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-   -   US Military 2013 Losses in the War in Afghanistan (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=210445)

Red October1984 01-08-14 03:24 AM

US Military 2013 Losses in the War in Afghanistan
 
On the first day of snow here, (as in, two days ago) I went along to a Orthodontist appointment of my brother's. I sat in the waiting room and flipped through this month's People Magazine. (To be fair, Jennifer Lawrence was on the cover so there's nothing wrong with that)

At the end, they had several pages where they honored all of the US Servicepeople killed in Afganistan all year.

There was 123 of them.

I got to thinking. If we ever got into a REAL war...one where we'd lose that many or more in one battle....

How would society react to something like that? Everybody would lose their minds!

I'm not saying that the number should be greater. It would be best if we had left A-stan years ago after Bin Laden and saved, let's say, 150 per year since then. That's 450 people counting this year. IMHO, there is no way you can just change what has been done for thousands of years. Why are we wasting resources and lives trying anymore?

Anyway, I just thought it was interesting that the number was so low considering how big of a deal it is when a soldier dies. You would think it would be a higher number. Just the media at work I guess. I'm glad that there are people out there that care though. It makes me so mad whenever I see somebody dissing the troops and using choice words/phrases to curse them. We've all seen those kinds of posts...

If you won't stand behind them, feel free to stand in front of them.

I thought it was a nice little memorial. Had all of the names and ages of the people and had pictures of all the servicewomen lost. It's sad that a lot of them had to die so young....but I think it's even worse when you see the name of somebody over 35....somebody with a family at home.*

To those that paid the price this last year, a salute.

:salute: :salute: :salute:


*not to say the younger ones didn't.

Betonov 01-08-14 04:52 AM

In a major war, especially where the enemy would be clear and the survival of the nation would be at stake, the public would be more acceptable to higher losses.

Especially now, when Bin Laden was neutralized by one SEAL team without losses, when an entire invasion 10 years before failed to do so.

Jimbuna 01-08-14 06:21 AM

The US have lost over 2,000 personnel in total....there is a breakdown by year and month in the link below:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_...in_Afghanistan

The price paid by all of the countries with personnel there is already far too high and the quicker everyone comes home the better.

Nippelspanner 01-08-14 06:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Red October1984 (Post 2161615)
How would society react to something like that? Everybody would lose their minds!

No, they would not. Not necessarily I mean. It always depends what they fight and die for. See WWII. A very good reason to fight, wasn't it? And now look at Vietnam, or Afghanistan and Iraq... somehow the mood quickly shifts, right?
At least that is how I feel about these conflicts.
When I hear about German losses in Astan, it mostly ruins my day. Because they all die for nothing good at all. But that is kinda OT atm I guess.

Dread Knot 01-08-14 07:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nippelspanner (Post 2161645)
No, they would not. Not necessarily I mean. It always depends what they fight and die for. See WWII. A very good reason to fight, wasn't it? And now look at Vietnam, or Afghanistan and Iraq... somehow the mood quickly shifts, right?


What is often forgotten is that about 3,000 French civilians were killed on D-Day alone by shore and air bombardment. About the same as the number of Allied servicemen deaths. More French civilians died under Allied bombs than British civilians during the Blitz – about 70,000. I think when we in America wonder why Europe is adverse to military adventures abroad, it's because they lived through their own liberation, and consequently had a much less rosy view of it. That's not to say they were ungrateful to be free from Nazi rule, but that they recognize it came at a steep price from all sides in people and infrastructure.

We tend to think that high causalities were an accepted norm in WW2, but even then negative public reaction had to be dealt with if you weren't a totalitarian police state. Certainly, the biggest tipping point in Truman's decision to use the atomic bombs were the 12,000 US dead on Okinawa. Politicians here recognized that home front morale was becoming more brittle with every expensive step toward Japan. The Japanese themselves were banking on it.

Cybermat47 01-08-14 07:22 AM

I wonder how many Afghan civilians have died?

R.I.P. All the troops and civilians who have died in Afghanistan.

Jimbuna 01-08-14 09:42 AM

Very hard to find a reliable figure but looking at a range of internet sights a conservative figure would be in the region of 20,000.

Red October1984 01-08-14 12:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Betonov (Post 2161627)
In a major war, especially where the enemy would be clear and the survival of the nation would be at stake, the public would be more acceptable to higher losses.

Especially now, when Bin Laden was neutralized by one SEAL team without losses, when an entire invasion 10 years before failed to do so.

I just wonder if our country would even unite against an enemy anymore.

With the way we are, I'm not sure if I want hipsters and gangsters defending me. That's saying they would go.

Idk. I guess something would have to happen to know for sure.


