Categories
Soldiering

STOP Repeating these Military LIES

Categories
Real men Soldiering

Russian Musketeer

Categories
Manly Stuff Our Great Kids Soldiering

This is what happens when an OH-6 Scout pilot loses on Poker Game to a private from Base Camp Motor Pool.

Categories
Soldiering War

Remembering History’s Last Major Cavalry Charge BY: JESSE GREENSPAN

With sabers drawn, about 600 Italian cavalrymen yelled out their traditional battle cry of “Savoia!” and galloped headlong toward 2,000 Soviet foot soldiers armed with machine guns and mortars. On August 23, 1942 (some sources say August 24), the cavalrymen—part of the Axis invasion of the Soviet Union during World War II— were attempting to close a gap that had opened up between the Italian and German armies along the Don River.

It was to be the end of an era. Though experts believe that smaller and less well-documented cavalry charges likely occurred later on in World War II and possibly as late as the 1970s in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), they generally describe this as the last major charge in history.

In a closely packed formation, the Italian cavalrymen hurled themselves at the left flank and rear of the Soviet line, tossing hand grenades and slashing with their sabers. Despite heavy losses, they then passed through the line in a reverse direction and helped to dislodge the Soviets from their position. Other World War II cavalry charges had not been so lucky.

At the beginning of the conflict, Polish lancers purportedly attacked a German infantry battalion (but not tanks, as Nazi propaganda would have us believe) and suffered predictably disastrous results.

The final U.S. charge took place in the Philippines in January 1942, when the pistol-wielding horsemen of the 26th Cavalry Regiment temporarily scattered the Japanese.

Soon after, however, the starving U.S. and Filipino soldiers were forced to eat their own horses. Two months later, Japanese troops in Burma almost completely wiped out a charging Indian regiment under British command.

A CAVALRY CHARGE DURING THE 1813 BATTLE OF LEIPZIG.

In fact, rapid-fire weapons had essentially rendered cavalry charges obsolete over a century earlier. But old traditions die hard. For thousands of years, famed military leaders such as Alexander the Great, Hannibal, Genghis Khan and Frederick the Great had used mounted warriors with great effectiveness.

Alex Bielakowski, an associate professor at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, put it this way: “If you see all of these guys charging at you, the human instinct for the overwhelming number of people is to run like heck. Then it’s easy because once they’re running away you can pick them off.”

Napoleon Bonaparte, who built up a potent cavalry force of his own, typically weakened the enemy lines with artillery fire and then sent in his cuirassiers for the decisive blow. “The French cavalry under Napoleon were known to be the finest in the world,” particularly in the way they handled large formations, said Jeffrey T. Fowler, an associate professor at the American Military University. “They were very well trained to the point where they could stop, they were maneuverable, they could change direction, they could do all of these things.” Nonetheless, even they suffered a disastrous defeat at Waterloo in 1815.

Throughout the rest of the 19th and early 20th centuries, cavalry popped up as a major component of both guerilla and anti-guerilla operations. But never again would they shine in pitched battles.

In the Crimean War, Russian artillery cut the British cavalry to pieces during the infamous Charge of the Light Brigade. Soon after, Union and Confederate commanders during the American Civil War learned it was suicidal to send their horsemen over open terrain against rifled muskets.

As a result, they began saving their cavalry for reconnaissance purposes and long-distance raids behind enemy lines. More mass slaughters occurred during the Franco-Prussian War, including one in which throngs of dead French horsemen and horses thwarted a later attempt to march through the area.

Afterward, the German Medical Corps determined that only six soldiers had died of saber wounds in all of the war’s battles combined.

A CAVALRY CHARGE DURING THE 1808 BATTLE OF SOMOSIERRA.

Yet very few of these lessons sank in prior to World War I, in which armies on both sides showed up with lancers and swordsmen on horseback. “You’re going against machine guns with a long stick,” Bielakowski said. “This is one of those examples of unwillingness to give something up just because we’ve always done it that way.”

During the first part of the war, cavalry played some role as the eyes and ears of the army. But at least on the Western front, they were mowed down in droves every time they charged against positions fortified with barbed wire, trenches, automatic weapons and tanks.

Perhaps because a few cavalry charges actually broke through on the less technologically advanced Eastern front, armies remained loath to give up their horses. Cavalry even had its proponents in the United States, which was one of the first countries to fully mechanize. “The horse and mule are not museum pieces,” Colonel John F. Wall wrote in a 1951 report now housed in the archives of the U.S. Cavalry Association. “If entirely discarded now, in days to come, they will re-appear. It is indeed shameful that this day may be at such distance away that there won’t be anyone available to pack a saddle or to throw a Diamond Hitch.”

In modern times, horse cavalry have been replaced by tanks for shock attacks, by armored vehicles and helicopters for transportation and by aircraft for reconnaissance.

But even with such modern weaponry available, a horse still comes in handy every now and then. In 2001, for example, U.S. forces in Afghanistan were photographed riding steeds over rugged terrain alongside their Northern Alliance allies.

