{"id":59,"date":"2020-11-14T20:33:45","date_gmt":"2020-11-14T20:33:45","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/tgenloe.com\/rescogitandae\/?p=59"},"modified":"2020-11-14T20:33:45","modified_gmt":"2020-11-14T20:33:45","slug":"musings-on-the-western-war-machine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/tgenloe.com\/rescogitandae\/2020\/11\/14\/musings-on-the-western-war-machine\/","title":{"rendered":"Musings on the Western War Machine"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Thomas Cahill marks the beginning of \u201cthe Western war machine\u201d from the time of Homer, the 8th century B.C. In the\u00a0<em>Iliad<\/em>\u00a0Homer tells the story of the 12th century Trojan War. The latter was a time of disparate Mycenaean aristocratic societies, \u201cwhere all decisions of peace and war were made by powerful chieftains who could lead their followers into whatever dangers their whims might prompt them to.\u201d<sup><a href=\"#footnote_1_59\" id=\"identifier_1_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Sailing the Wine Dark Sea: Why the Greeks Matter&nbsp;(New York: Doubleday, 2003), pg. 48\">1<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Although this is how the Greeks embarked upon the Trojan War in the first place and largely how they conducted themselves once at Troy, Homer retrojects into his narrative armored hoplites engaging in phalanx warfare, an innovation unknown to the time of the Trojan War. \u201cDespite the many descriptions of confrontations between the two [individual] opponents,\u201d writes Cahill, \u201cwarfare is largely conducted as an affair of massed charges of armored infantry\u2026chinking and clunking forward like an unwieldy but inexorable machine.\u201d<sup><a href=\"#footnote_2_59\" id=\"identifier_2_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Ibid., pg. 44.\">2<\/a><\/sup> As Homer himself puts it, the soldiers march into battle<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>tight as a mason packs a good stone wall,<\/em><br><em>blocks on granite blocks for a storied house<\/em><br><em>that fights the ripping winds\u2014crammed so close<\/em><br><em>the crested helmets, the war-shields bulging, jutting<\/em><br><em>buckler to buckler, helm-to-helm, man-to-man massed tight<\/em><br><em>and the horsehair crests on glittering helmet horns brushed<\/em><br><em>as they tossed their heads, the battalions bulked so dense.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This \u201cbrutal innovation,\u201d so unlike previous warfare in the Ancient world, was constituted of \u201ca mass of men no longer individuals but subject to an iron discipline, technologically superior to their opponents, their generals having learned that wars must be managed artfully, each battle planned and played out in the mind before the armies are engaged, and that, insofar as possible, the time, the place, and the conditions of battle are to be chosen beforehand to enhance one\u2019s own position and put the enemy at a disadvantage.\u201d<sup><a href=\"#footnote_3_59\" id=\"identifier_3_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Ibid., pg. 45.\">3<\/a><\/sup> According to Cahill\u2019s reading of the history of war, it is from this time in the 8th century B.C. that \u201cthe Western war machine is operational, its objective to field a force so lethal as to inspire abject terror in all opponents.\u201d<sup><a href=\"#footnote_4_59\" id=\"identifier_4_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Ibid.\">4<\/a><\/sup> Further, \u201cWestern soldiers march through history no longer exemplars of aristocratic valor but as the component parts [of the machine] they actually are.\u201d((Ibid.)) The doctrines of overwhelming military force,\u201d of \u201ccold calculation and rational planning, not heroic rhetoric or mystical faith,\u201d can be traced from the time of Homer through Alexander the Great\u2019s campaigns, Julius Caesar\u2019s conquest of Gaul, the Conquistadors, and the devastation of Europe during World War II.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To be sure, stories of individual bravery and lofty heroic ideals abound in Western literature (especially in Homer), but as Cahill reads things this is not the norm after the Trojan War. After that conflict, the shape and scope of war, and of the Western military machine more generally, changes dramatically, becoming far more mechanistic, impersonal, technologically-oriented, and artistic (in the sense of <em>artificial<\/em>)\u2014not to mention far more\u00a0<em>brutal<\/em>. The battles depicted in the\u00a0<em>Iliad<\/em>, as well as much later in Herodotus\u2019\u00a0<em>Histories<\/em>\u00a0and Thucydides\u2019 narrative of the Peloponnesian war are savage, gory affairs carried out precisely by clanking, clunking, battle-hardened, frenzied and heartless war machines.<sup><a href=\"#footnote_5_59\" id=\"identifier_5_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"One cannot help but think here of Tolkien&rsquo;s depictions, born of his reflections on the trenches of World War I, of the banging, grinding, fire-and-smoke belching, hard, unyielding steel-and-gear industrialism of the war machines of Isengard and Mordor.