Is McCain's Military Experience a Plus?
by
Arkady
07/02/2008, 5:09 PM #
This started as a response to another poster, but I wanted to expand on it here, for general comment. The conventional wisdom says that we can attribute the Iraq War, in part, to the "chickenhawks" who, never having been in a war, regarded it as a frivolous thing, to be entered into casually. The conventional wisdom suggests that those who have first-hand experience with the horrors of war are more reluctant to start one except as a last resort.
There's something comforting about that conventional wisdom. It would be nice if the hard-won experience of serving in combat did make men sadder and wiser leaders, serving as a lifelong cautionary tale. The only problem with that narrative is that it doesn't seem to be true. Sure, there are some combat veterans who draw from that experience a respectable reluctance to put the next generation of young men through that hell. And there are some life-long civilians who seem so eager to order others into combat that one is tempted to assume that it's because all their ideas of combat come from romantic pulp novels and glorious old Hollywood war movies. But is there really any pronounced trend for combat veterans to be more reluctant, later in life, to start wars?
I don't think history bears that out. If anything, living through those wartime horrors seems to desensitize people to them, or even to give them a sense of having paid their dues enough to entitle them to send other men off to die in their turn. Many of the biggest warmongers in history were men whose younger years were spent fighting on the front lines -- men who should have known better, but were perfectly happy setting off bloodbaths on trivial pretexts.
Napoleon went from being a young military officer to conquering much of Europe as France's leader. Adolf Hitler was more aware of the horrors of war than most people -- he was almost gassed to death as a corporal in the First World War. Yet he is personally responsible for the biggest war in history. The three men most responsible for getting the US involved in the nightmare of Vietnam were Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson, all three of whom had personal combat experience. The bloodiest war in American history, the Civil War, was between two political factions each led by a man who had combat experience in an earlier war. A combat veteran of that war went on to lead America into the colonial war against the Phillipines.
When I step back and look at history, I find it astonishing that this weird conventional wisdom can survive. From Alexander the Great in the ancient world up through the strongmen in Africa today, a huge number of those responsible for bloody wars of aggression have been people who spent their younger years on the front lines themselves. So, what leads us to believe such combat experience makes people less likely to casually invade other countries?
What we know of psychology suggests the opposite will be true. Are the children of abusive parents more or less likely to abuse their own kids? It would be nice if, having experienced the horrors of such an upbringing first hand, these people were extra careful to be patient and loving with their own kids. And some, of course, do take exactly those lessons and go on to be great parents. But, statistically, those who were the victims of those terrible behaviors are more likely to perpetrate them on their own kids. So, it wouldn't be surprising to find that, similarly, those who as young men were sent off to kill and die in unnecessary wars were actually more likely to do the same to the next generation.