And yet the peace time nations who then had to change to a wartime economy were able to defeat the militaristic states of Germany and Japan. Largely due to technological innovations such as radar (thank you Brits) and the atomic bomb. The dominance of Blitzkrieg showed itself to have one fatal weakness (a body of water separating you from the territory you seek to conquer.) And even today, where are these large super military powers that threaten us and require that we have large standing armies?Gawdzilla wrote:Andrew, we lost ground like crazy at first. MacArthur wanted 200,000 troops in the P.I., the entire US Army wasn't that large when he made the request. And almost all those people that signed up need training, which takes time. We had the 16th largest army in the world, after Bulgaria, in 1940.
Even if you demand that we have a large standing army to respond to an attack, and such a threat existed, how would this justify a preemptive strike? Even if we make such decisions with complete disregard for human life, based on nationalistic cost benefit analysis, has the expense of the Iraq war been justified by bringing lower oil prices to compensate for it? We won WWII, and regardless of speculation as to how we might have won it better or more quickly, the resilience and ability of free countries to defend themselves from militarism was tested then and stood firm.