LoBaron
Posts: 4776
Joined: 1/26/2003 From: Vienna, Austria Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: JWE quote:
ORIGINAL: xj900uk Agreed. Morale amongst even the toughest Marine units, and also on Naval ships faced with yet another Kamikaze attack in '45, was definitely starting to crack. Some men broke down in uncontrollable weeping, others just threw themselves overboard - they had reached the end of their line. Ugaki who commanded the Kamikaze units in '45 hoped this might well happen, but the US military rather wisely covered this up at the time and prevented information that morale was getting close to the cracking point from ever getting out, even to the US press. Must be nice making pronunciamento from a soft, comfy, easy-chair. You have obviously never talked to a Marine. When troops are interviewed, they tend to tell the truth; and for combat veterans, truth is they feel fear, rage, fear, frustration, and fear. Likely Sargon's troops felt the same way. But to conclude that this implies the Marine's morale was cracking indicates that you should perhaps learn a bit more about combat/conflict dynamics. Being afraid is good, in certain circumstances. In any nominal combat unit, there are 3 classes of individuals: 5% are hysterical ostriches - they jump overboard, hide, run about shouting - basically interfering with useful activity, frightening and irritating everybody else, and generally making a nuisance of themselves. 5% are hard, cold, and wicked - they have sublimated their fear and turned the emotional energy into focus and purpose. 90% are trained, know what to do, and do ok, but need a kick in the pants to do better (need to be led and directed). Normally, it's the Hard 5% that are the leaders (officially and unofficially), so the 90% will do what is necessary, and what they were trained to do under that prompting. It's a psychological trust thing. Sometimes, you may get a ship/unit where the Hysterics outnumber the Hard, and swamp the leadership principal. A real witch for the poor 90% pukes; but because it was unusual, it got reported; NOT because it was normal. For Marines, I would guess 2% Hysterics and 8% Hard. So please don't do contemporary psychobabble when speaking about morale in the mid 1940s. It is both much simpler and more complex than you can imagine. Admittedly I do not know much about the mindset of a crack marine in ´45. But what I for sure know is that its much easier to face death if you feel that you will probably die anyway, compared to when you see victory is close and you start hoping to return to your country as a victorious hero. I know of pilot accounts in the European theatre that stated that the last months of the war were the worst of their lives, because they had seen so many die, simply because luck ran out, that they started questioning their own luck and got timid because they were so eager to return home alive. It must be very tough to continue watching your friends and comrades die by the weapons of an enemy that does not seem to understand that he already has lost. Contrary to this there are many accounts of German soldiers who stated that they expected to die fighting anyway and nothing else mattered much to them anymore. And a percentage of these probably were "hard" enough to focus on taking as many enemy soldiers down with them. This or something similar can lead to different behaviour in combat I assume, even if it is negated by battle experience and training up to some level.
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