War

Thoughts on the Shrinking Utility of War

Until quite recently war has been one of the most profitable of human activities, at least for the winners. The necessary investment in men and equipment was only modest. Women and children did most of the domestic work, leaving underemployed young men to be recruited for minimal wages, a promise of adventure, and the potential fringe benefits of rape and pillage.  For most of that era a warrior’s basic equipment was minimal. A spear or sword, a shield and a pair of sandals were all that was needed for foot soldiers. It was a winner-takes-all contest and the profit to be had in territory gained, resources, treasure, slaves and women was substantial. Having a homeland surrounded by a buffer zone of conquered territory was also a valuable addition to security.

For groups having a clear advantage in fighting capability there has always been a strong temptation to use it. However, there has always been the less apparent risk of an addiction to power and, inevitably, this has been fatal.  The capacity to expand and control is highly attractive; enough is never enough.  Empires are built, then large militaries and bureaucracies are required to control, manage, and defend them. Vital interests expand, as does domestic disagreement, opposition and corruption. External threats and enemies also arise and grow.  Eventually every empire collapses in decay, moral dissolution and/or outright defeat.

Today, the insatiable addiction to empire building continues. But, unlike the slower rise and falls of the past, this process has become faster and more obvious.  Technology has changed everything, making a fundamental rethink necessary.

The key fact is that war is becoming too costly and too destructive to pursue, even for the winners. The equipment, training, maintenance and ongoing technological development required by a modern military has become ruinously expensive. Worse yet, the destructive capacity of modern weaponry has become so effective that even a moderate war can cost hundreds of billions of dollars (and hundreds of thousands of lives) while a major superpower conflict involving a nuclear exchange would be in the incomprehensible range of trillions in cost and hundreds of millions of lives.

The current war in Ukraine is a prime example. It was expected to result in a rapid and overwhelming victory for Russia. Now, after more than a year of heavy fighting, the Russian military has suffered well over a hundred thousand deaths, the loss of several thousand tanks worth billions of dollars, plus myriad more military losses and expenses in addition to multiple other national economic costs stemming from the war. And all for what?  Ukraine was no threat to Russia and has nothing that Russia needs. Putin simply thought Ukraine would  be a quick and easy victory, a simple step on the road to re-establishing even more of the former Soviet empire. He and his nation are paying dearly for this mistake.

What Vladimir Putin should have grasped is that modern technology enables masses of soldiers, weapons and supplies to be readily detected,  precisely located and accurately targeted. The advantage in numbers that previously afforded victory now presents fat targets vulnerable to devastating attack by highly mobile precision weapons, often situated far away from their targets.  In Ukraine this enhanced capacity to locate and destroy targets has not been limited to strikes on  troops, equipment and supplies; it  has also been very effectively applied to wreak havoc on command posts and even on individual high rank commanders. The mortality rate for Russian colonels and generals has been unprecedented.

Meanwhile, the population of Russia was already in decline, and this has been accelerated by a wave of war-inspired emigration that has seen the brightest and best of the country’s young professionals take their talents elsewhere. Compounding the consequences of the narcissistic insanity of Putin’s leadership is Russia’s awesome potential, which has gone begging. Russia has the largest land area and richest reserves of undeveloped natural resources of any nation. The wealth currently being literally blown away in an obscene war can only obtain what amounts to an ongoing and massive liability — if Russia were to win, how many more lives and how much treasure would be needed to occupy and pacify? Had that expenditure been directed to development of what is known and already possessed, Russia might have been well on the way to achieving one of the world’s highest standards of living. Instead, most of its population daily confronts a near Third World existence.

The cost of modern warfare has simply become prohibitive for winners as well as losers.  The recent experiences of the US in Iraq and Afghanistan are further telling examples. With the most advanced military in the world confronting a Third World rabble there was never a risk of overall US defeat on the battlefield. However, in the final reckoning, a cost of more than a trillion dollars and the lives of several hundred thousand civilians for little or no achievement amounts to a defeat.

The expense of maintaining both a large standing military and an ongoing lead in technology is never ending and unsustainable. Where technology is concerned, catching up is always cheaper than finding and developing the next big advance. The herd of lesser powers will follow as closely as they can afford, so the leading armies will always need to keep running if they are to stay ahead. To exit from such a  rat race is difficult.  Paying more attention to where you are headed is helpful but insufficient.

We see this too in Joe Biden’s America which, like Putin’s Russia, has its own internal problems — and an apparent, equally insistent refusal to recognise them. The US has developed far more government than its economy can support. Its health and education systems, welfare and infrastructure all require major attention. Meanwhile, a growing bureaucratic morass impedes productive activity, with the interest due on cumulative budget deficits raising the possibility of default. With one eye on history as a guide, the probability of large, disruptive change is approaching a certainty.

