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The Secret of American Foreign Affairs (football...real "football")
CNSNews ^ | April 29, 2003 | Stanley K. Ridgley, Ph.D

Posted on 04/29/2003 9:33:39 AM PDT by E Rocc

The Secret of American Foreign Affairs

By Stanley K. Ridgley, Ph.D.

CNSNews.com Commentary April 29, 2003

During his administration, Bill Clinton cut the United States Army from 18 active divisions to 10 and presided over an aimless "Blackhawk Down" foreign policy. How, then, could the U.S. military remain so formidable as to conquer Iraq, a nation of 24 million people, in three weeks?

A larger question is how does our military continue to outstrip the rest of the world in every category, from soldier training to leadership to the will to win? The answer to that question is one of the great secrets of American foreign affairs.

There is one primary reason for the rise of U.S. military power over the past century and its overwhelming capability to fight and win wars: American football.

Decried by some as a simple-minded sport that "glorifies" violence and appeals to the blue-collar, beer-bellied crowd, football is a phenomenon woven into America's social fabric and into the psyche of her people.

The United States is a football nation - football players and football fans - and this sociological factor sets Americans apart from every other nation on earth.

American football is a brutal collision sport in which every player's mettle is tested on every play. At its supreme level, the mutual human violence done in football is greater than that of any other sport in the world.

The only other sport that approaches football in bone-crunching controlled mayhem is rugby, another Anglo-Saxon game played almost exclusively by the British and Australians. Coincidentally, they were the two major powers providing ground troops for the war in Iraq.

Football is violent, but it is not aimless violence. Each individual collision is a tightly circumscribed competition that measures each man's heart, drive, intellect, skill and cunning.

On both sides of the ball, strategy and counterstrategy - the multiplicity of options on a single play - contrive to create an intricate and sophisticated contest. Football is as cerebral as it is violent.

The only people who cannot comprehend football's sophistication are snobs who would like nothing better than to believe that these slashing wide receivers and great gridiron behemoths smashing into each other are dumber than they are. What a devastating ego shock to realize that the average college professor would be incapable mentally, as well as physically, to play successfully the modern game of football.

Why incapable? Because a working intellect under intense psychological pressure and physical exhaustion is an entirely different quality than a working intellect languishing in the library.

Players must execute a sophisticated battle plan swiftly, decisively and flawlessly in extreme situations, while a similarly equipped and talented group of athletes is doing its best to stop them. Play after play, there is no room for error.

In football, there is no time for still more "resolutions." The threat must be perceived and evaluated and the correct decision made now or the consequences could be ignominious defeat. The ethos of football and its prerequisite talents, attitudes and qualities are inculcated in abundance in America's military leaders.

While the football ethos is reflected in America's national spirit and her military, the Europeans draw from a distinctly different sports tradition; one developed on the playing fields of Paris and Potsdam, Boulogne and Berlin.

The ethos of what Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld called "Old Europe" is exemplified in the game of soccer.

Soccer is a beautiful and well-powdered sport, much like "diplomacy," bringing to mind men in top hats and striped pants walking herky-jerky, as in black-and-white silent newsreels. Soccer is French jeu d'esprit, and it is the sport of the United Nations.

Soccer rules are easily understood, and the sport is imbued with a comradely egalitarian aspect. Players run about. They wave their arms. Sometimes, they fall down. Sometimes, they can even be tripped, and it is in these moments that Europeans first learn to be either bad actors or diplomats; tumbling on the turf, clutching a "bruised" shin, then bounding up unhurt to take a free kick (or a post-war oil concession.)

Soccer matches can and frequently do end in a tie. This abundance of scoreless ties leads one to suspect that for soccer players, as for U.N. diplomats, the goal is to stall until ultimately nothing is resolved, and no one can really be blamed. Tie-breaking "shootouts" in international play ought to be eliminated altogether, since an egalitarian draw of no winner, no loser, and no hurt feelings is a U.N. dream come true.

The activity, in the end, is pointless. But fans will neither despair nor rejoice at the outcome; aficionados in smoky salons, sipping espresso, can debate endlessly who played the better game.

Is it any wonder that the Old European nations shrink from decisive action, taking only tentative, mincing steps, hoping they'll never have to fight for anything and unable to decide firmly whether there is anything at all worth fighting for?

Consider also what American football is not. It is not about passing the buck, walking while others carry the load or debating until you are overcome by events. Nor is it about ennui, languor and the c'est la vie attitude.

Football is about character and courage, might and mettle, decisiveness, strength and stamina. It is about men who sacrifice, who dare great things and who are not afraid to win great victories.

