NeXuS4909 wrote:
Well i understand where you guys are coming from but were missing the point of what i asked!
I'm curious on how 5x as many people died in other wars but our forces are spread thin. That's what im asking. I've had family members serve in iraq to. I know how it is to worry whether or not they will come home.
I think we need to clear up the definition of "spread thin". Being spread thin doesn't mean we've lost so many soldiers that there aren't enough to do the job. It's more like a concentration per area. As Dilbert said, we have roughly 150,000 soldiers policing a population of 25 million. It's not 150,000 soldiers fighting an armed force of 200,000 Viet Cong.
Maybe this will help: Say in WWII, we had 500K men out there advancing on Berlin. Once they liberated a territory, the locals resumed control and we maybe left a station here and there for supplies or whatever, then we moved on closer to the goal.
Well there are no "lines" in Iraq. The entire country is a battlefield and there's no where to fall back to. This also explains why it's so much more traumatic for the troops over there now than it was in WWII. Then there was intermittent battle with heavy casualties. Now, they have lighter casualties, but they're basically in combat mode 24/7 with no breaks.