The Real Life and Huge Ending of Captain Herbert Sobel of "Band of Brothers"

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  • Опубликовано: 28 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @fbcpraise
    @fbcpraise Год назад +2498

    They all agreed he was a great husband and father. The wife he doted on divorced him. No one from his family attended his funeral. Speechless.

    • @cooper7354
      @cooper7354 Год назад +381

      That is crazy. How ungrateful we have become as Americans. As much of a jackhole of a commander as he seemed no one deserves to be abandoned at the end of their life. 😢

    • @letsgobrandon6281
      @letsgobrandon6281 Год назад +169

      ​@@cooper7354 it's not an American thing. But it is sad,I now have respect for this man

    • @1979draaven
      @1979draaven Год назад +267

      Maybe he wasn't that great then.

    • @A-small-amount-of-peas
      @A-small-amount-of-peas Год назад +265

      Maybe there's something we don't know?

    • @dafyduck79
      @dafyduck79 Год назад +89

      He was an asshole as a father as well, but they tried at least not to destroy him totally

  • @garfunkle5447
    @garfunkle5447 Год назад +580

    Even watching the series, I thought that Sobel tough training made the men tougher. And making the men hate him oddly enough brought the men closer together. Thank you Sobel.

    • @FPCCEM
      @FPCCEM Год назад +12

      I thought the same. I don't say this to knock Maj. Winters’ leadership. But Sobels’ toughness likely contributed to Winters’ cohesion with his unit and contributed to his leadership success. Sobel seems like a man of strong principles and conviction that could be unwavering to a fault. I’d say HBO probably displayed Winters’ in an overly favorable light and did some disservice to Sobel.That being said, I have all the respect in the world for all of them.

    • @barrymckockinner9292
      @barrymckockinner9292 Год назад +9

      ​@WPFD451 mayne brought them closer, but Major Winters was a far better tactician and combat leader.

    • @AmbassadorScorpio
      @AmbassadorScorpio 11 месяцев назад

      Hamas is funded by bb

    • @Chad-xh8zs
      @Chad-xh8zs 11 месяцев назад +3

      I am also reminded of the sergeant major in generation kill that was hassling everyone about their mustaches. There was a point in the series where morale was flagging, and he offered to go around and harass everyone about the grooming standard to serve as a common enemy for the men.

    • @XaviRonaldo0
      @XaviRonaldo0 11 месяцев назад +2

      It's not a commander's job to be a friend to his subordinates

  • @tharrigan5661
    @tharrigan5661 Год назад +2113

    Nice tribute. I had read that some of the men of Easy Company, after the war, realized how Sobel’s training helped them survive the war. Several tried to get Sobel to attend post war gatherings of Easy Company but he never went. If he had gone, perhaps some healing could have occurred on all sides.

    • @razor6888
      @razor6888 Год назад +150

      Thats possible, and well said. Dislike by a training officer is part of the process, train hard fight easy (sort of speak) Bottom line,good or bad, this officer helped make the unit what it became,...a bar and standard that any that serve strive to be. May history hold judgement against this man.. when a nation needed him , he did as he thought best to train the best possible. We can have pity on how his life came to a end. But a nation should not dismiss what he did accomplish.

    • @utpharmboy2006
      @utpharmboy2006 Год назад +105

      he had an important job and in many ways he excelled at it. his superiors realized his strengths and made sure to take advantage of them while removing his authority in areas of weakness. that is the definition of an effective chain of command. Sobels biggest weakness was not realizing his own weaknesses but in the end, he loved his country and he probably saved lives and for that he should be honored. 🇺🇲

    • @superstraighthhwhitemale8880
      @superstraighthhwhitemale8880 Год назад +129

      His training may have helped some original Easy Company members survive, but their survival is also because he wasn't in command of Easy Company during real combat operations. Not a single one of them would have survived if he led them in combat, and Easy's NCO's knew that long before D-Day.

    • @utpharmboy2006
      @utpharmboy2006 Год назад +7

      @@superstraighthhwhitemale8880 correct. see my comment above.

    • @mahatmacoat2793
      @mahatmacoat2793 Год назад +39

      My son always says that what he learned from his DI's at Parris Island saved his life more than once in Iraq and Afghanistan. 18 of those in his company weren't so lucky.

  • @oldsarge7005
    @oldsarge7005 Год назад +895

    His training was indeed tough and ultimately saved lives. Part of what made Easy company such a tight unit was the fact that they banded together with their collective dislike of his treatment.
    As a former Drill Sergeant, I understand his methods, I don't agree with the extent of some of his methods, but understand them.

    • @justinplaysguitar
      @justinplaysguitar Год назад +9

      I was the 101st like on your comment lol

    • @sergiozammel8261
      @sergiozammel8261 Год назад +14

      Yes I agree, it was not accident that Easy company ended up the crack team that it was, no thanks to Captain Sobel's bastardry. It was this punishing training that prepared them for what was to come, and I believe he had the men's welfare at heart, like when he ordered the pouring out of the canteens.
      He said to Dick Winters this is Easy company, meaning - this is a special squad and it's mine. He knew they were not headed for a Sunday school picnic.
      God speed Captain Sobel , because of you they were a bunch of bad asses.

    • @GravesRWFiA
      @GravesRWFiA Год назад +13

      he pushed them too far. it was all stick and never a carrot so he lost their respect. years later the enlisted men who came through the war actually credited him with giving them such good conditioning. supposedly aft BoB aired his sister showed up at a reunion and it fell to Guarniere (sp?) to explain the truth to her about her brother. the officers never got over their contempt for sobel.

    • @about99ninjas56
      @about99ninjas56 Год назад +4

      Agreed. Civilians don't understand that he knew that all those extra push ups and runs would make them stronger when it was about to matter most. A captain once told my unit that he didn't want to lay in bed at night knowing he could have done more that day, and those words have always carried with me. You can party ot 7p and when the time comes to act, your body will fail you, or you grind these men and women into something better, tougher, more resilient to what they may face one day. The ultimate form of "you'd rather have it and not need it, I stead of needing g it and not having it". He sacrificed his friendships for their futures. Its a good trade all day. Sad how he ended up, as many great men do.

    • @lokiman2256
      @lokiman2256 Год назад +1

      Some of the best military commanders in history understood that fear and resentment can be powerful motivators. sometimes to prepare men for what combat will unleash upon them you need to be brutal.
      The side in a fight that turns around and runs first will always lose. His training helped those men learn how to hunker down and weather the storm.

  • @wilsonle61
    @wilsonle61 Год назад +761

    Now for once this was a truly sad and undeserved ending and not just clickbait. RIP Col. Sobel.

    • @RogerOnTheRight
      @RogerOnTheRight Год назад +2

      How did he become a colonel, if he left the army at the end of the war as a captain? Something missing here.

    • @wilsonle61
      @wilsonle61 Год назад +26

      @@RogerOnTheRight he was recalled to Active Duty for Korea, and after that was National Guard (Reserves). He retired from the Guard at the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. (But it is custom to call them Colonel in brevity).