\">5<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>By contrast, we may consider (<em>very<\/em>\u00a0generally speaking) Medieval warfare, which, though possessing much of the post-Trojan War ethos described above, yet also retained deep personal connections and connotations in the form of its Christian feudal context. Medieval warriors may have marched in tight armored ranks of glittering helmets and shields, but as a general rule they did not fight, like Achilles, for abstractions like \u201cglory\u201d and \u201chonor,\u201d or, to put a more distinctly contemporary face on the question, for \u201ctheir country.\u201d<sup><a href=\"#footnote_6_59\" id=\"identifier_6_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"I am indebted for this particular point to my former history professor at New St. Andrews, Chris Schlect.\">6<\/a><\/sup> Much brutality, much evil, can and has been done in the name of preserving (or capturing) the flag, a goal which fits well with the abstract, impersonal, technologically-driven, mechanistic world of the Modern. I have noticed a trend in popular culture (e.g., Kiefer Sutherland&#8217;s <em>24<\/em>) in which the preservation of the impersonal nation-state is given the status of Ultimate Priority, so that all manner of moral violations, including torture and the use of innocents as decoys in battle, may be excused in the name of \u201cnational security.\u201d War is hell, and hell seems to be peopled by men who have sold their humanity for the mess of pottage that is \u201cpatriotism.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But if the violence and of the Western war machine is the same across post-Troy eras, what about the end result of the wars? If Achilles is doomed to find out, as we read later in the\u00a0<em>Odyssey<\/em>, to bitterly wish \u201cI\u2019d rather slave on earth for another man \/ some dirt-poor tenant farmer who scrapes to keep alive \/ than rule down here over all the breathless dead,\u201d where \u201cthe senseless, burnt-out wraiths of mortals make their home,\u201d to what horrific Hell is the dead Modern soldier, incessantly told that he is but a cog in a great national Machine, doomed? One is reminded of W.H. Auden\u2019s poem\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/www.sccs.swarthmore.edu\/users\/99\/jrieffel\/poetry\/auden\/achilles.html\">The Shield of Achilles<\/a>, in which a Modern army doesn\u2019t even know <em>why <\/em>they are going to war. The rallying speech of the leaders \u201cProved by statistics that some cause was just\u201d seems fit only for the army to be \u201cenduring\u201d, its cold logic moving their feet, but not apparently their hearts, \u201csomewhere else, to grief.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>One thing may at least be constant on the level of the soldiers, however, and that is seeing the ultimate end of their warmaking as being able to return home to normal life. Cahill makes this point by way of an intriguing contrast between the hero of the\u00a0<em>Iliad<\/em>, Achilles, and the hero of the\u00a0<em>Odyssey<\/em>, Odysseus. Achilles is offered the peace of a stable, loving home life, but instead chooses war and death in the name of having his praises sung for millennia afterwards\u2014only to be bitterly disappointed by the actual conditions of \u201cruling\u201d in the underworld. Odysseus, on the other hand, leaves the peace of his stable, loving home life to go to war, but his ultimate goal is to return home to his wife and child.<sup><a href=\"#footnote_7_59\" id=\"identifier_7_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Ibid., pp. 65-69.\">7<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Cahill thinks highly of Samuel Johnson\u2019s editorial on the\u00a0<em>Odyssey<\/em>: \u201cTo be happy at home is the ultimate result of all ambition, the end to which every desire prompts the prosecution.\u201d<sup><a href=\"#footnote_8_59\" id=\"identifier_8_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Ibid., pg. 68.\">8<\/a><\/sup> Further, consider men such as General Patton, who loved war and the battlefield more than their very lives, Cahill cites Patton observing a battlefield littered with dead, \u201cI love it. God help me, I do love it so. I love it more than my life.\u201d<sup><a href=\"#footnote_9_59\" id=\"identifier_9_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Ibid., pg. 34.\">9<\/a><\/sup> Contrast such a sentiment sharply with Herodotus\u2019 pithy remark, \u201cNo one is so foolish as to prefer war to peace: in peace children bury their fathers, while in war fathers bury their children.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To return to the earlier point, Cahill cites Victor Davis Hanson, an expert on Ancient warfare, on the Greek view of war as \u201cterrible but innate to civilization\u2014and not always unjust or amoral if it is waged for good causes to destroy evil and save the innocent.\u201d<sup><a href=\"#footnote_10_59\" id=\"identifier_10_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Ibid., pg. 46, citing Hanson&rsquo;s&nbsp;An Autumn of War.\">10<\/a><\/sup> Another contemporary military commentator, Robert D. Kaplan, has even gone so far as to write a book called\u00a0<em>Warrior Politics: Why Leadership Demands a Pagan Ethos<\/em>, which apparently argues that modern warfare needs to get away from Judeo-Christian constraints and back to the glory-seeking savagery of the Ancient Greeks. Some interesting discussion could be had on this point by examining the fundamental \u201contology of violence\u201d that drove the Ancient world\u2019s mythology and sociology, but for the moment it is interesting enough to note that Cahill again cites Hanson, this time saying that Homer\u2019s idea of war is similar to rap lyrics that \u201cglorify rival gangs who shoot and maim each other for prestige, women, booty, and turf.