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I disagree, soldiers are conditioned to avoid hesitation, two nuclear bombs were dropped on japan,the pilots committed suicide. A soldier that would hesitate means the situation warrants hesitation.

Not hesitating when you should could mean escalation of conflict. Even if you win the battle,it can cost you the war. Look at vietnam, the US lost domestic support because of lack of political support at home. You need the people who are pulling the triggers to know what victory means and it is not as simple as efficiently killing everyone.

The only time taking humans out of decision making makes sense is if you want indiscriminant killing,political support would not waiver at the sight if most civilians being slaughtered , you are fine with inspiring waves of terrorists that will attack your civilians and every other country will remain allied to you and continue to engage in commerce with you despite your genocidal ambitions.

Even in world war 2, civilians were mostly not targeted and prisoners were taken on both sides.

War is not about killing, war is means to acheive a political end by force. A machine that kills without knowledge of the (political) end game in mind will slaughter the enemy and cost you victory. Killing axis soldiers was not the goal of the allies,liberating occupied regions and removal of the fascist regimes was the goal, a goal that can easily be acheived by bombing every populated area of europe with minimal foot soldier involvement.




> two nuclear bombs were dropped on japan,the pilots committed suicide

None of the pilots died.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_bombings_of_Hiroshima_a...

Both planes returned to the US.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enola_Gay

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bockscar


Civilians were definitely target by both side throughout WW2. From Rotterdam to Dresden, Nanking to Tokyo. Both sides indiscriminately and intentionally killed civilians.




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