The Old Breed and the Costs of War | Eugene B. Sledge (1994)
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- čas přidán 12. 11. 2023
- "It has been said that the combat veteran has to live through the experience and then, if he survives, he has to live with it the rest of his life. How you handle yourself and what you make of yourself depends a great deal on your upbringing, your discipline, and things of this sort."
Recorded at the Mises Institute's "Costs of War" conference in May 1994 in Auburn, Alabama: mises.org/library/the-costs-war
Eugene Sledge (1923-2001) is best known for his books chronicling his experiences in the Pacific Theater during World War II: With the Old Breed: At Peleliu and Okinawa and *China Marine: An Infantryman's Life after World War II*.
I drove to where Sledge Hammer was layed to rest 2-months ago and rolled down the windows of my truck and played the theme song to “The Pacific” series as my buddy and I put a Marine flag at the head of his grave and shed a few tears of gratitude to say the least. What a great man
This is really awesome dude.
Excellent 💪🏽
AMEN 🙏
That was the Beautiful gesture!🇺🇲⚓️💯💖
I'm friends with his son. Saw him the other day.
My mom had one brother who was a Marine in WW2. He fought on Iwo Jima at 18 years old and turned 19 before he was in the battle for Okinawa. He told my mom that he didn't take his boots off for 30 days on Iwo Jima. He died in 2009. The Marines sent an honor guard to provide the military portion of his funeral. The Marines take care of their own!
How was bro at 2 places at once iwo was February 19- march 26 1945 and Okinawa was April 1- June 22 1945
What he said about the Japanese not acknowledging WW2 and their atrocities AND THE WORLD NOT MAKING THEM DO SO is absolutely true
Most Japanese veterans went to their graves regretting only one thing: that they lost. They really deluded themselves that they were liberating Asia from the white colonialists, even though they were more brutal than the Americans, British, Dutch, and French combined.
Japan has paid a price. It may not have been the price we would have wanted or expected, but they have.
As a person who has had some ability to be around and immersed in that culture, in the 90s anyway, it was clear to me that culture was broken, and it was WWII that broke it.
That’s because the empire needs them. The allies didn’t defeat the Axis, they absorbed it.
If you go to Hiroshima or Nagasaki and go to the museums and the shrines their for the atomic bombs it's disgusting. To paraphrase, their plaques basically say, we were minding our own business and out of nowhere the Americans dropped these bombs on us killing everybody. Do I have to even say who started that war in the Pacific? Do I have to say who perpetrated the rape of Nanking, the Bataan Death March, the brutalization of Allied pows, and the brutalization of civilians? My dad was a veteran of World War II, South Pacific, US Navy and he said that back in the day there was a saying that went around. It went: "wherever the Japanese go rape torture and murder follow" No truer words were spoken. The Japanese have much to atone for yet they never will. Unlike the Germans who have made huge strides. The Japanese were not victims and I have zero sympathy for them until they make it right by the World by atoning for the sins of their military during World War ii.
@@patrickmiano7901I don't think this is necessarily true. maybe the Japanese propaganda Ministry spit out a lot of information about liberating people from colonialism but I'm sure almost every single Japanese soldier knew the truth, that this like all other Wars was a war for dominance and power. they certainly regret losing, not because of some liberal Notions of freedom but because now they are the dominated.
His book abut the Pacific War is one of the greatest pieces of military literature ever written. A man with a gift with words and the real experiences under his belt. Epic interview.
Agree 1000%
absolutely
With the Old Breed stands as one of the finest war memoirs ever written along with Grant's Autobiography, Robert Leckie's Helmet for My Pillow, E.P. Alexander's Fighting for the Confederacy, and Robert Graves's Goodbye to All That. And I forgot George MacDonald Fasier's Quartered Safe Out Here.
@@unbreakable7633 And how bout William Manchester's "Goodbye Darkness"?
@@TomandAmyinthePI Forgot that one too, an excellent account, never will forget his description of Sugarloaf Hill. Thanks for reminding me.
This is amazing. I’m an Iraq and Afghanistan vet. God bless this man and the U.S. Marine Corps
I too, am an Iraq and Afghanistan veteran. Served two deployments in Iraq, and Three in Afghanistan over two enlistments in the Marine Corps from 2002 to 2012, as a Machine Gunner. I loved hearing Cpl Sledge speak here.
@@jdstocco84 god bless you brother. Semper fidelis
Me too. Afghanistan 2003. I’m humbled listening to this.
Thank you for your service to our great republic. I admire and look up to your strength and integrity. I can only guess each one of you has a story to tell about your military experience and there are few people that could listen and comprehend the first layer of the onion, if that makes sense. I can’t explain it, but listening to this brave man instills a sense of confidence that cannot be faked and that is a very rare quality, especially in 2024. I appreciate the people that have served and are serving in our United States military services. You are our backbone.
Thank you for your service!
I cannot give this enough thumbs up. E.B. Sledge is a National Treasure.
Semper Fi Devil Dog!
Amazing that societies don’t revolt against war participation.
If not for these MARINES and all other branches, if we had survived, we would be speaking Japanese or German. Evil cannot be squashed be good intententions. Semper Fi to you anyway.@@daveyvane9431
@daveyvane9431 It would have to be nearly unanimous. It really is hard to fathom the idea of millions of people sent into war for a handful of Jack asses that disagree.
Are you saying that we should have surrendered to Japan? Remember that after Japan declared War on us at Pearl Harbor, we declared war on them and Germany declared war on the United States; so, you either fight to survive or surrender. I hate war; but I will defend my life and that of my friends, family and country.@daveyvane9431
@@f.puttroff4470 I think his point was that societies, ALL societies, not just one side.
