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- Newsgroups: sci.military
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!hubcap!ncrcae!ncrhub2!ciss!law7!military
- From: emory!ke4zv!gary@gatech.edu (Gary Coffman)
- Subject: Re: Swiss military preparedness??
- Message-ID: <C0177A.3GF@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM>
- Sender: military@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM (Sci.Military Login)
- Organization: Destructive Testing Systems
- References: <BzH50C.Aq2@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM> <Bzo8os.C69@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM> <Bzo8zo.CKC@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM> <Bzs8Jq.KxF@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM>
- Date: Tue, 29 Dec 1992 17:28:22 GMT
- Approved: military@law7.daytonoh.ncr.com
- Lines: 55
-
-
- From emory!ke4zv!gary@gatech.edu (Gary Coffman)
-
- In article <Bzs8Jq.KxF@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM> durin!huntsville.sparta.com!valle@uunet.UU.NET (Tony Valle) writes:
- >
- >I think the driving issue of an armed militia versus a true modern
- >army is one of logistics. Putting aside the better training and
- >equipment available to a modern army (which makes them more efficient),
- >and the considerable advantage in firepower (which makes them more
- >destructive), the real problem with maintaining a guerilla war
- >against a motivated occupying army is in supply.
-
- Actually, guerilla war experience shows you have this backwards. It's
- the conventional invader who has the supply problem. The guerilla draws
- his supplies from the local economy and from captured enemy stocks. The
- guerilla avoids enemy main force units and concentrates on hitting the
- long and vulnerable enemy logistic supply lines.
-
- >As Dan Sorenson pointed out -- the invading army would control the
- >roads. And by extension, they also control the ports, the airports,
- >and the manufacturing facilities. And while it is true that going out
- >in small groups into the surrounding countryside might prove unhealthy
- >for the invaders, direct frontal assault on military encampments would
- >be suicidal for the militia. WIthout the ability to dislodge an
- >occupation force from key production areas, it's only a matter of
- >time before shortages in ammunition, fuel, parts, and food render the
- >militia militarily ineffective.
-
- The guerilla controls the countryside, including the roads, at all
- times except when the enemy is actually moving down the road in
- strength. The guerilla mines the roads, sets up ambushes of supply
- columns, and generally makes movement of supplies a dangerous and
- expensive operation for the enemy. The guerilla *never* engages
- in direct frontal assualts, that's suicidal. The guerilla engages
- in a prolonged war of attrition that wears the enemy forces down
- through denial of supplies, denial of safe areas for R&R, sabotage,
- ambushes of small units, and hit and run attacks on critical strong
- points.
-
- The guerilla doesn't need fuel, because he has no heavy vehicles to
- slow him down. Nor does he need parts that aren't available on the
- local economy. His ammo requirements are modest and most frequently
- come from captured enemy stocks. And he is fed by the people. The
- guerilla is like the sea, he flows gracefully away from strong forces,
- but comes back again and again eroding away the enemy's strength in
- tiny nibbles and bites.
-
- Gary
- --
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