What about the practical effects? Correct me if I’m wrong, but explicit mercenaries (like Blackwater) give worse results for vastly more money than normal volunteer (paid) soldiers.
I am with you on the preference for incentivizing people to go in to the military, rather than using conscription. Not being able to conscript more soldiers limits our ambitions to smaller wars against inferior powers. Then again, America seems to have a really good track record fighting giant military machines and great empires (Germany, Great Britain) and a really bad track record accomplishing our stated objectives in these regional wars against inferior militaries (Vietnam, Korea, Iraq, Afghanistan). Maybe I should be pushing for us to expend our military might on European plains?
By the second point, do you literally mean it’s legal to conscript soldiers (it is in America at least, although starting a draft would be politically impossible absent an immediate existential threat to America as a state), or do you mean that figuratively, in that if we pay soldiers enough, we’ll get more volunteers? I’m not sure what point you’re making.
I will see if I can find the data on the poor performance and high cost of mercenaries.
What about the practical effects? Correct me if I’m wrong, but explicit mercenaries (like Blackwater) give worse results for vastly more money than normal volunteer (paid) soldiers.
I am with you on the preference for incentivizing people to go in to the military, rather than using conscription. Not being able to conscript more soldiers limits our ambitions to smaller wars against inferior powers. Then again, America seems to have a really good track record fighting giant military machines and great empires (Germany, Great Britain) and a really bad track record accomplishing our stated objectives in these regional wars against inferior militaries (Vietnam, Korea, Iraq, Afghanistan). Maybe I should be pushing for us to expend our military might on European plains?
I find this unlikely, though I haven’t seen any evidence either way. Where did you learn this?
We can conscript as many as we want if we pay them enough. If we’re willing to draft people, then why wouldn’t we be willing to raise taxes?
Taxpayers are generally better organized politically than potential conscripts.
By the second point, do you literally mean it’s legal to conscript soldiers (it is in America at least, although starting a draft would be politically impossible absent an immediate existential threat to America as a state), or do you mean that figuratively, in that if we pay soldiers enough, we’ll get more volunteers? I’m not sure what point you’re making.
I will see if I can find the data on the poor performance and high cost of mercenaries.
The second one. I seem to have misused the word “conscript”.