Military incompetence
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Military incompetence refers to incompetencies and failures of military organisations, whether through incompetent individuals or through a flawed institutional culture.
The effects of isolated cases of personal incompetence can be disproportionately significant in military organisations. Strict hierarchies of command provide the opportunity for a single decision to direct the work of thousands, whilst an institutional culture devoted to following orders without debate can help ensure that a bad or miscommunicated decision is implemented without being challenged or corrected.
However, the most common cases of "military incompetence" can be attributable to a flawed organisational culture. Perhaps the most marked of these is a conservative and traditionalist attitude, where innovative ideas or new technology are discarded or left untested. A tendency to believe that a problem can be solved by applying an earlier (failed) solution "better", be that with more men, more firepower, or simply more zeal, is common. A strict hierarchical system often discourages the devolution of power to junior commanders, and can encourage micromanagement by senior officers.
The nature of warfare provides several factors which exacerbate these effects; the fog of war means that information about the enemy forces is often limited or inaccurate, making it easy for the intelligence process to interpret the information to agree with existing assumptions, or to fit it to their own preconceptions and expectations. Communications tend to deteriorate in battlefield situations, with the flow of information between commanders and combat units being disrupted, making it difficult to react to changes in the situation as they develop.
After operations have ceased, military organisations often fail to learn effectively from experience. In victory, whatever methods have been used—no matter how inefficient—appear to have been vindicated (see victory disease), whilst in defeat there is a tendency to select scapegoats and to avoid looking in detail at the broader reasons for failure.
See also
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- Cohen, Eliot A.; Gooch, John (2005). Military Misfortunes: The Anatomy of Failure in War. Free Press. ISBN 978-0-7432-8082-2.
- David, Saul (1997). Military Blunders: The How and Why of Military Failure. Robinson Publishing Ltd. ISBN 1-85487-918-9.
- Dixon, Norman F. (1976). On the Psychology of Military Incompetence. Jonathan Cape. ISBN 0-224-01161-8. (also Pimlico, 1994 ISBN 0-7126-5889-0)
- Dunnigan, James; Nofi, Albert (1991). Shooting Blanks: War Making That Doesn't Work. William Morrow and Company. ISBN 0-688-08947-X.
- Fair, Charles (1961). From the Jaws of Victory: A History of the Character, Causes and Consequences of Military Stupidity, from Crassus to Johnson and Westmoreland. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-671-20997-3.