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2006-11-06 Arabia
Strategy Page: The Feared Arab Soldier
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Posted by Nimble Spemble 2006-11-06 10:42|| || Front Page|| [5 views since 2007-05-07]  Top

#1 A long time ago I read a book called 72 hours on the Golan Heights. Just before the Syrians attacked Israel, one of the officers asked their Vietmanese advisor, "How do the Americans fight in the jungle?"

The Viet. Officer replied, "The Americans don't fight in the jungle, they mow it down."

Posted by Silentbrick">Silentbrick  2006-11-06 11:36||   2006-11-06 11:36|| Front Page Top

#2 Nothing new, the Arabs haven't known how to fight since WWI, and even then it was hit and miss for unit effectiveness. Point is, since the European takeover, the Arabs haven't had to fight. Since the Europeans left, the Arabs haven't relearned how.
Posted by DarthVader">DarthVader  2006-11-06 12:33||   2006-11-06 12:33|| Front Page Top

#3 Even in WW1, it wa British Officers and Sgts that led the effective ones (c.f TE Lawrence).
Posted by OldSpook 2006-11-06 12:58||   2006-11-06 12:58|| Front Page Top

#4 The last great Islamic general was Timur a 14th century warrior of Turco-Mongolian decent. Before that you have Saladin, a Kurd.

I can't come up with an actual Arab general worth his salt. They tended to raid like bandits, a form of warfare that doesn't produce honor or great tactics.
Posted by rjschwarz 2006-11-06 13:14||   2006-11-06 13:14|| Front Page Top

#5 The Israelis will tell you that the Egyptians have some competent junior officers and non-coms -- not brilliant but good. Problem is, the higher ups are completely corrupted -- they have to be to survive in that political atmosphere. This means that the intel is always bad (made up), the logistics are always bad (stolen), training is sub-standard, and the troops are treated poorly. That doesn't equate to success against a Western army.

To change this you'd need a generation of democracy and re-education, and I don't see that happening now, not even in Iraq :-(
Posted by Steve White">Steve White  2006-11-06 14:15||   2006-11-06 14:15|| Front Page Top

#6 @ Steve White : yup, those were diagnosticated before 9/11 (and I think .com has already quoted this article, which was in SDB's library, not sure).

de Atkine Why Arabs Lose Wars

or Here.
Posted by anonymous5089 2006-11-06 14:19||   2006-11-06 14:19|| Front Page Top

#7 Stopping to pray 5 times a day may contribute to their lack of soldiering skills. But I think, like many cultures, ego is their main obstacle.
Posted by wxjames 2006-11-06 15:12||   2006-11-06 15:12|| Front Page Top

#8 #4. I was thinking maybe Tariq ibn Ziyad, but a quick check on Google revealed he was a Berber and led a Moorish army to defeat Roderick in Spain in 711 AD. Maybe we should start a list of great Arabic Generals; something in the "world's shortest books" category.
Posted by GK 2006-11-06 15:14||   2006-11-06 15:14|| Front Page Top

#9 Maybe this guy? Even tho he was a turk.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suleiman_I

?
Posted by Anon4021 2006-11-06 15:46||   2006-11-06 15:46|| Front Page Top

#10 Simple: If they fought well, they might not die, and they couldn't go get their 72 raisins. If you have a culture that fundamentally prefers life over death, and manages to avoid wussifying their kids, you get good fighters.
Posted by gorb 2006-11-06 15:47||   2006-11-06 15:47|| Front Page Top

#11 While that may apply to the Arabs, the Turks gave the Aussies and Brits more than they could handle at Gallipoli. Again, not Arabs. The Egyptians technically aren't arabs, either, although they still have a hard time fighting.
Posted by Old Patriot">Old Patriot  2006-11-06 16:49|| http://oldpatriot.blogspot.com/]">[http://oldpatriot.blogspot.com/]  2006-11-06 16:49|| Front Page Top

#12 Back in the mid-1980's Mr. Wife described the sandles, and weapon, of an Egyptian soldier he saw standing guard as being held together by duct tape and baling wire. "No wonder they lost the Yom Kippur War," was his comment.
Posted by trailing wife 2006-11-06 18:56||   2006-11-06 18:56|| Front Page Top

#13 I think all of you overlook one fundamental feature that most Arab governments share in common, namely, tyranny. This sort of top heavy leadership is especially sensitive to an overly strong military. Since it does not depend on charismatic leadership or earned loyalty and instead is driven by the corruption and opportunities for graft that rank and position have to offer, there is little motivation to respect authority. Instead allegience is sold to the highest bidder.

No one involved in such a kleptocracy wants to deal with a highly efficient military machine capable of ousting them at a moment's notice. As it always has, corruption cripples all possibility of progress in the MME (Muslim Middle East). Tansparency works well in low context cultures such as the West. Unspoken agreements, cronyism, preferential treatment and favoritism are all extremely dependent upon a high context culture's emphasis upon position, wealth, status, seniority and connections. Witness Pakistan's Musharraf and his current difficulties in holding onto the reins of power.
Posted by Zenster">Zenster  2006-11-06 20:10||   2006-11-06 20:10|| Front Page Top

23:55 twobyfour
23:39 Zenster
23:30 elbud
23:27 Flomoter Ulolush5791
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23:05 Atomic Conspiracy
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22:47 Seafarious
22:47 Atomic Conspiracy
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