Rhetorically speaking I wonder why is it taboo to talk about killing other people in a martial or war setting.
My first thought is; the reason being is denial. Though Bill had a better answer. We as a (civilized) society have raised our children (including ourselves) learning that killing (another human being) is wrong and shall be punished. Some are conflicted and divided because there are those who are against hunting (animals; deer, ducks, et al) and others that advocate it. So we get mixed messages that way. Then we have war films that show (sometimes TOO graphically) a heroic figure killing numerous enemies and often times with dramatic heroic type music/theme in the background. We watch these films and to say (as individuals) they disgust us is denial as well because 1. Why did you watch it in the first place? Knowing the content. 2. Why is it (sometimes) a blockbuster movie?
To openly talk about it makes us go completely against the grain of the veneer of civilized behavior that we're supposed to be so proud of, yet we still cannot get rid of even the most base of animal instincts within us... killing one another.
Some Sci-fi stories I've read about "first contact" touched upon this. One (alien society) was totally pacifist, no wars in 10,000 of their years. Suddenly they were threatened by a savage, hostile race. Their people/society were ill equipt (mentally and emotionally) to handle and deal with the threat. Then they meet some humans (travelers that crash on their planet) and find that the humans are (in their view) at the same time intelligent, reasoning, savage, brutal creatures and some of the aliens felt that an alliance should be created with the humans to help fight the threat against them. Basically showing that even after we have advanced so far technologically that we are still capable of waging war and conduct savage acts of brutality. It's in our nature, plain and simple. But pacifists here want to deny that we have that capability or at least THEY have that capability.
Watch the movie Straw Dogs and see what can be possible.
Yes there is, it's covered in training now especially for officers. Many people still believe that the commandment says 'thou shalt not kill', it's a mistranslation, it is 'thou shalt not murder', a totally different thing and one that has meaning in terms of self defence and the military.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/8784650/Sandhurst-episode-2-BBC-Four-review.html
Exactly, if (the Christian) God did not want us to kill then he wouldn't have instructed David on how to kill Goliath, nor given strength and a battle plan to Joshua and defeat the walls of Jericho (killing hundreds if not thousands) and so forth. Killing is sometimes necessary. I recall reading a passage in the Book of Mormon about how a man was instructed directly by God to kill a king. The passage said something (I'd have to look it up to give a direct quote) to the effect, "Better that one man die than a whole nation perish", I recall reading that and thinking "absolutely". So to kill intentionally (murder) is definitely a sin. To kill in defense is not. Yet this can lead to a theological argument that'll go on for pages.
Thank you to Bill for his insights into this more-than-a-little-fraught subject.
I know it might sound odd, given that our soldiers are employed to kill our enemies, but I for one am comforted to hear that most of them find this a difficult thing to gird themselves to do.
Our soldiers (on both sides of the pond) I think are employed to DEFEND us from our enemies not to arbitrarily kill them. In defense it may become necessary to kill the enemy. Yet the irony is that our soldiers are sent to far off places to help others by killing their enemies when they are not quite yet our own enemies (read: no direct threat). Japan, Germany and other Axis powers during WWII sure because they were an immediate threat, so we go to meet them on their ground not ours.
Just in recent wars there's been no discernible direct threat to American soil enough to warrant sending our soldiers to fight/kill/die. Oh, to protect our "interests" but not our lives. That's the kind of war I'm personally against.
We're beginning to see countries that are under a despot, oppressive rule start to rise up and fight back against their oppressors. Many are finding out that while costly it's not as difficult as they first presumed and our intervention/assistance (beyond secret arms sale and advisors) wasn't necessary. I predict that the mid- African nations will eventually follow suit, rising up against the war-lords who are committing their own brand of atrocities. I say leave 'em alone and let them sort out their own mess. We've got enough problems of our own to attend to.
The suicides however are more complicated than being just down to the Falklands, the same soldiers who fought there were also sent to the Balkans where the majority of the PTSD was formed. The soldiers weren't sent there to fight for a clear cause, they were sent there as UN peace keepers and as such witnessed the aftermath of the horrendous killing and raping sprees that went on there. Soldiers tell of finding babies nailed to trees, of having to dig up mass graves so that the bodies could be identified. They came across awful scenes of butchery and devastation. They found women hanging in the woods, bodies that had been tortured to death, other hacked to death in front of their families. The horror was immense and has long lasting repercussion. The soldiers felt that they should have been able to stop this, their job is to defend people, either not to be allowed to or to get there too late causes such feelings of guilt and horror many can't live with it. We ask a lot of the military, I'm afraid that sometimes killing is the least of it.
George Carlin (yeah, I know, poor example huh?) talks about how we keep changing the language to suit and soften reality. From Shell-Shock (WWI) to PTSD (Vietnam and later conflicts particularly Gulf War Syndrome) we try to deny the harsh realities that our soldiers (young men even) have to face when we send them to far off lands and witness horrible acts of brutality first hand (not by the buffer of photographs or video/film) that if we had still been calling all that fancy jargon "Shell-shock" some of those soldiers might've received the attention they needed when they needed it. There are programs now supposedly to de-brief and de-stress the soldier after their tour(s) of duties, yet is it enough?
I believe all of us have the potential to kill one another of course. I mean that by intentionally doing so. We accidentally kill one another all the time via car accidents and other mishaps. But all of us have that capability to do it intentionally. Why else are we continuing to manufacture, sell/buy weapons of various types. Why else do we continue to study martial arts, Martial meaning War. Why else do we continue to wage war against one another. Why else do we have violent sports? Boxing, Rugby, Football, Wrestling, etc. We are a savage race of creatures. Yet I think we are dealing with it rather nicely. We create laws preventing the nature from enacting itself. We've learned to reason, to control ourselves. When one of us loses control then we justify their deaths as one that needed to be put down like a rabid dog because they no longer acted within the confines of what we call human decent behavior.
Killing is something that we do, and we do it very very well. We keep coming up with new ways to do it. It's in our nature. We either accept it and move on and work on refining it. Or end up destroying ourselves completely.