125 comments

  • kayo_20211030 3 hours ago

    A very insightful, and correct, piece.

    I'll quote in full the following, which I think gets to the heart of the matter. If you have no push, you can't apply pressure to the point.

    > The notion that amateurs talk tactics and professionals talk logistics is frequently discussed in military academies and war colleges, yet it is rarely reflected in the Army’s budget requests or modernization priorities. The outdated concept of the tooth-to-tail ratio, which implies the logistical tail is a bureaucratic waste that must be minimized to support the combat teeth, must be fundamentally reexamined. In modern warfare, the tail is the primary target. If the tail is severed, the teeth are rendered useless.

    • Someone 4 minutes ago

      [delayed]

    • silvestrov 3 hours ago

      One of the most interesting innovations in the Ukraine war is their internal market place for drones, letting each drone group decide which drones they want to procure and use in battle.

      It is not a top-down decision, production and supply as other armies use for their weapons logistics.

      • lopsotronic 37 minutes ago

        You also have to ponder how it looks when you remove the Chinese supply chain for all those commodity parts. Which will almost certainly be the case if we decide to punch that dance card.

        Having a boundless cornucopia of servos and radios will affect the shape of your logistics/maintenance/fabrication complex.

        That's not just a "Ukraine Problem" either.

        • bix6 11 minutes ago

          I am so curious about this. There are a lot of 3D printed drone startups now. But nobody really seems to be thinking about the electronics sourcing. Great you can print a drone shell wherever but what happens if China turns off exports?

      • tpurves 3 hours ago

        this strategy worked to keep Ukraine alive, by enabling them to throw literally anything and everything they could obtain into the fight. And the system enabled rapid experimentation and evolution of what works. Also they didn't have enough of anything to equip all units equally or fully, so a market-like system of was also a way to triage short supply.

        However the logistics costs of fragmentation are very real (relevant to the supply chain theme of this story). And now that Ukraine is producing the better part of 10 millions(!) of drones per year, they are shifting towards more standardized drone models to simplify logistics, achieve more economies of scale and also now to have the capacity to keep units equipped more evenly and reliably.

        • mcswell 2 hours ago

          Reminds me of the Cambrian revolution: suddenly there were all kinds of weird animals. Many of these kinds rapidly disappeared, while a few more successful ones kept on. Or at least that's my reading.

        • jerlam 2 hours ago

          Wouldn't a fragmented, decentralized system also help make their supply chains more resilient? If they had a single large drone factory, it would be a sizable target.

          • mikewarot 17 minutes ago

            During WW2 in the United States, you had all sorts of consumer goods companies reorganized to output a prodigious amount of military supplies. There were multiple companies making the same model of things, with fairly rigorous QA to ensure quality and uniformity.

            For example, the BC-348 receiver, widely used in aircraft, was produced initially by RCA, and eventually "farmed out" to 3 other manufacturers.

            More than 4 million M1903 Springfield Rifle were produced by the Smith-Corona typewriter company.

            Here's a really good example, look at how the production of proximity fuzes, was distributed.[1]

            The key thing is to have second sources for everything. Something the US military seems to have forgotten, or decided to ignore in their pursuit of gold-plated weapons systems that give the most kick-backs.

            [1] https://usautoindustryworldwartwo.com/vtproximityfuze.htm

          • soco 2 hours ago

            One design doesn't mean one factory. And it's not about one design anyway, just the thought of culling the less performing ones.

      • tim-tday 31 minutes ago

        Procurement innovation wins the war.

      • homeonthemtn 3 hours ago

        I hadn't heard this before. Do you have a good article on it? I'd be curious to learn more

    • larrik 3 hours ago

      They should probably rename it from "tail" to "neck" and watch the attitudes shift immediately.

      • cucumber3732842 2 minutes ago

        Tooth to tail is crappy PC/corporate-approved rename. The concept used to have a bunch of arrow and spear related names and a bunch of informal phallic counterparts all of which are better suited to the fundamental workflow of mechanized offensive operations.

      • mcswell 2 hours ago

        Or maybe "dentures"?