Categories
Soldiering

The list of stupid tanker tricks are virtually limitless, as most armor NCOs can tell you.

Categories
Soldiering The Green Machine

So where is the Party?

Categories
Good News for a change! Hard Nosed Folks Both Good & Bad Leadership of the highest kind Manly Stuff One Hell of a Good Fight Our Great Kids Real men Soldiering Stand & Deliver The Green Machine This great Nation & Its People War

8 Rounds of Valor – The Story of Thomas Baker

Categories
Soldiering This great Nation & Its People War

Harry Heth’s Head Wound By Will Dabbs, MD

Henry Heth was born on December 16, 1825, in Black Heath, Virginia. His father, John, was a captain in the U.S. Navy. Henry’s mother, Margaret, played aunt to one George Pickett, the man who years later led his Confederate Division on the eponymous Pickett’s Charge during the Battle of Gettysburg. Heth usually went by Harry.

Harry Heth’s was a military family. When he came of age, the young man entered the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. In 1846, he was inadvertently stabbed in the leg during bayonet training. At a time before antibiotics when even mild wounds could lead to sepsis and gory death, Heth somehow pulled through. The following year, Heth graduated as the goat (not GOAT)—the cadet at the very bottom of his academic class.

Harry Heth led a company during the 1855 Battle of Ash Hollow, killing a great many Lakota women and children, among other things.

Three years later, Heth penned the Army’s very first marksmanship manual titled “A System of Target Practice.” For the next several years, the young lieutenant did lieutenant things leading troops around the American West. Then there was a bit of a dustup at Fort Sumter, and everybody’s world went all pear-shaped.

Harry Heth Does Proper War

The 1860s were a fruitful time for a West Point grad, even one with sub optimal grades. America faced off against itself, and trained military men were in short supply. That meant meteoric promotions and command time aplenty.

Among other things, Heth logged a stint as Robert E. Lee’s Quartermaster. An Army runs on its stomach, and this was a terribly important job. Lee and Heth subsequently developed a friendship. Heth was one of the few subordinates that the notoriously professional General Lee referred by his first name. In May of 1863, Heth was promoted to major general and given a division in A.P. Hill’s Corps.

Confederate General Henry Heth.

Criticality

Now some 162 years distant, it is easy for us modern folk to lose sight of just what an iffy thing the American Civil War actually was.

More adroit commentators than I have spilt rivers of ink on the details. A few quite-talented novelists have penned some compelling alternative histories as well. Suffice to say, had the Confederacy prevailed and the United States advanced as something not quite so united, our modern world would be quite different today.

The particulars of two world wars, social evolution, and the Information Age would be unrecognizable from what our history books currently depict. All that really turned on a single battle that unfolded in and around the Pennsylvania community of Gettysburg in July of 1863.

Lee was in overall command. He directed his subordinate commanders to avoid a decisive engagement with Union forces until he had his reserves positioned.

However, Harry Heth was an impetuous man. While marching east from Cashtown on July 1, Heth deployed two full infantry brigades forward in a reconnaissance in force. He later claimed to have been looking for fresh shoes for his men. Historians have since disputed this. Regardless, when Heth’s two brigades met the Union cavalry under General John Buford, it was game on.

 Inflection Points

Any amateur student of Civil War history knows the rest. Pickett’s Charge petered out under withering fire, and Joshua Chamberlain’s audacious bayonet charge ultimately turned the tide of the fight. Before Gettysburg, the Confederate Army was within striking distance of the White House. Afterwards, it was a long, bloody slog all the way to Appomattox. All that kind-of hinged upon Harry Heth.

Prior to the unpleasantness at Gettysburg, Harry Heth had invested in a new campaign hat. Hats were ubiquitous back then and meant more than just comfort on a sunny day. This one arrived just a bit oversized for Heth’s head. To compensate, the good general liberally lined his new chapeau with newspaper.

While fighting at Gettysburg, Heth and Rebel Major General Robert Rodes prosecuted a combined attack against a Union Corps, putting the Yankees to flight.

Amidst the chaos of battle, Heth caught a Minie ball to the nugget. That big, fat .58-caliber round penetrated his hat, tracked around his ersatz newspaper lining, and exited the far side without debraining him in the process. The fortunate general spent the next 30 hours unconscious but eventually recovered.

Denouement

Heth fought honorably later at places like the Wilderness, Spotsylvania, and Cold Harbor. He stood alongside his friend Bob Lee when it was time to pack it in at Appomattox Court House.

After the war, Heth sold insurance and later took a government job as a surveyor. He died in 1899 at the age of 73, the unkillable Confederate general who quite possibly lost the American Civil War.

Categories
Hard Nosed Folks Both Good & Bad Soldiering

Lucius Siccius Dentatus – The “Roman Achilles

Categories
Soldiering War

What I call having a REALLY bad day at the Office!

Crassus’s defeat by the Parthian’s