eliakon wrote:Your making the imaginary claim that only professional soldiers in professional armies are combat trained and everyone else is just pretending.
I would say that since the real world disagrees with you there (hmmm, lets start with the Winter War? Or Vietnam? Afghanistan? ISIS? The American Revolution? Want to go on?)
Combat training is OBVIOUSLY not the sole provence of people who are in military units.
The idea is a nice conceit of the military yes...
...but it is utterly not true. My command was pretty clear on trying to quash that falsehood every time it reared its ugly head in our unit.
Now lets address the idea that your 'mind is being retrained'
Hmmmm. Once again that is H2H skill (Any)...
...you know the skill that lets you operate under fire four times as effectively as someone who doesn't have the training?
As for "boot camp" = "Combat Training"
Sorry, that fails on its head.
Again, yes its a nice conceit to pretend that successfully completing boot camp is the requirement for being combat trained.
Its utterly false but its a nice conceit for the professional soldier to pretend that they alone are trained.
Its a an illusion that will get them killed in the real world though.
Because in the Real World you run into people who have combat training that is not from formal boot camps... and where they don't care about marching in formation, or bayonet training, or knowing the chain of command or the army song.... they might not even care if you can put on MOPP gear in 15 seconds or pass a first aid test...
...because they are actual fighters. Not soldiers true... but fighters. It is a deadly mistake to confuse the two and imagine that only soldiers can fight.
(and just for kicks and giggles... go look at the boot camp in Mercenary Adventures... now go and tell me with a straight face that every single military OCC can honestly claim, by RAW to be equal to having passed that?)
people with a poor excuse for combat training can be a threat. heck, people with absolutely no training at all can be a threat. a person who picks up a gun for the first time in their life and has only ever seen it used from a distance or in movies can be a threat.
that doesn't mean they're trained for combat.
and true, boot camp is not the only way to get combat trained. but if your training environment hasn't included the kinds of things you see in boot camp - ie changing you from someone who generally isn't prepared to charge into danger when needed, and who knows how to recognize when it is needed - you aren't combat trained. i don't mean you need a drill sergeant screaming at you specifically - someone who's managed to survive through a few combats out of sheer luck may develop many of the things that are trained in boot camp. some rare few people may even just do many of the things that are trained in boot camp on their own. as you said, they probably don't know much about marching or inspections. and you're right, those things don't make a person combat trained.
but seriously, it sounds like you didn't read the article about boot camp that KC posted at all. it doesn't talk about the skills you learn. the purpose of boot camp is to change regular civilians into people who don't act like normal people do in the middle of combat.
combat training isn't about knowing how to fire a rifle. any idiot can do that. it isn't even about being able to fire a rifle well.
and the funny thing about your examples... let's have a look at them:
the winter war: ar you implying the soviets didn't have combat training, or the finns? because frankly, if you're trying to argue that the finns didn't have combat training but held out, have you really *looked* at the other side? the soviets had literally killed or imprisoned most of their officer corps just before the entire debacle. and not only were the remaining officers (most of whom had not been properly trained for their new responsibilities) not trained in general, but they displayed an absolutely appalling lack of understanding for what fighting a war in finland in particular would be like. furthermore, the finns did in fact have a military, it wasn't just civilians fighting. if, on the other hand, you mean the russians won and had poor combat training, then i have to point out that their lack of combat training of the officers caused them to bungle almost every aspect of the invasion for months. this war demonstrates that a comparatively small and poorly equipped group can fight a larger and better equipped group... if the larger and better equipped group has collectively no idea what they're doing. or, in other words... if the larger and better equipped group has inadequate training.
the vietnam war: if you look at the history, it turns out one of the major problems is poor training. short tours of duty and shortened training of the troops combined with leaders inexperienced in fighting a defensive war led to difficulties. later on, however, when the war shifted to offensive, the US was actually winning battles... and then lost public support, which in a democracy eventually means that (winning or not) you lose the war. as time went on, and the US withdrew (having lost public support), the poorly trained local militaries proceeded to demonstrate that combat training makes a difference, by suffering major defeats as a result of their lack of it.
afghanistan: did you actually look at what happened when coalition forces actually got to fight in pitched battle? it wasn't even close. to this day, nobody in afghanistan thinks it's a good idea to try that again. they're certainly still dangerous - as i said, people with *no* training whatsoever can be dangerous. if you think they're even remotely close to being near as dangerous as the US forces would be in a similar situation, then i have to question where you're getting your information. again, the problem here is not the military, which is in fact so much more dangerous in a fight than their opposition that the opposition does everything they can to avoid an actual fight, but US public support. well, that and the poorly trained local military and corruption in the region.
ISIS: there isn't a ton of combat, last i checked. but when the US actually does manage to find a target and initiate combat, well... i don't seem to recall hearing much about how well ISIS actually does in those situations. certainly, they still kill people (including killing and wounding some US soldiers). but in terms of being an effective fighting force? just like the previous two, the only chance they have of winning is eroding public support. which they may very well do... the US lately isn't looking much like they care about anyone except themselves. but again, if this fight is lost (which it probably will be, the US public hasn't got a good track record of supporting wars that can't be quickly decisively won lately), it isn't because ISIS is anywhere remotely close to being as effective as the US military in a fight.
the american revolution: uhhh... you *have* heard of valley forge, right? and how critical it was in turning a group of people into soldiers? you do realize that before valley forge, washington and his poorly trained troops generally didn't do so well, right? (with one exception where they caught an opponent completely by surprise as a result of their opponents failing harder at paying attention to their surroundings than the US army did at executing their own plan)? that the US army was repeatedly saved by events beyond their control as they repeatedly retreated? that a major turning point came when the french got involved with their very much trained navy?
now, a poorly trained force *can* defeat a better trained one... with a lot of luck, or some major advantages, or colossal mistakes by the other side. but it requires some pretty exceptional circumstances, it isn't common, and it isn't because knowing how to use a weapon is remotely close to being as effective as actual combat training.