I have heard this before, but just listened to it again. Such a juxtaposition between then and now. If you have not read "With the Old Breed" or Leckie's "Helmet For My Pillow", I encourage you to do so.
outofstateaggie said:
"With the Old Breed at Peleliu and Okinawa" is one the best books I've ever read. Incredible battlefield memoir. Definitely not the romanticized portrayal of World War II. The Pacific was an absolute brutal meat grinder.
P.U.T.U said:
Great books but sadly he made up a lot of things that never happened
BarfKraft Punk said:
& then things here took a turn somehow.....
P.U.T.U said:
Great books but sadly he made up a lot of things that never happened
YouBet said:outofstateaggie said:
"With the Old Breed at Peleliu and Okinawa" is one the best books I've ever read. Incredible battlefield memoir. Definitely not the romanticized portrayal of World War II. The Pacific was an absolute brutal meat grinder.
Finishing up Supernova in the East which is Dan Carlin's podcast focused on the Japanese in WWII and he mentions this memoir as the best and most brutal one he's ever read.
It's really interesting that we don't really teach the Pacific War like we do the European campaign. Probably for obvious reasons. It was stunningly horrific and makes the European campaign look quaint in comparison.
YouBet said:outofstateaggie said:
"With the Old Breed at Peleliu and Okinawa" is one the best books I've ever read. Incredible battlefield memoir. Definitely not the romanticized portrayal of World War II. The Pacific was an absolute brutal meat grinder.
Finishing up Supernova in the East which is Dan Carlin's podcast focused on the Japanese in WWII and he mentions this memoir as the best and most brutal one he's ever read.
It's really interesting that we don't really teach the Pacific War like we do the European campaign. Probably for obvious reasons. It was stunningly horrific and makes the European campaign look quaint in comparison.
That is a damn good summary. I also favor the Pacific both in my reading and interest. Great insight.Eliminatus said:YouBet said:outofstateaggie said:
"With the Old Breed at Peleliu and Okinawa" is one the best books I've ever read. Incredible battlefield memoir. Definitely not the romanticized portrayal of World War II. The Pacific was an absolute brutal meat grinder.
Finishing up Supernova in the East which is Dan Carlin's podcast focused on the Japanese in WWII and he mentions this memoir as the best and most brutal one he's ever read.
It's really interesting that we don't really teach the Pacific War like we do the European campaign. Probably for obvious reasons. It was stunningly horrific and makes the European campaign look quaint in comparison.
It's an interesting conversation and one I've had many times. What I think it boils down to, IMO, of course, is that the Euro campaign for was always a largely regimented and even formulaic war of good vs evil. Especially afterwards once the Nazis were finally defeated and able to be fully analyzed. We could hold our heads high and use our good guy methods (bombing campaigns notwithstanding) to ultimately triumph. It's the American Way ^TM.
The war against Japan was more primal and brutal. It wasn't a war against a single man and his outer circle and his ideals. The Nazi party was the ultimate and very easy to paint as such evil. It was a symbol unto itself of everything we stood against. While on the other side It was a war against the Japanese spirit itself and in the words of SNAFU himself, "Ya gotta get mean". Rules of war largely didn't exist on the battlefield in the Pacific and that really damages the persona we like to have of ourselves and we didn't have a singular easy target we could focus against aside from just the Japanese people. When troops attacked a Nazi position, it was war. When troops attacked a Japanese position, it was an extermination. In their own words mind you. And that's not exactly something America likes to highlight officially. So it gets pushed to the side a lot in our culture. It's truly wild to see the dichotomy of the fronts when you study them.
I actually think Bands of Brothers and The Pacific explore this perfectly. Bob was gritty and dark at times but the stakes are easy and the rules were largely set. The Pacific was about a war of brutality and what it does to the men who fought it. BoB was a set piece story of a military campaign filled with great characterization as the backdrop. The Pacific was the study of war and humanity itself and what it is capable of. Almost the exact opposite. I will always love BoB but I will always appreciate the Pacific more. It explores the side of war America doesn't like to think about but should not be allowed to ignore.