        • ykonstant 2 hours ago

          That will certainly resonate with the generals (≧▽≦)

    • aprentic 3 hours ago

      It's always about logistics. The Three Kingdoms War was one of the bloodiest conflicts in human history. It was largely enabled by the invention of the wheelbarrow.

    • zcw100 20 minutes ago

      I guess you're just supposed to read Clausewitz not actually understand it.

    • phkahler 3 hours ago

      The US military knows full well the importance of logistics. TFA is somehow arguing for distributed distribution networks that are harder to track and attack. Why not advocate for improved defenses along the supply lines? Or is it down to percentages where just one good hit has large effect?

      • zipy124 3 hours ago

        They argue for both no? Increased armour for logistics, but also the notion that yes, if one good hit destroys your whole stockpile then you would need a 100% success rate defense mechanism which is impossible when you can be overwhelmed by the number of drones/missiles seen in modern warfare.

      • maxglute 3 hours ago

        Knowing logistics is important =/= able to adapt logistics to modern environment. Last 40-50 years US adversaries couldn't really contest/degrade US logistics at scale. Article is suggesting with new tech, they probably could, and hence may have to redo the entire system for distributed survivability / operate under chaos. Aka 60/70% of the force (the tail) is going to have to change the way they do things. It's hard to make 60/70% of org change, especially the boring bureaucratic/logistics part built around predictability, who are going to want to stay predictable and insist everything is fine with these minor changes, until its not.

      • rawgabbit 2 hours ago

        Ukraine is deploying AI enabled drones that require no fiber optic wires and no electronic tethering. They patrol autonomously and identify targets; a human authorizes the strike and they take out targets by themselves. This is the holy grail of modern warfare; destroy the enemy’s rear staging and logistics. If they don’t have fuel or ammo, they are a defenseless sitting target.

        • nickphx 15 minutes ago

          huh? how does one keep a human in the loop for decision making it there is not an 'electronic tether'?

    • dahart 3 hours ago

      > A very insightful, and correct, piece.

      I agree, or at least it feels insightful and right, though I can’t personally validate if it’s correct. But the big question I have is who is this written for, and what do they want to see happen? Is this to sway the public, to push politicians, to convince the Army internally to plan better, stop using contractors & no-bid contracts, or simply ask for more?

      Looks like military spending is currently ~20% of all Federal Revenue at somewhere close to $1T, and it exceeds the combined spending of China and Russia by maybe 2x. Are we wanting to go back to 1960’s 50% of Federal Revenue? Why don’t we have reasonable logistics and supply lines and infrastructure with $1T?

      Sources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_budget_of_the_United_...

      • tclancy 2 hours ago

        >who is this written for, and what do they want to see happen

        It's at wespoint.edu. The US military has a long and proud history of really good thinkers writing insightful and important pieces the government then ignores. My outsider impression has always been there was a freedom of ideas there. Don't get used to it though as Pete Hesgeth is fixing it fast as he can.

      • rawgabbit 2 hours ago

        It was written by a major trying to convince both those in charge of military doctrine (army leadership) and military budget (civilian leadership). Both of which can be obstinate and counterproductive. Army brass sometimes prioritize their careers over everything else. Civilian leadership sometimes prioritize their careers over everything else.

        • kayo_20211030 31 minutes ago

          Yes. I agree, although careerism in the military is maybe not that strong an influence; it is, for sure, but not that strong yet. Careerism in the political class is probably exactly as strong as you claim it is. However, I do hope there are sensible people within that group too, and they heed the underlying message.

          • cucumber3732842 a few seconds ago

            The military is still fairly results focused compared to the political class so that at least sort of pushes back on the most flagrant careerism.

      • nradov 2 hours ago

        Foreign military budget numbers are largely fake and can't be attempted to be believed. China's government spending isn't publicly released and can't be independently verified. A lot of what the US considers to be military spending falls into separate categories in China. At least on a purchasing power parity basis their actual spending is probably close to ours now, maybe even higher.

        • ecshafer 20 minutes ago

          This is a good point that shows the weakness in a lot of these comparing military budgets. Imagine an example where one country spends $1000 per soldier and another spends $100k per soldier. IF they both field 100 soldiers. One budget is 100x the other, but by PPP they are equal.

