Randall Randall wrote:
> Note that the high cost of these weapons is purely a function of limited
> supply. I think it would be fairly easy to design such a man-carried
> missile to be mass manufactured for less than a thousand; no government
> would be pleased with this operation, though...
> In a free society, such things could be as common as .380 autos are
> now.
The high cost of military hardware is due to two factors: intrinsic complexity and small manufacturing runs. An anti-tank missile is a more complicated machine than a rifle, so it will naturally be more expensive. Tanks, aircraft and other very high-cost items are also produced in relatively small numbers, which drives up costs by making manufacturing inefficient.
> Eh? No one needs this to defend his house. If it were apparent that
> a standing force of some sort was necessary, people would pay for
> a private company to train one. I'm not trained to be a
> police detective,
> either, but I don't need to be one to defend my home individually, and
> if I do need one for something, I can call my crime insurance company
> (police force). It may be more efficient, in general, for a
> police company
> to also be a mass defense company, but probably not, IMHO..
Depends on what the threat is. My point is that a force of 1,000 men with
combined-arms equipment can easily defeat 50,000 individuals armed with
rifles. Unless civilian morale is very high, they can also terrorize
several hundred thousand people into submission (we have to remember, most
people are *not* willing to die for their freedom). This is an important
point to remember when you start looking at what a State or a rogue PPA
could do.
> >Today it is virtually impossible to defeat a modern army in
??? The Somalis killed a few soldiers, and the Clinton administration
decided it didn't want bad press on the issue and pulled out. There was
never any attempt to attack the warlords responsible, so it hardly counts
> conventional
> >warfare unless you have one yourself.
>
> Not so. The Somalis effectively defeated the force sent there in the
> early 1990s...the trick is to cause losses while making it clear that
> it will go on indefinitely.
> I disagree that this is so. Iraq had the fourth largest army in the
> world in 1990. We sent a trivial force, in comparison, and it was
> higher technology, not numbers, that made the difference..
The important measure of size is money, not people. In the modern world you will run out of money long before you run out of people.
An organization with more money to spend can afford more R&D, more specialized equipment and better training. With modern technology the number of things you could productively spend money on is far larger than anyone's pocket book, so money tends to be the limiting factor.
> >In the future, we should reasonably expect these trends to continue.
No, its based on the arms race problem.
Simply put, there is never a point at which military technology is 'good
enough'.
There
> >are far more things a military might want to buy than they are ever
likely
> >to be able to afford. The near future will see the introduction of
> >autonomous recon drones, robotic weapons, cheap precision munitions,
> >automated surveillance systems, and many other expensive, specialized
sorts
> >of hardware.
>
> Hah! Gotcha. All of this stuff is predicated on computational power.
> Computers are so cheap (and falling) that this sort of equipment is
> expensive only due to scarcity. The cost of manufacture is low,
> compared to many electronic gadgets that people routinely buy..
And BTW, the kind of systems I mentioned are not just computers. Military-grade sensors are better than anything in the civilian sector (except for scientific instruments, of course), and robotics are expensive anywhere. Also, the military version has to keep working after being shot, dropped, run over, rained on, and used as a hammer - all of which drives up costs considerably.
Now, once again, I expect that a privatized system could produce better arms for less money than a government. However, that doesn't mean that arms would be cheap. Costs of some items might drop, but an intelligent military will opt for improved performance over reduced cost in almost all cases.
> There is another point, here, too. Any population that is slated for
> conquering is likely to have deeper pockets than the conqueror, for
> two reasons: one, the conquerer must feel that he will get his money
> back, or it wouldn't be worth it to try (no one can lose money
> indefinitely, after all), and two, while the conquerer is willing to spend
> some portion of his own wealth to get the conquered area, he cannot
> be willing to spend as much as the area in question will be willing to
> spend to keep him out. That is, I would be willing to use up all my
> wealth to keep someone from stealing my wealth. This is the rationale
> behind many wealthy people's actions of giving away more than they
> would have to pay in taxes, to reduce the amount paid in taxes..
This is true as far as it goes, but it ignores some crucial factors:
economic growth and warlike groups maximize military power.
Billy Brown, MCSE+I
bbrown@conemsco.com