Posted on 05/08/2015 6:17:56 AM PDT by WhiskeyX
"The Filipinos did most of the fighting and most of the dying..."
This tells the "true story" behind the "forgotten war" of Bataan and Corregidor -- savage battles that violently hurled falsely reassured Filipinos and an ill-prepared Philippines into the Second World War in the Pacific. Produced by the Department of National Defense of the Philippines and the Philippines Veterans Affairs Office this series of videos documents the outstanding courage, heroism and nobility of Filipinos regardless the inevitable fall of the country to the unrelenting Imperial Japanese military juggernaut. An outcome inevitably irreversible despite the fierce resistance of the mostly Filipino and American defenders as the United States government relegated succor to the loyal but unwarily naive Philippine Commonwealth as secondary to America's commitment to her European allies.
This historical account belies many of the myths that have long distorted the realities of Philippine American relations and a must for the serious student of history, geopolitics and military matters. On a lighter yet equally revealing note it also gives a glimpse of pre-war Manila and Philippine society.
(Excerpt) Read more at youtube.com ...
http://www.amazon.com/Death-March-The-Survivors-Bataan/dp/0156027844
History ping.
thanx for the vids. very informative
I will check the video out later. I was a military dependent there a long time ago and spent several years over there. But I wonder if this is the kind of thing that, before I am done watching it, it will relegate Americans to the most minor of roles in battling the Japanese.
I hope not. I used to like and admire the Filipinos, but I get the impression there are many now in the mode of blaming all of the ills of their country on colonialism.
In one of the many books I have read on this useless tragedy, there was an account of the Filipino recruits being armed with old 1917 Enfield rifles that had broken extractors, so they were issued wooden rods to knock out the fired cases. They were sent to fight the Jap thus armed. Damned near like fighting with muzzleloaders.
Among some of their other weapons were the WWI Stokes mortars. By the 1940s, the ammo had an 70% dud rate. The Japs were so contemptuous of them that when, on rare occurrences, a position we lost was recaptured, they found the mortars still there - with flowers stuck in the barrel.
These guys were living on a half cup of rice and a tablespoon of Salmon gravy twice a day. (There wasn’t a reptile or monkey seen anywhere - all eaten.) It’s a marvel they lasted so long.
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