Subal das wrote:in Russia 2 years military service is mandatory for all man. Everybody get trained, not just how to shoot, but exact military specialty. Russia can assemble huge army in a week time. Just to know how too shot is not enough, you need to know how to use radio, how to use radars, missiles, mines, RPGs, tanks, canons, how to repair all that staff, plus medical, plus administrative et if you will bring up together 600k of hunters, who are perfect shooters, that is not an army at all.
History has shown us time and again what a determined body of men can do. We don't have to look very far back either. The Viet Cong and the NVA, with very little of an organized army's structure and material, successfully resisted the then most powerful army in the world for years and won. Look at the Afghans, they resisted the British successfully (three times), they resisted the Russians and are now resisting the USA. Just a bunch of rag tag guys with rifles and not much else. They were/are not an organized army either. They did not know "to use radars, missiles, mines, RPGs, tanks, canons, how to repair all that staff, plus medical, plus administrative", at least not at first. Even then they dispensed with most of the rest and and still prevailed over the Russians who had all that.
After Ww2 Chang Kai Shek had all that and he still got defeated by a bunch of communist peasants who had not much more than their ideology (however flawed it was) and their rifles. In Zimbabwe, again a rag-tag group of men overthrew an organized government who had a modern army, even though it didn't turn out very well for the people of Zimbabwe. The list goes on and on.
You just cannot dismiss determined armed men that easily.
however this slogan is wrongly attributed to general yamamoto.
Shooter, thanks for bringing that to my notice. It just goes to show that one must check ones sources always.
“Never give in, never give in, never; never; never; never – in nothing, great or small, large or petty – never give in except to convictions of honor and good sense” — Winston Churchill, Oct 29, 1941