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Punishment In The Military
from "Seven Pillars of Wisdom" by T.E. Lawrence
In the regular Arab Army there was no power of punishment
whatever: this vital difference showed itself in all our
troops. They had no formality of discipline; there was
no subordination. Service was active; attack always imminent:
and, like the Army of Italy, men recognized the duty of
defeating the enemy. For the rest they were not soldiers,
but pilgrims, intent always to go the little farther.
I was not discontented
with this state of things, for it had seemed to me that
discipline, or at least formal discipline, was a virtue
of peace: a character or stamp by which to mark off soldiers
from complete men, and obliterate the humanity of the
individual. It resolved itself easiest into the restrictive,
the making men not do this or that: and so could be fostered
by a rule severe enough to make them despair of disobedience.
It was a process of the mass, an element of the impersonal
crowd, inapplicable to one man, since it involved obedience,
a duality of will. It was not to impress upon men that
their will must actively second the officer‚s, for
then there would have been, as in the Arab Army and among
irregulars, that momentary pause for thought transmission,
or digestion; for the nerves to resolve the relaying private
will into active consequence. On the contrary, each regular
Army sedulously rooted out this significant pause from
its companies on parade. The drill-instructors tried to
make obedience an instinct, a mental reflex, following
as instantly on the command as though the motor power
of the individual wills had been invested together in
the system.
This was well, so far as it increased quickness: but it
made no provision for casualties, beyond the weak assumption
that each subordinate had his will-motor not atrophied,
but reserved in perfect order, ready at the instant to
take over his late superior‚s office; the efficiency
of direction passing smoothly down the great hierarchy
till vested in the senior of the two surviving privates.
It had the further
weakness, seeing men‚s jealousy, of putting power
in the hands of arbitrary old age, with its petulant activity:
additionally corrupted by long habit of control, an indulgence
which ruined its victim, by causing the death of his subjunctive
mood. Also, it was an idiosyncrasy with me to distrust
instinct, which had its roots in our animality. Reason
seemed to give men something deliberately more precious
than fear or pain: and this made me discount the value
of peace smartness as a war-education.
For with war a subtle change happened to the soldier.
Discipline was modified, supported, even swallowed by
an eagerness of the man to fight. This eagerness it was
which brought victory in the moral sense, and often in
the physical sense, of the combat. War was made up of
crises of intense effort. For psychological reasons commanders
wished for the least duration of this maximum effort:
not because the men would not try to give it-usually they
would go on till they dropped-but because each such effort
weakened their remaining force. Eagerness of the kind
was nervous, and, when present in high power, it tore
apart flesh and spirit.
To rouse the excitement of war for the creation of a military
spirit in peace-time would be dangerous, like the too-early
doping of an athlete. Consequently discipline, with its
concomitant 'smartness' (a suspect word implying superficial
restraint and pain) was invented to take its place. The
Arab Army, born and brought up in the fighting line, had
never known a peace-habit, and was not faced with problems
of maintenance till armistice-time:then it failed signally.
T.E. Lawrence was also known as "Lawrence
of Arabia"
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