    • @stephenb2276
      @stephenb2276 Год назад +7

      Yeah, it kind of was click bate. The series paints him out to be a terrible person, yet this video showed he was actually a really decent guy

    • @RevolverOcelot79
      @RevolverOcelot79 Год назад +4

      @@stephenb2276He was a terrible person to his troops.

    • @harry80124hill
      @harry80124hill Год назад +9

      @@stephenb2276 treated his soldiers like shit and his family disliked him so much he died alone? Yeah sounds like a great guy

  • @darkzak47
    @darkzak47 Год назад +267

    Having read Band of Brothers and Richard Winters book, Beyond Band of Brothers, they did reach out to Sobel after the war, to invite him to the reunions, but he apparently declined. Despite the antagonisms between everyone, they did recognize that Sobel did make easy company.

    • @jackprescott9652
      @jackprescott9652 Год назад +11

      Yeah but he didn`t want to go to the reunions. Why? I think he couldn`t let the pass behind so i think he was a resentful person. Another question i have is why his family left him is he was such a great man. I think this video tries to sell a better side of him, but i don`t buy it.

    • @Aviator-Chicken
      @Aviator-Chicken Год назад +14

      @@jackprescott9652
      There is absolutely some merit to the idea he was a very hard man. I mean as you stated if he was so great then why did no members of his family attend his funeral? Why did his wife divorce him etc
      His story is a very sad one but there’s more to this story that just isn’t public.

    • @kammmmal211
      @kammmmal211 Год назад +3

      ​@@jackprescott9652maybe he felt akward to meet them because all guy from easy company doing well without him while

    • @nowheretohideit
      @nowheretohideit Год назад

      just respect someone has passaway

    • @USMC49er
      @USMC49er 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@Aviator-Chicken The concept of PTSD was relatively unknown back then. Sobel had trouble coping with it and vented in the worst way, towards his family. Despite all the medical advancements in the past century, we still have no real way to determine how damaged a brain is both physical and psychological.

  • @csnide6702
    @csnide6702 Год назад +481

    This was the Role that opened my eyes to how GOOD of an actor David Schwimmer really is........

    • @gringoreno
      @gringoreno Год назад +2

      A regular duffic

    • @aarchiewaldron
      @aarchiewaldron Год назад +25

      Pivot!!!!!

    • @peterclarke7240
      @peterclarke7240 Год назад +17

      Like many Hollywood actors, he's great when being directed by someone who knows how to direct, and when given a character to play who actually has some degree of depth as an antagonist.

    • @Riverrockphotos
      @Riverrockphotos Год назад +1

      No kidding.

    • @slowery43
      @slowery43 Год назад +10

      Never remotely a fan of Schwimmer, seen him in plays and such never a fan at all nor liked his work in Bob, thought he was playing his actual self, unlikeable, arrogant

  • @michaelwilts5349
    @michaelwilts5349 Год назад +979

    At the core he was obviously a good man. Did he have his flaws and shortcomings? Absolutely. We all do. But he certainly didn't deserve such a sad, lonely end. I hope he is able to rest peacefully.

    • @nicklester6114
      @nicklester6114 Год назад +42

      To be left alone to starve to death by the children you bought up so lovingly, jee wiz, what the hell happened there,thoughts?

    • @deano6912
      @deano6912 Год назад +4

      Well said Michael. A perfect response.

    • @michaelwilts5349
      @michaelwilts5349 Год назад +25

      @@nicklester6114 Seems like the potential for some very unfortunate tension and resentment, especially as noted with how he and his son later in life drifted due to their views on military and war. No parent can escape causing their children hurt, since none are perfect, but that level of anger/hatred/indifference to allow their parent to waste away lonely is heartbreaking. There seems to be no indication of horrid abuse on his behalf that would make that make sense.

    • @nicklester6114
      @nicklester6114 Год назад +4

      @Michael Wilts yes I agree, all very sad

    • @glenturney4750
      @glenturney4750 Год назад +10

      His sad lonely end was his own doing by not discipling his own kids. He may have loved them, buy not enough to train them as they were growing up with discipline and that's why they grew apart from him, which led to his depression. There's more than one way to show love. Discipline is also a form of love, 'cause it trains children to grow straight and not turn them into thugs like there is so much in Chicago today. His kids probably hated him for NOT discipling them. They probably thought that he didn't care enough about them TO discipline them. Kids crave attention from their parents, whether good OR bad attention.. It's why they sometimes get into trouble and when Sobel didn't discipline them when they were young, they read that as hate from their dad. Even the book of Proverbs says that if a parent fails to discipline their child, then they hate their child, (cause, they don't care where their child's soul ends up in the end, 'heaven, or hell').

  • @rl1271
    @rl1271 Год назад +503

    There must be more to this story. Going from a loving father to not agreeing with his kids protest of the Vietnam war then dying alone with his wife divorcing him leaves a lot of gapes in the story

    • @TheRealDill93
      @TheRealDill93 Год назад +57

      Agree completely

    • @curtismantle
      @curtismantle Год назад +48

      It’s hard to not make some assumptions when there’s a doting husband who attempted suicide and was then sent into care and divorced.

    • @donstaunch7895
      @donstaunch7895 Год назад +17

      Yeah something missing for sure.

    • @leepreston9637
      @leepreston9637 Год назад +3

      ​@@curtismantleit's very hard not to make assumptions. Although I am finding it difficult to make them about Herbert.

    • @glenturney4750
      @glenturney4750 Год назад +5

      Yeah, there always ARE gaps. Important information that's needed to paint a clearer picture.

  • @johnholmes6897
    @johnholmes6897 Год назад +97

    As a paratrooper i can honestly say, there are plenty of excellent trainers that made horrible leaders. Everyone has strengths and weaknesses. Nothing to be ashamed of. To his family: my sincere condolences. He did good. I'm sorry if he thought for one second that he wasn't a great officer. Look what he created and tell me he couldn't do the right thing . God bless him and his family

  • @maxbrazil3712
    @maxbrazil3712 Год назад +390

    Some of the Easy Company guys said that it was their hatred of Sobel that kept them united and motivated to not give up.

    • @hawk2million
      @hawk2million Год назад +36

      ....so in that sense, he did a great job! 😂

    • @angloaust1575
      @angloaust1575 Год назад +6

      All volunteers anyway the extra money motivated many to join
      Cant pick the officers just have to endure bad leadership!
      Nobody in their right mind would want to jump out of aircraft with a parachute
      Westmoreland mentioned that when
      He landed in a parachute jump he suffered concussion and when he was in hospital they summoned him
      To a psychiatrist to find out why he did it
      Anyway he phoned up a colleague
      And was released!

    • @alisonhilll4317
      @alisonhilll4317 Год назад +1

      The tribe seems to make people ( goyim) hate them , no wonder they have been kicked out of every country they have ever been in, BDS israel free PALESTINE what no PALESTINIAN flag dew tube , the USS Liberty, 911 the dancing Israelis, the federal reserve, blood lible and pizza gate, Epstine and Maxwell Mosssd agents blackmailing their closest allies, it goes on and on pure evil psychopaths.

