gumboot
lorcutus.tolere
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2006
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An interesting question might be this: if many American soldiers never fired a shot at enemy soldiers during WWII, as Grossman's book claims (if I'm understanding it correctly), did many American fighter pilots similarly not shoot at enemy fighters or enemy ground personnel? Was there any difference in the rate of willingness to fire upon an enemy between the ground troops and the aerial combatants?
What about more elite units during WWII? Did they exhibit any of these supposed difficulties in firing upon the enemy? Did the 1st Special Service Force or the 101st Airborne have significant numbers of its members not fire their weapons at the enemy? If not, why?
This is actually a great question. The answer to these questions really starts to open up how extensive and complex an issue this whole thing is, and what makes On Killing such a fascinating read.
Grossman provides a lot of diagrams to explain some of this stuff because none of it's clear cut.
At the simple level, the resistance to killing varies based on the physical and emotional separation between the killer and their target. Or put another way, the separation makes it harder or easier to overcome the resistance.
Physical distance is pretty straight forward. The closer the target is, the harder it is to kill them.
Emotional distance is a little more complex. Grossman identifies four different factors which together influence emotional distance;
Cultural
Moral
Social
Mechanical
The last one addresses the question about fighter pilots. Obviously, to begin with a fighter pilot is engaging the enemy at much greater physical range. Secondly, the presence of two machines - the two aircraft - puts a mechanical disconnection into the formula that allows the killer to rationalise away their personal responsibility. For fighter pilots the classic rationalisation is that they're not trying to kill a pilot, but to shoot down a machine.
The mechanical can also serve to distance the killer in other ways - for example the mechanical presence of a telescopic sight distances a sniper emotionally from their target.
Socially, this is crucial for increasing emotional distance as well. In direct fire engagements the one type of combat soldier that consistently fires their weapon at the enemy is one manning a crewed weapon. This includes artillery, heavy machine guns, and so forth. This is because the soldier can again rationalise away personal responsibility by saying "we killed them" rather than "I killed them". This is why it was common practise in firing squads to load only one of the weapons with a live round. That way each member of the squad could rationalise that they didn't actually kill anyone.
An important piece of evidence that supports this notion is occurrences of psychological trauma. Inherent in Grossman's theory is that violating the resistance to killing has a consequence which is a backlash of psychological trauma. Grossman identifies a typical sequence of emotions and experiences that the killer feels upon killing, much like the cycle of grief. The greater the resistance to killing, the more psychological force is required to overcome it and the greater the resulting trauma.
What Grossman found was the the classic trauma felt by soldiers was not a result of being in a stressful environment in which people were trying to kill them, but rather, a result of being expected to kill. In particular, those who had killed, suffered the most trauma.
Except, in instances where the various factors such as emotional distance had made killing easier, the levels of psychological trauma were also lower. So while infantry experienced high rates of trauma (constantly being expected to kill at close range), fighter pilots and bomber crews and gunners on ships and artillery men and other combat soldiers, who actually did far more killing, experienced less trauma.
And that, Grossman argues, is why psychological trauma rates for Vietnam War veterans was so much higher than for WW2. Because, put simply, more of them had killed at close personal range.
What's particularly tragic about this is that group absolution is one of the more crucial factors in mitigating the psychological trauma. WW2 veterans, who had done less close-quarter killing and were less psychological traumatised, got a huge amount of absolution from their fellow citizens; they were given parades and generally viewed as heroes who saved the world.
In contrast, Vietnam War veterans, who had done more close-quarter killing and were far more psychologically traumatised got far less absolution from their fellow citizens, and often the exact opposite. Worse still, some people opposed to the war then used the higher rates of psychological stress seen amongst Vietnam War veterans as proof that the war was wrong, thus even further reducing the absolution that the veterans so desperately needed.
The second question you've asked relates to special forces, and you'd be right if you thought that higher firing rates were seen in special forces units. With any sort of biological function, it's never absolute. Grossman argues that an estimated 2% of people naturally do not have this resistance to killing. He identifies these as those that have psychopathic tendencies.
Generally, and historically, these 2% are the soldiers who have ended up in Special Forces or elite units, and that's why these particular units see higher firing rates.
Having said that, there's also factors about the nature of Special Forces soldiers that are often misrepresented. The typical WW2 Special Forces soldier was engaged in behind-enemy-lines sabotage, doing things like blowing up infrastructure. They didn't go around slaughtering hundreds of enemy - in fact they usually went to extraordinary lengths to avoid being spotted by the enemy at all. The perfect Special Forces soldiers would have got through the entire war and dozens of missions without ever getting into combat with the enemy.
These units would not have included, say, the 101st Airborne Division, who were a regular infantry unit, but air-deployed. They're not Special Forces (although they're often portrayed that way).
Anyway... since we're on the topic of influencing factors, I want to also just add that it doesn't end at physical and emotional distance.
Grossman identifies five separate bodies of factors that influence a killer's ability to overcome the resistance to kill:
1. Target attractiveness of victim
2. Total distance from victim
3. Predisposition of killer
4. Demands of authority
5. Group absolution
He then breaks these groups down into different factors, for example the factors in the "Demands of authority" group are:
1. Proximity of Authority
2. Respect for Authority
3. Intensity of Demand for Kill
4. Legitimacy of Authority
The Milgram experiment and real-world examples like the Holocaust have shown just how powerful an influencing factor the demands of authority can be, and indeed Marshall's studies from WW2 - which found 80-85% of infantry would not fire at the enemy - also found that almost all soldiers would fire when under the direct and immediate demands of a commander. And in Grossman's book he talks to officers and NCOs who recall having to walk along the lines of their men berating them to fire, only to have the men stop firing the moment the commander moves away.