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Victory Disease(Redirected from Victory disease)
Victory disease happens when a nation, army or commander has previous military victories and falls for some combination of:
and loses badly as result. In each case, the attacker is led to believe in a sense of military invincibility, and comes to ultimate disaster. While "victory disease" does not automatically foretell failure, it is a strong indicator. The term has applications outside the military world.
Concept in more detailVictory disease is generally used as a term when a series of military victories leads to arrogance or complacency; usually the term is used retrospectively after this arrogance or complacency has led to a defeat. While a force that has been defeated recently will tend to analyze the reasons for this defeat and attempt to change its organization and tactics, a winning force will often blindly follow previous tactics, or even ignore basic rules of strategy due to confidence in their own superiority. At the operational level, this can lead to an army going into combat without adequate preparation or with antedated tactics, or going on the offensive against a much superior force. At the political level, it can lead to a nation that has won a series of wars entering wars continually until it is exhausted. A related factor is the impact of logistics -- a series of victories can lead to battles farther and farther from the nation's homeland, which has the effect of weakening the available force by stretching out the supply lines and forcing the detachment of occupation forces. On the origin of the termThe origin of the term is usually associated with the Japanese advance in the Pacific Theater of World War II, where, after attacking Pearl Harbor in 1941, they won a series of nearly uninterrupted victories against the Allies in Southeast Asia and the Pacific. Although they had planned to establish a perimeter and go on the defensive, their victories encouraged them to continue expanding the proposed perimeter to the point where it strained their logistics and navy. This culminated in the 1942 Battle of Midway, which resulted in a devastating defeat to the Japanese navy and the loss of four of their six aircraft carriers involved. The decision of Japan to initiate the war (against a larger country with a larger industrial base) in the first place could also be described as Victory Disease following successes in the Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945) and the Russo-Japanese War. ExamplesExamples abound; the next list is by no means complete:
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See alsoMain linksMinor linksExternal links and referencesThe contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License.
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