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    1. The Madness of Crowds
      John Steele Gordon
      November 2008
    2. Obama's Leftism
      Joshua Muravchik
      October 2008
    3. Putin and the Polite Pundits
      Arthur Herman
      October 2008
    4. Sending Iran's Regrets
      Michael J. Totten
    5. 1948, Israel, and the Palestinians: Annotated Text
      Efraim Karsh
  1. The Madness of Crowds
    John Steele Gordon
    November 2008
  2. Obama's Leftism
    Joshua Muravchik
    October 2008
  3. Putin and the Polite Pundits
    Arthur Herman
    October 2008
  4. 1948, Israel, and the Palestinians: Annotated Text
    Efraim Karsh
  5. Sending Iran's Regrets
    Michael J. Totten

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commentary's blogs: the horizon | contentions | connecting the dots
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The Warrior Ethos

01.31.2008 - 11:44 AM

What is war like? For those of us who have never had the misfortune of seeing it in person, the question is of enduring fascination. The literature is vast, and there are many vivid memoirs and histories  that convey the horror of the battlefield. A picture of a very different sort is provided by a newly released U.S. Army document entitled The Warrior Ethos and Soldier Combat Skills, a manual for fighting modern warfare.

Here is how it opens: 

Modern combat is chaotic, intense, and shockingly destructive. In your first battle, you will experience the confusing and often terrifying sights, sounds, smells, and dangers of the battlefield—but you must learn to survive and win despite them.

1. You could face a fierce and relentless enemy.

2. You could be surrounded by destruction and death.

3. Your leaders and fellow soldiers may shout urgent commands and warnings.

4. Rounds might impact near you.

5. The air could be filled with the smell of explosives and propellant.

6. You might hear the screams of a wounded comrade.

However, even in all this confusion and fear, remember that you are not alone. You are part of a well-trained team, backed by the most powerful combined arms force, and the most modern technology in the world. You must keep faith with your fellow Soldiers, remember your training, and do your duty to the best of your ability. If you do, and you uphold your Warrior Ethos, you can win and return home with honor.

A brief excerpt from the table of contents — Chapter 5 “Cover, Concealment, and Camouflage”– gives a sense of what else awaits anyone who takes the time to study this interesting document.
Chapter 5 COVER, CONCEALMENT, AND CAMOUFLAGE

5-1  Section I. COVER

5-2  Natural Cover
5-2  Man-Made Cover

5-4  Section II. CONCEALMENT

5-4  Natural Concealment
5-4  Actions as Concealment. 5-4

5-5  Section III. CAMOUFLAGE

5-5  Movement
5-5  Positions
5-5  Outlines and Shadows
5-5  Shine
5-5  Shape
5-6  Colors
5-6 Dispersion
5-6 Preparation
5-7 Individual Techniques

The Warrior Ethos and Soldier Combat Skills is important not only for what tells us about the battlefield but for the glimpse it offers of what our brave soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan are called upon to do on a daily basis. 

 

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This entry was posted on Thursday, January 31st, 2008 at 11:44 AM and is filed under Connecting the Dots. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

2 Responses to “The Warrior Ethos”

  1. 1
    David Thomson Says:
    January 31st, 2008 at 12:11 PM

    The Warrior Ethos and Soldier Combat Skills should remind any sensible person that such a manual will be inherently required until the end of time. We will always need brave individuals to defend our society and pacifism is the ideology embraced by the utopian fool. In their heart of hearts, the Democratic Party elites prefer to disbelieve that the at least metaphorical reality of original sin is alive and well on planet Earth. This is why the Democrats cannot be trusted with national defense issues.

  2. 2
    J.E. Dyer Says:
    January 31st, 2008 at 1:50 PM

    A nice piece. I would add something that many people don’t realize, as we go about our relatively peaceful, entertainment-laden lives in North America: there’s no musical score accompanying combat. No crash of cymbals or crescendo of synthesized violins to alert us to “peak moments.”

    The Warrior Ethos emphasizes something many people won’t address today: that it matters whether you win. Although the movie Saving Private Ryan got many things right about combat, it missed that boat, settling for the personal moral idea of “earning” the sacrifices made by others. But it matters greatly who wins. We need not demonize the enemy to recognize that. Our world would be entirely different today if Hitler had not been defeated, or if the Soviet Union had not collapsed.

    We only brace ourselves to face the terrors of combat because it matters who wins. We must never forget that.

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