    • @jdliefting8926
      @jdliefting8926 Год назад +25

      True, Dick Winters even says in his book that although Sobel was not equiped to lead men in battle, his tough and seemingly unfair treatment and constant physical training of the men led them to become the finest unit of the 101st. Although he is being portraied as a tyrant, he plays a big part in the succes of Easy Company.

    • @stevenkimdmd
      @stevenkimdmd Год назад +15

      I grew up in schools that were very much run like in the military, complete with corporal punishments. Every single school had one peculiar teacher who was the most sadistic and feared by all students. It took several years after graduation for me to realize this was all by design.

  • @davidaddison5936
    @davidaddison5936 Год назад +55

    When I read the late Major Winters ' autobiography, he did say Sobel wasn't popular with his methods, but he did stick up for the men when higher command wanted to punish.

  • @anthonyelwick3600
    @anthonyelwick3600 Год назад +55

    This changes my whole opinion of him. He was treated so badly at the end. May he rest in peace and his accomplishment will always be remembered and appreciated.

    • @tokyworld
      @tokyworld 7 месяцев назад +2

      I feel the same way. I learned about Sobel's fate some 10 years ago. Im sure he suffered from Bipolar disorder or Borderline. Seems textbook definition of BPD. Those disorders were misunderstood back in the day, just written off like "he's an asshole". To this day it's hard to care for and treat through therapy. Poor guy.

  • @captainsensiblejr.
    @captainsensiblejr. Год назад +190

    Sobel was, probably, Schwimmer's finest role.

    • @jamesbarker2567
      @jamesbarker2567 Год назад +4

      Certainlyh Was

    • @hellomoto2084
      @hellomoto2084 Год назад +1

      ​@@jamesbarker2567*Certainly and not Certainlyh.

    • @jamesbarker2567
      @jamesbarker2567 Год назад +5

      @@hellomoto2084 Yes Captain

    • @williamdillard413
      @williamdillard413 9 месяцев назад +2

      I agree. as a veteran I felt sorry for him because of Schwimmer's portrayal.

    • @oliveradams1555
      @oliveradams1555 9 месяцев назад +1

      No probably, he suited the role amazingly.

  • @prestonlindbeck1197
    @prestonlindbeck1197 Год назад +224

    When you're going to war--especially against an experienced adversary such as the German Wehrmacht--Herbert Sobel is exactly what you need. A hard charger who doesn't need--or care--to hear about your feelings. May not have been the ideal CO to lead Easy Company into combat, yet he was most certainly the Right individual to prepare them for it.

    • @Shushus-cz9lk
      @Shushus-cz9lk Год назад +2

      No it’s not.

    • @benfrank9622
      @benfrank9622 Год назад +7

      Sobel's training is needed. But him leading the company? Yeah... its... just not.

    • @robertparis5680
      @robertparis5680 Год назад +7

      ​@@Shushus-cz9lkoh I guess they need to be soft. And hope the battle hardened germans take it easy on them.

    • @LearningHistoryTogether
      @LearningHistoryTogether Год назад +4

      ​@@robertparis5680yeah just imagine them doing the jumping out of a plane before D-day, market garden and battle of the bulge. Doubt a lot of them would've survived if not for Sobel (and Winters)

    • @ItsFrozn
      @ItsFrozn Год назад +1

      @@robertparis5680In those times i do believe that his method was an important factor in the success of easy company.
      Luckily we have learned from our past and we can train commanding officers who are tough and demanding without being cruel and unjust.
      Good CO will tell you what is demanded of you at any given time and what the purpose of your task is. Without purpose and reason many lessons will remain unlearned even when they are completed to perfection.
      One of the most important things in war is unity and loyalty. CO must be able to achieve these in order to command effective troops and Sobel never achieved this, his next in command did.

  • @otpyrcralphpierre1742
    @otpyrcralphpierre1742 Год назад +76

    I just realized through this video that I have something in common with Sobel. My Father was raised up Baptist. My Mother, Catholic. We had six kids, and we were raised up Catholic. Dad never went to Catholic Mass, and Mom
    didn't go to the Baptist church, although they both attended their perspective services every Sunday. Dad even
    became a member of Leadership in his Church, and after retiring from corporate life, volunteered for many years
    at a local hospital. Dad was always a Loving Father, and when he died from heart failure, He and Mom still were
    Very Loving towards each other. I had really outstanding parents. Dad died a dozen years ago, but Mom is still
    with us at 97 and still living an excellent life.

    • @missymarie2698
      @missymarie2698 Год назад

      Thanks for sharing.
      I love true love stories.
      Sounds like you had a great upbringing.
      And congrats on still having your mom too! That’s a rarity in itself.
      I can’t wait to go Home myself to be with the Lord.
      I’m not particularly happy awakening each day, but seriously can’t even imagine having to live in this place for another 40+yrs.
      ugh.🤦🏻‍♀️
      I’m 52 and already feel I’ve been here way too long.
      I’m happy for others tho, whom seem to be grateful for their longevity.
      I just can not relate is all.
      I feel guilty for those who mourn a particular life not being here anymore and often wonder why the Lord doesn’t allow some type of soul swapping.
      Cuz I’d gladly give myself up for someone who much rather remain here ya know?
      Anyhow, thanks again for sharing…it’s stories like yours that actually keep me going.☺️
      🙏✝️❤️✌️

  • @thebowtiechaplain3399
    @thebowtiechaplain3399 Год назад +463

    This story breaks my heart...how can a veteran died of malnutrition in a nursing home.

    • @TheOBOM
      @TheOBOM Год назад +31

      He tried to commit suicide before ... dit it occur to you that he might have deliberately refused food?

    • @razor6888
      @razor6888 Год назад +61

      @@TheOBOM Show some respect troll.

    • @fuckhandles1233
      @fuckhandles1233 Год назад +58

      @@TheOBOM still shouldn't have happened in a supervised nursing home

    • @cashfoley
      @cashfoley Год назад +16

      @thebowtiechaplain3399 and others, The reality can be people are kept in a comatose state for years using a feeding tube. It's a dreadful ending either way.

    • @TheOBOM
      @TheOBOM Год назад +5

      @@fuckhandles1233 I tend to totaly agree with you there, however: I have no knowledge about the situation in US regarding staffing in nursing homes.

  • @patrickradcliffe3837
    @patrickradcliffe3837 Год назад +75

    Some are meant to train, others are meant to lead. In my 20 years in the Navy I've worked with both. Some realized it and played to that strength to support and defend. Others not so much and the command suffered because of it.

    • @BR-il9vl
      @BR-il9vl Год назад +1

      Couldn’t agree more, having done 5 1/2 in the navy (83-89) I experienced good and bad leadership. Had it not been for the bad, I would have made a career out of it…. It’s too bad because I really enjoyed military life style. Honor and purpose and mission, felt good!

