Posted on 03/10/2005 7:10:45 AM PST by rcocean
Our awe at the bravery of the Marines and their Japanese adversaries should not cause us to overlook the stupidity that forced them into this unnecessary meat grinder. Selective memories of World War II, which record only inspiring deeds and block out all waste and folly, create an impossible standard of perfection against which to judge contemporary conflicts.
(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...
I SHOULD have said, the fat, drunk, murdering, LIBERAL bastard.
I have long been very critical of Eisenhower's ultra-cautious approach in the Battle of the Bulge, and the thousands of men who died needlessly because of it. Had Germany finished their heavy water experiments and dropped nuclear devices on our troop concentrations and air bases, and we had lost Europe, history would not have been so kind to Eisenhower.
Had we won Vietnam the "Tet offensive" would have been rightly seen as a great victory for our side, which it indeed was (before it was undermined by weak opinion at home). That is an opposite example.
There is NOTHING sacred about the decisions of men in history. Not McArthur, Nimitz, not Eisenhower, not anyone. So we should allow valid criticism of past conflicts and battles. Max Boot has a fine history as editiorial writer for the WSJ. He deserves more respect than many here have been giving him.
Hitler and the whole Axis debacle sorely and gravely underestimated the Allied forces that would sorely, gravely and ultimately grind them into dust and consign them to the ash heap of history.
I got to the site, but couldn't find the article. I look again when I have more time.
An example of why this article is terrible. P-51's DID escort B-29 to Japan. The B-29's DID need fighter escort on Daylight missions. Here is an extract from USAAF records:
HQ AAF (Twentieth Air Force):
TUESDAY, 26 JUNE 1945
510 B-29s and 148 P-51s fly 9 missions against aircraft factories, light-metals industries and arsenals in S Honshu and Shikoku; 6 B-29s and 1 P-51 are lost.
FRIDAY, 6 JULY 1945
110 Iwo Jima-based P-51s attack airfields in the Tokyo area (Kumagaya, Yamagata, and Chiba); they claim 1-0-0 aircraft in the air and 6-25 on the ground; 1 P-51 is lost.
You are correct.
All wars are the stage were "old" tactics meet new technology.
The reason for the high body count in the Civil war was that the old style of lining up and advancing on the enemy position in formation ran smack into the way high-tech of rifling.
Until that point, smooth bore muskets fired in volley were only 20% effective. An acceptable loss.
Rifling in the barrels improved volley fire to somewhere around 80%. Clearly unacceptable.
The trouble was, those in command were not able to immediately understand what was happening in front of them.
Same thing happened in Iwo. Same thing happened on the Russian front.
ETC....
Yes, it can. It can especially be criticized very poorly.
The alternative to Hiroshima was Iwo Jima on much more massive scale.
Based on the intellectual value of your post, I'd say Ollie North wouldn't even have to be awake to make you look especially stupid.
Well, the fact that he either inadvertently or intentionally misled readers on the bombardment of Iwo Jima led to the shallow level of respect I gave him.
I accept Iwo as necessary, but in hindsight consider Palau the mistake.
I have always had serious reservations about Tarawa,but Iwo Jima provided a"safety net"for air-crews whose planes were damaged bombing Japan from The Marianas.The figure is something like 20,000 that(if we had not taken Iwo Jima)would have been forced to ditch at sea.
If WWII taught us anything,it taught us that naval gunfire has it's limitations!
You have brilliantly punctured every aspect of my argument with your scintillating wit! Naturally, you have also displayed the courtesy of a true Freeper.
Of course, it was only my stupidity that got me through Princeton and Michigan Law. Now, I'm using my single brain cell to earn my Ph.D. in military history, where I did a review of Burrell's article only a few months ago. If only I could tie my shoe laces! However, if you want to get into the specifics of Burrell's work (which is not without some serious flaws), I'd be glad to.
If the mindless blather of Ollie on television isn't enough to cause you pain, read "Shadow Warrior" by Felix Rodriguez. Rodriguez, a profoundly anti-Communist Cuban emigre, spent twenty years in the CIA's paramilitary section, operating mostly in Central America and Africa. He did some work with Ollie in the 80s, and paints a pretty damning picture. Perhaps I should not believe a long-serving CIA field operative over a glory-seeking publicity hound. Yet, somehow, I can't help but find Rodriguez's observations to be quite consistent with the very public Ollie (tm) (patent pending) and his massive ego.
Ollie deserves credit for his military service, but military service does not immunize one from criticism. We all remember a nice pedophile by the name of Scott Ritter.
Stupidly Yours,
Seydlitz
And then you express surprise that I didn't waste any more of my time countering your oh-so-comprehensive argument (or did you use the Ivy League Cliff Notes method?).
Let me see if I can be a little more helpful for you, Biff. I would take Oliver North's intellect over yours any day of the week.
I wanted to introduce you to our Ivy League attorney, soon-to-be-military-history-Professor, and protocol consultant. I thought you might want to pay proper homage. ROTFL!
I resemble that remark.
If Ted Kennedy had been in the Senate in 1945 (hard to believe, but he wasn't), he would have been hollering about the incompetence of the Roosevelt administration, which produced many times more casualties in five weeks than U.S. forces have suffered in Iraq in the last two years.He would have hollered about the staggering US death toll from D-Day as well, except Roosevelt would never have put up with his shenanigans.
Likewise, please pardon my arrogance for not embracing the title of "stupid" more wholeheartedly.
That said, Ollie's vanity and foolishness caused a major crisis in US foreign policy and almost destroyed the Reagan administration. Why, as conservatives, should we admire him for anything other than his military service?
Quit whining. You started with the insults; expect 'em back.
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