          A practical example is health care. US Gov gives free healthcare to service members. This is in the military budget. A different gov which already gives free health care to everyone, would have this in a different budget even if its effectively still supporting the military for each service member.

          US Soldiers/Airmen/Sailors/Marines are incredibly expensive each.

    • alansaber 3 hours ago

      The driving force of peacetime military procurement and organisation is bureaucracy. Hence we see the real developments in military doctrine from Ukraine, Iran etc.

  • bad_haircut72 3 hours ago

    When Russia invaded Ukraine, nobody (even the Ukranians) imagined that 5 years later they would have their own missiles hammering Russia 2500kms in the rear. Americans need to start accepting that a) the Iran war will also probably still be going on in 5 years and b) Iran will probably in a better place than they are now, strategically speaking.

    • malfist 3 hours ago

      > Iran war will also probably still be going on in 5 years

      The Russia/Ukraine war has a goal, to make Ukraine either part of Russia or a client state.

      What's the goal of the US/Iran war? So far it seems like the goal is to mostly return to the status quo prior to the war. I can't imagine that could continue 5 years because there's just not an objective. Of course, I could easily be mistaken.

      • wnevets 17 minutes ago

        > What's the goal of the US/Iran war?

        To make certain people money by shorting the oil market. There is a reason why these "peace" deals are always announced on Fridays.

      • segbrk 3 hours ago

        That’s exactly why it could continue indefinitely. A war with no goal can’t be won. Nor can it be abandoned without bruising powerful egos.

        • runako 2 hours ago

          Per the spec of the last 25 years, they will let it run until the party in control of the White House changes. The new party will be responsible for the exit & cleanup phase.

      • bad_haircut72 3 hours ago

        Once you've lost something (I think sooner or later, Iran will succeed in sinking a big US ship) then even if you cant win, you also cant leave else its an admission of defeat - so it drags on and on and on.

      • tbrake 44 minutes ago

        > What's the goal of the US/Iran war?

        kneecaping china by cutting off a huge source of its oil imports. Russia will not be able to make up the difference.

      • 27183 2 hours ago

        Initially it's unclear what the goal was. But now the goal must be opening the strait of Hormuz ASAP. There's going to be serious economic fallout if that doesn't happen[0]. It remains to be seen how realistic that goal actually is. Iran has big advantages in their favor.

        [0] https://www.cnn.com/2026/07/08/business/iran-oil-trump-strai...

      • forshaper 3 hours ago

        There hasn't been a clear goal for an American war since the first Gulf War.

      • ApolloFortyNine 3 hours ago

        Well at this point the goal is for Iran to stop randomly blowing up innocent cargo ships. Or firing missiles at airports and cities in retaliation.

        [1] https://www.reuters.com/world/iran-war-live-us-says-iranian-...

        • csbrooks 2 hours ago

          That sounds like it would be a return to the status quo.

        • QuercusMax an hour ago

          If that's the goal then the US and Israel are doing their best to stop it from happening. Iran is responding to provocations. Stop provoking them, no more blown up ships.

          • lenerdenator 35 minutes ago

            Iran has shown a willingness to do these things through proxies regardless of anyone else before.

            Furthermore, if they want to deal with the US or Israel, then they should target American or Israeli assets. Not third party ships manned by citizens of neutral nations who just want to get to port and remit cash to their families back home.

      • Varelion 35 minutes ago

        > What's the goal of the US/Iran war?

        Distract from the Epstein files. If you think anything else you:

            1 - Haven't been paying attention since 2008.
        
            2 - Are giving the administration way too much undeserved credit.
        • post-it 23 minutes ago

          I'm not sure anything is a distraction from the Epstein files. I don't think the administration cares about the Epstein files. What would be the fallout if they were all released? We already know that a lot of wealthy people were raping children. It's not like the US is going to prosecute.

      • strulovich 3 hours ago

        This is not a very charitable explanation, it takes politicians at their word during a war. (One should not do that, and you can refer to Putin’s language at 2022 as a parallel example to Trump’s)

        The initial US goals clearly were: 1. Regime change 2. Denial is of nuclear weapons

        It’s also clear these goals were not achieved. So the US changed tactics and goals. (Same as Russia no longer plans on capturing Kiev it seems)

        Most likely the US is stalling for time due to oil markets and has the same intentions as before, limited only by current capability.

