BAND OF BROTHERS PART 2 | Reaction | First Time Watching

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  • Опубликовано: 26 дек 2024

Комментарии • 358

  • @JustSir430
    @JustSir430 2 месяца назад +116

    They dropped 18k paratroopers on D-Day. They jumped at night as the landings were scheduled for that morning and there were objectives that had to be secured. It's also a little harder to shoot them down at night. The combination of the parachute drops and the landings gave the Germans multiple things to be concerned with. In some ways, the fact that the airborne troops were so scattered may have actually been beneficial as it placed small groups of well trained, highly motivated troops all of whom knew the overall mission, all over Normandy. The random, attacks from so many places helped sow confusion among the Germans as to the main objectives of the airborne troops. You never knew where they would appear to blow something up. In regards to shooting of the prisoners, at that point of the invasion, with troops scattered all over the place, they didn't have the resources to leave people to babysit prisoners. They needed everyone they could could get to seize the various objectives. It's not like they had manpower to detail troops to guard prisoners. It's unpleasant and distasteful, especially to modern culture, but that was the world at the time.

    • @Knight-Bishop
      @Knight-Bishop 2 месяца назад +17

      I always found it a little weird that they left out how they actually had orders against taking prisoners... It's still not something most people could do to a surrendering enemy. Speirs was the type of officer to do such a thing himself rather than force any of the men to do it.

    • @notthestatusquo7683
      @notthestatusquo7683 2 месяца назад +6

      "Unpleasant and distasteful" is an interesting way of putting it. Another way to put it would be that if the axis had won and the allies were put on trial in Nuremberg, those responsible for those killings would have been executed for war crimes. That's not to say there was overall moral equivalence between "us" and "them" but it is objectively true to say that killing prisoners is unequivocally a war crime. It doesn't matter what your resource situation is or what your objectives are, you are obligated to care for them and keep them safe.

    • @dawnfallon6812
      @dawnfallon6812 2 месяца назад +3

      @@notthestatusquo7683 Yes, it was a war crime. Both sides committed plenty throughout the war. Try reading about the Eastern Front; It's no exaggeration to say it was Hell on Earth for 3 years. Now that's out of the way, remember that the Geneva Conventions set the rules of conduct for War. And like many, rules are bent and broken during the expediencies of combat.

    • @mikeity2009
      @mikeity2009 2 месяца назад +7

      @@notthestatusquo7683 If the axis had won we'd all be speaking german right now, it's a false equivalence. You can look back with 20/20 vision now in your recliner of course but the situation was vastly different.
      Playing "both sides" is moot, these two are not the same. Nothing the allies did compares to the final solution, unit 731, the mass starvation of china, nanking. Don't even try to play those games.

    • @mikeity2009
      @mikeity2009 2 месяца назад +2

      @@dawnfallon6812 Starvation, Hypothermia, Cannibalism. It made the western front look like a nice Sunday afternoon. The pacific was pretty bad too, people on the western front had it good in comparison.

  • @markpekrul4393
    @markpekrul4393 2 месяца назад +26

    Spades on the helmets designated members of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, of which Easy was one company. Other regiments in the 101st Airborne had hearts, diamonds or clubs. It's actually a long tradition - in the American Civil War, each northern infantry corps had its own unique symbol after 1862 - crescent moon, star, cross, disc, clover leaf, etc.

  • @Pawniac
    @Pawniac 2 месяца назад +43

    4:40 Remember, this is WW2, no nightvision, radar is still in its infancy, it's much easier to conceal your planes at night than it is at day.
    6:17 Around 13.000 paratroopers took park in the attack on June 5th, the day before D-Day
    6:48 Yeah, that goes without saying. The drops were so chaotic, that basically nobody landed where they were supposed to. That's why in the briefings leading to the drop, everyone was told to memorize town and village names, landmarks, etc, as to be able to gauge where they were dropped and where their objectives were.
    7:03 Yes, Winters lost his musette paratrooper bag along with his kit bag (the long cylindrical one), which basically meant he had no ammo or weapons on him.
    7:58 Winters ripped off one of his buttons which were specifically designed to be used as a very rudimentary compass. The RAF came up with the idea and its full name is "radioluminescent escape and evasion button compass"
    10:04 The German Master Sgt. POW Malarkey is talking to actually was from Portland, not Eugene, which was most likely changed since the two had actually worked across the street from each other for years, making it hard to believe for the audience. I will leave this point with a excerpt from Malarkey's memoir on the incident:
    _"I’d only been at war a few hours, and already I was learning stuff I hadn’t been taught in training. Namely, that the guy trying to kill you-and that you’re trying to kill-could be somebody who once worked in an American defense plant, across the street from where you later worked. Strange thing, war."_
    11:14 A lot of people criticize Speirs for shooting the PoWs, and for good reason, it is a warcrime any way you see it, however, they had orders NOT to take POWs. They didn't have the men to guard them and taking them with, as they advanced, was not feasible. Releasing them was also out of the question as they would give crucial intel back to their commanders. So, the only solution was, sadly, execution.
    11:28 The Brécourt Manor Assault was so masterfully executed by Winters that it is still to this day one of the most famous and classic examples of small-unit tactics and proper Leadership overcoming a larger enemy force.
    11:59 The Spade is actually the real symbol of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment and it works as a way of distinguishing who's who in the chaos of battle.
    The 101st A.D. consists of 4 smaller infantry regiments;
    327th Glider Regiment used Clubs (♣)
    501st used Diamonds (♦)
    502nd used Hearts (♥)
    and finally 506th used Spades (♠)
    13:25 In reality, Toye was able to survive the grenade blast by rolling away from it after being warned by Winters.
    14:48 Malarkey wanted a Luger P08 pistol for his kid brother. Lugers were extremely sought after as war trophies, which is what made Malarkey rush the field, believing he had spotted one.
    15:39 When you're not in a position to capture your enemy's equipment and repurpose it, you make sure you damage it to the point where not only it becomes inoperable, it becomes irrepairable, in case the enemy manages to recover said equipment. Blowing up the barrel in those field guns renders them useless for the enemy.
    16:06 John D. Hall, whom the series depicts as having been KIA in the Brecourt action, may have been a member of the basketball team, but he was not a member of Company 'A', as the dialogue indicates. He actually belonged to Service Company.
    *John D. Halls* , same middle initial as John D. Hall, but note the 's' on his last name, was a member of the 81mm mortar platoon, of Headquarters Co., 2nd battalion, 506th PIR, and according to John Barickman of the same platoon, it was HALLS who was killed in the Brecourt fight, not HALL. This is likely to be correct, because John D. Hall died in the plane crash of Stick #32 near Picauville, France, and all aboard were killed in that crash. It is unclear as to how Halls died in real life.
    22:59 We have seen Meehan, he was the officer who in Ep. 1 was saying "There'll be no jump tonight". Meehan's fate won't be mentioned much for the rest of the series so I'm going to spoil it here (don't read if you don't want to be spoiled). His plane was hit by German flak and went down, killing all onboard, which included all of Easy's headquarters personnel. Before takeoff, Meehan wrote a letter and handed it out the door of the C-47 to be sent to his wife:
    "Dearest Anne:
    In a few hours, I'm going to take the best company of men in the world into France. We'll give the bastards hell. Strangely, I'm not particularly scared. But in my heart is a terrific longing to hold you in my arms. I love you Sweetheart - forever. Your Tom"
    RIP.

