by Dreamtwister » Sat 03 Feb 2007, 17:35:59
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Free', 't')he battle of Agincourt
Another fantastic example.
I think what we are really discussing here is the thermodynamics of warfare. Weapons systems with low opportunity cost will always eventually triumph over sophistication, because of the energy investment required to construct, field and maintain those advanced weapon systems.
Take your battle of Agincourt as an example. For every suit of armor d'Albret was able to put on the field, Henry was able to put dozens of longbowmen out. Not to mention, for every suit of French armor, there was also an entorage of squires, blacksmiths, and years of training. Whereas the longbowman had his bow, his arrows and maybe 1 master bowyer for every 100 bowmen. The loss of one poorly trained bowman was inconsequential, but the loss of a single armored knight could be devestating.
Consider also the RPG-weilding guerilla vs the Apache helecopter. I won't pretend to know what an RPG round costs, but if it can find it's way into the hands of peasant farmers in Afghanistan, I would imagine somewhere in the $10 range would be reasonable. If he misses, he's out 10 bucks. But if he hits, that's an $18 million dollar loss for the Americans. And if you happen to kill the peasant farmer with the RPG, he's got 10 relatives in nearby villages who can fire that RPG just as effectively.
The complex exposes itself to maximum risk for minimum benefit, whereas the simple has minimum risk for maximum payoff. The complex has to be effective many many times before damage can be measured, but the simple needs only be effective once.
The whole of human history is a refutation by experiment of the concept of "moral world order". - Friedrich Nietzsche