Which country can beat America
Answers
Explanation:
These are the 5 countries that are most impossible to conquer
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Blake Stilwell, We Are The Mighty
Aug 15, 2018, 11:13 AM
Russian military parade
Russian servicemen march during the Victory Day parade at Red Square in Moscow, Russia, May 9, 2015 Reuters
Historically, all empires either fall or morph into some other empire... and then fall. We don't use the term "empire" to describe nation-states that much anymore.
Regardless of what we call some countries, they are still able to project power outside their borders, being it globally (like the United States) or regionally (like Iran).
But when it comes to having to defend their home turf, some countries are just not going to roll over for any reason.
These are those countries:
1. The United States of America
marine salute
Cpl. Seth Hall, anti-tank missileman, 3rd Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, mans the rails of USS Bataan in a parade of ships as part of Fleet Week in New York, May 25, 2016. The USS Bataan transported more than 500 Marines and sailors with the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit who will participate in this year’s Fleet Week. Sgt. Rebecca L. Floto/US Marine Corps
We all saw this one coming, so let's get it out of the way early and start with what I know many are thinking: any invader of the United States isn't facing just the U.S. military, they're facing all 330 million Americans. Yes, there are more weapons than people in the U.S. — and that's just considering the guns we know about. Americans are allowed to design and build their own weapons in many states, without ever having to register. This means every American with an arsenal can recruit and train their own band of Wolverines.
Even if an invader managed to take control of the civilian population — and that's a big if — they'd still have to get through the best-trained, best-equipped military in the world, recruited from the very violently pro-America people I was just telling you about.
Then, they have to hold on to that territory without getting killed and without the locals organizing against them. Many major cities are already organized. And armed. And ready to go killing again once the war dies down a bit.
Albuquerque, Houston, Oklahoma City, Detroit, Baltimore, New York City — whether the invasion moves from east to west or west to east, there are a lot of pressure points invaders need to secure before moving on. Which brings up another point: America is huge.
Our four time zones contain seven different climate regions, not to mention everything from high mountains to marshland, swamps to deserts, and in some places, a lot of flat nothing. Just going across the mighty Mississippi River without a bridge is enough to kill off a good chunk of an army while the residents of East St. Louis are using it as target practice.
When the invaders get out of the actual geographical features of the United States (where roving bands of armed American militias are waiting to ambush their enemies), the invader will enter some of the largest cities in the world, three of which are in the top 100 in terms of population, and many are full of the aforementioned gangs and violent extremists groups.
Ever look up at New York City buildings and just imagine what it would be like to have to invade, conquer, and keep a city so populous and so large in size and scale?
2. Russia
Russian servicemen march during the Victory Day parade at Red Square in Moscow, Russia, May 9, 2015 Reuters
This one goes well beyond the myth of "General Winter" (although that would definitely be a factor for most invading countries). Russia projects power regionally, but its armed forces (as I mentioned before in other articles) is not as great as Putin is hyping it up to be lately.
But if invaded, Russia doesn't have to project anything and its legendary toughness can really bloom, even in the middle of the freezing Russian winter. Invading Russia, as any student of history knows, is a terribly difficult thing. When Napoleon invaded in 1812, the Russian people took casualties, to be sure, but what really suffered was Russia's towns, cities, farms, and other infrastructure — all of it destroyed by Russians.
That's right, Russians would rather destroy their own country than leave it for any invader. And if you're thinking that was a long time ago, and modern Russians might have different sensibilities, remember they did that when the Nazis invaded in World War II, and at first many Russians welcomed the Germans. From there, the fighting only got more brutal. So any invader has to remember that they're likely fighting every single Russian – across 11 times zones.
Did you catch that? There are 11 time zones in
Answer:
China can beat America in war
Vietnam has defeated America in past