    • @aadpiraat7126
      @aadpiraat7126 2 месяца назад +1

      Someone is invested

    • @bluebird3281
      @bluebird3281 2 месяца назад

      11:14 And they were the behind the lines spearhead of an invasion that they weren't sure at the time wouldn't be pushed back into the sea. At that point it is dangerous to take prisoners.

    • @richcheckmaker
      @richcheckmaker 2 месяца назад +7

      Meehan dying isn't a spoiler. The plane that burns up you can hear the pilot saying "Tell Meehan to get his men out of here" before being consumed by fire.

    • @shoehead65
      @shoehead65 2 месяца назад +1

      Great reaction! You picked up on a lot of things many reactors seem to miss. The men, you’ll know their names and personalities in no time. They’ll be your buddies by the end of the series. A masterpiece of television history.

    • @pap4539
      @pap4539 2 месяца назад +2

      one of my favorite things about watching reaction videos is the breadth of knowledge many in the comments have to offer. thank you for dropping these tidbits here. many of these things I did not know.

  • @-C.S.R
    @-C.S.R 2 месяца назад +22

    Considered to be the greatest miniseries of all time.
    *Band of Brothers* is a masterpiece!
    100% 🍅 A+ 10/10 👍👍

  • @chetstevensq
    @chetstevensq 2 месяца назад +18

    Lt Meehan is the guy that said NO JUMP TONIGHT and worked on the map with Winters to figure out they were going to Normandy.

    • @kaliwali
      @kaliwali  2 месяца назад +3

      ahhh okay! thank you

  • @johnjones_1501
    @johnjones_1501 2 месяца назад +23

    Another interesting thing about Airborne is you have a stick and you have a squad. Your stick is the guys you jump with and your squad is the guys you fight with. Three to four squads then make a platoon, three to four platoons make a company, then three to four companies make a battalion. The reason you jump in a stick is because you don't try to put people from the same squads or platoon together, and there will even be guys from other companies and battalions in your stick, so that if your plane goes down, your entire unit is not lost.

    • @dallassukerkin6878
      @dallassukerkin6878 2 месяца назад +2

      All the decades I have studied military history and it was never as clear to me what the actual purpose of 'Sticks' was! Thank you, John.

  • @fast_richard
    @fast_richard 2 месяца назад +4

    Mehan was the officer who made the announcement "No Jump Tonight" when the jump was delayed by a day. The beach landings were also delayed by 24 hours so the relative timing was mostly as planned. Mehan was then killed in the plane that is engulfed in flame and crashes into the ground, killing all on board.

  • @EastPeakSlim
    @EastPeakSlim 2 месяца назад +6

    Thanks for another great reaction. I'm an old guy. Much earlier in my life, I taught history and civics at the secondary level in California. I tried to instill in my students the idea that these men who saved the world from fascist dictators truly were the Greatest Generation. May we always remember who they were and what they did.

    • @stevejette2329
      @stevejette2329 2 месяца назад +1

      East - The calendar may say that you are an 'old guy'. But I suspect you are younger than the calendar says ?

    • @EastPeakSlim
      @EastPeakSlim 2 месяца назад

      @@stevejette2329 kind of you to say

    • @stevejette2329
      @stevejette2329 2 месяца назад

      @@EastPeakSlim I have almost nothing to base my comment.
      Just a gut level hunch ...

  • @billbogamer4389
    @billbogamer4389 2 месяца назад +4

    Once while working as an usher at the US Open tennis tournament the actor who played Winters came walking through my gate. I reflexively saluted him without saying a word and he smiled and saluted me back.

  • @albinorhino6
    @albinorhino6 2 месяца назад +20

    The officer who allegedly shot the German prisoners, and who rushed the German position from outside the trench, is Lieutenant Ronald “Sparky” Spiers. Remember him for future episodes.
    It’s easy to miss in the chaos of the air drop in the opening scenes, but Meihan’s plane was the one that was engulfed in flames and crashed. The pilot yells, “Tell Meihan to get the men outta there,” and then the engine explodes, followed by the fireball.
    Great reactions, looking forward to more. The episodes only get better from here.

    • @a-6610
      @a-6610 2 месяца назад +1

      Also. Yes, shooting prisoners is a big no, no! But, most people fail to realize. They were seriously short man power. Sometimes, killing enemy prisoners is ordered when they can't be guarded or released.

    • @klonkimo
      @klonkimo 2 месяца назад

      @@albinorhino6 true story, he never smoked one cigarette his entire life. Not once, ever. Everyone just thinks he did.

    • @klonkimo
      @klonkimo 2 месяца назад +2

      @@a-6610 the entire airborne was under orders to not take prisoners. There wasn't going to be a collection point until they linked up with the seaborne infantry, which was D+3 days.

    • @RickLacy-b3x
      @RickLacy-b3x 2 месяца назад +3

      They were in fact ordered to not take prisoners initially.

    • @bjorns131stpa2
      @bjorns131stpa2 2 месяца назад

      @@RickLacy-b3x There was never a written or verbal order to the effect of no prisoners. But officers were quietly told that no one would really be looking into reports on prisoner deaths. This is follows on the heels of Operation Husky where the 82nd Airborne reported SS troops killing troopers caught up in trees and the like.

  • @waltshields5483
    @waltshields5483 2 месяца назад +57

    When you finish the series of BoB's, watch the real men of E 506 PIR. WE STAND ALONE TOGETHER | Band of Brothers Documentary

    • @dedcowbowee
      @dedcowbowee 2 месяца назад +2

      Yes, that is where the interviews were taken from right? They are really gripping.

    • @creamsiclem4433
      @creamsiclem4433 2 месяца назад +2

      In many ways, it's actually a more important watch, hard to believe but true .