        • dreamcompiler 2 hours ago

          I think regime change is likely to happen within two years. Just not in Iran.

      • lenerdenator 38 minutes ago

        > What's the goal of the US/Iran war?

        It varies. Which is the problem.

        I can think of a few:

        1) Severely kneecap the Iranians' nuclear ambitions. This one might actually be working to an extent.

        2) Severely kneecap the Iranians' military ambitions in the Middle East as a whole, particularly with respect to Israel. This remains unknown. Their neighbors seem content to give them a pass for launching missiles into their infrastructure, possibly on the grounds of shared religion. Maybe they'll get tired of it.

        3) Cause regime change in Iran. Not happening now. Might not happen in the foreseeable future.

      • mcphage 3 hours ago

        > What's the goal of the US/Iran war?

        What's the goal?! The US/Iran war has a ton of goals! Every day a new goal, each as improbable as the last.

        • anjel 3 hours ago

          As with Ukraine, it's a David and Goliath kind of conflict and in both conflicts, the temptation for Goliath to escalate by leveraging scale is predictable, tempting and frought.

          • malcolmgreaves an hour ago

            Iran is not David in this case. They’ve shown that their drone warfare is just a little bit under what the US military can provide. Remember that they destroyed a quarter of a trillion dollars radar installation. And the US has spent billions on munitions. The US can’t actually keep going in this war.

      • jandrese 3 hours ago

        The Trump administration forgot all of the lessons of Vietnam.

        • __s 3 hours ago

          If it weren't for those bone spurs maybe that war wouldn't be so forgotten

        • JBiserkov 3 hours ago

          Maybe because they dogged it?

      • pjc50 3 hours ago

        The goal is a very simple one: make Trump look good. It wouldn't be the first war in history to be driven by pure vanity of an absolute ruler.

        • isleyaardvark 2 hours ago

          It's to distract from the Epstein files.

    • mcphage 3 hours ago

      > Iran will probably in a better place than they are now, strategically speaking

      How could that be? Are they getting an influx of $300 billion dollars or something?

      • xp84 3 hours ago

        It’s an odd declaration and maybe based on Rus/Ukraine. But Ukraine is doing better now than in the first week of the “Special Military Operation” due to having a lot of rich allies who have (in fits and starts) given them a lot of money and gear, and due to a Russia which has stretched its military and economy to the breaking point.

        By contrast, Iran’s only allies are its terrorist affiliates in Lebanon, Gaza, and the Houthis. Those guys can’t do much to help. China and Russia (see above though) are willing to do business with them but don’t really give a crap about Iran surviving.

        Anyway, the US and Israel can keep degrading Iran’s military and “government” by dropping bombs (or better, drones) on them every week for a decade and it won’t really be a big deal for the former. Iran though will not be better off for it, I’m pretty confident. (Other than their surviving religious fanatics will be even more suicidally devout.)

        • Someone 36 minutes ago

          > Anyway, the US and Israel can keep degrading Iran’s military and “government” by dropping bombs (or better, drones) on them every week for a decade and it won’t really be a big deal for the former.

          Can they? https://www.csis.org/analysis/last-rounds-status-key-munitio... says

          “In the 39 days of the air and missile campaign before the ceasefire, U.S. forces heavily used the seven munitions in Table 1. For four of them, the United States may have expended more than half of the prewar inventory”

          According to that article, they expended ballpark a third of their inventory of expensive weapons systems such as Patriots or Tomahawk missiles, each with a production lead time of at least 3 years.

          If so, they would run out of those expensive weapons in three more months.

        • stevenwoo 2 hours ago

          It's sarcasm, a bit, because the last published deal revealed the USA was going to pay Iran 300 billion to end the shooting war that Israel and the USA started. https://www.npr.org/2026/06/23/nx-s1-5866577/iran-trump-deal...

        • pjc50 3 hours ago

          I believe the assessment is based on the desire of the US to offer concessions (such as sanctions withdrawal) in order to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Which will be painful in the medium term, but less so in the long run as oil is diverted around it.

