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Setting up paramilitary Security Forces
This is something that occurs in several campaigns and I think it would have been considered by the Morrow Project Planners.
So, for your consideration and comments, here are my initial thoughts on the "standard" thinking of the Project BUILDING A PARAMILITARY SECURITY FORCE What is needed? Think creatively, in partnership with the community, about what is truly needed to defend them from their threats. Who will make decisions about the Security Force? What are the costs and how will they be paid? A healthy community needs strong Economic and Political institutions if it is to direct and finance its own security. WARNING! Without these institutions, it is possible to set up a Security Force - but it would be the only effective organisation in the community. This is immensely dangerous. The Morrow Project is attempting to restore the United States, not set set up the conditions for a military dictatorship [The Security Forces should not be created without the simultaneous rebuilding of something resembling a democratic system of government, an independent Judiciary and a Treasury Department. There are very good reasons for the inclusion of Economic and Political Specialists in most Morrow Teams. ] Is the existing force corrupt? An existing, but corrupt, Security Force can be worse than no security at . Disarm and demobilise corrupt units whenever possible. Individual members of these units might be allowed to join the new force - but only after extensive vetting. How do you get the best recruits? Make it a public process. Involve the community in the selection and assessment of potential recruits. The Morrow Project can guide this - but it is the community that has to "own" the recruitment process. The aim is to give the force credibility and a good initial reputation. Does everyone understand that Security is more than "killing bad guys"? While paramilitary skills are important, it's likely that recruits will be already competent in combat. It may be more useful to train them in skills such as "conflict resolution" and negotiation (or even literacy). It WILL be essential to imbue respect for the rule of law and human rights . [Again, remember that the Project's aim is to rebuild the United States. Security Force training should emphasise national identity and the overcoming of ethnic/tribal/religious differences. ] Does this Security Force frighten the neighbours?. The last thing we want is an arms race with other communities. Don't build a Security Force that looks like it is intended for offensive purposes. |
This looks like one of those areas where you need to be careful not to ascribe prescience to the planners - remember that the planned deployment of the Project would occur in a time when there were going to be scattered remnants of the US military as well as a lot of veterans among the survivors. Much of the work and materials and expertise would already be available and the US would not generally have descended into mutual hostility. I think that restoring the military would be a high-level function, not one parsed to individual teams beyond a very basic, temporary level.
That having been said, some comments: Quote:
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As to costs, I think it likely that the Project would be encouraging a commune-style economy at the local level, until large-scale security had been established and actual commerce made capitalism feasible again. So at first... no one. Because no one is getting paid, everyone is pitching in to survive. For that matter, it is unlikely that any but the largest communities will have any full-time soldiers, not when basic survival takes so much work. Quote:
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b) This isn't about a new US Army, it's barely a gendarmerie c) Notoriously worried? Where do you get this from? Quote:
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Just so I am clear in my own head, are we talking something akin to a small town with a posse to promote local security or something like Texas Rangers, to promote regional security?
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to me it sounds essentially like establishing/rebuilding the local SWAT team. provide the community with a decent enough reaction force to protect itself and train them to be cops first and foremost.
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Second: TMP should reasonably have been predicting a dangerous atmosphere where the Michigan Militia and the Crips are creating pocket nations through looting and raping and the like, but there is no reason to expect that war + 5 years would be nearly as antagonistic to the Project as war + 150 years. Quote:
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b) Scale and job requirements are important here. c) There is surprisingly little 3ed text that isn't just rules, but from pg 13 of TMP 3ed: "It is the possession of such good equipment that causes all Morrow teams to be the object of such greedy consideration by every selfish survivor in the area. This is the reason that all Morrow personnel are given adequate means to defend themselves." And from the Starnaman Incident, pg 31, discussing the M6: "Neither round will penetrate Project coveralls. This was a factor in the selection of this weapon for issue to locals." That first quote tells us that the planners were worried about the populace (perhaps not all of it, but a good chunk) turning violent, and the second quote showed that protecting the Project from the population was judged a higher priority than making the population militarily effective on their own. Quote:
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A population that agrees 100% with Morrow ideals is a unicorn, not to be found in reality. The Project must decide which people to help, and how, and how much, but realistically they are going to need to provide security for a heck of a lot of people that have at least one big red flag. Perhaps they consider women property and have a culture of rape. Perhaps they insist on using child soldiers. Perhaps they simply don't think that the Project should have the authority to pick who protects them and nominate people the Project knows to be Bad News. When you consider how much of the populace are physically and psychologically able to fight, passing over all the "bad ones" is likely to mean that the security force is thoroughly undermanned. Quote:
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most police are paramilitary. even in the UK where most of them are unarmed they still qualify as paramilitary forces.(granted when they aren't armed we often refer to them by a different nomenclature "targets")
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I was thinking would being the force of law and order be an issue for the teams? What happened when the bandits they were stopping harassing the poor farmers surrendered?
But then I suppose the last thing any government would do before sucumbing to armagedon would be to declare martial law. The question then becomes do the teams have the courage to become; judge, jury and exectioner? Or Judge, Judy and Executioner? |
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Plus you are talking about a lot of additional storage. Quote:
The issue of overly-homicidal candidates for police and military is a long understood (if never fully-solved) problem. If you create a "danger scale" for recruits, then you can place windows on that scale where you can have someone enter the police (which requires more independent action and restraint), enter the military (which can tolerate more dangerous recruits with appropriate controls), or be inappropriate for both (either by being too pacifistic or too homicidal!). Where those windows lie depends on what you need and what you have... |
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Equipment: not actually required to be paramilitary but, they are uniformed, given commo and in most cases weapons, and i have yet to meet a cop that isn't wearing some armor. Organization; they have a clearly defined chain of command with a specified line of succession so you don't interrupt the chiefs game of gulf unless you have to. Habit: this is more difficult to point at but given that they are expected to be able to think on their feet in the field, they are expected to respect their superiors, they often even get the same haircuts(for many of the same reasons) and given that all of these habits stem from the same sources as their military mirrors. we can check this box as well. so yes by your stated standards any Police department that can effectively function is a paramilitary force. |
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If we are talking about habits, though, I do shoot with cops and we've had some interesting discussions about how they have to retrain ex-military to move and shoot like cops and not like soldiers. Different goals, different environments, different expectations. Quote:
Now we have certainly seen an increased militarization of the police in the US, but that generally only changes that small part of it designated as SWAT - they simply require too much training to justify for every cop, especially when they are not often required. |
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