Dak
mentat
Then how far back do we have to go to find a time where war wasn't so distant? Unless we count The Troubles, the last time any meaningful percentage of people in the UK were really exposed to war (as in knowing soldiers, casualties, etc.) was WW2. For the US I guess it would be Vietnam. But given the way everyone is hooked up to the internet now I'd have thought more people have exposure to the realities of the past two Gulf Wars than they did to Vietnam or The Falklands War.
I guess I could buy some of the argument if it focused on countries like Germany and Japan as opposed to all 'western liberal democracies'. I don't think it holds up with regards to the US or the UK though.
Potentialities of exposure doesn't make something less Other, and I see more of an exponential curve rather than a linear progression as well. From the US perspective Vietnam involved far, far more troops than Desert Storm/Desert Shield ,and this desert "conflict" potentially distinguishes the point where Western warfighting tilted towards remote viewing and "Smart" weapons. The 90s were full of "peace missions" and "humanitarian missions". The Global War on Terror saw a lot of boots on the ground, but overall is known as a "Drone War", and the drones remain even after the boots left. Much of the manpower in the GWoT was not involved in any "combat" so-to-speak anyway. As the public grew weary of even a relatively minimal amount of "boots on the ground", the "conflicts" shift to funded local fighters with both manned and unmanned air support.