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To: Salman

I was stationed there in the 70’s. The worst place to be. At least someone is having fun. The 400 tickets sold? I’m sure most of those people who bought them were straight. Second, families are stationed there meaning they are not confined to the limited entertainment on the island. The only question is military preparedness. Our hero Barry Goldwater would disagree with most of you. The career military brass/nco’s? They are NOT going to jeopardize their careers. Keeping one’s mouth shut shows they know who’s boss.


13 posted on 03/16/2014 8:09:24 AM PDT by DIRTYSECRET (urope. Why do they put up with this.)
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To: DIRTYSECRET; All

(I posted this on another thread and I’ll ping it here.)

This is immoral debasement of a place that history has not forgotten. A perverted dance on the graves of our deceased. Of all the places they could choose for this sick display they chose Okinawa.

“Battle of Okinawa”

“...The Battle of Okinawa is distinguished among battles, yet often unrecognized when referring to the great battles of the Second World War. Over 250,000 people lost their lives. Approximately 150,000 Okinawans, about a third of the population, perished.[1] At the battle’s end, somewhere between a third and half of all surviving civilians were wounded.[2] No battle during the Second World War, except Stalingrad, had as massive a loss of civilian life. The stakes were high. The Japanese, determined to fight to the last man, almost achieved their objective, but in defeat 100,000 Japanese combatants died rather than surrender.[3] In the end, fewer than 10,000 of General Mitsuri Ushijimas’s Thirty-Second Army were taken prisoner.[4]

United States loss of life was staggering as well. The United States Navy sustained the largest loss of ships in its history with thirty-six lost and 368 damaged.[5] The Navy also sustained the largest loss of life in a single battle with almost 5,000 killed and an equal number wounded.[6] At Okinawa, the United States Tenth Army would incur its greatest losses in any campaign against the Japanese.[7] The Tenth Army, which initially was made up of 183,000 army, navy, and marine personnel.[8] During those eighty-two days, the Tenth Army would lose 7,613 men and over 30,000 men would be evacuated from the front lines for a minimum of a week due to wounds.[9] Moreover, the largest numbers of U.S. combat fatigue cases ever recorded would occur on Okinawa...”

http://www.militaryhistoryonline.com/wwii/okinawa/default.aspx


22 posted on 03/16/2014 8:21:16 AM PDT by 444Flyer (How long O LORD?)
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