MWadwell wrote:Thucydides wrote:
Bolt action rifles along the line of the Lee-Enfield coupled to rigorous training will probably suffice; British riflemen at the Battle of Loos in 1915 poured so much aimed, accurate rifle fire into the advancing Germans they thought they were being machine gunned (and this at a time the British Army still only had two machine guns per battalion). No CoGA formation will be able to reply to that storm of firepower, yet the regular British Army of the day would have the command and internal structure that the Safeholdians would be able to understand and emulate.
VERY good point there - having the weapon (i.e. semi-automatic rifles) is not the entire story.
You need the means to effectively use it.
As you point out, this is effective small unit tactics, appropriate leadership selection and training, communication ability, logistics, etc.
Taking this point further, this means that weapon tech will eventually plateau, until other tech (i.e. communications) catches up. (For example, there is no need for massive artillery pieces with a large reach, if you lack the ability for the FOD to direct it.)
Effective battlefield communication is hard enough with telephones, radio's and smokeless powder, without these its pray and hope and wait for the smoke to clear. The battle field vanishes in a cloud of smoke and coordination becomes impossible beyond the range of voice and bugle, one of the reasons for marching in files is to keep the troops heading in the same rough direction - add automatic (or even reliable magazine rifles) to this mix and you are looking at a blender loaded with an army. (This is the First World War scenario with asymmetric arms thrown in - a one sided blood bath, possibly similar to the Chinese Boxer Rebellion). Charis has advanced strategic communications and intelligence but like the church lacks rapid tactical communications.