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The Volunteers to Fight Our Wars series comprises five shorter books excerpted from For God, Gold, and Glory: A History of Military Service and Man's Search for Power, Wealth, and Adventure. Each book can be purchased separately in print or electronic format.
The Forces of War: Patriotism, Tradition, and Revenge
In his farewell speech of 1989 President Ronald Reagan asked us to
remember the resurgence of national pride he called the “New
Patriotism.” Patriotism and love of country, he said, are closely
related to our national memory and have given our nation’s history a
deeper meaning. Approximately two-thirds of Americans consider
military service patriotic, ranking it second only to voting in
elections and ahead of reciting the pledge of allegiance or wearing
an American flag pin. Army service has historically been a lineage
obligation. To prove their worth, kings and rulers had to embark on
campaign within a short time, normally a year after ascending the
throne. Family tradition has further compelled commoners to don the
uniform in the service of their country. A need for revenge along
with the effects of social and political pressures are other factors
that influence an individual’s decision to join the army and go to
war. This book examines men and women who have made war their prime
call of duty for real or perceived patriotic reasons; commoners
enlisting voluntarily as a matter of family tradition or kinship
obligation; and others serving to avenge a wrong, or because of
social and political pressures.
The Financial Incentives of War: Poverty Draft, Mercenaries, and
Volunteers in Foreign Armies
There are essentially two ways to staff the armies of the world:
conscription and voluntary service.
Military service is a genuinely popular choice for young men in
districts afflicted by poverty. Financial incentives, such as
enlistment bonuses or promises of an education, may also lure those
from slightly more favorable economic backgrounds into the armed
forces.
Perhaps not as common knowledge is the fact that governments have
used similar tactics in their attempts to get foreign governments to
commit forces to war for a common objective.
Some men also volunteer in foreign armies because of ideological
reasons, to flee a life of crime, or to satisfy some personal aim. Well-paid
mercenaries, however, are motivated by their personal acquisitions,
mostly in the form of money and not in what they can do for the
state. This book examines poverty
and the effects of financial need on voluntary military enlistment;
financial incentives such as promises of enlistment bonuses and an
education; and mercenaries and private contractors lured into
military service by the promise of large sums of money.
The Propaganda of War: Personal Transformation and the Search
for Adventure
Individuals tend to seek adventure through war to counter the
effects of boredom. The wars of the twentieth and twenty-first
centuries have found many men and women who cannot imagine life
without combat.
They enlist because of the power war brings them and the knowledge
that they literally hold life and death in their hand.
Governments,
too, seek adventure through war.
Propaganda is the manipulation of ideas to influence the beliefs of
the masses and bring about a specific action.
War propaganda has been used widely throughout history and for a
broad variety of purposes, often to inspire military enlistment and
a hatred of the enemy.
This book examines military enlistment as a result of boredom that
comes with everyday existence, or as an element of hopelessness and
the desire to escape from intolerable pressures at home; recruitment
propaganda and its relation to the promise of adventure, marketable
skills, and personal transformation; and the inability to chill and
leave military life behind after one’s time in the armed forces has
ended.
The Glory of War: The Way to Historical Immortality
What motivates men to go to war? The answer is the desire for
recognition and the opportunity to gain eternal fame.
War is perhaps the most common way in which a man can become a hero.
We tend to romanticize war. War is portrayed as a daring adventure
for a sacred cause, where the soldier will ultimately reach the
highest level of self-actualization. As demonstrated by the great
military figures in history, the promise of honor and heroism can
help a man conquer the world. Persuading talented officers to
forsake field command for a desk job has historically been
difficult. Foot soldiers, too, know that their way to glory and
historical immortality lies with the sword and not the pen. This
book examines the dream of membership in an elite society and battle
as the supreme test of the individual; promises of great rewards and
military training as a “pleasant pastime”; and the tendency to grow
fond of the pleasure/pain dichotomy of war.
The Reality of War: Boredom, Disillusion, and Desertion
Although large numbers of men and women volunteer for military
service, astoundingly few soldiers actually achieve their dream of
going to war and emerging as heroes. When not battling for survival
in its purest sense, military service and war are for many soldiers
a tedious period of their lives that does not compare to the
colorful images of action and adventure the recruiter promised them.
Desertion was always a possibility for men who found army life
intolerable.
Yet each new generation walks into the recruiter’s office with the
same ignorance of war’s reality only to discover, when reality
strikes, the terrible price they have to pay for believing the myth
of war.
This book examines military service as 90 percent boredom and 10
percent action; the search for the “real” army while discovering the
cost of war; and climbing the “mountains of life” in search of the
“Holy Grail.”