        • general1465 2 hours ago

          > Anyway, the US and Israel can keep degrading Iran’s military and “government” by dropping bombs (or better, drones) on them every week for a decade and it won’t really be a big deal for the former.

          I disagree. The huge problem here is that USAF is showing how they are doing things over and over again. For China it is a treasure trove of data and ideal place for testing of their gear to detect and later shoot down US stealth aircraft which USA is constantly threating to use against China.

      • jandrese 3 hours ago

        They'll be getting the Hormuz toll money.

    • stronglikedan 3 hours ago

      lol, no. no comparison between those wars

    • kcatskcolbdi 3 hours ago

      It's hard to imagine them in a better place; they seem to have us by the balls already.

    • anjel 3 hours ago

      History reveals that every war is won by the nation with superior industrial capacity.

  • briandw 25 minutes ago

    These systems are antifragile. Just like what was exposed by the supply chain shock during covid. You optimize like crazy to squeeze every bit of efficiency (I know it's the military, so this is relative) out of a system when times are good / easy. Then the game changes a little and the entire thing comes apart. The US military has been operating in an uncontested space for far too long and there is major weakness in all the unprotected assets away from the front. Think about all the aircraft that are unprotected and near civilians. A project spiderweb in the US would be relatively easy and devastating. The US military needs to get their butt in gear and take action to close those vulnerabilities.

  • haunter 3 hours ago

    > If history provides the theory, the ongoing war in Ukraine offers a brutal contemporary lesson: Modern armies collapse when they run out of logistics, not when they run out of weapons.

    Is this really a new lesson? I thought that was common knowlegede since WW2 especially with the events of the Eastern Front.

    • hvs 3 hours ago

      That was discussed in the article.

    • realusername 3 hours ago

      "Amateurs discuss tactics, professionals discuss logistics"

      Napoleon

      • tristramb 3 hours ago

        He learnt the hard way (as did all those who followed him into Russia)

        • orthoxerox 2 hours ago

          Napoleon planned his Russian campaign extensively: he had supply hubs set up all over the Duchy of Warsaw, with feeder routers from Prussia keeping them full.

          What he didn't anticipate was how bad the roads in Russia would be and how long the Russian army would retreat along them. You can't resupply an army that is marching on a narrow dirt road through a forest because it's blocking its own supply lines.

  • yborg 2 hours ago

    I wonder when the use of 'culminate', v. "reach a climax or point of highest development" for "cease to be effective" became the standard in military-related writing when trying to sound smart. The original usage in the specific context of an army's advance or offensive coming to an end made some sense but it's now used as basically a wordy synonym for "stops" in any context.

  • thrownawaysz 2 hours ago

    >the difficulty of transporting extremely heavy 155-millimeter artillery shells and guided multiple-launch rocket system pods across contested oceans and degraded theater road networks

    I found it interesting that not even this article thinks about it that the US mainland ever can be attacked

    • LinuxAmbulance 11 minutes ago

      > I found it interesting that not even this article thinks about it that the US mainland ever can be attacked

      It can be, but it would be very, very difficult for anything short of lobbing ICBMs around. You'd have to have a fleet of ships that would be detected as soon as they set sail, and then protect that fleet for the entire voyage, which would also be extremely difficult for any adversary.

      Getting boots on US soil would be even tougher.

      Drones are an option, but cross-ocean ones are not an easy problem to solve.

  • mcswell 2 hours ago

    I was puzzled by this: "...the Army must reinvest in up-armoring its logistical fleet. While adding armor reduces payload capacity and increases fuel consumption, violating the peacetime gospel of efficiency, it is a mandatory trade-off for survival." Where are the armored vehicles now in Ukraine? I don't hear much about them, and I thought that was because drones can find the weaknesses in armor. Instead the emphasis now seems to be on rapidly moving logistical vehicles (and even, for the Russians, on hand-carried "stuff", which seems unlikely to be sustainable). Can someone who knows more than I do comment on this?

    • mpyne 29 minutes ago

      > Where are the armored vehicles now in Ukraine?

      A more appropriate question might be, where are the armored vehicles now in Russia?