    • @danharris5999
      @danharris5999 2 месяца назад +1

      One of the things they do on purpose with the intro interviews with the veterans is to not identify them. I think they want the viewer to see if they can match them up with their screen counterparts. They let the cat out of the bag at the end of episode 10, and in the documentary.

    • @hawkeyegeorge
      @hawkeyegeorge 2 месяца назад

      It's a must!

  • @jackmessick2869
    @jackmessick2869 Месяц назад +1

    An infantry company is about 100-200 soldiers. Those planes could only fit about a dozen jumpers each. So Easy Company alone took 8 to 16 aircraft to get them to France. So the ~15,000 paratroops needed more than 1000 aircraft!

  • @mikealvarez2322
    @mikealvarez2322 2 месяца назад +12

    The first soldiers landing in France were the Pathfinders. Their job was to guide the planes into their correct drop zones. Following the Pathfinders came the Paratroopers. We must keep in mind that this was a new discipline. It was pioneered in the late 20s and 30s by the Germans and Russians. In 1939 the US had one of the smallest militaries in the world. Portugal's military was larger. We had few planes, few tanks, and few of everything.

    • @DavidSmith-mt7tb
      @DavidSmith-mt7tb 2 месяца назад +3

      Worth noting the Pathfinders had horrific survival odds

    • @PolymurExcel
      @PolymurExcel Месяц назад +1

      One of the harshest jobs of the war with some of the worst survival odds.

  • @markperez7597
    @markperez7597 2 месяца назад +17

    The "flash" challege and "thunder" counter were specifically chosen as well. No word in the German language produces the TH sound, so if someone tried saying thunder and it had a german accent or it sounded like "sunder", chances are they weren't friendly.

    • @kaliwali
      @kaliwali  2 месяца назад +5

      oh wow, I didn't know this! thank you for sharing

    • @restitvtororbis5330
      @restitvtororbis5330 2 месяца назад +1

      'challenge' and 'counter' phrases were a very common thing. Even if a German could pronounce 'flash' like an English speaker, the speed you have to reply would likely throw you off even if you knew the counter. Notice how quickly they say the counter word 'thunder' when challenged. They know if they hesitate even a bit there's a chance they'll be shot. 'flash' is also a word that most German speakers would have difficulty saying in an American accent, so both words make it very difficult for a German to immitate an American even if they somehow knew both words. I'm not sure the exact phrases the US used against the Japanese, but they likely included a lot of 'L' and 'Th' sounds because i don't think either are in Japanese.

    • @Hugebull
      @Hugebull 7 дней назад

      @@restitvtororbis5330 "Liberty" was a common one. When catching the Unabomber, if I remember correctly, the reason they got the warrant against his cabin, was because the judge had served in the Pacific, where they had used "Liberty" and such. Which, in the eyes of the judge, meant that language was good enough grounds to grant a warrant.

  • @archbury918
    @archbury918 2 месяца назад +6

    New subscriber here. I watched this series when it first came out. For reference I'm a veteran of the 82nd Airborne with 26 years of service starting campaigns in Panama, Desert Storm, Bosnia, and returning to Iraq. The series brought back memories and reactions I'd forgotten about with my own experiences. I'm enjoying following the series again through your eyes. I'm extremely impressed with your insights and comments for someone with little military history and combat knowledge. I'm grateful to know there are those as yourself still interested to learn and take to heart those sacrifices made by them for us to carry on.

    • @kaliwali
      @kaliwali  2 месяца назад +1

      thank you for your service 💚 you've had an incredible journey. means a lot that you've been enjoying my videos! thank you

  • @skyhawksailor8736
    @skyhawksailor8736 2 месяца назад +5

    Again, from a retired Sailor who spent over 41 years in the Navy, Thank you for taking the time to watch this series. I will suggest you watch the other Hanks/Spielberg series, The Pacific and Masters of the Air. Band of Brothers and The Pacific series there is additional videos with more backstories of the Soldiers and Marines along with interviews of the actual Soldiers and Marines along with their Families of the Soldiers and Marines who are no longer with us.

  • @m_v__m_v
    @m_v__m_v 2 месяца назад +39

    New subscriber. Nice reaction. You really need to watch the documentary We Stand Alone Together, after you're done this series. It's where the vet interviews come from and it's the unofficial 11th episode of Band of Brothers.
    "I didnt cry as much as I thought I was going to" uh, yeah lets revisit that comment later lol.

    • @kaliwali
      @kaliwali  2 месяца назад +8

      thank you for the new sub!

  • @YN97WA
    @YN97WA 2 месяца назад +1

    I guarantee you will never be the same after watching this series. You will have a lasting respect for our greatest generation. It will make your spirit soar, and break your heart at times. Be prepared for one hell of a ride. Great reaction, young lady.

  • @JayEvans1911A1
    @JayEvans1911A1 2 месяца назад +7

    All of the soldiers of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment had spades painted on their helmets. Soldiers of other regiments of the 101st had other symbols painted on their helmets (Hearts, Clubs, or Diamonds). Lt. Meehan was the guy that stood on the Jeep that said "No jump tonight". He was on the plane that burst into flames. If Meehan wouldn't have taken over Easy Company, it probably would have been Sobel on that plane.

  • @Mini_Hayley
    @Mini_Hayley 2 месяца назад +41

    Something I find crazy is that Winters was only 26 doing all this.

    • @alanmacification
      @alanmacification 2 месяца назад +12

      My father and uncle were 20 and 19 when they landed on Sicily in July '43. Winters was an " old man "

    • @Dej24601
      @Dej24601 2 месяца назад +3

      My Dad and his friends enlisted as soon as they graduated high school in June. My Dad and a few others would not turn 18 until the autumn, but since they would have still been in training when they finally turned 18, and not yet engaged in combat, the age “requirement” was overlooked, and I was told this was not an unusual occurrence.

    • @vincentsaia6545
      @vincentsaia6545 Месяц назад

      Many of the servicemen were young. There were several senior officers who were under 40. General John Gavin who commanded the 82nd Airborne at that time was 36.

    • @PolymurExcel
      @PolymurExcel Месяц назад

      Yeah, these guys were young as hell. Hollywood always gets the are wrong and casts people too old for their rank in these movies.

  • @Dej24601
    @Dej24601 2 месяца назад +4

    Dick has traditionally been a common nickname for the full name of Richard, just as Jack was common for John, Bill for William, Jim for James, etc. Dick was not commonly used as a negative term for a person until the 1960’s/1970’s, so would not have been commonly used by the men in WW2, especially since they were expected to speak more respectfully to their leaders.

