Political leadership guided the North and South landscape, but the military leadership guided the battlefield. The Civil War was a modern war compared to the Napoleonic wars and for the South; Lee is seen by some scholars as a leader out of touch with modern warfare while other generals such as those from the Union were waging a modern style of warfare. In the article, An Old-Fashioned Soldier in a Modern War?: Robert E. Lee as Confederate General, Gary Gallagher takes a historiographical approach of how historians viewed Lee’s method of warfare to answer his question of whether or not Lee was outdated. These historians Gallagher references look at Lee’s aristocratic background, personality, and treatment of civilians as a gauge to determine if Lee was an old-fashioned general as Gallagher puts it.…
All of this makes daily life for the soldiers very difficult, but the soldiers do not want to seem faint-hearted in the face of death surrounding…
This novel was an honorable effort by Richard Holmes in discovering the essential issues persuading the nature of man's behavior on and off the battle field. This writing is well-researched and recognized logical studies of the soldier's feelings and behavior during their basic training, his experience in battle, and its aftermath (p.30). The study is well covered: during battle, he argues the factors that encourage soldiers to keep them going in the face of weakness, fear and death. Further than the battlefield, he deals with the influence of religion and background, the significance of personal leadership and inner self influences soldiers to continue fighting in the heat of battle.…
Soldiers undergo traumatic events while in combat. Some survive harrowing experiences; other men die. When soldiers go back home to their loved ones, it is hard to look past what happened to their comrades while they were in combat. For the soldiers who survives, everyday life is a tossup between feeling genuinely happy and feeling guilty for surviving. Even the toughest of soldiers may suffer from survivor’s guilt---a psychological syndrome that makes someone believe they have done wrong by surviving a situation when others did not.…
The Vietnam War took place from 1954 to 1973. The United States became involved in this war because of the fear of communism spreading though out South East Asia. Throughout the war the American people started losing support because of all the men we were losing. All of the troops were finally pulled out of Vietnam, but not before the U.S. lost more than 58,000 soldiers. The movie Letters Home from Vietnam shows real film from the war, and shows what the American troops really endured.…
I've generally trusted that I have a solid sense of leadership abilities, however being a Soldier has genuinely offered me some assistance with realizing what it intends to be a genuine leader. It is my conviction that all Soldiers in the armed forces are leaders and that with the end goal anybody should be an incredible officer. Being an enlisted Soldier, there's a lot of information that is found out through involvement to pick up administration abilities that an officer ought to possess. To me, being an officer likewise implies that one should be an extraordinary follower. Being an enlisted Soldier, throughout my previous twelve years, has had a positive effect much all the more so on that conviction.…
Soldiers’ psychological state was always something that needed to be watched. “At night the wire is hammered by the artillery and we live in perpetual fear of raids” (Harrison 49). This quote depicts trench warfare as weeks or months of silent boredom interrupted by moments of terror. Harrison reveals the psychological damage (shell shock or PTSD) of being at the front line or being kept up by the sounds of endless shots and the fear of rogue bullets. In addition to shell shock, the men were sleep deprived.…
These conditions took a toll on the soldiers’ physical and mental health. Adapting soldiers coming back from war were faced with a psychological condition known as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (Hochgesang 2). PTSD is a substantial problem that many returning soldiers face when coming back from war. According to Britannica, “Post-traumatic stress disorder follows a traumatic event particularly that involves actual or threatened death or serious bodily injury to oneself or others that creates intense feelings of fear, helplessness, or horror” (Emery 1).…
War is a critical engagement that does not end with the stop of guns t the battle field. More than 17,530 US troops in 2009 were hospitalized for mental disorders. Traumatic brain injury is the most prominent injury that occurs in war with more than 50% of all combat related casualties a result of brain injury. With the advances in treatment and evacuation, however, more wounded soldiers are surviving than they did just a few years ago. However, hundreds of thousands are coming home and suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder with a significant percentage of those who are suffering not realizing they have a condition (Lawhorn & Philpott, 2010).…
This mental fortitude requirement equates to Nietzsche ’s quote, “That which doesn’t kill me makes me stronger (Nietzsche, 1888). Harsh physical training in elite units is a tool which at times provides the physical resiliency which allowed me to have the fortitude to continue with an injury in the Ranger course. As well, the drive to complete the course despite being hungry, extremely tired with an injury derived from the ability to bounce back from a negative event originated from training conducted daily in the Regiment (Tugade, et al, 2004).…
Effects of the war, specifically the front lines, are shown significantly through the historical novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, written by Erich Maria Remarque. The author displays the development of Paul, the narrator through World War I, through the story as he encounters the front, and how it can change someone’s life forever. Soldiers endure countless hours of pure war. The effects of the front can bring abandonment in their life and them wanting no one. It is very dehumanizing and can turn a human into an animal, and it’s inescapable – the soldiers are forced to feel the wrath of war.…
RAND Corporation was generally greater exposure to trauma, conducted a survey in 1965, 24 service members from the national community to evaluate and deploy a recent exposure to traumatic events and possible brain damage and evaluates current symptoms of psychological illness. Reports that at least 50% reported serious injury or death, and 45% had a friend report a death or serious non-combatant, and 10% are reported injured and required hospitalization. The frequency of traumatic events was found to be more common in the New England Journal of Medicine study, with 90 percent of soldiers returning the bodies or reporting harmful and reported the death of a reported enemy combatants who are responsible for 50% of Iraq. RAND survey found that meets the stress disorder (PTSD) or depression, post-traumatic basis for return of 18.5% of all service members are; these numbers are similar to those reported by Hodge and colleagues. In addition, RAND survey experienced a mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) are available in the deployment process and found that 19.5% reported; After experiencing more than one-third of TBI and that also duplicated traumatic stress disorder or depression had.…
The Effects of War on Veterans in Afghanistan and Iraq More than half of the 2.6 million Americans dispatched to fight the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq struggle with physical or mental health problems and often begin to feel disconnected from civilian life, deriving from deployment. As stated in the article “After the Wars: A legacy of pain and pride”, written by Rajiv Chandrasekaran and published by The Washington Post. The conditions of being deployed and serving for our country can conclude in widespread consequences within soldiers in which if no help is provided, could become permanently detrimental. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), Military Sexual Trauma (MST), and an increase in suicides are some of…
Despite this relatively recent acceptance by the psychiatric community, the notion of traumatic stress has been discussed in the context of military service as far back as the writings of the Ancient Greeks (Shay, 2002). PTSD is still in the process of becoming more appropriately diagnosed and discussed as a serious problem among all military personnel and veterans. The term “post-traumatic sress disorder” was coined in the late 1970’s after the Vietnam War. Another form of PTSD that is frequently experienced by veterans is known as “survivals guilt” (Smith, 2015). This occurs when a veteran returns from active duty and feels guilty that that they had survived while others did…
The Army’s Leaders, in turn, must protect their Soldiers and maintain their readiness at all times. To do this, the Army developed several programs intended to keep Soldiers active and prepared for the challenges they will face. The Comprehensive Soldier and Family Fitness, SH/ARP, and Suicide Prevention programs are some of the most prominent in a long list of initiatives the Army created to take care of its Soldiers. Each of these programs relies on Army Leaders to maintain personnel accountability and take initiative when a soldier exudes “warning signs” as described in each of the programs’ mandatory training…