    • @bassuverkropp1525
      @bassuverkropp1525 10 месяцев назад +4

      Leading the whole unit min the field might have been out of his league, but on D-Day, Sobel parachuted into Normandy with the rest of the 101st Airborne Division as commander of the 506th's service company. Immediately after landing, Sobel assembled four men and destroyed a German machine gun nest with grenades before joining the rest of the division near Carentan.

    • @alexanderchenf1
      @alexanderchenf1 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@bassuverkropp1525THAT is leadership!

  • @Mark-vf8op
    @Mark-vf8op Год назад +50

    It’s easy to judge from your couch as you watch the series, but this man was indeed responsible for a good training through discipline to his men…. What saved a bunch of them… his last years were not deserved considering the stress hardship and cruelty this man had endured… thank you for this piece..🙏🏻

    • @jimmyhaley727
      @jimmyhaley727 Год назад +3

      discipline??? at what price??respect only comes with fair treatment for all, I would died for my 1sr lt. and would have killed my full commander, (same for my 12 yr. E5),ole USN vet

    • @Mark-vf8op
      @Mark-vf8op Год назад +3

      @@jimmyhaley727 yes discipline! We will never know the outcome if this man would not be in place at that time…. The point to me was more that a movie or series is often dramatized and therefor you create an opinion about a character. I also thought he was a d*ck but the outcome how the man lived his last years of his life was not deserved imo

    • @animec-dramaskpop6362
      @animec-dramaskpop6362 9 месяцев назад

      Dude they hated him. ​@@Mark-vf8op

  • @bigchungus6011
    @bigchungus6011 Год назад +574

    What a heart breaking end. The part where he made pancakes for the neighborhood kids broke my heart. RIP Captain.

    • @truegileadoil8215
      @truegileadoil8215 Год назад

      ​@@glenturney4750 Awwww looky here folks, another example of a whiny little loser in life. Typical from this sort.

    • @monkeycat48
      @monkeycat48 Год назад

      @@glenturney4750 I advise you to go check out a grunts life. It really goes straight into the details of soldiers, wanting to kill another soldier because they hate them along with just incompetent commanding officers in the field. The story is about 2nd Lieutenant Vinny Murphy who tries to protect his Marines from two enemies, the Taliban and incompetent officers. 🤣🤣🤣 Sobel is the definition of officers that definitely don’t think before the consequences.

    • @azb3728
      @azb3728 Год назад +1

      Which captain? He wasn’t a captain at the end of his career

    • @bigchungus6011
      @bigchungus6011 Год назад +6

      @@azb3728 Ah you're right Lieutenant Colonel

    • @dontworryaboutit5490
      @dontworryaboutit5490 Год назад +18

      Why are the replies so cringe?

  • @brandon7482
    @brandon7482 Год назад +34

    I remember reading about his life years ago. Being a good family man is tough sometimes, but when you do it right it shows true character.

  • @russhaper1705
    @russhaper1705 Год назад +86

    Something awfully strange went on about the time his kids left the house. There is, as they say, much more to this story.

    • @LuvBorderCollies
      @LuvBorderCollies Год назад +14

      Exactly what I'm thinking.

    • @SofaKingShit
      @SofaKingShit Год назад +18

      All l heard was a story about a guy with a cruel father who tried to overcompensate with his own kids. If l was to speculate I'd guess that his kids eventually got sick of his expectations and demands, like a lot of kids with authoritarian fathers do.

    • @alysonfishel6039
      @alysonfishel6039 Год назад +7

      There always is

  • @marclaporte3710
    @marclaporte3710 Год назад +176

    His discipline and drive for perfection absolutely had a profound effect on the company. Getting through basic with him for sure banded the boys together.

    • @gunsforevery1
      @gunsforevery1 Год назад +8

      They had all been through basic before arriving at E company. They were all infantryman who signed up to be part of an airborne unit.

    • @neverpc4404
      @neverpc4404 Год назад +3

      He lied about a subordinate officer out of jealousy

  • @darrenadams4088
    @darrenadams4088 Год назад +45

    It is sad how he even cared for the kids in his neighborhood and he loved his wife and kids and they abandoned him. It shows just how selfish and cruel people can be.

    • @jurner0
      @jurner0 Год назад +3

      Some people ride their life in a pain we or their loved ones never knew.
      I guess

    • @AdeptKing
      @AdeptKing 9 месяцев назад +4

      Unless there's something behind the scenes we weren't told then yeah that's pretty heartless.

    • @animec-dramaskpop6362
      @animec-dramaskpop6362 9 месяцев назад +2

      Or maybe it shows just how unbearable he was. If he was truly a good man ppl would've showed up for him.

    • @pdworld2418
      @pdworld2418 7 месяцев назад

      guarantee sobel and his family regularly freaked out about sobel’s goy wife and kids

    • @imtryinghere1
      @imtryinghere1 6 месяцев назад

      They couldn't stand dealing with him.

  • @ericvadekro8334
    @ericvadekro8334 Год назад +152

    Good to hear the entire story of his life. Rest in peace

    • @glenturney4750
      @glenturney4750 Год назад

      This WASN'T the entire story. This was the Reader's Digest version. Lots of gaps and unanswered questions.

    • @truegileadoil8215
      @truegileadoil8215 Год назад +4

      @@glenturney4750 well just Google it, and stop your whining.

    • @glenturney4750
      @glenturney4750 Год назад

      @@truegileadoil8215: Why would I want to Google it? I got better things to do with my time, than hunt up information that's not important to me. And besides, I wasn't whining about it, but it sounds like you are, that I'm NOT Googling what's important to you? LOL! 🤣

    • @truegileadoil8215
      @truegileadoil8215 Год назад

      @@glenturney4750As you were the One whining about insufficient information,, you need to Google it so your ignorance decreases, not increase as is your obvious habit. Such a silly child your mommy raised you to be.

    • @12345Yeah
      @12345Yeah Год назад

      ​​@@glenturney4750 cry more

  • @jaytrace1006
    @jaytrace1006 Год назад +169

    Sobel’s training reminds me of “The Karate Kid”. Daniel hated “wax on, wax off”, etc. until he was shown how all of those tedious tasks were vital to his maturation & skill as a fighter.
    Thank you for bringing Sobel’s story to life…

    • @Soboba.Fett69
      @Soboba.Fett69 Год назад +3

      Maturation...

    • @glenturney4750
      @glenturney4750 Год назад +7

      Perhaps Sobel should've EXPLAINED his reasons to his men, but instead he just kept belittling them and being cruel.

    • @triGRIMM
      @triGRIMM Год назад

      Yeah 👍
      Except that training is bull 💩
      Did nothing more than exploit child labor 😂
      You want to know how to be trained well at blocking?
      Starts by being shown blocking techniques.