  • @richarderamirez5909
    @richarderamirez5909 2 месяца назад +1

    My mother's had two brothers serving in 1944. One in the infantry and the older in the Army Air Force. The older one was 19 years old, the younger was 18. The younger one was in the 6th wave that went in on D day, the older one it was his first bombing mission in B17 on D day. They both by the grace of God survived the war. The younger never spoke of the war, I was just a young child, born in 1944. The younger brother had PTSD though everyone called it "Shell Shocked". Even into the late "40"s there was one night I stayed overnight with my grandparents. He started sleep walking screaming and wondering through the house reliving something from the war. It was frightening to see. It took a while before my grandfather could calm him down.

  • @benjaminkirk4678
    @benjaminkirk4678 2 месяца назад +34

    While the killing of pow’s is absolutely awful and in MOST cases unforgivable, it was unfortunately necessary on d-day. There were only about 20,000 paratroopers dropped behind enemy lines who had to secure very important objectives in a very short time to insure the success of the largest invasion in history. They had no way to guard, secure, feed or care for them and to try to do so could absolutely result in 100,000’s of allied deaths and failure of the invasion. Letting them go would just allow them to rejoin the German defences with info about where the paratroopers were.

    • @crashchaser
      @crashchaser 2 месяца назад

      Still a warcrime no matter what!

    • @don_sorensen_santa_barbara
      @don_sorensen_santa_barbara 2 месяца назад +3

      Hitler had issued orders paratroopers were aware as follows. “I order, therefore:- From now on all men operating against German troops in so-called Commando raids in Europe or in Africa, are to be annihilated to the last man.” This did much to influence the way our guys dealt with prisoners.

    • @Thegoat152
      @Thegoat152 7 дней назад

      Exactly.
      Many people are repulsed watching that scene, but you really have to consider the totality of the situation.
      Moments later easy company is attacking the artillery guns with 12 men.
      Up against about 60 Germans.
      How many of those 12 were they supposed to leave behind the guard the prisoners?

  • @steveg5933
    @steveg5933 2 месяца назад +2

    I live about an hour north of the National Warplanes Museum in Genesseo NY. Their pride & joy is the C-47 (the transports the Airborne jumped out of) W-7. Affectionately known as Whiskey 7. She was the lead ship in the second wave of the invasion. She is still flying today. In fact on the 75th anniversary of the invasion she flew back to England, then to Normandy this time with an old friend, the last surviving member of the stick she carried that day. This time he did a tandem jump with a current member of the 101st. He stated it was a lovely jump, nobody was shooting at him. He was 97 at that time. W7 is lovingly restored & maintained by a crew of volunteers. She flies airshows all year.

  • @christophercurtis4131
    @christophercurtis4131 2 месяца назад +11

    All I can say about this episode is Thank God for Richard Winters. Speaking from my own experience as an enlisted man in the Navy, Winters was the kind of officer you want leading you. My favorite part of this episode is the end, when Winters thanks God for surviving D-Day and when he makes his promise about finding a small piece of land and living the rest of his life in peace. Ther are a couple of great books about the life of Richard Winters; he even co-wrote one of them before he passed away. Some of the other men from Easy who survived the war wrote books as well.

  • @Short_Round1999
    @Short_Round1999 2 месяца назад +5

    10:17 This is something they don’t tell you in school. The large amount of soldiers that were conscripted into the German army. Even like here, a German-American citizen who was born and raised in America went to volunteer and fight for the German army. Also, in reality they actually worked right across the street from each other, they changed it cuz the real story was too unbelievable

  • @alexs.3492
    @alexs.3492 2 месяца назад +25

    Fun fact, @kaliwaali, the attack on Brecourt Manor is still taught at West Point today. Dick Winters is a legend.

    • @gabrielstone9293
      @gabrielstone9293 2 месяца назад +7

      Yeah, says at the end of the episode. I think everyone knows lol

    • @brianjoslyn7538
      @brianjoslyn7538 26 дней назад

      True blue American hero.

  • @Forgottenfriend56
    @Forgottenfriend56 2 месяца назад +1

    Band of brothers, The Pacific and Masters of The Air are on my top 5 shows of all time, all shows did a perfect job portraying the two different theaters of war and how combat varies between branches. I’m hoping as well the do a Vietnam war show like this as well there’re veterans still alive that can share their story. Welcome home to all Veterans

  • @krisfrederick5001
    @krisfrederick5001 2 месяца назад +5

    Well, this is when the sh*t gets real. "We're not lost Private...we're in Normandy." This one line displays Winter's ability to instill confidence in his men, even unarmed in the face of all adversity. And this soldier wasn't even a member of Easy Company. Currahee ♠

  • @PolymurExcel
    @PolymurExcel Месяц назад +1

    Yes, Spiers, the officer in question did shoot those German prisoners. At least he did in the show, I don’t remember if he did it in real life as well. Think about it though, they had just jumped the night before, are scattered across the entire operating area, are completely surrounded by German forces, and are completely cut off with probably zero communication with command at that point. The airborne are in no position to be able to supply resources and men to keep those prisoners under guard. According to the Geneva convention, what he did was indeed a war crime as the Germans had already surrendered. Sadly, with more pressing matters, they were unsurrendered and dead men tell no tale. I have no idea what I would have down in his position. I mean, we all saw what could happen if the US forces let the prisoners go in Saving Private Ryan.

    • @Hugebull
      @Hugebull 7 дней назад

      He told Winters that the story was true and that he had done it when Winters was writing his book. And that he had no problem with Winters putting it in the book.
      They had orders to not take prisoners within a certain window of time during the opening parts of D-Day.

  • @sebjones1566
    @sebjones1566 4 дня назад

    My Grandad was flying a Mosquito Fighter/Bomber plane for the RAF. Doing bombing and Gun Runs on German positions/infrastructure on D-DAY+1 and onwards.
    One operation was supporting US Airborne troops couple miles south of Carentan to stall the German reinforcements "Panzer Division" coming from the South and West.

  • @LucasxDucas
    @LucasxDucas 2 месяца назад +2

    Dick Winters said in an interview that he called Ronald Spiers to ask about shooting the POWs. Spiers didn’t hesitate and said they were under orders to not take prisoners. Winters noted that Spiers and Bill Guarnere were trained killers, and that comment shouldn’t been taken as negative against either man. They did their jobs well.

