A simple poll for the weekend...
Which Theater of Operations during WWII holds your most interests?
ETO or PTO?
Charlie-painter777
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A simple poll for the weekend...
Which Theater of Operations during WWII holds your most interests?
ETO or PTO?
Charlie-painter777
ETO for me.
eto also
PTO here
ETO as well.
PTO here
PTO - in honor of my dad - 32nd Infantry Div.
Like both, but ETO for me also, in honor of my dad, "C" 1/387th 97th Inf. Div.
PTO, I have no chance of finding anything else. Mike.
Great idea Charlie. You know I honor all of our Vets, and I have a bunch of buddies that are Marines. I know that the Army served in the PTO but I always think Marines when PTO comes up.
WW2, three uncles (Navy) PTO, my Dad (Army) CBI
My vote is the ETO, mainly because I'm an Army guy.....Frank
P.S. wore my Fort Benning tee shirt yesturday when I was warmming up at the Diamond Nationals Karate Tournament. It must have given me good luck. Got fourth in my forms division and second in fighting. It was a good day!!!:cheers:
My late friend Eddie Nunes fought both the Germans and Japanese. Italy, DDay, Luzon and Corrigador. He respected the Germans and felt sorry for the Japanese. Tell this to a Marine on Betio or Peleilu and he'd knock you down.
In PTO the Japanese numbered maybe a million, in Russia it was 3 million vs 13 million. At Stalingrad the Germans lost the whole 6th Army, maybe 200,000 men.
eto simply I live in hot muggy Florida. give me cold over hot any day. But hats off to all our great fighting men who had no choice and went where they were told to go. Plus I'm sick of bugs, snakes, gators, and nort.....big city drivers.
ETO for me
PTO. Personal interest. Dad and three uncles all fought in the pacific.
I also have an academic interest in ETO
PTO
Having seen alot of the places battles were held, I choose the Pacific. Brave men died on both fronts and not saying there were not as many or even more notable battles in Europe. Stalingrad, Battle of the Bulge, Bastogne, Patton, Darby's Rangers. Different areas and circumstances. Heat verses snow, Sea verse Land. All of that.
But what got us into the war in the first place, Pearl Harbor.
Wake Island Dec 8th-23rd 1941 holding out for 15 days, then told relief was to return to Pearl Harbor due to fear of possible loses.
The horrors of the week long 60 mile Bataan Death march with no food or water in 1942. Tens of thousands of POW's murdered.
The six month battle of Guadalcanal Aug 1943 to Feb 1943.
Coral Sea and Midway battles.
Iwo Jima 1945 and our Flag flying on Mt. Suribachi.
I feel the brutality of the Japanese with their jungle and tunnel warfare, add to that the logistics of materials and supplies, the pacific seems to me to have been the tougher front.
We all have family and friends who have fought, regardless of the front they were on. Armistice Day is coming up November 11th and we should remember and honor them all.
Charlie, you sure know how to stir up the pot. Pittings us against each other. And our personal feelings.
Jim
Will not choose. Civil War General Sherman was right (Damn, a Southerner quoting Sherman????) when he said "war is hell". Our fathers went through hell during WWII and it had more than one location and more than one set of demons. I study as much as I can about the ETO and the PTO as well as the Eastern Front and the CBI theaters. They all have their unique situations and what made them pure hell. I am thankful to have not been there and I am proud of my father's service in the ETO (and an uncle in the PTO).
I will never be satisfied with my knowledge of either the ETO or PTO (or CBI for that matter). They say that over 60 million people (military and civilians) died bewteen 1939 and 1945. May they rest in peace.
CBI, then PTO......
CBI? I must have slept through that one. Enlighten me please.
CBI = China/Burma/India
could be incorrect ... though
CBI - China Burma India theater. As the Japanese spread out across China into Indochina (modern Vietnam and neighbors) they invaded Burma and threatened to invade India which was still an British Colony. The British had their hands full trying to stave off not only the Japanese, but deal with the internal threat of near revolution of the population of India who saw it as a chance for independence. America provided manpower, equipment and supplies to the Nationalist Chinese via the Burma Road and DC-3 flights over the mountains. The Office of Strategic Services (OSS, the forerunner of the modern CIA) mounted what was to be America's first attempt at Guerilla warfare in occupied Burma.
The long story short is that most people today do not realize that the groundwork of what happened in Vietnam was a direct result of the Japanese expansion into Indochina which was a french colony prior to WWII. To understand the CBI theater action you have to understand what was going on in that area of the world long before the Japanese invaded Manchuria.
As a side note, the American OSS was relatively successful in mounting that guerilla war against the Japanese using the many local tribes of the Burma countryside. Its too bad that they forgot the lessons and success of 1942-1945 just 20 years later when we blew it in Vietnam.
Thanks TR. As a kid, and scale modeler, my favorite was always the P-40 (Kittyhawk, Tomahawk, Warhawk) that Gen. Chenault and the Flying Tigers flew during that campaign. Of course I wasn't into M1 Carbines back then, but as WWII was only over for a few years then, I was very much interested in the subject. I see we are in the same area. Perhaps we can get together some time, and you can educate me further in these carbines. After all, I too am retired, and come to think of it, pretty tired too ;)
Merril's Marauders, Chindits, Ghurkas, Chenault, Vinegar Joe Stillwell, Chang Chia Chek....... You guys should all be familiar with those names. ALL CBI...... And our secret base in Shang Gri La!
ETO for me, my Dad was there, 387th Inf Div.
Regards: Thumper
Pacific Theater… My dad severed in the Navy Sea Bee’s on Attu in the Aleutian Islands of Alaska after the Battle of Attu rebuilding/maintaining the landing field. His was issued a M1 Carbine, but doesn’t remember the manufacturer.
As well as all those that severed during WW 2 I think we also need to remember the people on the home front that did their part helping with the war effort.
If not for the efforts of those all American that did their part was could be speaking German or Japanese today.
God has blessed the USA. Too bad we don’t take better care of it!
US Army Viet Nam Infantry. John
Hear hear and thanks for your service. (Actually I thought it was" here here" but I checked it out.)
Both, My farther and some uncles served in both.