    • @scoutdogfsr
      @scoutdogfsr Год назад +2

      He was a toxic leader. The entire company (120 or so men) disliked him. His CO disliked him. His NCO'S were willing to go to jail to get him removed. He was a terrible officer and not a leader at all. Those who serve know at least 1 Sobel during their service

    • @12345Yeah
      @12345Yeah Год назад +1

      ​@@glenturney4750you're soft

  • @anthonyroyle6641
    @anthonyroyle6641 Год назад +69

    I have no doubt that a lot of them men lived through the war because of this guy. Absolutely horrible that he died alone regardless of situation.
    He put family first yet was left at the first chance.
    Pulled my heart a little hearing that god rest your soul sir 🌹

  • @benjaminrush4443
    @benjaminrush4443 Год назад +51

    Thanks for a decent tribute to one who had a truly sad ending.

  • @ivyking4149
    @ivyking4149 Год назад +3

    Aaaah,
    I'm taking my bob dvd's out of storage for the coming 5th of may to re-watch the whole thing.
    I'm forever gratefull for the world's young men coming to europe's aid and will for ever respect and appreciate their sacrifice in a foreign continent.
    Love&greets from Amsterdam Holland

  • @bonnyblue9399
    @bonnyblue9399 Год назад +18

    It’s one of the most heartbreaking stories I’ve ever heard.

  • @SinnerSince1962
    @SinnerSince1962 4 месяца назад +1

    Wow, what a great little biography! Thank you!

  • @mikestanmore2614
    @mikestanmore2614 Год назад +10

    Such a sad end for an essentially decent man. No-one in care should die of malnutrition. No-one with family should die alone and abandoned.

  • @matteowatteo1296
    @matteowatteo1296 Год назад +11

    To say Sobel was a complicated man is a huge understatement. There's little doubt Sobel wanted Easy to be the best. Whether his motivation was for his own self aggrandizement, ambition and ego or for the good of his men can and should be debated. I believe his men felt it was the former.

  • @katazack
    @katazack Год назад +52

    Sobel's problem was that he could not lead in the field. You can be a demanding SOB while training your men, but you better have your stuff together under fire. Sobel looked like a lost tourist instead of a company leader. When you think about it, Sobel probably wasn't that different from Gen. Patton. Patton was often cursed by his men. The difference was that Patton was a bold, competent leader who won the men's trust, so they would willingly (sometimes reluctantly) endure hardships for him. Casting Schwimmer to play Sobel in BOB was brilliant.

    • @studinthemaking
      @studinthemaking Год назад

      I wonder how they picked him for that job? It was such a good fit.

    • @mrobinson7828
      @mrobinson7828 Год назад

      That and he thought he was better then his men and didn’t mind fucking people over

    • @KonaLife
      @KonaLife Год назад +2

      You can add McArthur (Dugout Doug) to that list as well.

    • @studinthemaking
      @studinthemaking Год назад

      @@KonaLife who did Doug better. Tommoy Lee jones or Gregory peck?

    • @slowery43
      @slowery43 Год назад +1

      spoken like someone who knows so little about psychology, military leadership, or motivating teams yet is quick to hop oin the keyboard and speak like a self-imposed expert... ugh

  • @waynemayo1661
    @waynemayo1661 Год назад +29

    Truly a sad ending to a life. But, I can't but think that Sobol's intra-family relationships were not as nice as the video says and/or implies. His wife , on whom he reportedly doted divorced him. His children abandoned him to die alone. I think that he was a deeply troubled person with unresolved issues. Sad.

    • @CorePathway
      @CorePathway Год назад +1

      I’m estranged from my narcissistic father. He’s not going to change, and I don’t care to join him in his bubble of non-reality.

  • @michaelscott2269
    @michaelscott2269 Год назад +10

    Great story. Even when watching the series years ago on HBO, it’s plain to see his training, although harsh at times, is what kept these men together and saved many lives. The end of his life is heartbreaking.

  • @shapandsons7402
    @shapandsons7402 Год назад +22

    Had a real asshole of an RSM in service.
    Nothing we did was right. We were never good, fit or clean enough.
    Always punished, always chased, always yelled at, always berated, humiliated and bullied.
    And damn did we end up knowing our jobs.
    To this day, he still haunts me - my boys and I ended up in a survival situation in the mountains.
    Just as they were giving up I told them "You have 60% more in you" - in exactly the same tone he used. And they, in fact we, did. We got through it.
    The bastard saved me and my kids in the end.
    It may not be likeable, it may not be nice, but damn me did cruelty fix a hardened streak in me when it was needed.
    Cheers, RSM.

  • @BishopWalters12
    @BishopWalters12 Год назад +33

    That is very sad, it seems like he was doing good for years and I wonder what really made him go down that dark road.

    • @Kennypowers51
      @Kennypowers51 Год назад +29

      His son became a democrat. Truly sad. I could only imagine.

    • @CP-mb7ly
      @CP-mb7ly Год назад

      @@Kennypowers51 yeah must've broken his heart to have a son protesting a stupid war built on lies that resulted in thousands maimed and killed. F off.

    • @thelemonpepperdon
      @thelemonpepperdon Год назад

      @@Kennypowers51 his son was arrested protesting at the democratic convention and that's where their fallout began you muppet

    • @NiquidFox
      @NiquidFox Год назад

      @@Kennypowers51put some respect on that man’s family, knucklehead. He clearly was a loving and devoted father

  • @ThunderDucky187
    @ThunderDucky187 Год назад +8

    Doesn't matter how and what Sobel was. He instilled discipline in Easy company and thats what kept them alive!

  • @palmerswei1572
    @palmerswei1572 Год назад +9

    What doesn't kill you, will make you stronger. Captain Sobel knew that when he trained the Easy Company.

  • @jason-hy8ci
    @jason-hy8ci Год назад +11

    Thank you, Capt. Sobel, your choice in Training technique might have been unwarranted at times, and controversial, but the results are undeniable, I like to believe you learned something from Easy Co. and they intern did also, at the end of the day Victory was attained, and that's all that matters. I would also like to thank you for your service in Korea, already being a WW2 veteran you were free to deny service in a combat theater, but you went, because you were a soldier, and you knew where a soldier belonged.
    Once again THANK YOU & God Bless.

  • @the3rdid485
    @the3rdid485 Год назад +9

    An excellent training officer to prepare men for the unpredictable horror and harshness of war. A training regiment that probably saved many of their lives but thank God he did not lead them into battle.

  • @romainlavoie1526
    @romainlavoie1526 Год назад +20

    I must say that while listening to the documentary I was hoping that he was going to enjoy a long and peaceful life after his retirement after giving so much to his family. Im saddened to learn this. Despite his professional short commings I dont think he deserved such a terrible end to his life 😢

  • @natejones902
    @natejones902 Год назад +32

    He's a good example of the different roles people can play. It's sad that his family had a falling out, he seem to been a good dad. Perfect? None of us are, but he did have his positive sides. Good video.

    • @Riverrockphotos
      @Riverrockphotos Год назад

      Yes but you have to love your kids unconditionally which means no matter what their political views are or whatever you still support them 100%. There is no reason to ever disown disown your child I don't care how good of a father you are in the if you disown them You are nothing but a big old bag of POS.

