| > If we faced a land invasion, for example, we would not be able to bomb our way out of it. Why would you state this as if it were fact? It's not true. Our own generals bombed the most important trade hub of the time, Atlanta, during the civil war. Bombs are highly effective, and location matters little to their effectiveness or usefullness. We dropped plenty of bombs in unreachable parts of Afghanistan. Were those effective? Yes, they were. Were those bombs as effective, in that region of uninhabitable tunnels and cliffs, as they would be in an urban setting? No, of course not. Bombs are still the go-to attack and defense strategy. Bombs reduce the need for boots on the ground. Bombs reduce the enemy's ability to go to ground and hide. If we faced a land invasion, in the USA, we would absolutely-certainly utilize modern weaponry, including bombs, to displace the enemy. To say otherwise is to disregard history. To say otherwise is to place hope in pie-in-the-sky feelings and not the data we've accumulated over the last 200 years. |
In the short term, yes. In the long term the US eventually gave up and left. Likewise, the US bombed Vietnam heavily, eventually gave up and left. You can't hold territory with bombs.
To say otherwise is to disregard history. To say otherwise is to place hope in pie-in-the-sky feelings and not the data we've accumulated over the last 200 years.
Every military historian will tell you the same thing I just did, and cite examples going back thousands of years - military arson serves the same function as bombing.