Sheerin said:
While reading this thread I was reminded of artice I read in my ex-girlfriend's psych textbook that during WW2 it was calculated that only a 1/3 of the soldiers actually fired at the enemy or something like that. And that this caused the US military to revamp their basic training to make it easier for the new soldiers to actually kill their enemies.
Now is this true or an urban legend that has been perpetuated by some anonymous psychologists in his text books? And if it is true has Canada done anything with its basic training that would make it easier for a solider to kill?
This is probably taken from SLA Marshall's famous operational research publication called
Men Against Fire, in which he claimed to have found that only about 30% of combat soldiers actually fired their weapons at the enemy. However, a few things should be noted:
a) some recent writing has called SLA Marshall's work into serious question, even going so far as to suggest that he falsified results;
b) even Marshall admitted that the crews of heavy weapons such as AFVs, AT guns, MGs, etc were far more likely to fire their weapons in combat; and
c) I believe his studies were based largely upon US WWII Infantry. IIRC, William DuPuy, a US WWII Inf Bn CO who later became a General, has described the US Army Infantry of WWII as being the worst trained ever fielded in war by the US Army (subjective opinion, of course...)
The training of a Canadian infantry soldier produces a person who can execute the mechanics of killing other human beings. Whether the person will actually pull the trigger at the crucial moment is a question whose answer is influenced by many, many factors. IMHO the evidence indicates that many soldiers can kill almost without thinking--that is not the issue---the problems develop in the aftermath when they realize that what they have done is against everything they were brought up to believe as children and adults. This struggle against a whole mess of personal feelings in order to achieve the mission is what makes soldiering (especially Infantry soldiering) such an intensely human business. People who sacrifice this truth at the altar of high tech take huge risks, as the US is being reminded nearly every day by the fierce battles its Army and Marine riflemen fight in the streets of Fallujah and elsewhere.
Armymedic said:
They discuss the change of tactics about target shooting to human shape targets extensively in Col Dave Grossman's On Killing.
If the CF ever had required reading for mbrs of the CF this book should definately be on the list.
The Army does. It's called the CLS' Reading List: you should be able to find it on the Army's website.
To address the general issue of the value of training, it is probably safe to say that any training is better than none, and that good training delivered by experienced instructors and based on operational lessons learned is the best of all. All training modifies human behaviour to some extent: that is its nature and purpose. Good training, which the soldier understands, repeated and reinforced regularly, will probably produce a soldier who can withstand the demands of combat better than an untrained individual might. Good leadership and strong team cohesion, coupled with a belief in the mission, will further develop the ability of the individual to sustain himself in battle. However, IMHO there is no such thing as the "Bulletproof Mind" nor could we likely produce one in a normal human being. Just as we all have limits to our physical endurance, so we do have for our mental endurance as well. Conditioning will improve both of these (indeed, there is strong evidence to suggest that they are interrelated at a fundamental level...) but IMHO will not produce a superman, or a supersoldier. Cheers.