  • @steph7614
    @steph7614 Год назад +6

    The Vietnam War caused so much division among friends and families, the whole country. It’s easy to imagine how protesting that war could have felt for many WW2 vets. I wonder how much that played a role in Sobel’s relationships with his sons.

  • @SkymarshalAnoke
    @SkymarshalAnoke Год назад +23

    A man who lived to serve. May he rest in peace.

  • @tmilesffl
    @tmilesffl Год назад +10

    The power of the command went to his head. You can be tough, but you can also be a real jerk in doing so. I have known officers this way and they would fear for their life when the ball dropped.

  • @JOHNSmith-pn6fj
    @JOHNSmith-pn6fj Год назад +77

    They portrayed all that pretty well in the series. But I thought watching the series that it was Sobel's hard training and the men's dislike for him that really made Easy company what it was. A very tough and united outfit. Sobel does deserve at minimum some credit there. Sad how his life ended up. Something happened there to cause an attempted suicide and no contact from his family.

    • @dannyexalto-753
      @dannyexalto-753 Год назад +4

      I do not know what motivated sobel to be as he was, but if it was to better the compagnie he deserves credit, but if he did it solely to further his own career he deserves the hatred he got despite how it helped easy, based on the book and movie it was the latter

    • @utpharmboy2006
      @utpharmboy2006 Год назад +1

      i mean, he gave his family so much love and they all turned out to be shitbags. id kill myself too

    • @virginiabeachbeachcombers9483
      @virginiabeachbeachcombers9483 Год назад +7

      Possibly PTSD after two wars.

    • @michaelhusada
      @michaelhusada Год назад +3

      @@dannyexalto-753 Listening to how he was with his kids made me think it’s the former. I think his portrayal in the book and movies probably came from most in the company. Remember, history is most likely written by the victors.

    • @michaelhusada
      @michaelhusada Год назад +3

      That method of training to make the subordinates dislike you remind me of Dirty Dozen (I think). In one part of the movie, the officer who trained them explained that to another.

  • @Sean-wq5fg
    @Sean-wq5fg Год назад +5

    I’ve read many of the comments and understand that the age range of the people reading this comment spans the generations. Concerning his character though, one telling thing I’ve picked up about Sobel is that even though he did some good things, no one, not even his family, respected him. Respect goes hand-in-hand with love for a man.

  • @kcgunesq
    @kcgunesq Год назад +9

    We have to remember that he was a very young man in a very important position having to prepare even younger men for the fight of their lives. Obviously, he wasn't qualified for field command and his training methods were less than ideal. But I never got the sense that he was trying to do anything other than the best job he could, as he saw it.

  • @LEric49
    @LEric49 Год назад +6

    Ah damn , at the end of the day he was a rather good man. Loyal husband , good father and a veteran. He deserved better , what a tragic life he had. May he rest in peace.

  • @dcxplant
    @dcxplant Год назад +25

    Captain Sobel made that unit. Winters and the others that trained under him and their families should pay eternal respects and thanks for what Sobel did for each man under his charge in Easy Company. Every unit in training needs a Captain Sobel. He was the reason Easy was so successful, a wonderful loving father, and got nothing in return for his efforts. God Bless you Herbert, rest in peace.

    • @slayer6936
      @slayer6936 Год назад +8

      Have you ever served??? It is the NCOs that makes a unit!!

    • @gunsforevery1
      @gunsforevery1 Год назад +2

      @SLAYER 69 Sobel hardened the men. He was responsible for all their training and discipline. He didn’t let his NCOs lead.

    • @slayer6936
      @slayer6936 Год назад +3

      @@gunsforevery1 Have you ever been in the military Sobel was hated the men actually made that unit! A leader that is hated and not respected does nothing for a unit!! The men and ncos joined together out of hate is what made the unit!

    • @coyoteblue9733
      @coyoteblue9733 Год назад +4

      ​@@slayer6936Have you?
      I was an NCO. I've also read the book "Band of Brothers".
      In the book Ambrose quotes EVERY MEMBER of Easy Co. as stating that Sobel's strict training regimen is what made them the soldiers that they were.

    • @gunsforevery1
      @gunsforevery1 Год назад +5

      @@slayer6936 I did serve. What’s next? Going to ask what branch and MOS so you can say that I didn’t really serve? I was a 19k in the U.S. Army.
      Where did I give any indication that he wasn’t hated? Where did I give any indication that he was respected by his men?
      I said he hardened them. He made them who they were. How? By his cruel nature. He didn’t let his NCOs lead. Have you even read Dick Winters book? Not “Band of Brothers” by Stephen Ambrose, but Dick Winters “Beyond Band of Brothers”?
      He constantly said that sobel always found chicken shit things to do to men because he was a cruel person. His cruelty hardened them. His over the top training regimen hardened them. The men bonded and formed a brotherhood over their hatred for him. Their hatred of him, hardened them.
      But that doesn’t mean he didn’t make them who they turned out to be. Every man in easy company who survived the war credited Sobels training tough treatment as the reason why they survived. He did so much more than you think.
      Now if he had lead them into Normandy and beyond, he and all the men would be dead because of his shitty leadership.

  • @TheMichaelBeck
    @TheMichaelBeck 8 месяцев назад +1

    All of us veterans have served with guys like this. More rank than brains. You endure their bullsh*t until they're replaced by someone that knows how to be a real soldier, a real leader. God bless the greatest generation.

  • @rocky3027
    @rocky3027 Год назад +3

    Had an E7 Tanker take over my Medic PLT while we were waiting for our new PSG to be assigned. He was harsh, demanding, but he whipped us into shape and we respected the hell out of that man. Great leader

  • @MarkHoltze
    @MarkHoltze Год назад +38

    I didn't like Sobel's character in the first episode, but as I continued through I couldn't help but recognize his ways definitely had an impact on the unit as a whole. Very sad how his story ended, especially having been such a devoted husband and father.

    • @Midwest10
      @Midwest10 Год назад +1

      People that know him wished he was fragged. Today I’d do it!

    • @paintedhorse6880
      @paintedhorse6880 Год назад +1

      ​@Midwest10 And yet those same men later admitted that his training was why Easy co made it through the war.

    • @tren380
      @tren380 Год назад

      @@paintedhorse6880his wife left him for a reason you know…

    • @paintedhorse6880
      @paintedhorse6880 Год назад

      @@tren380 Am I supposed to care?

    • @knightingale9833
      @knightingale9833 Год назад

      I actually had the opposite reaction watching the show, at first, I recognized Sobel was being so hard with the men to prepare them for how shitty they would feel in the meat grinder, but as it went on Sobel seemed incompetent as a leader and always blaming others instead of himself.

  • @drush525
    @drush525 Год назад +20

    Being a great dad is the greatest award any man could hope to achieve.

    • @maroontide31
      @maroontide31 Год назад

      No it’s not being a righteous man is. Your probably an atheist.

