auxiliaries, combined forces and citizen armies 55
explained, of the Syracusan armies, Hiero soon realized that
the mercenaries among them were no good, led as they were
by men like our Italian commanders. Realizing that he could
neither make use of them nor let them go, he had them all cut
to pieces, and from then on fought only with his own soldiers.
I’d also like to bring in a parable from the Old Testament.
When David offered to go and fight the Philistine trouble-
maker, Goliath, on Saul’s behalf, Saul gave him his own
weapons to bolster the boy’s courage. But no sooner had
David put them on than he refused the gift, saying he wouldn’t
feel confident with them, he would rather face the enemy with
his own sling and knife. In the end, other people’s arms are
either too loose, too heavy or too tight.
When, with luck and good leadership, Charles VII,
Louis XI’s father, had pushed the English out of France, he
saw that a ruler needs his own troops and so set up a standing
army of both cavalry and infantry. Later, his son Louis dis-
banded the infantry and began to hire Swiss mercenaries.
It’s now plain that this mistake, together with others that
followed, is what lies behind France’s present troubles. By
giving this important role to the Swiss, Louis had weakened
his whole army, since, with no infantry of their own, his
cavalry were now relying on others, and once they’d got
used to fighting alongside the Swiss they started to think
they couldn’t win without them. As a result the French are
unable to take on the Swiss in battle and won’t fight anyone
else without their help. So French forces are now mixed,
part mercenary and part their own men. Such composite
forces are much better than just auxiliaries or just mercen-
aries, but much worse than having all your own men. France’s
situation proves the point, because if the standing army
Charles recruited had been reinforced or just maintained, the
French would be unbeatable. But men are so thoughtless
they’ll opt for a diet that tastes good without realizing there’s
a hidden poison in it: it’s like the problem I mentioned earlier