There is a few volumes out there of German soldiers in the East that are just as bad probably if you are looking for grim campaigns to read. Carlin also has a series on this, called Ghosts of the Ost Front I believe. Really, really good as well.
P.U.T.U said:
Great books but sadly he made up a lot of things that never happened
Jocko was going over one of his books and was talking about how a few of the stories in his books were made up. Not shocking since stuff like that is still going on today (Marcus Luttrell and Chris Kyle got caught with false stories in their books).Stive said:P.U.T.U said:
Great books but sadly he made up a lot of things that never happened
Random drive by comment with no supporting statements. Care to explain what you meant or are you just trolling?
My history prof at A&M made the comparison that the Japanese were Klingons & the Germans were Romulans. (Apologies for the Star Trek reference, but it fits)Quote:
Bob was gritty and dark at times but the stakes are easy and the rules were largely set. The Pacific was about a war of brutality
Well, if Jocko said it, it must be true. How the hell would he know?P.U.T.U said:Jocko was going over one of his books and was talking about how a few of the stories in his books were made up. Not shocking since stuff like that is still going on today (Marcus Luttrell and Chris Kyle got caught with false stories in their books).Stive said:P.U.T.U said:
Great books but sadly he made up a lot of things that never happened
Random drive by comment with no supporting statements. Care to explain what you meant or are you just trolling?
WTF is Jacko and why should we think he's suddenly telling the truth when literally NO ONE has said since it was first published 40+ years ago "With the Old Breed" was full of made up stories?usmcbrooks said:Well, if Jocko said it, it must be true. How the hell would he know?P.U.T.U said:Jocko was going over one of his books and was talking about how a few of the stories in his books were made up. Not shocking since stuff like that is still going on today (Marcus Luttrell and Chris Kyle got caught with false stories in their books).Stive said:P.U.T.U said:
Great books but sadly he made up a lot of things that never happened
Random drive by comment with no supporting statements. Care to explain what you meant or are you just trolling?
I bought those two books years ago but never got around to reading either. I have read many books about the fighting my dad was involved in but need to read these.ts5641 said:
Both are outstanding books! Not even sure we'd have the resolve to win a war 10% of the scale of WW2. We are so weak now and Gen Z are the leaders in weakness and America hating.
Jocko Willink, former S.E.A.L. officer and OIC of Task Unit Bruiser. Some people love him, and some absolutely despise the guy. A lot of Marines and SEALS were wia and kia do in part to his actions in Ramadi.agracer said:WTF is Jacko and why should we think he's suddenly telling the truth when literally NO ONE has said since it was first published 40+ years ago "With the Old Breed" was full of made up stories?usmcbrooks said:Well, if Jocko said it, it must be true. How the hell would he know?P.U.T.U said:Jocko was going over one of his books and was talking about how a few of the stories in his books were made up. Not shocking since stuff like that is still going on today (Marcus Luttrell and Chris Kyle got caught with false stories in their books).Stive said:P.U.T.U said:
Great books but sadly he made up a lot of things that never happened
Random drive by comment with no supporting statements. Care to explain what you meant or are you just trolling?
I had the absolute privilege of getting to know a Iwo Jima vet pretty well before he passed away.Hunted with him many times and drank a lot of beer with him and his son. What you say above mirrors what he related to me. He was 19 when he was on Iwo. His words, "He was just a scared Mexican kid from Laredo that was placed in the middle of hell." Proudest Marine you would ever meet.Eliminatus said:
I know a few things have been called into question over the years that civilians think "could never happen". The big one I remember was his telling of an accidental death of a Marine who had a freak out mental break on the line and they couldn't get him to be quiet (sound discipline was in full force) so they hit him with an e-tool to knock him out. Ended up dying.
Sledge names no names and no one ever stopped forth to corroborate with names so people years later didn't think it happened. Did it? I don't know. Could the situation exist where it could have? Absolutely. Does **** happen in war that we like to gloss over in the name of good publicity and not looking bad and even protecting people and image? Also hell yes. It sucks but things like this DO happen and it may get mentioned in passing but not many are exactly lining up to spill all. Especially from those days and generation.