    • @kevincoffey3112
      @kevincoffey3112 Год назад +1

      Hope to find out one day

    • @lueyR
      @lueyR Год назад

      Pffft

  • @darrenadams4088
    @darrenadams4088 Год назад +10

    Being a veteran ,I believe That Captain Sobel cared so deeply for the men he trained and wanted them to survive so badly that he chose to be hated and lonely in exchange for his men to be the best trained men in the war, I could be wrong ,but I have witnessed men who I personally knew were good hearted train their soldiers and be very harsh and unforgiving of mistakes because they simply cared deeply for those young men and wanted them to have the best chance of survival and thus endured the hatred or maybe a STRONG dislike from those they trained. If you have never served ,you probably wont understand.

  • @joselabrada232
    @joselabrada232 Год назад +8

    That just broke my heart. He had good intentions it's hard to be the leader we dream about being. No soldier, should pass on like that. I hope he found peace and knows now many men lived and excelled after the war in part because of what he did

  • @abidababida7096
    @abidababida7096 Год назад +4

    What a sad story. After watching B of B many times and reading up on Sobel i realized that E company was as tough as they were due to HIM. Setting aside his bad field tactics i think he understood that war doesn’t wait for u to finish dinner or get some rest after an 8 hr march and he trained his men to be animals in the face of the enemy. How else could they have held off the Germans at the Bulge with so few men against so many attacking? R.I.P Herbert Sobel. U deserved better.

  • @deano6912
    @deano6912 Год назад +3

    Great video. It was nice to learn a side of Captain Sobel many of us didn’t know.

  • @crlourenco88
    @crlourenco88 7 месяцев назад

    I understand this speech very much.
    Takes much love to love a devoted military.
    The job eats their happines.

  • @devinbaker3272
    @devinbaker3272 Год назад +21

    I get that the didn't want him as a commander because of his lack of skills as an Infantry officer. But I think his training style, though it seemed unfair at the time, ultimately was beneficial to the company. Getting punished for things that legitmately weren't your fault or seem minor is very common in modern infantry training. Things that unfair are going to happen in war and you don't want your first encounter with that to be combat.

    • @Inspectorzinn2
      @Inspectorzinn2 Год назад +1

      Unfairness is demotivating by nature. If I’m going to be punished for something not my fault, then why bother following the rules?

    • @knightingale9833
      @knightingale9833 Год назад

      I think he crossed the line court marshaling Dick Winters for something that wasn’t his fault. Something like that could have ruined the career of someone who was going to make a great leader, the leader Easy Company would need when it went to war.

  • @WazirinJosnEnvirons
    @WazirinJosnEnvirons Год назад +13

    Sobel's job was to train men of war. He did it well.

  • @bbryant2485
    @bbryant2485 Год назад +11

    Its unfortunate he received such a bad reputation. People have different skill sets, where he failed as a leader in the field he excelled as a trainer. He should be recognized for his great contribution to our country.

    • @sgu02nsc66
      @sgu02nsc66 Год назад +1

      Exactly. If you judge a fish by its ability to climb trees…

    • @LuvBorderCollies
      @LuvBorderCollies Год назад

      He earned his reputation, he didn't receive it.

  • @Flunddk
    @Flunddk Год назад +4

    "As we train in peace is as we fight in war"
    He is undoubtedly responsible for so many men getting through at least the first part of the war alive. I agree that the dramatization in HBO's production is perhaps a bit one-sided - and I am sure that several of the men in the EASY company owe him a silent thank you. Glory be to his memory!

  • @ILWU4Ever2024
    @ILWU4Ever2024 Год назад +7

    This man served his country and commanded a highly distinguished platoon. He is a hero, along with all that serve this great nation. No man is perfect and no man is an island.

    • @peterclarke7240
      @peterclarke7240 Год назад

      *The Isle of Man has entered the chat*

    • @MrSmokincodz
      @MrSmokincodz Год назад

      He’s not a hero. Relax on the nation bootlicking.

  • @S1L3NTG4M3R
    @S1L3NTG4M3R Год назад +4

    Captain Herbert Sobel, although not liked by his men, trained them hard, and may have been the reason many succeeded... it was interesting to hear about his background.

  • @dogleg7401
    @dogleg7401 Год назад +29

    The man did his job and performed his duty for America. He should always be respected for it.

    • @neverpc4404
      @neverpc4404 Год назад +3

      He was a bully who abused his power and lied about a subordinate because he was inept in the field and jealous of the subordinate.

    • @MisterRawgers
      @MisterRawgers Год назад +1

      @@neverpc4404you have no idea what you’re talking about, infant.

    • @shrekxrohankishibe
      @shrekxrohankishibe Год назад +1

      @@neverpc4404even if that’s the case, his tactics still saved lives and prepared soldiers for war.

    • @neverpc4404
      @neverpc4404 Год назад +2

      @@shrekxrohankishibe the ends don’t justify the means. The exact same thing was accomplished without being a liar and a bully.

    • @shrekxrohankishibe
      @shrekxrohankishibe Год назад +2

      @@neverpc4404 if he was too soft on the men they wouldn’t have known what was coming next. He was mean, but nothing compared to a battlefield. He disciplined the men. Had he been too soft the men wouldn’t have been mentally prepared

  • @smckay6438
    @smckay6438 4 месяца назад +1

    Thank you captain Sobel !
    You fought for my country And family !😊

  • @charliebecker2216
    @charliebecker2216 Год назад +11

    What a great story. What he did for easy company might have kept them alive. Even thou he was not acceptable by his men I think he was a great asset to the war cause. Sometimes training is not accepted for the reason at hand.

    • @toddsalkowski448
      @toddsalkowski448 Год назад +4

      Agree. He may have been an SOB, but he served his nation in WWII and Korea. Rose to the rank of Lt. Colonel. Those facts should not be diminished.

  • @zoso73
    @zoso73 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you for doing this. The man saved many lives by his methods in Tocoa.

  • @avfx
    @avfx Год назад +5

    A training officers job is not to be loved.... it is to get the troops ready to WIN in battle.... in fact being to close to the troops is a bad thing as an element of fear and respect is needed.
    RIP Sobel my thanks for your service.

    • @superstraighthhwhitemale8880
      @superstraighthhwhitemale8880 Год назад +2

      He wasn't just a training officer. He was going to lead the entire company to their deaths in combat due to sheer incompetence as a leader. He couldn't even read a map.

    • @twistiefe
      @twistiefe Год назад

      As an ex serving soldier I disagree, maybe in basic training, but at regular units definitely not. As a leader its better to be respected than feared. If Sobel took Easy company into combat he would have got a bullet to the back of the head and be counted as KIA.

  • @keithbartholomew2990
    @keithbartholomew2990 Год назад +5

    He definitely deserves respect for making Easy the toughest ever

  • @rustsalya
    @rustsalya Год назад +29

    An old Russian Army saying goes, "The more you sweat training, the less you bleed fighting". I held grudges over harsh treatment by my commanders in my younger Army years only to realize some of those old grumpy bastards saved my life during the wars I went to.

    • @Tomato41866
      @Tomato41866 Год назад +2

      Winters turned out to be a hero and possibly saved many lives with his leadership. How many great soldiers like Winters were successfully discarded by men like Sobel?

