Well, don't forget that most deaths would not be directly due to starvation; disease and infection are much more likely to kill if they don't have access to medical supplies and/or personnel and their immune systems are weakened by hunger.
I had a flashback to the ME thread and recalled actually there were towns where the same siege tactics had an immense effect on the militants and civilian populace
Mass starvation kills surprisingly few, but the emaciated survivors surviving on grass and aid are not exactly what I'd refer to as "healthy." Or for that matter, long for life. Looking at them I'd say starvation would probably kill them before disease; it very much is a case of the length of the siege or in more serious cases, the starving not counting as the dead. It would be useful to describe them as casualties, as though they are not yet dead, they are pretty incapable of doing anything.
Sadly for them, the strategy works in forcing enemies into surrender. Only so much fighting you can do when your capability to fight has ceased to exist. Interestingly in the telegraph article they show the backlash against the rebels for surrendering, with one guy defending their surrender with this: “Those who didn't live under siege can't judge how it looks like.” I'm intrigued why the rebels are expected to fight to the death, and the backlash isn't wholly directed against the Assad regime.
Aye, that's probably about what I was thinking of. Sieges work, certainly, but if you're fighting people who can return to guerilla operations and could use the siege as a recruitment device, it seems risky. If you're in existential crisis mode, where you need to beat them right fucking now or very likely die, the long-term consequences seem more acceptable, somehow.
I definitely agree that shit's pretty fucked, tho
It doesn't seem risky if the city is occupied, as at that point what matters is not what their trending social media narrative is, but neutralizing/destroying the enemy
I recall one instance where a BBC reporter in Afghanistan witnessed Al-Qaeda launch a mortar attack that ended up tearing off this kid's leg, his father was absolutely distraught - convinced that the Americans had bombed him, because Al-Qaeda said so. On a very practical level though any state will want to minimize the damage to itself, as it will have to stop fighting some day, and that won't be possible if everyone's in no state to work and their cities are irreparably ruined
Not always. Maybe typical, but certainly not the only possible outcome. The risk of running a siege is that sometimes your enemy is willing to call your bluff.
Who would run a siege as a bluff? Moreover Leningrad the Germans failed to completely cut off all supplies to Leningrad, whose citizens were already fighting to the death. Without Finnish aid and with their forces spread between Leningrad, Moscow, Sevastopol etc. they were not able to capitulate on any advances or weaknesses, fighting a war of attrition they could ill afford to fight. One of the greatest benefits of this strategy is that it forces the enemy to surrender, however this incentive is completely erased when your side is offering two options:
- Fight to the death against us until you starve to death
- Surrender and be fed, until you die of exhaustion in a work camp/get executed
Moreover Stalin's ruthlessness ensured that what meagre supplies the Leningrad forces had was put to good use. Food, water, fuel and medicine was prioritized to soldiers, civilians were left to fend for themselves. Deserters were to be executed on the spot and Soviet "anti-retreat detachments" would complete the encirclement of trapped soldiers and citizens, by killing anyone who tried to flee the siege. This left all Soviet soldiers with no option for retreat, no option for surrender, no option for survival - only the chance to fight viciously with backs to the wall or die slowly in the cold. Stalin was pretty lucky the Nazis didn't show mercy to his soldiers, defection would have been a very real threat otherwise