Technology: Making Crap Soldiers., page
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ATS Members have flagged this thread 2 times
Topic started on 2-1-2011 @ 07:23 AM by Yissachar1
If this is in the wrong forum then Mods please change.

Over the past few years there has been a large influx of technologies that are meant to aid and advance our millitary capabilities.

In some senses it does. However at what cost?

This tech is an example of the new tech available. It locates the enemy for the soldiers and warns them on shots fired. This seems good to the casual observer but from an infantry purist perspective it is a further loss of hard earnt and trained fieldcraft, personal skills that infantrymen should know without tech.

Locating the enemy via the "crack and thump" method and observation is bread and butter stuff. An infantryman should be able to give a direction and distance of the enemy just by listening to the crack and thump of rounds fired in the troops direction.

Then there is navigation. Troops now use satellite tech to navigate and bring in fire missions rather than the very low tech map and compass. A soldier should be able to navigate without the aid of technology, and bring down artilery with skills aquired in training.

Technology breaks down.

Good fieldcraft does not.

We are in danger of these bread and butter skills being lost, and if they are, and the tech fails, then whats left is a few useless and probably dead soldiers.

Real infantrymen are well versed and practiced for every eventuality and relys more on their skills rather than technology that adds more weight to what they have to carry in terms of equiptment and batteries and time wasted in maintaining these devices.

A team of well trained and lightly equipt infantry will out manouver any troops in the world.
edit on 2-1-2011 by Yissachar1 because: (no reason given)
edit on 2-1-2011 by Yissachar1 because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 2-1-2011 @ 09:06 AM by autowrench
reply to post by Yissachar1



Star and flag for bringing up a very good point, field-craft. With all of this new technology, and several generations of soldiers use them, and do not use the soldier stay alive skills they are taught, the technology will only work for them until it breaks down, and all tech eventually breaks down. Technology, as always, is a double-edged sword, both good and bad. Sadly, most technology goes to the building of weapons systems.


reply posted on 2-1-2011 @ 09:35 PM by Somehumanbeing
reply to post by Yissachar1



Then I guess it must be a difference of nationality. I am from Australia, here in the ADF we are taught all the things you have mentioned, instructors even seek to neglect any technological advantage we may have at this current state, so we tend to pursue the training adhering to the original manual. Fieldcraft was the most important aspect of training here, they would be up your ass if you got it wrong.

Upon finishing basic, and pursuing IET as a Rifleman, they initially taught weapons, and an entire module of fieldcraft which built upon the subjects in basic. Maybe it would depend on the instructor, but so far it does not seem to me that these essential skills are dismissed for more "technological" training.

As for my swordsmanship statement, I was just trying to make a point as it seemed to me that going by your reasoning we would still teach archaic methods of warfare.
edit on 2-1-2011 by Somehumanbeing because: (no reason given)

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