    • @mikewood4242
      @mikewood4242 Год назад +2

      Actually it was Patton who created that saying,not Russian

    • @rustsalya
      @rustsalya Год назад +3

      @@mikewood4242 It was Alexander Suvorov, the Russian Field Marshall, long before Patton was born. Suvorov coined more than one, in fact, but this one is one of his best. Actually, he landed in trouble more than once for his sharp tongue and his ability to argue with the Empress Catherine the Great, and more so with her successor Paul, who even dismissed Suvorov only to reinstate him for his military talents.

    • @rustsalya
      @rustsalya Год назад +1

      @@mikewood4242 Patton's war career was way shorter than that of Suvorov, and his military record can only shine with the likes of him in the background. The saying about blood and sweat goes down centuries back, but it was first put in a book of good military practices by Suvorov, the Russian war leader of the 18th century. Suvorov's military career lasted over 50 years!

    • @JackyJames1
      @JackyJames1 Год назад

      Russian Trolls! Shame on you!!! Not 1 country on earth agrees with Russia! You lied btw !

  • @nnvsvs4969
    @nnvsvs4969 Год назад +3

    I can feel for Sobel....when you are hard on your soldiers, they never appreciate the basis of the approach. Its for the future. Poorly trained men are easily sacrificed

  • @honeyfrissonhoneyfrisson6994
    @honeyfrissonhoneyfrisson6994 Год назад +4

    I have a completely different outlook on this man now. What a loving and caring father and husband. May he rest in peace in the light of God.

  • @Rodz88
    @Rodz88 Год назад +1

    RIP Capt Sobel. You did prep your man well to face the enemy. It's was the training & discipline that shaped them

  • @jess2690
    @jess2690 Год назад +6

    This is so very sad. For whatever shortcomings he had, he didnt deserve such a fate.

  • @kiacarens
    @kiacarens Год назад +3

    He may not be the best Captain but he is a good father. Leaving parent dead unattended, the sons forgotten where they come from despite rage with anger!

  • @robappleby583
    @robappleby583 Год назад +7

    We do not all become the man we wished to be.

  • @RobertLewis-el9ub
    @RobertLewis-el9ub Год назад +14

    'Horses for courses' - they say. Sobel was an effective training officer, the evolution of Easy Company from a group of civilians to an effective combat force is testament to his achievement. Did his methodology include tough love and strict adherence to military discipline, probably. Did he possess the necessary tactical skills to perform as combat leader, most likely not. Most soldiers will forgive tough leadership, but are less forgiving of an ineffective combat leader. I think the latter, is where Sobel lost the respect of his men.

  • @interstellar618
    @interstellar618 Год назад +2

    This story broke my heart:( RIP Lt. Col. Sobel

  • @petebondurant58
    @petebondurant58 Год назад +17

    Herbert Sobel BUILT Easy Company. Dick Winters PERFECTED it.

  • @Rockinruffhouser
    @Rockinruffhouser Год назад +10

    He was a good man. He didn’t deserve to die the way he did.

  • @spitfires1979
    @spitfires1979 Год назад +3

    It would be a truly extraordinary man who could both form and train an incredibly capable unit as well as lead it in combat while earning the trust and respect of his men. Sobel was not that man, but he made a significant contribution to the war effort by preparing men who could not only survive but thrive in combat.

  • @jerkov420
    @jerkov420 Год назад +14

    That story went from a happy family to suicide attempt pretty quick. Now I NEED to know the details leading into that much further

    • @tony9146
      @tony9146 Год назад +2

      Yeah and he was shot from the left but he was right handed??? There’s definitely more going on here.

  • @ruthnagarya2028
    @ruthnagarya2028 Год назад +16

    HE HAD to HAVE KNOWN THAT bringing a legal case against Winters would effect his career, you KNOW in your heart when you have done somethig terribly WRONG, and I think that ruined his career from that point on.

  • @jubb1984
    @jubb1984 Год назад +2

    This is a lesson in how important it is to know yourself, and realize your own shortcomings and either work on them and perhaps improve or just accept oneself and do what you can do best (while avoiding hurting others due to one owns shortcomings). Its sometimes a harsh pill to swallow, but it wont help you refusing the medicine.

  • @IsabelleSt.Pierre-q2n
    @IsabelleSt.Pierre-q2n Год назад +3

    He may not have been an astute tactician, but he sure understood the word discipline. As a Marine vet, I admire soldiers like him. As my DI used to say, a drop of sweat saves a drop of blood. He has my respect. He was a great American who served his country honorably. Rest in peace, sir.

  • @nealser2002
    @nealser2002 Год назад +2

    I had an officer in the Marines like him and we nicknamed him Skeleletor because his face look like a skull. But his physical training and mental tough training… I enjoyed because I knew if we were sent to fight a war … we would be ready. The enemy is not nice so I believe in training that builds physical fitness and mental toughness. Sobel I believe got East company ready for the war ahead.

  • @dictator9849
    @dictator9849 Год назад +4

    Don’t know why they put a “viewer discretion” warning up for this video? Silly. What a strange man, but undeniably a hero in my mind, simply for the fact he prepared those paratroopers to perform an unimaginable task. Schwimmer played the part well in the HBO series. I find it a little hard to believe that what was such a almost storybook family life, fell-apart so quickly over his son’s protest of the Vietnam war. I bet there is more to it.

  • @lwovert8148
    @lwovert8148 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks for sharing episode 1 of Band of Brothers. I think you are creating your own narrative

  • @davidwebb8993
    @davidwebb8993 Год назад +4

    Had to change my mind, sure he had faults but didn't deserve the ending RIP CAPTAIN

  • @danielsummey4144
    @danielsummey4144 Год назад +2

    I don’t care what the man did, he served his country and didn’t deserve that.

  • @Chiller01
    @Chiller01 Год назад +3

    What a strange end for this man. One slight correction, opposition to the Vietnam War was not an unpopular position on college campuses from about 1969 onward. I was a university student at that time. Of course it depended where you were in the US and which university but I imagine Michael Sobel would have had many likeminded classmates.

  • @SK-hz8qu
    @SK-hz8qu Год назад

    Man this changed my entire perspective on the man. God Speed Sobel. RIP Sir. Till Valhalla

  • @lampshade3795
    @lampshade3795 7 месяцев назад +3

    We have the most powerful military in the world, yet as a whole we treat our veterans like second class citizens.

  • @Jayfrmdadorf
    @Jayfrmdadorf Год назад +1

    Even though he was harsh on Easy company, he prepared them very well and taught them how to survive

  • @jimmywest4757
    @jimmywest4757 Год назад +7

    Heavy is the head that wears the crown. You have to be toughened up for war. If you're a teacher in those conditions you can't be buddies with your men. Only after the war is over can you show compassion to your men or they will be soft and probably killed in combat. Again,,,, Heavy is the head that wears the crown. RIP. sir. You created one of the best companies ever to fight for our country 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @ChoonHowOng
    @ChoonHowOng Год назад +2

    We often judge a man by one single thing he did and ignore the others.