In another thread it was suggested that the outcome of the Vietnam war illustrated the inferiority of US military forces. Another poster then replied that the Vietnam war while a political defeat for the US was also nothing but a string of military victories for the US military. That argument was in turn dismissed as the result of brainwashed fantasy.
This has got me thinking however. Is it true that sufficient military superiority will always guarentee political victory? Is it even possible to have an unfavorable outcome to a war without one's military being defeated in battle? The consensus throughout the world appears to be that it is not possible to lose a war without having your military defeated, judging by the widespread perception that the The british leaving India, the US leaving Vietnam, and the soviets leaving afghanistan were all proof of the inferiority of the departing military as compared to their adversaries.
What do the rest of you think? Does it even matter which military in a conflict was more capable if the political outcome that military was intended to influence is not achieved? Are future wars more or less likely with either of these interpretations?
please discuss.
This has got me thinking however. Is it true that sufficient military superiority will always guarentee political victory? Is it even possible to have an unfavorable outcome to a war without one's military being defeated in battle? The consensus throughout the world appears to be that it is not possible to lose a war without having your military defeated, judging by the widespread perception that the The british leaving India, the US leaving Vietnam, and the soviets leaving afghanistan were all proof of the inferiority of the departing military as compared to their adversaries.
What do the rest of you think? Does it even matter which military in a conflict was more capable if the political outcome that military was intended to influence is not achieved? Are future wars more or less likely with either of these interpretations?
please discuss.
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