And then there is China and and its enmity for Taiwan. Both share much the same culture and ethnicity as well as enjoying highly beneficial economic relations. In addition, Taiwan provides China an open side door for access to much of the most advanced Western technology, even including military hardware, systems, and operational information. As for an actual invasion, no war is needed.  At any time it wishes, China could contrive some incident to declare a blockade of commercial shipping and aircraft. While it is certain no airline or commercial shipping would dare defy such a ban, Washington’s response, especially under the current administration is moot. What we can assume is that, after a few weeks, Taiwan would run out of fuel and the world would begin to face an abrupt halt in the supply of over 90 per cent of global production of the most advanced microchips. China could then make Taiwan an offer it couldn’t refuse, much like the  treatment meted to Hong Kong.  No war, and minimal risk or effort would be needed.  Taiwan is a ripe fruit, easily plucked whenever China wants it.

However, China too faces its own, far more difficult, problems. The consequences of its longstanding one-child policy, for starters, these being compounded by the effects of the huge growth in urbanization. With a rapidly growing population of elderly and no system of social security, children are expected to care for their elderly, with few able to afford the support of two parents. Relaxing the one-child policy came too late for the spoiled offspring of single-child families to take such Confucian responsibilities on themselves.

Any hope of the superpowers addressing their problems will require a major realignment of national resources and priorities away from the arms race. Counterintuitively, advances in  technology may greatly reduce the need for insanely complex and expensive weapon systems if these are made obsolete by their vulnerability to highly effective defensive weapons. This appears to now be happening with tanks in Ukraine, where Russian losses have seen storage depots and even military museums stripped of outdated models, which are being pressed into front-line service. It is likely other military systems will also become vulnerable to highly effective (and far less expensive) drones, robotics, beam weapons and unmanned systems.

While all this may seem like science fiction much of it is already in advanced development, testing, even early stages of deployment. Soon manned aircraft and submarines will begin to be replaced  by drones. Surface ships, long since trackable by satellite, will become sitting ducks indefensible against long range hypersonic missiles. All vehicles of all types anywhere will be open to serve as shooting gallery targets for controllers and targeters at military consoles thousands of miles away. 

Looming over all this is the undeniable reality that all of the major powers face a growing affliction of politico-economic imbalances, and all would benefit greatly from a reduction in military costs to enable an increased focus on their own development. Rational analysis would suggest such a move; it remains to be seen if policies and expenditures endorse that future.

10 thoughts on “Thoughts on the Shrinking Utility of War

  • Geoff Sherrington says:

    Walter,
    The rush of counties to the aid of Ukraine might signal a strategy of modern war, namely that modern weapons need periodic testing in real situations, to provide data for design improvement.
    Who knows the answers to whether the world needs armies and warfare at all? Seems like wars can now be won without need for conventional weapons, as you note. What is to do be done for re-employment of the military industrial sector?

  • Andrew Campbell says:

    So why are we spending billions of our hard earned dollars on submarines that will be difficult to crew when a fraction of that could be used to develop thousands of submarine drones that can be crewed onshore with minimal risk?

    • Lewis P Buckingham says:

      The answer is probably both.
      There will be a gap between Collins and whatever follows.
      Presumably the Collins will or has been upgraded to control drones and a flotilla will surround it up to say 200 km radius.
      The new nuclear powered boats will still use these or further upgraded drones.
      Land based HIMARS will eventually control the littoral seas and warn off Chinese wolf warrior naval vessels that deploy off Arnhem land as happened recently.

  • marcusgoyne@hotmail.com says:

    This piece is very light on facts and reality.

  • Lewis P Buckingham says:

    ‘The key fact is that war is becoming too costly and too destructive to pursue, even for the winners.’
    So what’s in it for Ukraine?
    Survival, they have no where else to go.
    What are the real costs for the old Soviet apparatus?
    All their old missiles and antique tanks and ordinance blown up.
    Their prison system emptied.
    The opportunity for more treasure, rare earths, gas, lignite, uranium, grain if they persist.
    A financial and economic relationship with the new world order based on the old Sino soviet Bloc.
    Immunity from international sanctions and credit controls.
    A place in the written history of Russia, ‘Putin the Great.’
    This one falls into the criteria of a Just War.
    So it has to be fought.
    It seems such a waste and uneconomic to the outsider.
    The alternative though is to be annihilated, at least from the point of view of Ukraine.
    Then, of course, there is the Polish question to be settled……..
    By Russia and China?

    • rosross says:

      @lewis P. Buckingham,

      What is this obsession with the Soviet era? Russia has not been Soviet since 1991. Like China Russia wants to trade and this war was created by US/Nato because they could see that Russia was growing in strength economically and in terms of trade. Why do you think the Americans blew up Nordstream? To force the Europeans to buy energy from them. If the Europeans are stupid enough to go along with that they deserve all they get.

      Any reading of the history makes it clear this is a US/Nato proxy war against Russia, using Ukraine as cannon fodder, and it has been decades in the making.

