Mikey wrote:Since we've been discussing Starship Troopers lately, look at the book; there's a fairly good-sized passage in which Heinlein blasts the top-heaviness of the modern American military machine. What it comes down to is too many Indians, not enough chiefs (no offense, Tsu, I didn't make up the phrase.) Heinlein's model shows a pretty decent officer to enlisted ratio, annd a good NCO to private ratio as well.
Don't you mean "too many chiefs and not enough indians"?
The problem with Heinlein's TOE is that it doesn't take account of the amount of staff work and organic support any army needs. At platoon level thats fine, but he doesn't make any mention of supporting weapons (despite mentioning a HW squad earlier in the book - it must either be integral to one of the sections, or the MI reorganised between Op BUGHOUSE and Rico's sint on the
Tours). Above platoon level you need admin, heavy weapons, armour, logistics, various types of engineers, signals, medical staff, etc, etc. The higher up the chain you go, the more extras you need. In a modern British armoured infantry battalion, there are only 192 men in the rifle platoons, out of a total of 741. The other 500+ do not spend their time sitting around twiddling their thumbs. The further up you get, the worse the discrepancy gets - 3 (UK) Mechanised Div has about 18,000 men on strength, of whom fewer than 1800 are in the rifle platoons. Again, the rest of the division is not sitting around doing nothing. Heinlein tries to brush off the issue by claiming that officers on the commander's transport "double hat", but that doesn't wash. Commanding an infantry battalion and being chief of staff of a division are both full time jobs - you can't have people double hatting those jobs.