  • @kenstill-vx4vi
    @kenstill-vx4vi 2 месяца назад

    The 101st Airborne Division was consisted of 4 Regiments...the 501st, 502nd, and 506th Parachute Infantry, and the 327th Glider Infantry. Each one had a marking on the helmets one card suit for each Regiment, such as Spade for the 506th.

  • @PaulDear-jb2bu
    @PaulDear-jb2bu 2 месяца назад +1

    Another great reaction from you. The whole of Easy Co probably occupied about 8 - 10 planes with about 18 men in each plane. Meehan was the guy in the tent with Winters when they worked out that they were jumping into Normandy in the first episode and also said in front of the gathered men that there was a German garrison in the area they were landing in and that Easy Co would destroy that garrison. He was also in the plane where the propeller caught fire and the fireball entered the fuselage. You may also note that when the propeller caught fire, one of the pilots said to the other that, "you better tell Meehan to get them out of there", just before the propeller blew up. I hope that helps you to identify Meehan. Ps, Dick is another name for Richard, just like Bob is for Robert and Bill is for William, so his name is really Richard Winters.👍

  • @RP_Williams
    @RP_Williams 2 месяца назад +2

    They don't reveal who is who until episode 10, but they did a good job of some of the casting and the actors actually look like the interviewed veterans they play. And Dick used to be short for Richard back in the day (eg. The Dick Cavett show). And while it's actually a war crime, Speirs shot those POWs under order (as it was D-day, and they had nowhere they could safely keep the POWs, and there was no other option).

  • @mr.invisable6919
    @mr.invisable6919 2 месяца назад

    That German POW actually worked across the street from Malarkey. They changed it to 100 miles because they thought no one would believe it.

  • @TD-mg6cd
    @TD-mg6cd 2 месяца назад +1

    Malarkey and the German actually worked across the street from each other, but the producers didn't think that the audience would believe that.

  • @legendareNz
    @legendareNz 2 месяца назад +17

    There was no place, not enough resources to keep prisoners at this point. Also the german grenades were not fragmentation grenades. Just explosive.

    • @MS-wz9jm
      @MS-wz9jm 2 месяца назад +4

      That may be true, but they were not supposed to be executing prisoners. That wasn't spears doing his job.

    • @Yawnzee_
      @Yawnzee_ 2 месяца назад +7

      ​@MS-wz9jm yea because we all know Germany treated their prisoners with the utmost respect right?

    • @Morten_Storvik
      @Morten_Storvik 2 месяца назад +7

      @@Yawnzee_ That`s not an excuse.

    • @2971username
      @2971username 2 месяца назад +3

      At least he gave them a last cigarette.

    • @Yawnzee_
      @Yawnzee_ 2 месяца назад +1

      @@Morten_Storvik I disagree

  • @KimBanez
    @KimBanez 2 месяца назад

    The show is based on a book from the perspective of Easy Company. In real life things happen that you might observe but don’t know the back story. Sprinkled throughout the episodes are little true things that happen,but like in real life, you see it but don’t necessarily know why. The soldier looking for battalion headquarters and shot in the head really happened. Compton didn’t drop the grenade out of clumsiness. He was bumped into from behind. He was an All-American catcher at UCLA and his throwing prowess was evident with several other grenades. His gun wasn’t on safety of jammed out of negligence. Like Winters he lost his gun on the jump and got one from an injured British soldier. Unable to test fire it b4 the assault, he didn’t realize the firing pin was broken. Notice on the assault on the gun battery he never uses a rifle. Spiers jumped out of the trench because it was unfinished and didn’t make it all the way to the artill 8:21 ery. He shot the prisoners because the paratroopers had objectives, were low in manpower, and behind enemy lines. They had nowhere to take the prisoners and couldn’t afford to use men to guard them.

  • @TD-mg6cd
    @TD-mg6cd 2 месяца назад

    Meehan was the very first speaker in the series, "NO JUMP TONIGHT!"

  • @Short_Round1999
    @Short_Round1999 2 месяца назад +1

    12:04 The markings on the helmet is an identification method to tell who is from what regiment and what company. The Spade with the little square under it, means 506th Easy Company

  • @jeff-ni5cy
    @jeff-ni5cy 2 месяца назад +2

    Lt. Mehaan was the one saying no jump tonight at the start of the series. His aircraft was the one where all the men burned.
    A little fact about Damien Lewis the guy who plays Lt.Winters. He's English but his American accent was so good that when he spoke in his original tounge they thought that he was faking.
    This might surprise you but alot of easy company are being played by commonwealth actors.

    • @fast_richard
      @fast_richard 2 месяца назад

      My favorite is Liebgott being played by a Scotsman. The actor did a fantastic job of staying in character and maintaining the accent throughout the casting interview process.

  • @mikemax9076
    @mikemax9076 2 месяца назад +3

    The stick grenade was mainly a concussion grenade but had a collar that was added for fragmentation thay also had thier own version of a pineapple grenade.

    • @captainz9
      @captainz9 2 месяца назад

      Also referred to as the "potato masher" because of its appearance with the stick handle.

  • @TD-mg6cd
    @TD-mg6cd 2 месяца назад

    The flight for Easy Company, from Upottery, England tp Normandy, was about 200 miles.

  • @charlize1253
    @charlize1253 2 месяца назад

    D-Day will always be one of a kind. The US tried the first-ever large-scale nighttime paratroop drop for surprise, but as the episode shows, it took so long for the troops to get organized that most didn't achieve their objectives until the next morning, so no major night paratroop drop has been attempted by any country ever since.

  • @PickledShark
    @PickledShark 2 месяца назад

    New to your channel, I I just want to say, thank you for checking out Band of Brothers. This show means a lot to me and many other people, and I think it’s one that will shift your perspective of WWII forever. Everyone should watch this.

  • @mikealvarez2322
    @mikealvarez2322 2 месяца назад

    The Spade was the helmet marking for Easy company of the 506 Regiment. Different units had different markings. The glider units had a playing card club. Artillery I think was a circle. Other units had hearts 💗 or diamonds ♦️. The markings made it easier to identify or organize the different units.

  • @baseball-4-life434
    @baseball-4-life434 2 месяца назад

    Ive seen Band of Brothers to meny times to count, but I still get choked up when 4:03 say, "We lost a lot of people that night..."

  • @mikealvarez2322
    @mikealvarez2322 2 месяца назад

    After the Normandy Beachheads were established and different units linked up, the real battles took place. It took the Allies nearly 2 months to break out in Operation Cobra. The hedgerow region of Normandy provided the Germans ideal defensive positions.

