Justus2
Posts: 729
Joined: 11/12/2011 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: StK @spence: I know all that. I know Napoleons tactics where the ones that filled the military textbook. It really isn't meant disrespectful to anybody, because of course its me reflecting on this with 20/20 hindsight. But never mind those theoretical aspects your soldiers know they can fire their weapon with good accuracy and reload at a rather quick rate, so they have to know something like Picketts charge won't work unless you have vastly superior numbers (and then it won't end pretty). Advancing in the open against people in defensive positions with accurate firearms is certain death. I also think that there was the thought of that war was always fought like this and something so simple as a musket shouldn't be able to change the rules so quickly and so completely. A thought which has its merits but it didn't stand the test of the battlefield. Again I mean no disrespect and I never was a soldier (I served a year in the Red Cross instead) I simply can not imagine myself in the position of those soldiers. I agree with Spence, years of training and experience are hard to overcome, the whole 'refight the last war' mentality that has vexed commanders for generations. Look at the French in WWII, even with the changes in aircraft and tanks, their strategy and doctrine did not change much. Another reason I have read about for the amount of bloodshed (the 'advancing in the open to certain death') from the Civil War was that most regiments were made up of volunteers, generally from the same areas. While there is always the 'peer pressure' not to run or desert in front of your brothers in arms, that was multiplied by the fact that they weren't just fellow Soldiers, but they were your brothers, cousins, and neighbors. If they advanced, and you fled, everyone in your town, your own family, would know you had 'turned coward'. Very powerful motivation to stick it through.
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Playing/Learning Shadow Empire
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