I agree with you A4's, but unless I am reading the article incorrectly it seems as if they are saying the techies are incapable of doing what you say, which seems to be absolute horse****. Engineering certainly does involve general non-quantitative problem solving, which I think is the real key of the major anyways. To think that all engineers are just book nerds who can't comprehend anything else (as I felt the author was implying) is just ignorant. Seems to be written by someone who simply doesn't understand the field. If someone were to tell me, "because you were an engineer, I know you can't read learn the history and strategy involved with being a combat leader" I would laugh in their face.
), things like GPS, NVG, they are all tools. We have men, women and weapons to deliver to the battlefield and they are essential at times for getting us from point A to B to accomplish the mission. That is smart utilization of technology, and not weakness....in fact it is strengthening. But to prepare battle plans solely around the use of one technology that must function properly for mission accomplishment, that is just poor planning and is indeed weakness. Here is an open ended question because I don't know the answer.....could we execute a complicated military movement/operation without GPS or NVG, and do so in an equally tactical manner? I bet we have the tools to do it, even if we don't think we do.