My dad was a career RN bloke, ended up president of the Chiefs' Mess with a BEM to go with his two WWII DSMs.
There's no doubt that in the minds of Brit servicepeople in WWII, they saw "the enemy" in the following order of priority:
#1 Yanks
#2 Frogs
#3 Japanese
#4 Germans
Although his medals were for fighting the Japanese...
Go to work, get married, have some kids, pay your taxes, pay your bills, watch your tv, follow fashion, act normal, obey the law and repeat after me: "I am free."
Anon
Yeah, they also tell us in history class here that Canadian soldiers were the most feared, bravest, and most skilled fighters and the Newfies (at that point not actually part of Canada) in particular were fearsome (though, two consecutive generations of males were essentially wiped out in Europe, so perhaps they got the bravery bit right) - personally, I doubt the Wehrmacht could tell people apart, especially not the commonwealth battalions but that's just me.
But yeah, people tell me the All Blacks Haka before games scares the crap out of the other teams, so perhaps the Maori battalion was the most frightening.
Athiest I knew you would come through for me. Your old man sounds like a trooper. Yanks, well hated, stealing all the wives and girlfriends. Frogs, for obvious reasons. Japanese, sneaky buggers and the Germans because their trains run on time. Question, will you be supporting Australia in the Ashes next week?![]()
Last edited by jocky; 07-05-2009 at 09:06 PM.
Go to work, get married, have some kids, pay your taxes, pay your bills, watch your tv, follow fashion, act normal, obey the law and repeat after me: "I am free."
Anon
My uncle Walter, the ex German paratrooper, was sensible enough to surrender to the Americans, when his battalion were ordered to the Russian Front.
I don't know about the German Top Brass, but the troops he was with, feared the Russians almost as much as the Gestapo.
In this very highbrow debate on the fighting abilities of the British, its necessary to recognise the negative virtues of this entity e.g.
"I dont know what they do to the enemy, but they frighten the life out of me" Attributed to The Duke of Wellington"
"The highest traditions of the Royal Navy are comprised of rum, sodomy & the lash" Attributed Winston Churchill when First Lord of The Admirality.
' My uncle Walter, the ex German paratrooper'. Prendrelmick, I seem to recall hearing this story before. I am suspicious, this is not the beginning of an extremely elaborate tall tale is it?![]()
Which one?
One of the toughest men I ever knew was an ex Wermacht soldier who was very badly wounded on the Russian front at Leningrad. When I asked him if he had any regrets about what had happened to him he said none whatsoever and if he had his time over again, he would do exactly the same.
Jocky
If I remember correctly you can find the reassurance that this is not a "tall tale" in the following two books:
"Years of The Sword" by Elizabeth Longford.
"The Last Lion" by William Manchester.
Sorry, I cant be more precise, but most of my books are in London, and I'm in the Middle East!
Yes, the Russians were particularly unfogiving to Germans, and I guess that's understandable given the atrocities perpetrated on the Russiand during German occupation. Ironic really, when they started out as pals.
And a great album by The Pogues!
(I think Winnie's original words were "Rum, buggery and the lash" but it's been kept alive as sodomy to preserve a few sensibilities.
Go to work, get married, have some kids, pay your taxes, pay your bills, watch your tv, follow fashion, act normal, obey the law and repeat after me: "I am free."
Anon