The Conservative wrote:When you have another country's army to protect you... it's called a shield.Speaker to Animals wrote:The Conservative wrote:
Wrong, it is used as a deterrent. When you know, you are going up against an enemy that has superior numbers, and power you are less likely to loose your shit against them, because you don't want to deal with the repercussions, like death and humiliating defeat.
How much warfare, do you suppose, the people of Japan and Germany have been exposed to since 1945?
If you ranked developed nations by casualties in foreign wars, you'd also see a correlation between size of the armed forces and war. Maybe those wars were all just wars, that's not really the point. The point is that, when some foreign war is a choice, and when a nation has a very large armed forces, the choice is more often than not: yes.
You are moving goalposts around. Nobody has attacked the western territory of Europe since WW2. Our wars have been foreign, mostly set in the third world. The bigger the armed forces, the more engaged the nation is in the third world conflicts. France and UK are tits-deep in foreign engagements. France is perpetually locked in African conflicts, for example. But the other nations of Western Europe.. not so much. Even when they do participate, it's quite minimal.
Large armed forces tends to pull a nation into foreign conflicts. I did not make a value judgment over whether that is favorable to us or not. It just simply is the case.