---

Afghanistan is the wrong place for us to be. We need to stay out. Let them fight amongst themselves. Until there's an actual reason, (Iran and Israel get into it...) we should just quit trying. We have our own oil. We can sustain ourselves with oil from Canada and South America.

Betonov 01-08-14 01:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Red October1984 (Post 2161755)
I just wonder if our country would even unite against an enemy anymore.

That's the one thing you need. A common enemy that is an actual enemy.
If you can raise 5 million USD I can invade you in a week :)

Oberon 01-08-14 01:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Red October1984 (Post 2161755)
I just wonder if our country would even unite against an enemy anymore.

With the way we are, I'm not sure if I want hipsters and gangsters defending me. That's saying they would go.

Idk. I guess something would have to happen to know for sure.


---

Afghanistan is the wrong place for us to be. We need to stay out. Let them fight amongst themselves. Until there's an actual reason, (Iran and Israel get into it...) we should just quit trying. We have our own oil. We can sustain ourselves with oil from Canada and South America.

How easy it is for one to generalise a population for their viewpoints. :O: A Hispter or a gangster could make just a good a soldier as any other man, heck for some gangbangers it might well be the only way out of the circle of violence of the streets for them. If one of them with a gun is the only thing between you and a horrible death then you will be glad of them no matter what race, sex or ideological viewpoint they hold. Remember, many conscientious objectors in the First World War would wade through the mud in the frontlines to carry back wounded soldiers from no-mans land as they acted as medical orderlies.

In regards to US opinion on war, it would depend a lot on how long the war lasted and how much it effected the mainland. Aside from periodic terrorist attacks and the one that started it all on 9/11, the 'War on Terror' (which is the worst designation for a war ever) hasn't really touched American soil, and in fact since the Civil War the American mainland has remained relatively untouched, the odd Japanese raid or balloon here and there, but nothing at all like the destruction that fell upon the whole of Europe during the Second World War. If a war happened that devastated American cities, killed thousands of American people, you bet that America would be right behind that war, in a manner similar to how public opinion was initially behind the invasion of Afghanistan. It's not too difficult to get public opinion behind a war when you've already been attacked, but maintaining it in the face of a lack of progress is difficult, and it will be very disheartening for all involved in Afghanistan when the final withdrawal takes place and the Karzai government lasts as long as a Furby in a microwave. Already in Iraq we're seeing the nation split into two and the creation of a new Al'Qaeda state in the Al'Qaeda controlled areas of Iraq and Syria, so it's a real kick in the teeth to have blood spilled for seemingly no real return, sure Saddam is gone, mission accomplished there, but what is going to replace him may lead to the old story of 'better the devil you know'.

Would the American public support a war on Iran...honestly I doubt it, even if Iran attacked Israel I think that public opinion would be extremely split between pro and anti-Israel sentiments, and most people would see a war on Iran as being a fruitless endeavour...which is partially true to be honest, because the only way you're going to completely stop Iran from developing its nuclear program is to get boots on the ground, air attacks just won't hack it, and I would be extremely surprised if the American public would support a boots on the ground war with Iran.

Dread Knot 01-08-14 01:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Red October1984 (Post 2161755)
I just wonder if our country would even unite against an enemy anymore.

With the way we are, I'm not sure if I want hipsters and gangsters defending me. That's saying they would go.

I don't want an army of square-jawed, lock-step automatons who obey every order without compunction defending me either. At the end of the day every Army is a reflection of the nation that sends it into battle.

I guess we could always go back to conscription. That was popular. :D

Red October1984 01-08-14 02:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Betonov (Post 2161760)
That's the one thing you need. A common enemy that is an actual enemy.
If you can raise 5 million USD I can invade you in a week :)

Well shoot. Ran out of that several trillion dollars ago. How about an IOU?

Quote:

Originally Posted by Oberon (Post 2161767)
How easy it is for one to generalise a population for their viewpoints. :O: A Hispter or a gangster could make just a good a soldier as any other man, heck for some gangbangers it might well be the only way out of the circle of violence of the streets for them. If one of them with a gun is the only thing between you and a horrible death then you will be glad of them no matter what race, sex or ideological viewpoint they hold. Remember, many conscientious objectors in the First World War would wade through the mud in the frontlines to carry back wounded soldiers from no-mans land as they acted as medical orderlies.

