When news reports describe military exercises, they typically focus on spectacle: tanks maneuvering across foreign terrain, jets screaming overhead, ships launching missiles. The coverage implies these events are either elaborate training sessions or political signals, shows of force designed to impress allies or intimidate adversaries. This framing, while not entirely wrong, misses something fundamental about what exercises actually accomplish and why militaries invest enormous resources conducting them.
Military exercises are not training in the conventional sense. Training teaches skills; exercises test whether those skills integrate into functioning systems. Training asks whether an individual or unit can perform a task; exercises ask whether entire organizations (thousands of people, hundreds of platforms, multiple services, sometimes dozens of nations) can accomplish complex missions when everything happens simultaneously. The distinction matters because it explains why exercises reveal things that training cannot.
Nor are exercises simply displays of capability. While they certainly communicate political messages, their primary value lies in what they expose rather than what they demonstrate. A well-designed exercise stresses command structures, communications networks, logistics systems, and decision-making processes in ways that reveal weaknesses invisible during normal operations. These weaknesses (the radio net that fails under load, the supply chain that cannot sustain high tempo, the doctrine that breaks down when the enemy does something unexpected) are precisely what exercises exist to find.


