Relax wrote:Ok, Historical data for number of US soldiers in uniform from 1950 through 2005.
http://www.heritage.org/research/report ... -1950-2003Download the Excel file.
Add population
Graph percentage.
Over those years, the average is well over 1%. Only after 1990 did it drop down to 0.5% of the population from which this number has remained stable since then.
USA was playing global peace enforcer and a step in big kid. The proposed scenario is Manticore and friends whose population dwarfs Manticore by the way, is now the galaxy peace enforcer. USA's Economy was and still is the envy of the world, so why is this number(1% of pop) "impossible" in the Honorverse where the total population drain in basic infrastructure employment is vastly lower than it is today? IE internal GSP consumption to keep the machine running smoothly is vastly lower than it is today.
They also do not need to garrison planets, rather just hold the high orbitals and the locals can't do jack about it.
Sigs wrote:Check those nations, in the last 50 or so years the large deployments were in Germany(US ally), Japan(US Ally), South Korea(US Ally), Vietnam(WAR), UK(US Ally)… Unless you are proposing that the RMN is deployed in Beowulf, Haven and Grayson the comparison is lost otherwise.
Their Largest deployments were in war zones and in allied countries, if you would notice US Troop Deployment by Region in the Excel spreadsheet you would see that the Area's where the most "peacekeeping" has been done are generally not where the US deployed its forces. In other area's those forces are on exchange. training exercise or as instructors.
As for the 1% in military….During the 1950's there was the Korean War and the Cold War, during the 1960 and 70s there was the Vietnam War and the Cold War, during the 80's there was the cold war with a bunch of small wars… Look at the numbers in 1989 and 1990-1994 and tell me what you see… between 1989 and 1995 there was a drop of roughly 600,000 troops.
The Us military size was proportional to the threat that the people felt, as I said it is rather easier to convince people to support a large military when their lives and the lives of their family and livelihood are in danger than convincing them to support a large military because some 800,000 in Rwanda face death.
Don't let's get hung up on the real world; this is fiction. The size of the US military depends on what the government can afford to spend at any given time, and the political situation at home and abroad.
SIG, you are not including the political reality in the US of the base closings and RIF begun under Pres. GHW Bush.
Bipartisan committees during the Reagan Administration took up the task of "downsizing" the military and reducing the defense budget. This was, in effect, a belated attempt to do what had been the desired policy since Rumsfeld was Pres. Ford's defense secretary in 1973. Carter continued it by canceling a number of new weapons systems' development and deployment, then (political suicide) reversing himself in the wake of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and concurrent overthrow of the Shah of Iran (and Iraq's immediate invasion of Iran). Starting iirc in 1989 or so, there was a major RIF (reduction in force), meaning a drop in manning, coupled directly to the base closings negotiated earlier, under Reagan.
Our actual military activities then (1990-91) included a major deployment of forces to the middle east; it didn't affect any of the RIF or base closings at all.
I spent 1982-84, and 1986-88 deployed to FRG. Deployments to allied nations were not "peacekeeping," or even intended to be sufficient to delay being overrun. I think the intel estimates then suggested we'd have at best a week before the Soviets reached the Bay of Bisquay, or Rota. We were there because we'd do some damage to the Soviets, and because we'd be the martyr's to mobilize support for a war with the public. We had troops in Japan/Korea to forestall China politically; not because they could have stopped the Chinese.
But in order to take us out, they'd have to go to all out war, no holds barred; MAD was the real life deterrent.
For the wars in Korea (two of my uncles were drafted) and Vietnam, you have to look politically to the Truman Doctrine. Taking over the security of SE Asia in the former French Indo-China wasn't necessary for us militarily at all. Even so, "proxy wars" weren't restricted to Asia (Chile, Cuba, Nicaragua, Angola, Suez, &&&&&)
Relax, we have never been a "global policeman" except in our internal domestic propaganda, but this is a real life issue, and I try to mostly avoid real life politics. We intervene when we have economic issues at stake; moral issues get dithered over and buried in propaganda.
But that isn't for this forum, anyway. Your point about whether Manticore could put enough bodies in uniform is valid, and I think, supported by text (recruitment of Naval Personnel in Talbot; several "divisions" of ground troops).
Rob