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12-230 Garand Picture of the Day- Tateyama, Japan
Last edited by Mark in Rochester; 08-18-2014 at 12:32 PM.
He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose
There are no great men, only great challenges that ordinary men are forced by circumstances to meet.
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08-18-2014 12:27 PM
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My father was in the Philipines prepping for the invasion, became part of the first occupation forces... he was in Nagasaki two weeks after the bomb. Truman was not one of my favorite Presidents, but I bless him for dropping the bombs. BTW, just watched "Railroad Man" on TV, an Aussie film based on a true story about a Brit POW in the Pacific -- IMO the Japs deserved every bit of what they got, and then some, the swine.
Real men measure once and cut.
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I wasn't present Bob, and my dad was in Europe. He bore a grudge until his dying day. There's a reason for that. My great uncle was USMC from '19 to '23 and did time in the Philippines. He bore a grudge against the Japanese
for his life...in both cases, that's something that history can't re-write and political correctness can't change. I have my own share of issues from my own overseas service and no one's going to change those thoughts...
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Jim, I suspect your dad had another reason for bearing a grudge. He knew what the Canadian force defending Hong Kong suffered both in battle (Canada
's first infantry engagement of WWII) and in captivity.
Link: HyperWar: Canadian Participation in the Defense of Hong Kong, December 1941
Officers of HMCS PRINCE ROBERT with liberated Canadian POWs at Shamshuipo Camp, Hong Kong. August 1945.
Last edited by Paul S.; 08-18-2014 at 10:31 PM.
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He fought Germany
, and a few Italians too. He didn't call them that though. He was captured by Germany three times and once he escaped naked...with a broken radius in his right arm. That looked terrible to his dying day. "Twice the Germans broke it and once I did" he said.
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Most of our AIF WWII vets that I have had the pleasure to talk too will or if they do talk deplore the tactics of the IJA and the navy as their submarines after sinking a ship picked up the survivors and then had sword practice on the after deck of the sub so much for the mariners code.......
A small story for you ;
I worked with a chap when I was a farm hand (1978-80) his name was Ken Warburton (Dec) a WWII vet and a guest of the Wehrmacht for a few years, Ken talked to me as I one day mentioned that my dad went through PNG and a few islands up that way in the 4 years he was at war '41-'45.
Anyway Ken was a real cracker of a bloke the ol' school aussie we seldom see or hear about the story goes; Apparently they were in a pitched battle with the Germans (cannot remember where) and Ken had the 303 shot out from his hands and was then captured by the enemy "You prisoner Kome Ja" so that was his lot.
After being in the Stalag for a while, starvation was on every ones plate (no pun there) one night in a bid to ease their pain Ken volunteered to go under the wire to get food, he managed to find some potatoes and was busy digging them by hand and putting in his jacket when a guard sprung him.
He could have shot Ken there and then, Ken said the muzzle of that K-98 looked like a train tunnel, the guard said in broken English but the implication was clear, go back the way you came, take what you have as next time I catch you out here I will kill you.................Ken did as he was directed and never again went out of the wire until liberated.
So there were those in the German
Services that perhaps did not have the same vision as the idiot in command, but the other enemy in the words of Gene Hackman from Crimson tide " Drop that F******* twice Sir " and so it was.
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Originally Posted by
Paul S.
the grudge he bore was against the
Japanese
No, it was my great uncle that hated the Japanese. Can't say why though...yes, dad was 1 Div, red patch.
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