In regards to US opinion on war, it would depend a lot on how long the war lasted and how much it effected the mainland. Aside from periodic terrorist attacks and the one that started it all on 9/11, the 'War on Terror' (which is the worst designation for a war ever) hasn't really touched American soil, and in fact since the Civil War the American mainland has remained relatively untouched, the odd Japanese raid or balloon here and there, but nothing at all like the destruction that fell upon the whole of Europe during the Second World War. If a war happened that devastated American cities, killed thousands of American people, you bet that America would be right behind that war, in a manner similar to how public opinion was initially behind the invasion of Afghanistan. It's not too difficult to get public opinion behind a war when you've already been attacked, but maintaining it in the face of a lack of progress is difficult, and it will be very disheartening for all involved in Afghanistan when the final withdrawal takes place and the Karzai government lasts as long as a Furby in a microwave. Already in Iraq we're seeing the nation split into two and the creation of a new Al'Qaeda state in the Al'Qaeda controlled areas of Iraq and Syria, so it's a real kick in the teeth to have blood spilled for seemingly no real return, sure Saddam is gone, mission accomplished there, but what is going to replace him may lead to the old story of 'better the devil you know'.

Would the American public support a war on Iran...honestly I doubt it, even if Iran attacked Israel I think that public opinion would be extremely split between pro and anti-Israel sentiments, and most people would see a war on Iran as being a fruitless endeavour...which is partially true to be honest, because the only way you're going to completely stop Iran from developing its nuclear program is to get boots on the ground, air attacks just won't hack it, and I would be extremely surprised if the American public would support a boots on the ground war with Iran.

+1 :hmmm:

I just have so little faith in our population...I know there'd still be a group of people (maybe like....California, Florida, etc :O: ) protesting the war no matter what happened.

Iran might not have been a good example....but how about Russia?

Or some Asian aggressor? :hmm2:

Would it take another Pearl Harbor to unite the country?

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dread Knot (Post 2161773)
I don't want an army of square-jawed, lock-step automatons who obey every order without compunction defending me either. At the end of the day every Army is a reflection of the nation that sends it into battle.

Seems like the US Military is getting softer though....with all the political correctness. That's what I'm basically getting at. "Nobody can be offended and whatever you do, it's okay" kind of society really makes me mad.

Quote:

I guess we could always go back to conscription. That was popular. :D
If we get into it with an Asian country, we just might have to.

Oberon 01-08-14 02:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Red October1984 (Post 2161782)
+1 :hmmm:

I just have so little faith in our population...I know there'd still be a group of people (maybe like....California, Florida, etc :O: ) protesting the war no matter what happened.

Iran might not have been a good example....but how about Russia?

Or some Asian aggressor? :hmm2:

Would it take another Pearl Harbor to unite the country?

Oh, definitely, even in the depths of World War II there were protests against it, both in your country and in mine. The most amusing of which was the socialist ones who were fiercely anti-war right up until Operation Barbarossa and then, strangely enough, they became very pro-war. :har:
Then there's the isolationist movement, popular in America both pre and post war, and I don't think that Charles Lindbergh would be a modern day Californian. :03:

Russia...or China for that matter is a difficult one, because of their nuclear arsenal, no one would want mutually assured destruction, and you have to look at the peace protests throughout the west (and no doubt there would have been the same in the east if they had been permitted or publicised) during the Cold War, but certainly a Pearl Harbor style attack would inflame public opinion to the point of support in general, but not fully because that would be impossible, after all to this day there are people who argue that both Pearl and 9/11 were inside jobs, but that's another topic of worms entirely.
If one were to look at the general public reaction in American on the 10th September 2001, it was almost overwhelmingly in favour of not only invading Afghanistan but erasing it from the map, shock is very quickly replaced by anger, and with that wave of anger over a decade of long and bloody occupation began. Of course, waves of emotion swiftly break upon the cold hard wall of reality, and that reality has pushed the American public, when they are reminded of the war, into a fierce anti-war stance, and not just the American public but most of the nations that were involved in Iraq and Afghanistan, you only have to look at the recent events in Syria and the general opinion in Europe and America about taking military action against Assads regime. Once bitten, twice shy, as the saying goes.
So, a Pearl Harbor style event would certainly inflame public opinion in support of a war, but it wouldn't last long. Imagine what the American public would have been like if Operation Olympic had gone ahead? If the Japanese hadn't surrendered and the Allied forces had been forced to fight mile after bloody mile into Japan. I think that public support for total surrender would have started to wane and with the Soviet Union looking hungrily across the Sakhalin straits the US may have been forced into a position that it didn't want to take.

Tribesman 01-08-14 02:36 PM

Oberon, you raise an interesting question.
Exactly how long does a furby last in a microwave?

Oberon 01-08-14 02:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tribesman (Post 2161791)
Oberon, you raise an interesting question.
Exactly how long does a furby last in a microwave?

About less than five minutes according to the scientific experiments conducted by 'Is it a good idea to microwave this?' :hmmm:


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