Four Types of Armies

YNCS

Ex-bubblehead
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There are several different types of armies in the world. There are about 165 armies, but many aren't real armies. As determined by their primary role, there are essentially four types: ceremonial armies, political armies, police armies, and real armies.

For a newly independent country, having an army is like having a flag, a symbol of sovereignty, besides it looks good parading on official occasions. In addition, in many countries the army represents a political party, regularly staging coups, in some cases with different units espousing different political lines. This is nothing new. The Roman Empire fell partially because the professional soldiers spent too much time fighting with each other over who would run the show. Also, many armies are police forces, whose primary purpose is to keep internal order, frequently by means of massacres and other forms of terrorism against their own populations. Real armies, although they may have ceremonial, political, and police functions, are those that devote most of their time and energy to preparing for war with an external foe. Less than a third of all armies are real armies.

To some extent, the type of army a country has reflects its needs. But needs can change, and ceremonial, political, and police armies usually don't do well when confronted by a real army. Consider some recent instances: In Sri Lanka, the ceremonial army virtually disintegrated when faced by the Tamil insurgency, and quickly developed a penchant for massacre, rather than battle, which only exacerbated the situation. Similarly, the Lybian Army, which exists primarily as a police force, has proved itself incompetent against five opponents--Chadians, Egyptians, Tunisians, Tanzanians and French--in a series of clashes going back more than two decades. The Argentine Army, a political and police force, collapsed in the Falklands when facing less than half their number of British soldiers and Marines. This was after several years of counterinsurgency warfare in which some 12,000 Argentineans, mostly unarmed and including numerous women and children, were killed by the Argentine Army.

Of course, under pressure, an army's character can change, but this is difficult, painful and expensive. In 1948, most of the Arab armies were largely ceremonial forces with some police experience, which did them little good against Israel, with thousands of World War II veterans in its ranks. Defeat tended to politicize most of the Arab armies, in the 1950s it was said that Syria had three political parties: the I Army Corps, the II Army Corps and the III Army Corps; which led to further defeats in 1956 and 1967. It was only then that the principal Arab armies began to become real armies, whereupon their tactical performance improved markedly. Likewise, the Sri Lankan Army underwent years of reorganization and training in the hands of the Indian Army, and became a real army.

Fortunately in Western countries we have real armies, with uniformed leaders who understand the pitfalls of becoming some other type of army.
 
I think it fits here. In a way its military history, although it is very recent. Plus, if it got moved to off topic, it would be burried fairly quickly.
 
Dreadnought said:
Did you write this yourself? This is pretty good...
Thank you for the compliment. Yes, I wrote it.

I was reading the thread about Buddism and War and it occurred to me that the Sri Lankan Army had changed its characteristics. At the beginning of the Tamil Rebellion, the Sri Lankan Army were pushovers. The Sri Lankan government essentially gave control of its army to the Indian Army for ten years, and now the Sri Lankan Army is a capable "real" army.

I thought about how certain armies have reputations for being good or bad. I then realized that there were the four types of armies that I referred to in my original post. So I wrote my thoughts down and posted them.

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