Sunday, July 11, 2021

Reflection on Storm of Steel by Ernst Junger

Storm of Steel was a very fast read for me, in which Junger details his experiences as a German soldier on the western front of World War One. Junger adapted his memoir from his journal, so sometimes the narrative is not so clear, but he writes very descriptively and there were times when I couldn't put this book down. One example is how he describes weathering an artillery barrage, like being tied to a post while a man swings a hammer at you over and over, just barely missing you, sometimes hitting the post, and sending splinters raining down over you.

Reading Storm of Steel gave me a better appreciation for the different phases of the war, as it began in pitched battles that resulted in stalemate and trenches, followed by a war of materiel and artillery barrages, followed by some mechanized warfare at the end.


Some things that stood out to me included the general absence of life not on the front. Junger frequently tells us about when he has leave to go back home or when he goes to training or when he is in the hospital convalescing, but only to inform us that there is a pause. The action of the book does not take place in the hospital or Hanover (Junger's home). Rather, he tells us that he is gone for a while, and then, in the next sentence, we are back fighting in northern France. I also thought it was strange that the officers and maybe other men wore their awards in battle. It is strange to imagine them fighting with ribbons and iron crosses on.

Junger as a person at times seems like an absolute madman who sometimes really enjoyed the war. He writes about how "these short expeditions, in which a man takes his life in his hands, were a good means of testing our mettle and interrupting the monotony of trench life. There's nothing worse for a soldier than boredom." The book is highly emotional, as Junger is deeply introspective about his own reactions to war. He is enthusiastic at times, and at other times paralyzed with fear, sometimes throwing himself on the ground and crying, "sobbing hysterically," as he writes it. Other times, he finds himself experiencing no fear at all and experiencing "fits of laughter I was unable to repress."  Twice Junger thinks that he is about to die, and his descriptions of that are very interesting, especially the second time. He mainly describes surprise and relief as his emotions, where he gains a deeper understanding of his purpose in life. For Junger, war evokes the entire range of human emotion, often not the types that you would expect would match the situation. He is unapologetic for showing emotion. Junger reflects on seeing a dead English soldier who was so young that Junger calls him a boy-- "the state, which relieves us of our responsibility, cannot take away our remorse; and we must exercise it. Sorrow, regret, pursued me deep into my dreams." I think that is the best line of the book.

Monday, July 5, 2021

Reflection on The Savage Wars of Peace: Small Wars and the Rise of American Empire by Max Boot

Boot's biggest point in this book is that America's small wars (Nicaragua, Haiti, Philippines) are the way we fight wars and the big wars (WWI/II, Korea) are exceptions. I think he is right about that. He convincingly points out dozens of different operations that US forces have been a part of from our founding until the modern day, and it is clear that we have a long history of interventionism. The problem is that he ties this history to his own interventionist ideology, and pointing out past interventions is seemingly his way to argue that there is precedent for more interventionism in the future. But the book is weak in evidence that those interventions worked. Boot is always arguing that the occupation just needed to go on for longer, and I think he would always argue that even if we occupied countries for centuries.

This is definitely a well researched book, though it is not really systemic in its treatment of small wars. The book is really split with the time period from the Revolution through World War One just recounting different random small wars and then a big skip to Vietnam and a little bit about the nineties. I don't think I changed to many preconceived notions, though I think I am a little more appreciative not of how the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were not a pure waste. While we should have been focused on China, fighting those wars definitely honed the skills of a generation of American warriors, and so it was not a pure loss of time, blood, and money. However, I would still say that America should not be invading landlocked countries without planning to stay for the long haul. The clearest lesson that I can get from this book and my other readings is that you can't win an occupation unless you plan for it to be permanent. If there is going to be a handoff later, you are always going to lose the territory by design. The great empires of history did not invade lands so that they could do nation building and then leave.


Miscellaneous Facts and Quotes:

  • "The strategy of guerrilla war is to put one man against ten, but the tactic is to pit ten men against one." -Mao Zedong
  • Congress authorized the Medal of Honor for officers after the battle for Veracruz in 1914 and gave out 55 medals, which was probably too many. Smedley Butler tried to refuse his because he thought the award was now watered-down.
  • Haiti invaded and occupied the Dominican Republic from 1801-05 and 1822-43. The Dominicans could not defend themselves and even volunteered to return to Spanish sovereignty in 1861, though Spain pulled out in 1865. The Dominicans asked the USA to annex them but the treaty was defeated in the Senate in 1871 even though President Grant was interested.
  • Smedley Butler voted for the socialist candidate Norman Thomas in 1936 and shared speaking platforms with members of the American Communist Party. He also opposed US intervention in World War Two. 
  • In the early twentieth century, marines were known as "State Department troops."
  • General Victor Krulak was only 5'5" 138 pounds. 
  • Between 2003 and 2008, 10,000 people died of suicide bombings in Iraq
  • "Qui desiderat pacem, praeparet bellum." -Vegetius (Let him who desires peace prepare for war).