military machine
Noun: 1. The organized armed forces and associated resources of a nation or group, viewed as a single, complex, and often impersonal system for waging war. This term emphasizes the scale, structure, and mechanistic efficiency of a nation's military apparatus, including its personnel, equipment, logistics, and command structure.
The term "military machine" is typically used in analytical, political, or historical contexts to discuss the power, capability, or function of armed forces as a large system. * It often carries a neutral to critical connotation, highlighting the impersonal and systematic nature of military power. * It is commonly used with verbs like build, deploy, face, weaken, strengthen, fuel, and maintain.
- The country invested heavily to build a formidable military machine.
- Analysts studied how the military machine was deployed during the crisis.
- Despite its size, the aging military machine struggled with modern logistics.
- The war effort fueled the entire national military machine.
- "The wheels of the military machine": A metaphor referring to the processes and operations of the military system.
- Once the order was given, the wheels of the military machine began to turn.
- Used to contrast with individual soldiers or specific units, focusing instead on the entire institution as a single entity.
- He was not just fighting soldiers; he was fighting a vast, relentless military machine.
- War machine: A very similar term, often used interchangeably with "military machine," sometimes with a slightly more aggressive connotation.
- Military-industrial complex: A related but distinct concept referring to the close relationship between a nation's military, its defense industry, and policymakers.
- Armed forces: A more standard and neutral term for a country's military services.
- Military apparatus: A formal synonym emphasizing the structural components.
- Armed forces
- War machine
- Military apparatus
- Defense establishment
The term "military machine" specifically frames the military as an engineered system. It focuses on: 1. Systemic Function: How the parts (troops, ships, commands, factories) work together. 2. Scale and Impersonality: It often diminishes the role of individual agency, presenting the military as a single, large entity. 3. Capability and Resource Consumption: It is frequently used when discussing the power output or the logistical and economic inputs required to sustain military operations.
This term is not typically used for casual reference to one's own military in patriotic contexts; terms like "our armed forces" or "our troops" are preferred. "Military machine" is more often used in third-person analysis or description.
- the military forces of a nation
- their military is the largest in the region
- the military machine is the same one we faced in 1991 but now it is weaker