Why did I even try to explain this, it is so goddamn simple that I can't even articulate it because the usage of the language being spoken is so utterly different.
Because you have been taught what you ought to believe is true, as I have too, and these two views present differences. Our Englishes are different ones, but that is no reason to lament, rather a reason to have fruitful discussion. We think in our worlds and these different perspectives give us things to teach one another, because there's more than one way to skin a cat.
Okay LW, from a civilian, outside perspective, you are correct, nothing you have written is demonstrably false. At the same time, it makes it clear that you and I are speaking from completely different positions.
As an ex U.S. soldier, my comprehension is bottom-up, and is focused on the terminology I as a soldier am expected to use to relate to my commanding officers the procedures followed, the assets utilized, and the actions taken in the course of my duty. As a civilian, you are basically just reading back to me what amounts to a press release, or the contents of a book, or another form of what amounts to propaganda that is released for public consumption. None of it is wrong, but from that internal perspective it is nonsense, because the measures necessary to create that organic multi-layered defense are separate and distinct methodologies that are employed as the situation demands.
I only judge forumites on the content of the posts, not who they claim to be. Countering "nothing you've said is wrong, but as a blankety blank, you are wrong," makes for poor argumentation in person and worse with the unverifiable identities of online personas, not least to say, poor OPSEC. Framing me as nothing more than the bookish regurgitation of propaganda and public consumption is just absolutely haram as far as civilized discourse goes. Do you expect me to reveal personal information about myself, in order for you to permit yourself to be respectful? This is not how reasonable discussions are had online. It's b8 at best
When we talk about carrying out an airstrike, and whether or not it can be defended against, the dissuasion/deterrence strategy is irrelevent , because we aren't talking about the psychology, we are talking about the assets. And from that position there are not adequate practical methods for 'prevention' of that attack.
When we talk about the decision on whether or not to carry out an airstrike, we do care about the psychology, because the people involved in ordering the attack have to weigh the pros and cons of doing so.
But the decision and the attack are separate and distinct unto themselves, and so are the methods of dealing with them.
There's an interesting matter of history, in that on the outbreak of the Falklands War, the US Admiralty was convinced the UK could not recapture the islands, whereas the UK Admiralty was convinced it could be won. Why the difference in opinion? Why is it that with the UK having 20 harriers operating and 220 aircraft, both came to different conclusions over the possible outcomes?
Obviously neither the US or UK were wrong or right, as neither could predict the future, and both had reasonable criteria and reasoning for coming to their conclusions. Of course the cause was that both were running under different operational procedures which in turn alter what both believed were acceptable working conditions.
The US will not deploy if they cannot deploy with overwhelming superiority, if they cannot materially counter the enemy in totality before the war has begun. My perspective is of the maritime unit, which cannot operate independently with its own methodology - it
must act in formation with this integrated defence, because it is impossible for any single maritime unit to defend itself from every threat, nor is it necessary to try and defend every unit from every threat. I had hoped this would lead to a fruitful discussion, in which I wished to ask what you thought about the US perspective, in particular whether it resulted in the US being hesitant where it needed not to be and committing far too many forces where much fewer would be more profitable, but we're stuck on the irreconcilable orthodoxies of two jargons. Which is much less interesting than probing to find out why random forumites on the internet who may possibly be representative of a country's strategic mindset draw a distinction, put into separate operational procedures, between destroying enemy assets and rather unsexy neutralizations or enemy assets.
So it is clear that we aren't actually talking to each other, because the word we are using carry very different meanings to each of us.
Down the semantic rabbit hole madness lies. But it can be crossed, simply with common definitions being agreed upon
So I am going to apologize for exacerbating this argument, because I feel that my involvement was the more disruptive;
I am sorry to have perpetuated this misunderstanding, it was not my intent to make this into such a big deal.
Tbqh I don't think you should apologize, because you haven't done anything all that haram. I'm sure if emotion could carry through text this would be a lot less tense than it may seem, because ending everything with proper grammar and no slang has a tendency to raise the register, or make it sound as if both parties are perpetually cross - when I imagine, we are both typing this rather calm and neutrally.
As a result, proper sentences seem that much more confrontational.
Yet spoken speech would be much more light hearted, and casual!