I posted this on the "other site" but thought a few over here might enjoy it as well.
Last few weeks in AZ – I drove down to Window Rock to see my wife, chase the suitors away, then on to Tucson for a few weeks in the sun with our son. He borrowed a Netflix account so we could watch movies on his computer in the evening. One night it was “Patton.” Great movie, but here's where it gets good:
After wrapping up the Afrika Corps, there is a scene where Patton, Monty, Bradley and some others are planning their next move. Where will they go next? Italy? Sicily? The Balkans? Sardinia? Someone suggests invading southern France.
This is where it gets good. My wife says they should invade southern France right away. She says Sicily is a sideshow and invading Italy will just tie up trops without doing much harm to
Germany. “It's just a blind alley, they should have struck at the main German force.” She went on to say the Germans would take over Italy and Vichy France once the allies moved into Europe. After telling her by now astounded husband and son about the tactical advantages the Panther and Tiger tanks gave the Germans, she finished out by saying: “They should have listened to Stalin.”
When I moved out, I left a lot of my books in Window Rock. I knew right away that she was basing her opinion on David Kennedy's “Freedom from Fear.” I stopped a couple days on my way back to Idaho and re-read the chapters on the war in Europe. She followed pretty closely on Kennedy's analysis, but reached her conclusion about the right next move after Torch on her own. Kennedy barely mentions Operation Anvil, the invasion of southern France, which eventually materialized as Dragoon in August of '44.
I had to think about that one. She may have been right. The Allies might have had enough men and materiel resources to just barely pull it off, provided they could get Churchill and Montgomery to go along. (They couldn't) Then I thought some more: what if I disagree with her? Can you imagine a husband and wife fighting over whether the Allies should have invaded France instead of Sicily and Italy? What would we tell the judge at the divorce hearing?
so, in the thead most people were working out their views on Italy, but one person asked, "Who is this girl?"
Salisa Chaiyapruk. We met in Philadelphia 30-some years ago. she is from an upper middle-class Thai family, had won a national competition for a full-ride scholarship to Penn. I followed her to Bangkok, we came back after a few yeaRS and ended up working for the Navajo Nation. She's still there, likes it fine, I'm trying to talk her into moving in with me in Idaho.
She's always got a surprise for me. I think she read the Kennedy book in 6 evenings. Recently she told me she thinks in English. "It's easier because there are more words to think with." I don't necessarily agree with her about Italy, butI'm not going to argue unless I have my facts straight first.
Just when you think you know someone, they totally surprise you!
jn