      The Russians no doubt felt they had no other choice once the CIA fomented a coup in Ukraine in 2014 and the Americans got busy building their 46 bio(weapons) labs in Ukraine. A guess in line with military analysts including American is that Russia went to war to protect ethnic Russians being bombed by the Ukrainian Government in Donbas and elsewhere. They have taken that region. One also supposes they wanted to protect Crimea after the people there voted to return to Russia.

      The Russians do not need to take all of Ukraine and are no doubt smart enough to work out that would be a bigger bite than was necessary. As to accessing minerals, for heaven’s sake, Russia is hardly short of resources. Quite the opposite.

      As to Ukraine’s future, if they were stupid enough to get into bed with the US/Nato then they can hardly be surprised that this war is the result. If the Mexicans or Canadians did what the Ukrainians did, got into a military alliance with a deemed enemy, the Americans would invade them in a nanosecond. If anything this war has gone on too long because the Russians have tried to protect civilians and have not done the American version of shock and awe, where you knock out power and water in days, as the US did in Iraq.

      Sadly, Ukrainians have been betrayed by their idiot leaders although one presumes Zelensky has his stolen billions tucked safely away and lives in hope that the Americans or Israelis will get him out of danger so he can enjoy his blood-drenched pieces of silver.

  • rosross says:

    While there are some valid points here I am not sure stats out of Russia or Ukraine can be trusted. Military analysts put Ukrainian losses at 8-10 times that of Russia so if the Russians have lost 100,000 then the Ukrainians are clearly out of the game.

    And since the Russians are also using mercenaries and again, according to military analysts have barely touched their best trained soldiers, this ‘weakening’ of Russia might be a bit soon to call.

    Yes, war costs but if you push a country to the wall, as US/Nato did with Russia then they will do anything to protect themselves. Ditto for China in the face of US aggression, in which Australia is stupid enough to play a part.

    As to China’s enmity with Taiwan, again, this is a Western invention. The Chinese and Taiwanese are one people and Taiwan was a part of China and will be again. In fact the Chinese and Taiwanese had pretty much quietly agreed as much and were getting along fine until the US began to do in Taiwan what it did in Ukraine, in order to foment a war to weaken China as it wished to weaken Russia. Fund dissent and revolution is the name of the American game.

    The Chinese are pragmatic although unlike Russia they did not, yet anyway, have 46 bio(weapons) labs on their doorstep and neither is Taiwan being pushed into a military alliance as Ukraine was with Nato. Neither has the CIA carried out a coup in Taiwan to put in pro-US leaders as they did in Ukraine.

    War might be costly but US/Nato have seen their weapons swallowed up by Ukraine in their proxy war against Russia, and, since the ever-resourceful and totally corrupt Ukrainians have destroyed a lot and sold a lot on to nefarious groups, the shoe would seem to be on everyone’s foot.

    One thing is certain, both Russia and China have more economic resilience than either the Americans or Europeans. The cost of war is more likely to destroy the West, including Australia, than it is to destroy Russia or China.

    • Lewis P Buckingham says:

      Not sure about your history. I suppose history will be written by the victors.
      However for another view I refer you to
      ‘World War I and the struggle for independence’
      https://www.britannica.com/place/Ukraine/Bukovina
      It looks as if this all started well before the CIA was created and the US stopped being an isolationist power.
      One has to give the Ukrainians some agency.
      Its unlikely the Nord Stream was bombed by the US.
      Looking at the explosion site it appeared that the pipe blew from within.
      If so then the charge was laid remotely and sent along the pipe as part of a maintenance rig.
      The Ukrainians are using the repeated Russian attacks as a ‘killing field’.
      By following this daily for 12 months I think that the numbers of casualties the Ukrainians are saying they inflicted on the enemy is inflated by about 20%.
      https://en.defence-ua.com/news/438_days_of_russia_ukraine_war_russian_casualties_in_ukraine-6632.html
      That’s because they appear to be estimates and there is a fixed number with a random variation.
      The numbers are high.
      If their own losses were 8 to 10 times this, Ukraine would have already thrown in the towel.
      Russia may well have a lot of minerals, however its growing season is short and it can always do with more.
      Nothing like famine to cruel things, useful to have a vassal grain supply to exploit when needed.
      Unfortunately acquiring Ukraine will ensure another 1000 year dynasty.
      That’s if they get away with it.

  • Feiko Bouman says:

    It is strongly suggested that commenters become familiar with the analysis, historical background and research of professor JJ Mearsheimer, International Relations scholar, in relation to the origin of this proxy war between the US military establishment and the Russian Federation.
    His global analysis is concise, precise, erudite, realistic and convincing.
    It forms the basis of an historical perspective from which flows a deep understanding of this tragic conflict, not readily available via MSM platforms.
    Easily sourced via the magic of the internet.

    Perhaps Quadrant can “start the ball rolling” with one of his essays/interviews/podcasts.

    Much is at stake. Unintended consequences are lurking.

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