      And as it turns out, they have indeed started adding armor to transport craft, including trains: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_armoured_train_Yenisei

      And despite Ukrainian strikes earlier, the Russian bridge over the Kerch strait remains standing and in use for some (not all) logistical supply from Russia to Crimea, and this is due in no small amount due to the amount of 'armoring' that is inherent to the design of a bridge that must cross a strait of that size.

      It's a question of cost more than anything, the more expensive a transport means becomes to build, the more it makes sense to start including armor to force an attack on that transport to itself have to invest a lot more for success.

    • rawgabbit 27 minutes ago

      The most common truck used by the US army has no armor. The author is saying they need to be up-armmored despite the additional weight and fuel consumption; that is the "A2".

      https://oshkoshdefense.com/vehicles/medium-tactical-vehicles...

  • neocodesoftware 2 hours ago

    What’s missing - the cost of armoring and weaponizing logistics. Maybe easier to invent a new “startup” logistics than replace the old - especially when he talks about a new autonomous delivery in kill zones.

  • red_admiral 2 hours ago

    I would not underestimate the power of a fully mobilized USA. If we really need to, we can do a lot of things that would die to bureaucracy in peacetime - see WWII.

  • causality0 3 hours ago

    Change is not going to happen until it's forced. The US military was born as a force required to rebuff existential threats. Since the fall of the Soviet Union, the gravitational center of the US military has been the profit margins of defense contractors. What creates the greatest profit? Centralization. Why have a dozen logistics centers when you can have one big one? A trillion dollar fighter program more efficiently absorbs tax dollars than half a dozen specialized vehicle programs from mid-sized companies. Why get congress to pay you to make cheap drones when you can get them to pay you to build $4M Patriot missiles? The MBAs have been riding the US military into the dirt for forty years and I don't think it's going to stop any time soon.

    • kasey_junk 3 hours ago

      Isn’t the American military logistics the most decentralized supply chain in the world? Famously (perhaps apocryphal) _every congressional district_ has jobs in the military logistics supply chain.

      • causality0 3 hours ago

        It would be decentralized if the same things were being built in different places. The way US government manufacturing is set up is more like taking all your organs out, sticking each of them in a separate room, and piping the blood back and forth. Every item has a mile-long supply chain and attacking any part of it shuts the whole thing down.

      • snowpid 2 hours ago

        sorry, but the European defence is more decentralised.

    • xp84 3 hours ago

      Why are defense contractors not better investments, then?

      https://youtu.be/C2gIId1dpDs

      • ptmcc 18 minutes ago

        They are largely congressional jobs programs, not traditional business investments

    • bflesch 3 hours ago

      I agree with your point but it's incredibly naive to identify "the MBAs" as scapegoat for this problem.

      We're living in times where an evangelical POTUS dislikes the pope, oligarchs talk about the "antichrist", wars are started with reference to "armageddon" [1] to distract from old money power brokers such as Epstein who has esotheric Kaballah symbols on his office walls [2 @14min42sec].

      The authoritarians are concluding the democratic experiment because they can't hide their heritage any longer. All hail the King.

      [1] https://www.huffpost.com/entry/troops-being-told-to-prepare-...

      [2] https://www.yahoo.com/news/videos/never-seen-video-shows-eps...

  • moi2388 2 hours ago

    “ In a future peer conflict, the US Army will not be granted a six-month, uncontested build-up phase, nor will it operate under friendly skies.”

    Depends how the war starts. Russia? USA somehow attacks? Easily 6 months of buildup in Europe.

    China? Again USA somehow attacks? Again buildup in Australia, Japan, Korea.

    Also US air power is absolutely supreme. I don’t see how they will be fighting in actually contested skies even only 2 months in.

  • Stevvo 3 hours ago

    A limited view of the threat. All very well worrying about keeping your armored brigade combat team fueled up, but that won't be much use when the same weapons that threaten the logistics have destroyed all the Abrams and Bradleys that use the fuel. The Army is still under the delusion that its possible to win a peer conflict, not having learnt the lesson of the cold war there will be no winners in this hypothetical fight.

  • lenerdenator 43 minutes ago

    The entire body of assumptions that the post-Cold War US military was built on is flawed. China didn't democratize, Russia's oligarchs didn't stop using NATO as their boogeyman, and the world isn't willing to turn dictatorships and ultraconservative theocracies into pariah states.