Hundreds of thousands of American boys and young men play football each year, forging a distinctly American character in the fire of competition. This character is reflected in the American military and its successes.

I am not the first to claim more from sport than might be deserved. Arthur Wellesley, the Duke of Wellington, supposedly credited his victory over Napoleon at Waterloo to his having been schooled on the "playing fields of Eton," his famous alma mater. So mightn't there be substance here?

Perhaps. American football might not be the great secret of American foreign affairs success of the past 100 years, but it does capture much that is true about the United States and her mettle. And surely, it is one small part of why she is great.

Stanley K. Ridgley, Ph.D., is president of the Russian-American Institute and a former military intelligence officer.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: football; strategy
In sports and more serious matter...we're different from the rest of the world. In a good way.

Seriously, football and war share many basic concepts and as a result even young children have a basic grasp of strategy. No wonder lefties push soccer.

-Eric

1 posted on 04/29/2003 9:33:39 AM PDT by E Rocc
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To: E Rocc
Uh . . . what about rugby and australian rules? No pads.
2 posted on 04/29/2003 9:47:34 AM PDT by cruiserman
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To: E Rocc
Good essay.

I'll take a 'football mom' over a 'soccer mom' anyday.

3 posted on 04/29/2003 9:47:40 AM PDT by RJCogburn (Yes, I will call it bold talk for a......)
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To: E Rocc
Soccer is a commie plot designed to destroy clean living American youth.

Or so my football coach told me. :-)

4 posted on 04/29/2003 9:51:22 AM PDT by adx (Will produce tag lines for beer)
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To: E Rocc
Some decades ago Sports Illustrated had an article about the characteristics of the various football positions:
Offensive linemen don't get much glory, and they have a lot of responsibility.

Defensive linemen don't have as much responsibility as defensive backs, whose failure could more directly lead to an opposing score.

Wide receivers can hope to make the dramatic scoring play--and tend to be showoffs.

Quarterbacks have to be leaders, and tend to be either notable straight arrows or notable bad boys.


5 posted on 04/29/2003 9:52:12 AM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion
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To: E Rocc
Hmmmmm......Let's see.

Go ARMY! Go NAVY! Stand up, sit down, FIGHT, FIGHT, FIGHT!!!

HooooRAH!!!

Something like that, maybe?


6 posted on 04/29/2003 9:53:54 AM PDT by Coyote (the opposite of RIGHT is NOT left....it's WRONG!)
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To: cruiserman
No pads.
Actually, the pads have a similar effect to auto seat belts--they make the user feel safe, and consequently induce the wearer to take additional risk.

As a result they can, perversely, be a cause of injury.


7 posted on 04/29/2003 9:54:52 AM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion
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To: E Rocc
Here's an exerpt from an article I found linking the development of the T-formation to Heinz Guederian's theories of Blitzkreig.
In the T, backs were already moving forward to take a handoff almost at the line of scrimmage. The wing formations (single and double) had a deep back receiving a direct snap from center in a stationary position. Instead of having forward momentum, the non-T back needed to generate it. Shaughnessy, a true intellectual, was a student of military history. He insisted that his inspiration for the get-'em-before-they-know-what-hit-'em attack of the modern T was General Heinz Guderian. Guderian wrote a book called Achtung, Panzer! It featured "war of movement."

After having friends at the University of Chicago, where Shaughnessy coached, translate the German officer's book, Shaughnessy adapted the Blitzkrieg tank techniques to football. It worked for the Bears. Unfortunately, it also worked for Guderian on the battlefield -- obscure at the time the book came out, his swift, devastating conquest of France in the summer of 1940 gained him instant notoriety.

Link to rest of the article
8 posted on 04/29/2003 9:55:27 AM PDT by Paleo Conservative
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To: adx
Soccer is a commie plot designed to destroy clean living American youth.

Or so my football coach told me. :-)

My kids' coach had a similar comment, but added soccer was best played in skirts.

9 posted on 04/29/2003 10:00:24 AM PDT by RJCogburn (Yes, I will call it bold talk for a......)
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To: E Rocc; dighton; general_re
No! No! No!