  • @saaamember97
    @saaamember97 2 месяца назад +2

    The German grenade did not kill Joe Toye in that trench, because of the German High Command's theory on the use of grenades. The Allies and the Germans had two different theories from each other. The German theory was that a grenade was to be used as a percussion device to temporarily stun an enemy, so that a German soldier had enough time to close the distance and shoot the enemy with their guns. The German grenades were colloquially called "Potato Mashers" because it had a thin metal cannister on the end of a long stick. When the device exploded, it did not have enough metal in it's composition to create much shrapnel ..... But, it sure made a loud percussive BANG!
    The Allies theory (Especially in America) was that a grenade should have a thick, heavy metal body, so that when it exploded, it sent razor sharp pieces of metal in all directions. When you look at a standard American WWII grenade, you will see that it looks as if the metal body of the grenade is "sectioned" into small squares. When it exploded, these sections were extremely deadly. Because of it's look, the American grenade was fondly referred to as the "Pineapple."

  • @jackray333
    @jackray333 2 месяца назад

    Our grandfather's and Great Grandfather's were the biggest badasses of all time.
    Good reaction.
    And a heads-up. This series is about to get very real. But so worth it in the end. Good job.

  • @lukecowen
    @lukecowen 2 месяца назад +1

    Prisoners were more of a liability if held at the time. They are invading so until proper headquarters could be established, prisoners were mostly shot at the beginning. Once landings were complete then prisoners were taken and held.

  • @echinorlax
    @echinorlax 2 месяца назад

    @4:30 - First planes took off around 10:30 pm, and the drop started around 0:45am. Considering the time needed for preparations before the jump, they had less than two hours of idle time to dwell on what was about to happen. It wasn't a long distance between airfields and dropzones, all things considered.

  • @aksimms
    @aksimms 2 месяца назад

    I've watched probably 15 BoB reaction series and you're by far the most observant and attentive person I've seen to the details of what's happening and the historical significance. Keep it up!

  • @gabrielstone9293
    @gabrielstone9293 2 месяца назад +1

    @14:12 Joe Toye was wounded multiple times during the war. At some point during the series he says "Whats a guy gotta do to get killed around here?" 😅

  • @munchausen8755
    @munchausen8755 2 месяца назад

    The white spade on their helmets is a symbol to identify their regiment 506 PIR. Some scenes will show symbols for soldiers in other regiments - clubs, hearts, circles, and squares. Colonel Sink, the officer with the southern accent who transferred Sobel, was the 506th regimental commander.

  • @edm240b9
    @edm240b9 2 месяца назад

    14:54 Malarkey went out there to try to grab a Luger, which is a German handgun that was in common use at the time. Many soldiers did this, it’s one of the reasons why there’s a bunch of Lugers on the US firearms collector’s market today.

  • @9thSapper
    @9thSapper 2 месяца назад +2

    Loving your reactions to BOB. Just wish they were around 40 minutes long.

  • @thomasherron5809
    @thomasherron5809 2 месяца назад

    Very thoughtful and genuine reaction. It warms my heart to see young people interested in these important things. Thumbs up. Subscribed!

  • @roger3141
    @roger3141 2 месяца назад

    I think you are the first commentator who spotted the spade on the side of he helmets. It gets harder to watch as you go on, but our schools are woefully lacking with teaching history and what it really means to be American. Thank you for watching this with us.

  • @leewaffe3
    @leewaffe3 2 месяца назад

    @10:28 All throughout WWI and WWII thousands of Americans joined Foreign Armies before the United States officially joined in. In WWI you had the famed fighter squadron "Lafayette Escadrille" made of American volunteers in the early French Air Force. There was also the French Foreign Legion who took in men from any background who were willing to fight for France in exchange for a new life/ identity and if they survived their enlistment they could choose to become French Citizens (still exists today). In WW2 you had loads of Americans who went to fight beginning as early as the Spanish Civil War in 1936. In WW2 Americans would cross into Canada to join Canadian commonwealth forces to fight the Nazis including the famed "Eagle Squadron" of the Royal air force. Some later joined the fight against Russia with Finland in the Winter and continuation wars. The most notable group was the American Volunteer Group fighting the Japanese in China, they were later more famously known as "The Flying Tigers". Once the United States entered the war, these men would usually be swept into the regular American forces.
    The Nazis exploited the prejudice and fascist ideologies of individuals from a far including the USA where there was a growing movement for an American Nazi party mimicking Germany's. The Waffen SS created volunteer fighting or support units made of foreign nationals of occupied territory including Eastern Europeans, French, Africans, and Far eastern legions. Some included British and Americans who joined the Nazis and whom later met life imprisonment or execution by the Allies for treason after the war was won. Anyone caught by the Russians were summarily executed if they were lucky, the unfortunate ones were sentenced to life in hard labor camps in Siberia where they would essentially be worked to death.

  • @thomasmonahan1928
    @thomasmonahan1928 Месяц назад

    Real grenades explode mostly up and out because the ground directs the blast up with smaller amounts going sideways, so being low helped keep Joe safe

  • @jackmessick2869
    @jackmessick2869 Месяц назад

    Airborne nearly always jumps before ground forces advance. That way they have the element of surprise.

  • @americandad8903
    @americandad8903 2 месяца назад

    You will definitely begin to learn their names. It will definitely get harder the further you go, but worth it. Many of the details are true. Popeye apologizing for getting shot. The guy looking for headquarters in the middle of a firefight and getting shot. Joe nearly getting blown up twice by grenades. Those were details taken from when they interviewed the veterans. It’s an extremely accurate series! Can’t wait to see the rest

  • @stuka80
    @stuka80 2 месяца назад

    3 allied paratroop divisions made the jump the night before D-Day, 2 american and 1 british, roughly 20,000 troops total. Also the jump was made at night because objectives had to be taken to help smooth out the seaborn landings arriving early in the morning while the darkness also provided cover for the paratroops and sow chaos and confusion on the German defenders.

  • @Camino377
    @Camino377 Месяц назад

    Something of note about the medals from Brecourt Manor, Colonel Sink originally recommended Winters for the Congressional Medal of Honor, which is the highest military award possible. It had to be downgraded to the Distinguished Service Cross, which is the second highest, due to a policy of only one Medal of Honor can be awarded per division, with the 101st's going to Col Robert Cole.

  • @rg20322
    @rg20322 2 месяца назад +2

    I agree that Sobel was necessary for the training but not as a leader. Sometimes you just need to know your strengths and weaknesses.