    All of that was assumed to be true. The US would do small police actions here and there with highly-specialized forces. The rules-based system would more-or-less do the rest.

    In the meantime we gutted not only the logistics but the manufacturing base needed to feed that system so that we could "cut costs"... which didn't really happen anyways.

    We should be throwing people in prison over this.

  • hunmernop 3 hours ago

    So many armchair quarterbacks

    • bee_rider 2 hours ago

      The “game” has been reinvented recently, there aren’t any non-armchair quarterbacks. Thankfully.

  • wartywhoa23 3 hours ago

    Many complain on negativism in HN comments, but how in the world can a sane person express anything positive when there's a hell-bent will in conjunction with the "next war"?

    • marssaxman 23 minutes ago

      Your concern is reasonable but misdirected. This article is a publication of the "Modern War Institute", a research organization at West Point, the US Army military academy; it is literally their job to anticipate and plan for the next war, whatever it may happen to be. Deciding whether those plans ought to be used is a completely different responsibility.

    • strictnein 3 hours ago

      Are you under the impression that humanity could reach a state where there is never another major war?

      I don't know how one would reach that conclusion, least of all a Major at the nation's leading military educational institute. Nothing "hell-bent" about it.

      • pjc50 3 hours ago

        People were starting to think that way at the "end of history" period between the Cold War and 9/11. At that time the major powers were not involved in wars, and it was believed that regional ones could be "solved" like Yugoslavia.

        9/11 was a huge success for Bin Laden's goal of restarting a forever war, though.

      • wartywhoa23 3 hours ago

        Yes, I am. That requires a total reassesment of who the real enemy is, though (hint: psychopaths at power).

    • paulluuk 3 hours ago

      I consider myself an optimist, but given that the US has been in 229 wars over it's 249 years since founding, it seems highly unlikely that there wouldn't be a "next war".

      • xp84 3 hours ago

        There’s nothing peculiar about the US, every country or even tribe has fought many wars.

        • krapp 3 hours ago

          Not every country or tribe has been engaged in near continuous violence for over two centuries. That isn't simply "fighting many wars" it's being "existentially bound to warfare." The US is peculiar. It's the nation born of a continent-wide campaign of genocide and plunder. It's the only Western nation that couldn't give up slavery without a civil war. It's the only nation to wage nuclear war, and did so primarily against civilians. It's (for the time being) the world's only superpower, with a military orders of magnitude larger than any other. It put the right to shoot people into its Constitution because its founders wanted a government that normalized regular revolutionary violence as a civic principle.

          The US is weirdly attached to violence and war in ways you only tend to find in modern dictatorships or the empires of old.

      • wartywhoa23 3 hours ago

        My point is that war is the worst thing that humans can engage in, and that the prevailing sentiment is that constant war is an immutable status-quo, and hence it's okay, there's nothing we can do except downvoting those fucking negativists.

        • eth0up 2 hours ago

          I think the folks disagreeing with you maybe haven't spent much time in war. Almost certainly some in harsh skirmishes, but I reckon a few Nam, Korea and WWII vets would at least entertain your position on the subject. Pretty much every meta variation of terror has surfaced or has the potential to surface in war. Parts of Ukraine, I think, easily represent hell on Earth, for both sides.

          Edit: I will go a bit further..

          I consider Military the greatest power on Earth. It's sacred, necessary. But those who abuse its power commit, in my view, the greatest of sins. I don't mean the soldiers who fight, but those making the decisions of who they fight. The soldiers do their job, often willingly. And they are the ones who face the consequences. To betray them by corruption is the ultimate betrayal. War is a power that, I think, should be reserved for situations with no other option. Mercenaries not considered.

        • abtinf 3 hours ago

          War is not nearly the worst thing. Not even in the top 10.

          • wartywhoa23 3 hours ago

            Oh, really? I'd like to see your top 10.

            • abtinf 3 hours ago

              Things that are worse than war, a wildly incomplete list, in no particular order:

              Pogroms; slavery; totalitarian dictatorship; theocracy; intentional mass starvation; mass organ harvesting; mass forced relocation; anarchy; failing to respond to unprovoked violence; restricting freedom instead of defeating the adversary.

