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Oldgateboatdriver said:And Jollyjacktar, here is a little secret: every single war in the history of the planet has been "come as you are". When war breaks out , you have what you have - on both sides, but then you can start to build up/mass produce war materiel. If you were a bit prescient (and in most cases, wars don't just breakout, there is a period of tension where both sides see what might happen and start preparations), you can implement urgent production programs before it actually breaks out - like the corvettes of WWII which were implemented before the war began as an emergency program.
The "Come as you are war" concept of the 60's and 70's what premised on something different: that the next war with the Soviets would not give us time after the beginning of the war to build up resources because it would escalate into a nuclear conflict as soon as things start to go bad for one side, and that nuclear conflict would resolve the matter once and for all. I personally don't believe that the next war will necessarily "go nuclear" right away, so things are not totally going to be crystallized with what you have at the beginning.
I completely agree. The quote from Gwen Dyer that was referred to had an extra addition to it which is often lost when quoting him. What he was specifically referring too was that with the very high technology of the current (read 1985 tech) military could not be produced fast enough to keep pace with losses in the event of Warsaw Pact vs NATO. That meant that you would have to "come as you are" and then build faster, cheaper, easier low tech solutions if the war dragged on. The new versions of the cheap and nasties. You saw this with the end of WW2, as Shermans and T-35's could be produced much faster despite the fact they were not the "best" tank vs the Germans versions, they were good enough and the quantity over quality argument was very important. Even the Germans tried to improve the cheap with the Panzerjager's etc...