| Steely Glint 
 
 Posts:  580
 Joined:  9/23/2003
 Status: offline
   | Wow, talk about just not getting it. 
 Two sides square off for a battle. One side is much larger and very
 well-off. The other side is smaller and poor. The larger side has far
 more men, far better weaponry, far better logistics, far better
 railroads, and control of the seas and rivers. The smaller side has far
 fewer men, many of who are barefoot and many of whom are poorly armed
 and poorly fed. The smaller side's logistics system is in tatters
 because they have only a pathetic railroad system and because enemy
 control of the rivers and the sea not only makes the use of shipping
 impossible, it also strangles all imports and exports. The larger side
 doesn't have a significant problem dealing with a foreign land, a
 foreign language, or a different religion, either; the great majority of
 the people in the major area of conflict speaks the same language, are
 from the same culture and have the same religion, and some of the larger
 side's units are from immediately adjacent areas.
 
 Given this situation and any kind of parity in leadership, what results
 can be expected? Clearly the smaller side will be steamrollered. When
 the larger side has all the advantages and has adequate comparative
 leadership, what can the smaller side do? If it goes on the offensive it
 will take losses that it can't afford or sustain, and that will only
 speed up the steamroller. The best that the smaller side can do is to
 defend and to hope that the larger side will make a mistake that it can
 jump on - but, if the leadership on the larger side is adequate in
 comparison, that opportunity just won't happen. All that can be done in
 the realm of civilized warfare by the smaller side is Fabian tactics;
 they can harass and delay the larger side and pray that time is somehow
 on their side - perhaps maybe they will be able to hold out until an
 event such as an election might change the will to fight of the larger
 side. The smaller side will do its best to damage the larger side's
 morale. It will try to make the larger side at least work, if not bleed,
 for every step. Which, leaving out the utterly uncivilized options such
 as terrorism, assassinations/decapitation strikes, a scorched earth
 campaign/total war, etc., is essentially that all the smaller side
 really can do.
 
 If the larger side's leadership quality is higher than the quality of
 smaller side's leadership, the smaller side will be promptly blitzed.
 
 If the larger side's leadership is comparable in quality to the smaller
 side's leadership, the smaller side will be steamrollered in a timely
 manner.
 
 But, if - and only if - the larger side's leadership is significantly
 poorer than that of the smaler side, then the smaller side will be able
 to make the larger side really pay. Better leadership will allow the
 smaller side to make effective countermoves and counterattacks, to steal
 a march now and then, to strike behind the larger side's lines, to delay
 and to deny. The smaller side may even win some battles. If the smaller
 side's leadership is sufficiently better than the larger side's is, the
 smaller side might even win thirty-three of them, where in theory it
 should have won very few if any at all. The smaller side's better
 leadership will certainly always delay the steamroller.
 
 The remarkable thing about the Civil War in the West isn't just those
 thirty-three amazing victories where the CSA David, instead of being
 flattened, somehow not only knocked the USA Goliath down but sometimes
 beat him like a dog; it wasn't that CSA forces could face five to one
 odds in the open field and still triumph; it was that a campaign that
 should have been long over by the end of 1863 was delayed to the point
 where it was still incomplete in 1865.
 
 There is only one variable that can account for what happened as opposed
 to what should have happened given the force disparities, and that
 variable is leadership. A novice looks at the Civil War in the West with
 honest simplicity and falsely concludes that "The Union forces won, ergo
 the Union must have had better generals." A professional looks at the
 documented force disparity and the results and says, "If it took the
 Union forces that long to do that little with that big an advantage in
 everything then the only possible explanation is that the Union forces
 were badly outgeneraled." This leaves two remaining options; either the
 overall CSA generalship was above average and the overall Union
 leadership was average or below average, or the CSA generalship was
 average and the Union leadership was below average. An examination of
 the leadership in the West makes it very clear that something along the
 lines of the latter was the case. There were, of course, clearly
 exceptions on both sides (Grant, Sherman, Thomas, Sheridan, Forrest,
 Sidney Johnston, Joe Johnston et al as positive exceptions; Bragg,
 Pemberton, Van Dorn, et al as negative exceptions) but overall the facts
 demonstrate that the CSA in the West was sufficiently better led that
 its leadership was able to prevent the CSA from being steamrollered by
 vastly superior forces in the West. Looking at the force differentials,
 that's actually quite an achievement.
 
 When you throw in the thirty-three Union defeats - when there really
 should have been very few or none - and, once you account for the few
 exceptions, Union leadership in the West was clearly incompetent. This
 should not come as a shock to anyone; with a few exceptions, most of
 whom were already noted as exceptions above, the Union leadership in the
 East was clearly incompetent as well.
 
 _____________________________
 
 
  “It was a war of snap judgments and binary results—shoot or don’t, live or die.“ 
 Wargamer since 1967. Matrix customer since 2003.
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