              • malcolmgreaves 37 minutes ago

                What do you think happens in war? Clean fighting from side to side?

                You really think the massive amounts of death and destruction aren’t top ten? What do you think happens to the local population when an invading force arrives? You should go and read about the rape of Nanking. And just read about what happened in wars before the modern era.

    • alansaber 3 hours ago

      Comparing the negativity of HN to the inevitability IRL warfare is absolutely hilarious, but I take your point

    • mcphage 3 hours ago

      Ukraine didn't want to go to war, but someone else made that choice for them.

  • HelloMcFly 3 hours ago

    This piece seems logical and correct. It also seems entirely AI-generated, but I suppose we've moved into a world where that's just the way content is now.

    • ranger207 3 hours ago

      Nah that's just the way defense essays have sounded for the past 20 years or so

    • BadBadJellyBean 3 hours ago

      Maybe it is. Maybe it isn't. You gain nothing from pointing out every post that seems LLM generated. Read it or don't but we don't make the world better by accusing each other of using LLMs. The only things we increase are mistrust and frustration.

      • HelloMcFly 3 hours ago

        There is no "maybe", it is at least largely AI-generated though I'm sure there's a human involved in building the perspective. Run it through any checker you can find, the outcome is without doubt.

        I don't think I've made a similar comment elsewhere on Hacker News, reddit, etc., (nor do I plan to make a habit of it) but this one stuck out to me. I know this because I did read it just as I've read previous posts such as these on West Point through the years. This just isn't how things used to be written. It's a little more ambiguous out in the wild on any given site/blog/etc.

        > The only things we increase are mistrust and frustration

        Mistrust of what? The human voice behind this thought? Yes, I think that mistrust is valid and earned. Nevertheless, I admit the topic seems pertinent and the argument has merit.

        • BadBadJellyBean 2 hours ago

          You can't reliably prove that something is written by an LLM. There are certainly tells but it could be a personal writing style as well. When reading everything with the suspicion that it might be written by an LLM you are at best finding LLM written content and at worst accuse people of using an LLM when they haven't. Nothing is gained by the accusation.

          For me a better way is to find out if I want to read the text or not. Does is there something interesting being said? Is it presented in a way that is at least pleasant enough to read? Is it concise enough? If not I don't read it. Or I skim it.

          Don't misunderstand me. I don't like the overuse LLM generated texts. I write my words on my own. Still there is nothing to be gained from distrusting and calling out authors.

          • HelloMcFly an hour ago

            I'll admit it cannot be proven to the standard of criminal conviction, but I don't think it's beyond a person's or technology's ability to identify enough "tells" to make a solid conclusion. I can share the things that stick out to me if desired, not that it ultimately constitutes any "proof".

            > Still there is nothing to be gained from distrusting and calling out authors

            Is there nothing? Nothing at all to be gained by resisting the loss of human-created written thought? It may be a futile effort, the tide may be too great, but I guess I'm not just quite so ready to accept the robotic creation of all written content without even a periodic passing comment. It's good for the soul, but I admit I am probably commenting in a community less likely to appreciate or share such a sentiment.

            • BadBadJellyBean 17 minutes ago

              I don't think you gain anything. The article is written, it will not be rewritten or unwritten because you said it's written by an LLM. I don't see the author not using LLMs in the future if they did use them.

              I don't see how you changed anything by pointing out that you assume that this is written by an LLM. What was gained? I don't really see anything. Do you think anyone is dissuaded from reading the article or from using an LLM the next they write something because you could maybe probably tell that it's probably written by an LLM?

              I think we all lose more than we gain if we do this. We look at each other with mistrust over whether they used an LLM and we point fingers as soon as we see a sign of "wrongdoing". I see artists and writers frustrated about being accused of using ML tools. And the people who just use LLMs and image generation tools mostly just don't care.

              The whole "AI" industry makes everything diffuse. We have to go by vibes if something is made by a human or not and the signs are ever more subtle. We have to be so incredibly careful not to accuse those who are on our side. People who create real human work.

              For me the easiest solution for now is to stop accusing. Unless you know for certain that there was not a real human behind it don't point fingers.

        • nradov 2 hours ago

          What is the false positive rate on the checkers?