Sending Children Off to Die for Old Men
A history of youth, war, and the slow normalization of both
There’s an old, uncomfortable pattern running through the history of organized warfare: the people who decide to go to war are almost never the people who do the dying. Political leaders are generally much older than the soldiers they send to fight, and it is the young — again and again — who walk across the lines those leaders draw. Sometimes very young.
(By “old men,” I don’t mean necessarily elderly men. History has plenty of young conquerors — Alexander invaded Persia at twenty-two, Napoleon led the Italian campaign at thirty. The pattern isn’t about age alone; it’s that those with authority to commit others to war are almost always older than the people expected to fight it.)
This isn’t a new observation, and it isn’t a partisan one. It shows up in ancient law codes, in the folklore of medieval Europe, in the muster rolls of the American Civil War, in the last desperate defense of Berlin, and in the minefields of the Iran-Iraq War. What’s changed over the centuries isn’t really whether societies use children in war — it’s how openly they admit it, how they justify it, and whether they’ve built legal machinery to make it look orderly rather than desperate.

























































