much as they did coming up through the ranks. A general is a soldier just like a private, just with better pay and benefits.

Now if politicians had to fight and die in the wars they start....

MineralMan

(146,308 posts)
7. No, you see. That isn't how it works.
Fri Jan 3, 2020, 04:41 PM
Jan 2020

We have had politicians die during wartime, too.

Try a different idea, perhaps.

sarisataka

(18,655 posts)
12. My answer was tongue in cheek
Fri Jan 3, 2020, 05:05 PM
Jan 2020

About politicians. The point I was making is the troops, including generals, will be the ones fighting the wars while the political leaders who order the wars are far away with no risk to themselves.

Killing leaders will not end the wars however. Say the impossible happened and Iran gets a suicide bomber close enough to kill Trump. Do you think this country would let that go? Missiles and planes would be on the way within hours, with the full support of Congressional Democrats.

Iran cannot respond to this killing in the same manner but you can be sure they will respond.

getagrip_already

(14,750 posts)
28. bad example.. trump doesn't care about his kids
Sat Jan 4, 2020, 12:06 PM
Jan 2020

and would gladly trade them for a badge of honor. It would be about him and his sacrifice......

But english royal family have fought in wars; most recently harry in afghanistan I believe.

And there are several serving senators and house members who have kids in the military.

harumph

(1,900 posts)
9. Conflict of the future will leave no fingerprints.
Fri Jan 3, 2020, 04:44 PM
Jan 2020

e.g. non-state actors acting as proxies for states.

Hortensis

(58,785 posts)
11. For anything bigger than security maintenance and brief police actions,
Fri Jan 3, 2020, 05:01 PM
Jan 2020

I favor a draft and have since the 1960s. Only it's the older, able, parental generations, all sexes, who would be in the first draft, then the next most mature age group. Adolescents through their mid-20s only after mature adults were tapped out. Sometimes war is necessary, people lined up to sign up after Pearl Harbor, but this would get rid of a lot that wasn't.

I moved twice to different states in high school, and then dropped out; and ultimately, except for a couple, I've never known if, or which of the boys who talked in dread about their draft numbers came home okay from Vietnam. Or didn't. But I've always known that the parents who let them go should have gone first.

 

braddy

(3,585 posts)
16. Warriors are young because of the physical requirements, 50 year old bodies can't do it in the first
Fri Jan 3, 2020, 06:52 PM
Jan 2020

place and the few who tried to keep up would quickly fill the VA hospitals and drain our disability pension funds.

Generals are skilled soldiers who got old in the ranks and also wrecked their bodies if they were in combat arms.

Hortensis

(58,785 posts)
17. :) I don't buy it. I'm a grandmother and way too experienced
Fri Jan 3, 2020, 07:59 PM
Jan 2020

to believe a bunch of callow adolescents make better soldiers than men and women who've achieved emotional and intellectual maturity. More gullible and malleable beyond doubt, but not taking advantage of that, drafting people of mature abilities, needing it to be important enough for them them to sacrifice cushy, prosperous years, is exactly what I'm talking about.

And let's face it, few in the military are combat soldiers. Clerks, electricians and forklift drivers serve also. But even combat soldiers no longer march across Spain and Portugal.

The problem with my fantasy is political of course. People would have to choose to change the way it's always been. But if it was that way for just a while, following that new norm by trying to exploit adolescents to send them into danger because their parents wouldn't go would be seen as egregiously immoral.

And that's really the point of my rant.

 

braddy

(3,585 posts)
18. As a vet and a contractor I can tell you it is the fact, the combat arms life is hard and wrecks our
Fri Jan 3, 2020, 08:12 PM
Jan 2020

bodies, old knees and backs cannot carry 100 pound packs up mountains and move 100 pound artillery shells etc. Old people can't handle the heat, the arctic cold, the jungles, the dysentery, their eyes and ears aren't as good, they can't dig foxholes and handle combat jumps with 200 pounds of weight into trees, snow, and water, at night, and on and on.

As a vet who associates with other vets I can tell that many of us older guys would love to replace our kids in the military.

Your mention of the ancient days indicates that you don't know a lot about hard modern soldiering. Old men's bodies can't handle it, it even tears up the young female body and they are almost all in support.

Hortensis

(58,785 posts)
19. No, I don't begin to know what you do. But our friend who
Sat Jan 4, 2020, 08:56 AM
Jan 2020

retired in his late 40s as a sergeant major after working into his 40s as a career combat soldier,
master sergeant rank with a number of deployments to the ME, as well as other parts of the world, agreed with me. The age for combat soldiers should be moved up, or at least preference should be for older. Btw, I just looked and the average age of Olympic athletes is 27, with many in their 30s.

Once retired and until cancer took him a couple years ago, our friend made an avocation of counseling wounded kids on getting what they're going to need from military systems that are trying to hustle them out for least cost. Most make easy victims at this end of their service also, with the experience they need before signing still ahead of them.

Have a nice day. And let's hope Trump doesn't get any killed... Might as well. Until it happens.

 

braddy

(3,585 posts)
21. This theory of old people replacing the young as warriors is so silly that it has never been done
Sat Jan 4, 2020, 09:22 AM
Jan 2020

and never will be, if the old and worn out were interchangeable with the young and fit then we would simply have a permanent job as combat soldier just as civilians do, and we would hire our old vets like me.

Hortensis

(58,785 posts)
22. Lol to your notions that 30 is old and worn out.
Sat Jan 4, 2020, 09:38 AM
Jan 2020

But no wonder you think the knees of 50-year-old accountants couldn't handle payrolll disbursements.

Our thoughts are on nonintersecting lines. This was just meant to be a passing rant, anyway. Average military service age has been rising and is expected to continue to in future, but not because the parents go before their children.




 

braddy

(3,585 posts)
23. I never included 30 year olds and the discussion is about combat arms, not finance, legal, and
Sat Jan 4, 2020, 10:17 AM
Jan 2020

medical, no one cares how old they are.

Thirty year olds are not the Generals and old parents that this thread is about, enlist and learn something about this military that is insulted by this thread.

Mariana

(14,857 posts)
25. History shows us the opposite is true.
Sat Jan 4, 2020, 11:53 AM
Jan 2020

Generals have fought in battle and died for thousands of years. War didn't end.

sandensea

(21,635 posts)
27. +1
Sat Jan 4, 2020, 11:58 AM
Jan 2020

War is just so ingrained in human nature, sadly. It appeals to the ego.

Plus the profit motive. Always the money.

sandensea

(21,635 posts)
26. The Trump Doctrine is: if war can get you re-elected, provoke it any way you can
Sat Jan 4, 2020, 11:57 AM
Jan 2020

And if it can make you boatloads of money, all the better.

 

cwydro

(51,308 posts)
29. Most of them become generals because of their combat records.
Sat Jan 4, 2020, 12:23 PM
Jan 2020

Most know about fighting and dying.

The Velveteen Ocelot

(115,693 posts)
30. No, it would not.
Sat Jan 4, 2020, 12:23 PM
Jan 2020

Many generals have been killed in combat; in the old days even kings died in battle, and wars continued anyhow. There's always an effort to take out a leader. Don't forget that Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden were killed for that reason. Trump didn't have Suleimani killed because he was a general, but because Trump is too stupid to understand that doing so was likely to cause more blowback than he was worth. That's why neither Bush nor Obama tried to take him out although they could have done so easily. There is no "Trump doctrine." Trump does something because he thinks it might benefit him personally at a particular moment. And killing generals has never stopped wars.

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