People like to think the American military at that time were perfect little parade ground soldiers with perfect jawlines and "gee shucks" attitudes who took their rifles and shot perfect little holes in the bad men and took home the trophy after the game was called. The common American these days with no real historical knowledge has elevated them all to this perfect pantheon of the "Greatest Generation". I'm not saying it's wrong and that they were not great of course, they were. But it's also ridiculous to think that they were perfect avatars of righteous good in every aspect, incapable of mistakes and bad decisions. Which such an elevation of them can imply for many these days. They weren't. They fought a hellish war and mistakes and bad decisions happen. Like every other war ever fought. Like accidentally killing a comrade instead of just knocking him out.
Zelenskyy's face lmaoKraft Punk said:
& then things here took a turn somehow.....
Of what Sledge and the rest of the Marines went through in Peleliu and Okinawa in 1944-45? I would say no, Jocko does not have firsthand knowledge.BQ78 said:
So Jocko has no first hand knowledge, got it!
I think that is part of it, but a significant part of the differences in the teaching and how history generally views it are based on a couple of things as well:Eliminatus said:YouBet said:outofstateaggie said:
"With the Old Breed at Peleliu and Okinawa" is one the best books I've ever read. Incredible battlefield memoir. Definitely not the romanticized portrayal of World War II. The Pacific was an absolute brutal meat grinder.
Finishing up Supernova in the East which is Dan Carlin's podcast focused on the Japanese in WWII and he mentions this memoir as the best and most brutal one he's ever read.
It's really interesting that we don't really teach the Pacific War like we do the European campaign. Probably for obvious reasons. It was stunningly horrific and makes the European campaign look quaint in comparison.
It's an interesting conversation and one I've had many times. What I think it boils down to, IMO, of course, is that the Euro campaign for was always a largely regimented and even formulaic war of good vs evil. Especially afterwards once the Nazis were finally defeated and able to be fully analyzed. We could hold our heads high and use our good guy methods (bombing campaigns notwithstanding) to ultimately triumph. It's the American Way ^TM.
The war against Japan was more primal and brutal. It wasn't a war against a single man and his outer circle and his ideals. The Nazi party was the ultimate and very easy to paint as such evil. It was a symbol unto itself of everything we stood against. While on the other side It was a war against the Japanese spirit itself and in the words of SNAFU himself, "Ya gotta get mean". Rules of war largely didn't exist on the battlefield in the Pacific and that really damages the persona we like to have of ourselves and we didn't have a singular easy target we could focus against aside from just the Japanese people. When troops attacked a Nazi position, it was war. When troops attacked a Japanese position, it was an extermination. In their own words mind you. And that's not exactly something America likes to highlight officially. So it gets pushed to the side a lot in our culture. It's truly wild to see the dichotomy of the fronts when you study them.
I actually think Bands of Brothers and The Pacific explore this perfectly. Bob was gritty and dark at times but the stakes are easy and the rules were largely set. The Pacific was about a war of brutality and what it does to the men who fought it. BoB was a set piece story of a military campaign filled with great characterization as the backdrop. The Pacific was the study of war and humanity itself and what it is capable of. Almost the exact opposite. I will always love BoB but I will always appreciate the Pacific more. It explores the side of war America doesn't like to think about but should not be allowed to ignore.
There is a few volumes out there of German soldiers in the East that are just as bad probably if you are looking for grim campaigns to read. Carlin also has a series on this, called Ghosts of the Ost Front I believe. Really, really good as well.
I disagree with your generational assessments. Millennials have been the foot soldiers of the woke, CRT, and trans movements. Gen Z males in particular are getting red-pilled and are the most conservative youth in generations.ts5641 said:
Both are outstanding books! Not even sure we'd have the resolve to win a war 10% of the scale of WW2. We are so weak now and Gen Z are the leaders in weakness and America hating.