Tuesday, November 29, 2022

The Winds of War

 The current Ukrainian success against a much stronger Russian military may or may not be surprising. The history of war is full of examples of small, outnumbered forces beating larger armies. Here are some examples:

The United States vs Great Britain in 1776 and 1812.  Britain was the greatest empire of the world at the time the United States declared their independence.  The British military was the number one power in the world.  Yet they were decisively beaten by a rag-tag American army made of of private citizens for the most part.  You could argue about what the cause of the British failure, but one reason for the American success was its leadership under George Washington.  In Roman times this proved to be the deciding factor in victories or defeats.  During the time of Julius Caesar, his leadership was so esteemed that whenever he appeared to his troops, they would turn the time of the battle.  In World War II the United States was blessed with strong, proficient leaders such as General George Patton, Dwight Eisenhower, or General Douglas MacArthur.  The same could be said of the German military with such competent leaders as Erwin Rommel, Herman Goering, Friedrich Paulus, who commanded the German 6th Army at Stalingrad, and others.

The French Indochina War of 1946-54.  The French had a formidable army.  The Vietnamese were a third world colonial country. The French had modern weapons and an Air Force and help from the United States.  Yet, the Vietnamese soundly defeated the French in the final decisive Battle of Dien Bien Phu in 1954.

Italy loses to Ethiopia - 1895-96.  A modern European power loses a war against tribesmen of a backward country like Ethiopia.  

In ancient history we have the example of Greece vs Persia.  The Greek city states were not all united; some even fought for the Persians. The Persians, at the time, had the largest and greatest empire of their day.  Then they got greedy:  the wanted to take Greece too. Two Persian invasions of Greece took place. The first was under King Darius in 492 BC.  It ended with a humiliating defeat at the Battle of Marathon in 490 BC.  The Persians were so humiliated that Darius vowed revenge.  Revenge took place in the name of Darius's son Xerxes.  This second war took place from 480 BC to 479 BC, again, it ended in a humiliating Persian defeat. Some of the famous battles in this second war include the naval battle of Salamis, the Battle of Plataea and Thermopylae Pass. 


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