It's all about the magnificent game of chess. That's why that nation of great chess players -- the Soviet Union -- will prevail over you stupid Americans.
10 posted on 04/29/2003 10:00:37 AM PDT by aculeus (FR sarcasm is like pornography. You know it when you read it.)
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To: E Rocc
This is not a new idea. General Douglas MacArthur, speaking of the Army/Navy football games circa 1920:
"Upon the fields of friendly strife are sown the seeds that upon other fields, on other days, will bear the fruits of victory."
11 posted on 04/29/2003 10:14:30 AM PDT by blanknoone
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To: E Rocc
Great read.
Now if the Lions secondary can quit getting burned on deep passes...GRRRRRRRRRRR!(I coached DB's)
12 posted on 04/29/2003 10:20:37 AM PDT by Dan from Michigan ("I have two guns. One for each of ya." - Doc Holliday)
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To: cruiserman
Uh . . . what about rugby and australian rules? No pads.
The author mentions rugby. I'm not all that familiar with the rules of rugby, but it appears to be a game that focuses on the scrum, a basic down-and-dirty collision that is sometimes slow to produce results.

Now consider the strategies of George S. Patton in World War II, versus the more slow and plodding approach of Montgomery.

-Eric

13 posted on 04/29/2003 10:30:50 AM PDT by E Rocc ("it will take him a f-ing month just to get his tea things ready" - Patton on Montgomery)
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To: E Rocc
Ball games are ball games be it soccer or football-all apolitical. I'm not a soccer fan because I didn't grow up a soccer fan, not because it's a socialist sport. I don't think George Washington, Winfield Scott, Robert E. Lee or W. T. Sherman gained any of their American military genius from the gridiron.

Besides, I'm not sure the real sports model for the American military talent wouldn't be that ultimate American sport - basketball. The individual inititive and quick thinking required in basketball may be a better fit for what makes the US armed forces successful. Football=central planning= grandiose scripted strategy =USSR.
14 posted on 04/29/2003 10:49:05 AM PDT by Colonel Kangaroo
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To: E Rocc
Tongue in cheek article obviously, so I hate to rain on your parade, but the French play rugby too! And they're pretty good at it. And "soccer" was invented by us British, not the commies.

American "football" is a minor regional matter of no real importance in comparison to "real" football <dons flame proof suit, heads into bunker!>

15 posted on 04/29/2003 10:53:49 AM PDT by alnitak ("That kid's about as sharp as a pound of wet liver" - Foghorn Leghorn)
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To: Colonel Kangaroo
Ball games are ball games be it soccer or football-

I disagree. While all sports enhance youth, some are better at teaching lessons that are valuable in a military setting. This can be good or bad depending on the situation our society finds itself in. In a war on terror, it is a good thing. In some settings, having a militaristic, disciplined youth could lead to insufficient independence and initiative. (That's what baseball is there to teach). Football is very much akin to the type of culture prevalent in our military.

I played football since I was 8, through college, and have coached Pop Warner for 7 years. I studied military strategy and tactics, and military history, including the aforementioned Guderian, in college. Among the lessons that stayed with me are that the greatest generals are those who are audacious and who use deception and indirection to achieve an unbalanced adversary and to prevail with little, if any, fighting. The military history that I studied has been quite applicable to my coaching. I have created offensive schemes that are unique, always having the philosophy of concentrating force on a spot of our choosing, which the opponent cannot see coming because of our movement and fakes. And the lessons our kids learn are the same ones taught in the military, of honor, discipline, courage and of hard work paying off.

Watching the Iraq campaign, I was reminded of nothing so much as a brilliantly executed football game plan, complete with long bombs (the 3rd ID's race to Baghdad), downfield blocking (mopping up the supply column), fakes (pretending we were bogged down or that we would begin with an air campaign), cut blocks (special forces), crackbock blocks (JDAMs), and, as needed, pounding the ball up the middle (tank battles). And at the end, all we had to do to seal the victory was a quick 2 yard plunge into Baghdad, after which we did a dance in the end zone.

16 posted on 04/29/2003 11:43:40 AM PDT by Defiant (Iraqtion. That swelling pride that results from raising the staff of freedom.)
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To: E Rocc

17 posted on 04/29/2003 12:09:31 PM PDT by moyden2000
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To: E Rocc
My son has played soccer for years. Then he discovered lacrosse. Good-bye soccer, at least as his first love. And the team is mostly made up of football players looking for a spring sport.
18 posted on 04/29/2003 12:23:47 PM PDT by RonF
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To: Defiant
I played Pop Warner ball as a kid. Although I think football programs ought to be eliminated from high schools (any idea how many chemistry or computer labs a district could build for the price of one year's worth of field maintenance?), I fully support non-school youth football programs. If there's a better way to teach young men the harsh realities than on the gridiron, I am unaware of it. Football is undoubtedly the sport most like modern warfare in the world today.

I like soccer all right, but it needs a shot clock -- and more contact.
19 posted on 04/29/2003 12:58:53 PM PDT by B-Chan (Catholic. Monarchist. Texan. Any questions?)
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