\u201d<sup><a href=\"#footnote_11_59\" id=\"identifier_11_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Ibid., pg. 41.\">11<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>One last thing on this subject: Cahill asks speculatively whether the Greek tradition of war, seemingly so integral to Western warfare, has not reached the end of its usefulness, given that in our own age decentralized, international, unpredictable terrorism\u2014\u201ca war in which the enemy has no territory to defend and cannot be met on any known battlefield, a war in which all initiative lies with the enemy and every shadow may contain a hideous surprise\u201d<sup><a href=\"#footnote_12_59\" id=\"identifier_12_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Ibid., pg. 47.\">12<\/a><\/sup>\u2014seems to be the biggest foe with which we must reckon.<\/p>\n<ol class=\"footnotes\"><li id=\"footnote_1_59\" class=\"footnote\"><em>Sailing the Wine Dark Sea: Why the Greeks Matter<\/em>\u00a0(New York: Doubleday, 2003), pg. 48<span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_1_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_2_59\" class=\"footnote\">Ibid., pg. 44.<span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_2_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_3_59\" class=\"footnote\">Ibid., pg. 45.<span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_3_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_4_59\" class=\"footnote\">Ibid.<span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_4_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_5_59\" class=\"footnote\">One cannot help but think here of Tolkien\u2019s depictions, born of his reflections on the trenches of World War I, of the banging, grinding, fire-and-smoke belching, hard, unyielding steel-and-gear industrialism of the war machines of Isengard and Mordor.<span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_5_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_6_59\" class=\"footnote\">I am indebted for this particular point to my former history professor at New St. Andrews, Chris Schlect.<span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_6_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_7_59\" class=\"footnote\">Ibid., pp. 65-69.<span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_7_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_8_59\" class=\"footnote\">Ibid., pg. 68.<span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_8_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_9_59\" class=\"footnote\">Ibid., pg. 34.<span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_9_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_10_59\" class=\"footnote\">Ibid., pg. 46, citing Hanson\u2019s\u00a0<em>An Autumn of War<\/em>.<span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_10_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_11_59\" class=\"footnote\">Ibid., pg. 41.<span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_11_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_12_59\" class=\"footnote\">Ibid., pg. 47.<span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_12_59\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><\/ol>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Thomas Cahill marks the beginning of \u201cthe Western war machine\u201d from the time of Homer, the 8th century B.C. In the\u00a0Iliad\u00a0Homer tells the story of the 12th century Trojan War. The latter was a time of disparate Mycenaean aristocratic societies, \u201cwhere all decisions of peace and war were made by powerful chieftains who could lead [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[7],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-59","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-historical-interpretation"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/tgenloe.com\/rescogitandae\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/59","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/tgenloe.com\/rescogitandae\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/tgenloe.com\/rescogitandae\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/tgenloe.com\/rescogitandae\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/tgenloe.com\/rescogitandae\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=59"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/tgenloe.com\/rescogitandae\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/59\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":60,"href":"https:\/\/tgenloe.com\/rescogitandae\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/59\/revisions\/60"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/tgenloe.com\/rescogitandae\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=59"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/tgenloe.com\/rescogitandae\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=59"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/tgenloe.com\/rescogitandae\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=59"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}