US may have won some of the wars but once the dust settled, it just didn't feel like winning
It's the sentiment that matters in this case, rather than the facts
coming from a lowly whites background, Vance knows vevy well what kind of message his rust belt folks resonate with.
The mission asked of young service men and women was beyond the scope of the resources given to them. Winning hearts and minds in countries where the people don’t see a continuous solid relationship with the US was the difference between winning in Germany and Japan, and failing in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Korea and Vietnam were proxy wars in the Cold War, a contest of wills. The Soviets were paid back in small proxy wars around the world, but directly in Afghanistan in the 80s.
This is why you see the shift back to thinking about warfare, but limiting it to Latin America and western hemisphere (Panama, Greenland, possibly Venezuela, the cartels), then a build up for a potential conflict; big power competition, and finally using diplomatic and economic means for the rest of the eastern hemisphere.
I expect to see Marines training more heavily in Jungle gear, for Latin America and manning posts in the many south pacific islands the US use to operate, such as Tinnian Island.
Look at this new ad for the special forces (specially the Green Berets, which specialize in training local guerrilla allies): Iron Sharpens Iron. The shift in the recruitment will start with the special operators.
Btw, I lived for years in the area of the country JD is from. He is also from my generation. A few of my classmates signed up to join the service after 9/11 and were sent overseas. So I understand, at least a little of where JD is coming from. The thought that our generation’s sacrifice may have been in vain if the military had been led by incompetents for the past 3 decades.
Btw, I personally don’t think the US and China will
ever go to war, with China focused on becoming a regional military power in the areas around itself and protecting its SLOCs, so just for the record, that’s why I don’t see a conflict in discussing Chinese military modernization as an American. Chinese military modernization does benefit partner nations that look to work with and procure Chinese arms, like Pakistan, which also share the goals of a stable developing world. Pakistan that is also a partner nation with the US, and still a MNNA, in areas of shared national interests. So Pakistan’s relationship with the two major powers are not at odds with each other.
Jungle Training will overlap for Latin America and the South Pacific.
The following is a good documentary, over hour long, to watch on the shift in training.