At 10:1, you actually need 64,000 instructors, not 6,400. If you were paying attention, the two Church cadre we saw in LAMA were both wounded in Siddarmark, and that would be the source Magwair is drawing on. He could easily have come up with 6-10,000 veterans of Wyrshym's and Kaitswyrth's campaigns [although I would offer good money that none of the survivors of the ops following Taisyn's defeat have been included < BEG >] who have seen the new weapons used against them and have at least some idea of why the new tactics they're teaching make sense. Probably not all at once, of course, since they would have to recover from their wounds, but they should be available by now. So, in principle, instructors wouldn't have been an issue.
However, Magwair has 2 problems that seem to be escaping peoples' attention. First, _nobody_ on the CoGA's side has actually used the new doctrine in action and [AFAweK] come back to report on it; the people actually training the Harchongese don't even have much, if any, experience with developing it and training with it themselves, so they're going on what they've been told. Worse, they have no idea what Wyrshym and Nybar are telling their people _now_ - what they're teaching is probably what Wyrshym put into one of his reports 6 or 8 months ago, before he had a chance to actually try it and start figuring out how well it might actually work. Anything will be an improvement on 'dress your lines and march that way!', but rote learning from someone who's learned by rote isn't the very best preparation for the current Safehold battlefield.
The second, and much more fundamental, issue is the execrable educational level of the Harchongese. NCOs for sure, and probably younger officers as well, at least by comparison with the AoG. Modern officers and NCOs, at least in the better western militaries, are specifically trained to teach today what they learned yesterday - you need that skill to do complex operational briefings and training, without which said ops are liable to blow up in your face - and that depends on a lot of what was just taught being more something brought to the surface that's been known for years. Even when it's completely new, you learn to learn by doing lots of learning. IOW, by being well educated. Nobody recruits high-school drop outs anymore, and Harchong's ranks are full of what we'd regard as grade-school drop outs. If you're lucky, since many of them aren't even that well taught. That is going to have a profound effect on both the speed and depth with which they master the new military order. If, as I suspect, the upper classes regard 'education' as spending years learning to ace the civil service exams [something many of them would have no interest in], the officer corps will also be lacking breadth and mental nimbleness. What it comes down to is that the upper ranks of the MHOGATA will take a long time to master their new lessons, and even longer to be ready to pass them on, and therefore the snowball effect WH is anticipating will take a lot longer to get rolling. However many veterans Magwair has rounded up, they probably aren't nearly enough.
Weird Harold wrote:Keith_w wrote:The trick is "Work as a team" and if you don't have the training - through drill, ...
Modern drill is largely based on traditional Pike formations; the Harchongese army was a mostly Pike army when dispatched to the front -- they've been trained to work as a team, they just need the new weapon and a hint at the new tactics it makes possible.
I doubt that anyone expects to make the Harchongese into elite infantry, but they already know how to fight as a team. If they didn't, they'd not be using pikes; it is impossible to move without teamwork when everyone is carrying an eleven-foot spear.