They want us to believe that the Russian campaign destroyed divisions, and hordes of tanks, and whatnot. It did, no doubt. But it also has left them with a couple of hundred or more divisions of the best-trained big-country invasion troops in history! The Germans wouldn’t like us to dwell on that angle! Our own army has a number of strategists who claim you can’t defend America—once an enemy has established bases inside the nation, and good supply lines. And if the German troops who trained in Russia landed here, they might blitz from Atlanta to Seattle!”
“But the general staff—” said one of the women.
Mr. Corinth looked at her.
“Unfortunately, the brass heads in the army and the navy think the way Wilson does. With their wishes. It’s natural. We brought them up in a ‘tradition.’ We thought that officers should have imagination beaten out of them; we sacrificed it for discipline, automatonism, excellence in as-is operation. Being patriotic, and being the victims of an ironclad environment, they—for the most part—can do nothing original to win our wars.
They don’t understand how the wars will be fought—only how they were fought. So that they must use up their energies wishing that the Germans were coming in ’43 just as they came in ’14 because that is the only way they learned to use their energies. That’s why an American admiral can strut smugly about on the deck of a battleship that has inadequate anti-air defenses. That’s why a general can conduct war games, and keep ‘score,’ without taking the possibility of air power into consideration at all. He does what he can do because he is a patriot—and he doesn’t do what he can’t do. That’s impossible.”
“But our boys have the spirit to whip anybody. We’re training ’em right now,” retorted Mr. Wilson.
“We may get enough new officers in time,” Mr. Corinth replied. “But whenever I hear an army man saying, ‘Give me the boys, and give the boys Springfield rifles, and I’ll show the old Boche what for!’ I get sick at the pit of my stomach. Because that poor devil will someday possibly be facing Boche —who are destroying himself and his men and the terrain and towns around them, from a point beyond Springfield range. Or from behind armor plate a Springfield and a Garand and a .37 millimeter gun can’t pierce! I get quite sore at veterans and old soldiers and the reminiscing legionnaires, sometimes. All they have is the right spirit. What they lack is the basic realization that, in twenty-odd years, one military machine—the German—has figured out how to make the World War lessons meaningless.
“Last fall, Mr. Wilson, the British were almost ready to quit. If the air blitz had gone on another ten days they probably would have quit. The government even had appointed the officials to treat with the Germans after the surrender. Whole towns, whole cities, counties, were so shell-shocked that they were unmanageable. Millions of people were stunned, numb, out of their heads. The end was at hand. The British knew it. And then—the Germans gave up the effort. That’s twice they’ve quit too soon. The third time—they may not quit. It’s all different, and it would be better for us if we didn’t have so many old soldiers around the land—good men—who are trying to get us ready to fight the war of 1914.
“The military wiseacres will tell you that there’s a defense discovered for every new weapon of offense. And so there is! I used to be more or less lulled by that theory.
Then I skimmed through the history of war to investigate it. And the sad truth is, that most of the great new steps forward in new weapons for offensive war—or new ways of using old weapons—have been immediately followed by the disastrous defeat of nations and whole continents! You can follow the story, from the phalanx and the catapult, through the Swiss bowmen and the use of gunpowder, right down to the tank and the bomber! There’s always a time lag before defense catches up with offense. It may be that an adequate defense will someday be invented against air bombing—as the old truism says it must be—but history leads me to suspect that the invention may very well come after the whole damned world has been subjugated, and the defense will be useful only in wars that lie centuries away from us now.”