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The Doolittle Raid
April 18, 2015
| Self
Posted on 04/18/2015 12:01:58 PM PDT by Retain Mike
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I grew up around and noticed incredible men like these, because I related better to my dads generation than to my own. My Economics professor in college served in the first Navy UDT team operation. I would meet at the golf course where I played one of the Flying Tigers. I often ended up as a dishwasher at the country club. When I noticed the chef always limped as he moved around the kitchen he saw my puzzled look and he told me he got the limp from a wound received when he was with the Rangers at Pointe De Hoc. There are more stories I could related and many more I have forgotten.
April 18 is the anniversary of the mission and I offer this essay annually as a reminder. Men like these should never be forgotten. The reference and links contain much more information for those interested.
To: Retain Mike
2
posted on
04/18/2015 12:08:43 PM PDT
by
piytar
(If you don't know what the doctrines of taqiyya and abrogation are, you are a fool!)
To: Retain Mike
3
posted on
04/18/2015 12:08:55 PM PDT
by
piytar
(If you don't know what the doctrines of taqiyya and abrogation are, you are a fool!)
To: Retain Mike
But it was Eglin base in Florida not Elgin.
4
posted on
04/18/2015 12:12:16 PM PDT
by
arthurus
(it's true!)
To: Retain Mike
I've had the same experiences. Because I was born during WWII, nearly all my teachers, my Sunday School teachers, my coaches, my Cub Scout den Dad, virtually every male I knew, fought somewhere, somehow in WWII. (My own Dad had a bad leg injury as a child and walked with a limp. He ended up temporarily taking the job of government employee who had joined the service and was set to go overseas.)
Many, many stories about battles, narrow escapes, literal escapes (my camp counselor and his air crew, to evade capture in Europe, stole the town's fire truck and drove with siren wailing, through the German crossroads check point), my pastor flying deadly B-25 missions in the most litereal flying coffins of WWII, my relative having to leave his top turret gun to check whether or not the tail was going to stay on the B-17 because top turret gunners were also the crews' flight engineer.
So many stories. And STILL. none of them considered themselves heroes. I was raised by the men of the Greatest Generation.
5
posted on
04/18/2015 12:17:09 PM PDT
by
righttackle44
(Take scalps. Leave the bodies as a warning.)
To: Retain Mike
The best war documentary I have seen is by Ken Burns, “The War” 2007. I watch it every year..sometimes twice
6
posted on
04/18/2015 12:24:02 PM PDT
by
cd jones
To: Retain Mike
Thank you for posting this.
7
posted on
04/18/2015 12:24:03 PM PDT
by
Radagast the Fool
(At my signal, UNLEASH PALIN!!)
To: Retain Mike
Growing up in Dayton, Ohio near the Air Force Museum, I was fascinated by these men. And still am.
One irony that I think many over look is the The aircraft was a B25B MITCHELL bomber.
General Billy Mitchell an advocate for air power and one of the men who predicted the Pearl Harbor bombing, twenty years earlier. At that point, his army career was over, because all the Wizards of Smart (thanks Rush) “knew” war was obsolete and the Japanese were so backward they could not possibly do something like that.
8
posted on
04/18/2015 12:27:46 PM PDT
by
Tupelo
(I feel more like Philip Nolan by the day)
To: Retain Mike
As a kid, I used to delight to talk with guys from various theaters, missions, etc. It was kinda like a collection. I meet and knew guys who were waist gunners on B25s, B17 radio and turret gunners, various pilots, POWs, one guy who survived Bataan, another guy who flew the “Hump” (he was shocked I even knew about it), at D-Day, Iwo, Guadalcanal, etc.
Now those guys are getting harder and harder to find.
9
posted on
04/18/2015 12:30:59 PM PDT
by
WKUHilltopper
(And yet...we continue to tolerate this crap...)
To: Retain Mike
The Army knew how to get things done.
10
posted on
04/18/2015 12:34:36 PM PDT
by
ansel12
(libertarian social liberalism makes conservative small limited government & low taxes impossible.)
To: Tupelo
Mitchell was actually dead by the time Pearl Harbor happened.
There’s a neat short story titled “Billy Mitchell’s Overt Act” that has him acceptng the demotion and staying in the AAC. Where he ends up in command of the B-17 squadron on Oahu in late 1941. Very good read.
To: Retain Mike
12
posted on
04/18/2015 12:57:26 PM PDT
by
RaceBannon
(Rom 5:8 But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for)
To: Retain Mike
13
posted on
04/18/2015 1:01:35 PM PDT
by
RaceBannon
(Rom 5:8 But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for)
To: tanknetter
I think I would check the sources of that story. General Billy Mitchell died February 19, 1936. (wikipedia)
14
posted on
04/18/2015 1:05:57 PM PDT
by
Tupelo
(I feel more like Philip Nolan by the day)
To: Retain Mike
Thank you for posting this!
I’ve said this before of LtC Doolittle’s raiders - there were so many courageous acts in WW2 (of which my own Dad fought).
But few were as audacious as this one. We let the Japanese know they were indeed touchable.
15
posted on
04/18/2015 1:12:01 PM PDT
by
llevrok
(To liberals, Treason Is the New Patriotism)
To: Retain Mike
16
posted on
04/18/2015 1:44:41 PM PDT
by
jonrick46
(America's real drug problem: other people's money (the Commutist's opium addiction).)
To: llevrok
A book just out, titled “Target Tokyo,” reviewed in today's WSJ, suggests the primary accomplishment of the raid was to convince the Japanese that what remained of the American fleet had to be destroyed, and quickly.
Thus, the battle of Midway only a few months after the Tokyo raid. We know how that turned out...
The more direct result of the bombing was a pin prick to Japanese industry while resulting in the slaughter of thousands of Chinese who were rounded up and executed for helping the American pilots make their way to safety. The majority of these Chinese had no connection to this final chapter. It's reminiscent of the Nazi's slaughter of an entire Czech village after the assassination of a prominent German general...
17
posted on
04/18/2015 2:09:43 PM PDT
by
Eric in the Ozarks
("If he were working for the other side, what would he be doing differently ?")
To: Retain Mike
Real men who saved the world from tyranny. Ohhhh, how we could use them now.
And like most WWII vets, they came home, got jobs/married, etc, and never said much about any of it.
18
posted on
04/18/2015 2:33:30 PM PDT
by
oh8eleven
(RVN '67-'68)
To: Retain Mike
19
posted on
04/18/2015 2:40:31 PM PDT
by
Eric in the Ozarks
("If he were working for the other side, what would he be doing differently ?")
To: Tupelo
It’s an Alternate History story.
20
posted on
04/18/2015 3:41:06 PM PDT
by
GreenLanternCorps
(Hi! I'm the Dread Pirate Roberts! (TM) Ask about franchise opportunities in your area.)
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