  • @nickomatick8394
    @nickomatick8394 2 месяца назад

    Winters was set to receive the Medal of Honor for what he did at Brecourt Manor. I don't fully remember to circumstances of why he didn't but i THINK it was because someone else in the army was awarded the MoH. With what he did and how it made the landings at Utah beach "easier" for the men to secure the beach, he should have absolutely deserved the MoH but earning a distinguished service cross is deserved as well.

  • @vincentdesjardins1354
    @vincentdesjardins1354 2 месяца назад

    02:02 "New gear and anti-sickness pills"
    For a first time viewer Kali sure catches a lot of the small details that made this show a masterpiece.
    Way to go lil sis, keep it up !... Currahee !!!

  • @mikealvarez2322
    @mikealvarez2322 2 месяца назад

    When you are playing with dangerous weapons accidents are bound to happen. My grandfather was in the cigar making business in Cuba. In 1914 he and my grandma were sent to Tampa for 2 years. During this time my father and his older brother were born. Then the family moved back to Cuba were the rest of the 6 kids were born. My Dad and his brother had dual citizenship. Right after Pearl Harbor my Dad took his birth certificate to the US Counsel's office to request passage to the US to enlist. He left his young bride with her family, came to the US, and enlisted. He never made it overseas as he was severely wounded in a training accident. He almost lost both his arms and had difficulty moving them all his life. He was discharged but decided he wanted to stay in the US. It took him over a year to bring my mother over as she was a Cuban citizen. She finally came and that's how I and my sisters wound up natural born American citizens. Playing with explosives and guns can be dangerous. I'm not sure how many casualties in WW2 were from accidents (the Red Ball Express had quite a few) and how many were from friendly fire but I think it's more than most of us imagine.😮

  • @EthanKandler-ti8px
    @EthanKandler-ti8px 2 месяца назад

    It’s estimated only about 10% of the airborne paratroopers landed in their correct drop zones, and less than 50% ever made it to their intended landing area. This was Operation Overlord, about 3x mire paratroopers were dropped in the Operation Market Garden failure.

  • @Hypureswe
    @Hypureswe 2 месяца назад

    In World War II, the soldiers of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the American 101st Airborne Division were marked with the spades symbol painted on the sides of their helmets. In this capacity, it was used to represent good luck, due to its fortunate connotations in card playing.

  • @Dej24601
    @Dej24601 2 месяца назад

    As other commentators have said, killing prisoners during the chaos of an assault was a result of various factors-every available soldier was needed for their assigned duties, but also there was no place established which could have served as a “safe” holding area. The location was still not definitely or totally in the control of the Allies- they were still under attack even though they were having successes pushing inland. Roads were still under threat of attack, so there would have been problems transporting prisoners. Germans controlled the land as the Allies advanced inland, so the only place to keep prisoners would have been alongside the troops or to try to get them back to shore and shipped back to England. As the Allies made a permanent presence and could control their environments, and more troops arrived to replace those lost on the initial assault, the traditional rules of war and POW’s were more likely to be followed.

  • @robertsistrunk6631
    @robertsistrunk6631 29 дней назад

    The spade on the helmet denotes they are from the 506th regiment if you look close you can see a little bar. A bar on the top of the spade denotes HQ on the left side 1st battalion on the bottom of the spade 2nd battalion on the left side 3rd battalion

  • @rawschri
    @rawschri 2 месяца назад

    Roughly 23,400 paratroopers were dropped from between 00.13 and 6.35 am on the morning of 6th June .... around 13,000 American and 10,400 British, Commonwealth, Free French and others ..

  • @richardstephens5570
    @richardstephens5570 2 месяца назад +10

    In real life Sobel did jump into Normandy as commander of the 506th's service company. After landing, he assembled four men and they destroyed a German machine gun nest with grenades. Then he joined the rest of the division near Carentan. Sobel was awarded the Bronze Star and spent the rest of the war as a staff officer and logistics officer.

    • @2104dogface
      @2104dogface 2 месяца назад +1

      NOPE, WRONG he never made the jump per all the Reg. paperwork & Combat journal has him listed coming ashore with the seaborne element to bring in needed supplies , he didn't get a star on his jump wings (Combat Jump) he got the invasion arrow head. he NEVER took out a MG nest either, the bronze star was for insuring the supplies made it too the reg.

    • @richardstephens5570
      @richardstephens5570 2 месяца назад

      @@2104dogface On June 15th, 1944 an article in the Pittsburgh Press newspaper mentions Capt. Herbert M. Sobel landing near St. Omer-Dumont and the events I described on D-Day. Sobel was also awarded the Combat Infantryman Badge(CIB), which is only given to soldiers who directly participate in active ground combat with the enemy.

    • @2104dogface
      @2104dogface 2 месяца назад

      @@richardstephens5570 yeah still wrong , i was in E/506th Reenacted back in the 90's. i spent time with the Real men of Easy co. NO ONE saw him take out the MG nest and he's not listed on any stick that jumped., NO ONE saw him at the airfield. (Ed Mauser was the only one who later in life says he saw him, but at that time his memory wasn't good) also the 2nd unit CO (E/506 reenacted) is close to Sobel's son and has all the Co. & 506th Reg. paper work & is working on a 4 book series on the history of Easy co.. BTW basicly everyone in normandy got a CIB

  • @edm240b9
    @edm240b9 2 месяца назад

    13:29 yes, sometimes grenades won’t explode because the fuse doesn’t ignite properly or due to user error. However, that’s not what happened there. The grenade exploded, but Toye was left unharmed.

  • @Short_Round1999
    @Short_Round1999 2 месяца назад

    7:39 This is why they drilled into their heads the sand tables and briefing information, so if they did miss their drop like they did they’d be able to find their way to the rally point with just a map and compass, or purely by memory

  • @baliri
    @baliri 2 месяца назад

    4:40 They were dropped by parachute the night before D-Day so that they could destroy the cannons and enemy positions, and when the others landed on the beach the next day they would have a clear path. The problem was that they were dropped scattered everywhere and very few of them They were able to fulfill their mission, which is why when the soldiers landed on the beaches of Normandy they encountered so much resistance from the Germans.

  • @BruceRKF
    @BruceRKF 2 месяца назад

    Hey there, Kali, movie notes!
    A lot of details have already been pointed out by other comments, so I will concentrate on the technical side: The filmmaking in this show is outstanding. Camera, lighting and editing are incredible. For example, you can actually see things during night scenes, but still get that it is supposed to be pitch dark. Other shows could learn something about how to shoot a night scene. Then there is the camera work, like the shots following the soldiers, excellently done by the camera operators. Just wanted to get some appreciation out for that, since camera and lighting work often seems to go overlooked.
    The names of the soldiers will come to you and by the end of the show you will know them by heart. Also, don't worry about not crying too much this episode, you will do more of that sooner or later ;)
    See you next time!

