Patriotism, War, and Why We Fight
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Patriotism is a powerful force that compels men and women to give full support to their government in time of war. But patriotism and loyalty are largely based on the belief that one has a personal stake in the outcome. This brief study, which examines men and women who made war their prime call of duty for real or perceived patriotic reasons, contains the introduction and first chapter of the full analysis of war volunteering titled, For God, Gold, and Glory: A History of Military Service and Man’s Search for Power, Wealth and Adventure (also by Martina Sprague), which sheds light on those individuals who commit their lives to armed service for reasons related to patriotism, financial gain, adventure, and heroism.
Martina Sprague
Martina Sprague grew up in the Stockholm area of Sweden. She has a Master of Arts degree in Military History from Norwich University in Vermont and has studied a variety of combat arts since 1987. As an independent scholar, she writes primarily on subjects pertaining to military and general history, politics, and instructional books on the martial arts. For more information, please visit her website: www.modernfighter.com.
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Patriotism, War, and Why We Fight - Martina Sprague
PREFACE
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Not for nothing did Napoleon say, Give me enough medals and crimson ribbon and I will conquer the world.
¹ Soldiers fight for a variety of reasons: a sense of patriotic duty, the lure of financial gain, or the desire for honor and glory. Some want a bit more than what life has to offer. Others feel that war is their destiny; they can see the writing on the wall and know they must be part of it.
The prospect of war has for millennia lured men into military service, and the field of military history with its subfields of social and political history continues to fascinate the general populace, as evidenced by the great number of books that have been written and published, for example, about the Civil War, World War I and II, Korea, Vietnam, and, more recently, Iraq and Afghanistan. The movie industry, the Military History Channel, historical societies, and the news media, in which war and politics are discussed on a daily basis, further fuel popular interest in the subject. War volunteering, however, is an aspect of military history that has received surprisingly little academic attention among military, social, and political scholars and critics.²
Although patriotism is a powerful force that compels men and women to give full support to their government in time of war, it is largely based on the belief that one has a personal stake in the outcome. This brief study, which examines men and women who made war their prime call of duty for real or perceived patriotic reasons, contains the introduction and first chapter of the full analysis of war volunteering titled, For God, Gold, and Glory: A History of Military Service and Man’s Search for Power, Wealth and Adventure (also by Martina Sprague).
INTRODUCTION
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I have always been a soldier. I have known no other life. The calling of arms, I have followed from boyhood. I have never sought another . . . I have never feared anything, save the mischance that would prevent me from fulfilling my destiny . . . I can feel it [war], it calls me.
¹
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Steven Pressfield’s rendition of Alexander the Great’s realization that nothing mattered as he stood before the Range of Perpetual Snows contemplating his next move on his historical journey of conquest, not weapons or tactics, philosophy or patriotism, nor fear of the gods themselves,
except for the love of glory,
is revealing of man’s quest for immortality at the prime of his life. This account of an event that transpired more than two millennia ago does not differ a great deal from the stories that soldiers of our own time tell about their desires to lead men into battle, banners fluttering and swords valiantly raised.
²
Soldiers fight for a variety of reasons, such as a sense of patriotic duty. In 1801 Stephen Decatur, the son of a famous naval captain of America’s Revolutionary War, sailed for the Mediterranean in search of glory and adventure. He found both during his conflicts with the Barbary States and upon his return was celebrated as a military hero. He is remembered for coining the phrase, My country, right or wrong.
Some say that he helped forge a new nation out of thirteen former colonies
by kindling the flames of patriotism.
³ But acts of loyalty are largely based on the belief in a personal stake in the institution of war. The conflicts with the Barbary States and privateering—the government authorization of a private ship to attack and seize the cargo of another country’s ship—in waters closer to home were activities undertaken primarily with economic and trade interests in mind.⁴
Patriotism has traditionally been understood to mean a willingness to sacrifice for one’s country and fully supporting one’s government in time of war. The Germans in World War II were undoubtedly patriotic, as evidenced by their nearly unflinching support of Adolf Hitler in his search for Lebensraum (living space) in the east. But several unfolding and interlocking events complicated Operation Barbarossa, Germany’s invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941. The German leadership had underestimated Soviet endurance and readiness to sacrifice, and German intelligence proved faulty in its estimation that Stalin lacked the reserves necessary to raise new forces for the Red Army. The Soviet leaders and their soldiers provided stubborn resistance, while enjoying the advantages of the proximity to resources for sustaining their efforts. Poor weather further aggravated the German advance. Germany’s overextension into Soviet territory can also be