  • @0sM1093
    @0sM1093 2 месяца назад

    In regards to Volksdeutsche, my great grandfather was born in Germany and moved his family to the United States and the first of his children born in the US was my grandfather. When Germany declared war on the US and my grandfather and his brother joined the US Army, my great grandfather was absolutely livid, and all but disowned them both. He felt their enlistment was a betrayal to Germany. So that was the kind of mentality that Hitler tried to capitalize on when he called for everyone of German heritage to join the German military, and I probably wouldn't exist if my great grandfather had shipped his sons back to Germany.

    • @captainz9
      @captainz9 2 месяца назад +1

      My maternal grandfather came to the US in like 1897, my mom was born in '33, she remembers him listening to Hitler on the shortwave radio at like 5yo saying how Hitler would do "great things for Germany", and how upset he was when Hitler declared war on the US after Pearl Harbor.

  • @PaulDear-jb2bu
    @PaulDear-jb2bu 2 месяца назад

    D-Day was originally 5th June but was postponed for 24hrs and everything was put back till the 6th June, including all the ships and and all the soldiers had to wait aboard the ships for that 24hrs.

  • @salto1994
    @salto1994 2 месяца назад

    the guy who played John Hall and Damian Lewis will be in another WWII movie called "Pressure" about the weather prior to D-Day. excited to see it when it comes out

  • @jose123
    @jose123 2 месяца назад

    the spade on the helmet was the symbol 506th pir used for identification. the rest of the 101st division used different card symbols along with other blobs and shapes. 501st had diamonds, 502nd had hearts, the glider boys had the Club. some of the other airborne regiments in other divisions also had some different helmet markings but not as much as the 101st.

  • @cheesehands3112
    @cheesehands3112 19 дней назад

    He wasn't supposed to do that, no, but it happened pretty often.
    I can't remember exactly what it was called, but the allies invented a second classification for captured German soldiers besides "prisoner of war", something like "disarmed enemy combatant" or something, that allowed them to ignore their own laws on treatment of those prisoners. There's never been a lot of talk about it officially (but you'll see it mentioned a few times in journals/diaries by soldiers at the time), but it wasn't uncommon for those Germans to just "disappear".
    One of the few slipups they had in regards to hiding these acts, was releasing a figure that some 200k-400k German(s) [prisoners] were "unaccounted for" after the war (on the western allied side).

  • @bjorns131stpa2
    @bjorns131stpa2 2 месяца назад

    Just to clear something up, Spears got his men out of the trenches because he was worried of mines and traps. There was also another right angle turn in the trench that the Germans might well have set up an MG42 like the one Winters took out. In reality the casualties suffered by Dog Company weren't as extreme as the show makes it out to be. Most of his troops stayed back to provide a base of fire.

  • @Funrides91
    @Funrides91 2 месяца назад

    20:18 lol he was a legend from the beginning.

  • @RedSinter
    @RedSinter 2 месяца назад

    They tried to give Winters the Congressional Medal of Honor for his Command of Easy and his basic Heroics he refused. At the end when he, the real Winters give his thoughts on being with his men brakes me down. A True Leader, a Heroic Example, a Great Man.

  • @KaEl-Alpha
    @KaEl-Alpha 2 месяца назад

    I watched it as it was new - in the early 2000ths - in a 5.1 Surround sound environment. It was mindblowing...

  • @vincentsaia6545
    @vincentsaia6545 Месяц назад

    Lipton later admitted that climbing the tree was a rookie mistake.

  • @Sp33gan
    @Sp33gan 2 месяца назад

    Had Sobel still been with Easy Company, he'd have been in the plane where Meehan was. It would have meant Sobel was currently missing and not Lieutenant Meehan.

  • @johnhippely2125
    @johnhippely2125 2 месяца назад

    Lt. Meehan was in the plane shown with the engine fire. The final resting place of that plane still won't grow anything today due to the fire/fuel intensity. There are other RUclips channels that have visited that site if you'd like more details.

  • @ericdulyon4601
    @ericdulyon4601 2 месяца назад

    Loving your reactions so far very genuine. Nice to see

  • @duanetelesha
    @duanetelesha 2 месяца назад

    Yes, Winters as you will see in up comming episodes has concern for his men. If you get a chance watch the movie The Longest Day, it shows the story of D-Day from the American, British, French and German perspective an older movie from 1962. The Lt who alledgely shot the Germans is Lt Spiers, he is a bad ass. love the reaction.

  • @bakersmileyface
    @bakersmileyface 2 месяца назад

    Lt. Speirs (who executed those prisoners), was praised for his actions at brecourt manor.
    In the show, you could see his actions as being reckless. However everyone there described it as brave. He himself led an assault with 5 men on a fortified enemy position, during a battle that had taken 2 hours. He captured that final gun by leaving the trenches and exposing himself to enemy fire. He lost 2 men, but he saved his other mens lives with his quick thinking and tactics on several occasions during that battle.
    As for the execution of prisoners, well there's no moral justification for it. They had orders to not take prisoners because holding prisoners would compromise the mission. Holding prisoners would tie the airbourne forces down, when they needed to be highly mobile and able to secure key objectives and conduct raids on fortified enemy positions, then retreat to safety.I imagine from their perspective, it's either execute these prisoners or they could potentially get in the way of saving the lives of your brothers in arms. A tough decision for any person to make. Just something to consider before casting judgement on something that's easy to dismiss as being wrong.

  • @mikegoodwin2386
    @mikegoodwin2386 2 месяца назад

    Buck Compton is often shown throwing grenades. I don't think this series mentions that he was a pitcher on his college baseball team and was known to be an ace with grenades (and darts, apparently, lol).

  • @jerrykessler2478
    @jerrykessler2478 2 месяца назад

    The spade on the helmet was an indicator of which Regiment they were in.

  • @rayvanhorn1534
    @rayvanhorn1534 2 месяца назад +1

    Because you have shown such respect towards these men & your thoughtful commentary... I'm along for the ride; subbing.

  • @mikealvarez2322
    @mikealvarez2322 2 месяца назад +2

    The Germans fight gor the Fatherland, the Russians fight for the Motherland, the British fight for King and Country, and the Americans fight for souvenirs.😊

  • @TimMurphy-f3t
    @TimMurphy-f3t 2 месяца назад

    The spad on the helment represent the battle. Othrr 101 unit had clubs,heart and dimonds