The Janet Reno remark was great, God bless him. RIP.
Janet Reno, Bill Clinton et al, could not make a patch on this man’s ass.
Amazing how sharp he is, I wish I had been born a bit earlier so I could've met men like him. All you can do is just listen and react. I love how he targets his audience, and is a great showman.
Men who lived through the great depression and then went on to fight in the second world War really were another type of man. There's been none like them since. The conditions haven't existed again to produce them. The greatest generation indeed.
It's not that men like them don't exist any longer. There are still a few here and there. But never before, or since, have they existed in such great quantity. The plethora of greatness that participated and/or were lost in WW2 can never be overstated.
No doubt! Many don't even know they are men anymore. But being a man is more than gender. It is about character. Something sadly missing these days.
I’m so glad to have found this. I was a 60mm Mortarman in the Marine Corps. I receive the PFC Sledge “With The Old Breed” award while in Mortar Division Schools. I met Sledge’s section leader, R.V. Burgin some years ago, and I wept in his presence.
Every American should listen to this.
You think those morons protesting on the college and universities care about this or worse, America..
Brit veteran here! Every man, where ever he comes from should listen to this.
@@michealrcnicholson9342 Indeed. We few, we happy few. We band of brothers…”. Semper Fi.
Every Student in 8TH GRADE SHOULD Hear this, the young need to know !!
My MOM WAS A WAAC
WOMENS. ARMY AIR CORP , IN WORLD WAR 2 ,
BEING IN LONDON ENGLAND
DURING THE. B L I T Z
SEVERELY SHELL SHOCKED now it's called. P T S D
MY DAD and her were divorced When I was 2.
Veterans HOSPITAL ALL THE REST OF HER LIFE,
BACK THEN THEY PERSCRIBED THORZINE HEAVY DOSES
REST IN PEACE 🙏
AND THANKYOU. MOMMA
for your service * 😢
I listen to this every time I think I’m having a bad day.
RIP Sledge ❤🇺🇸
You are SO right!!
I think about the living hell that these brave Marines and Army dogs went through on Peleliu and Okinawa every morning when I wake up for work. So happy to be alive. My older brother died when he was 27 years old In 2016 another reason I’m happy to be alive and clean from hard drugs been clean for 4 years now. Never going back. EVER
RIP Dr. Sledge. Thousands of great men with no Purple Heart but with wounds that will never fully heal. You were one of those great men and human beings.
Ever notice that the Old Breed who survived the worst of the War in the Pacific, a lot of those men didn't even have enough decorations in their "fruit salad" to make two rows of ribbons. Yet, you have people in today's military running around with so many badges, decorations, and gee-gaws and whatnot that there's no room left on their uniforms for anything more, despite not seeing near the amount of action those old WW2-era guys did. Medal inflation is a thing, it really is....
Sledge survived the war, but didn't get to return home until he did a rotation in China, too, since the communists and nationalists took up where they left off because of the war... and the USMC was needed to protect Americans and other foreign nationals over there. Anyway, Sledge didn't get home until the post-war celebration was really over.
I wish he'd lived long-enough to have seen "The Pacific," but at least his best buddy Sid Phillips was still around when it came out...
The way this man spoke is incredibly powerful. I wish I could've seen it in person
No kidding. If only.
I heard about Sledge through the Ken Burns program on WWII. I read his book and found it totally gripping. I admired how he endured the war, and his literary rendering of it. Hearing him speak about it is a privilege.
You ought to hear his 10 part audio book available on CZcams. Gripping 100% “The Old Breed”
It’s amazing to
Hear the real Eugene Sledge
He has been immortalized by the series the Pacific.
Mr Sledge bravado and sense of humor is common amongst the greatest generation who served in WW2 in my experience talking to many vets of that era.
His book is amazing. Highly recommend
One of the things I remember most from the book is how the Navy gladly started sharing chow with the Marines, provided all the Navy personal had eaten first.
I have his book on Audible, and it's very well written.
❤❤❤❤❤
Not a Veteran. Just amazed at the high caliber people our country can produce. Can't count the # of times I've read this man's book. Incredible. Highly suggest this book. Thank you Sledge Hammer.
Past tense,OUR American youth are WEAK,ENTITLED,and LAZY!!!!
Mr Sledge never really recovered from his time in the marines. The price he paid as a marine haunted him the rest of his life. Never forget. We stand on the shoulders of giants.
I read Eugene Sledge's book "With the Old Breed" that chronicles his experiences during the war and have reflected on it often over the years. I highly recommend that EVERY civilian read it and consider the contents when politicians (& armchair warriors) begin "sabre rattling)!
My dad carried a BAR in the 3rd Marine Div, 21st Marines. He would talk about his experiences...telling us the both the bad and the good. I remember him saying in simple words..."What a waste".
Yea my dad would say that as well. He was a BAR men in the 4th Marine Division he was at the battle of Iwo Jima. Thank God we had men like those fighting for us.
My husband was a proud Marine the rest of his life, having served in the P.I. in the 60s in intelligence on the Midway that is today a floating museum here in San Diego. He showed me the chair he sat in at the same desk to do his job.
He chose to be buried at a Marine Corps cemetary with a ceremony given by a chaplin who spoke as if he had known Lowell in his lifetime. The guard presented our oldest son with the flag that was draped over his coffin. He is in a new section of other Kaplans dating back to the 1800s.
My Dad fought with the 1st Marine division on Okinawa. Glad he and Sledgehammer aren't witness to the fall of our great nation. God bless all from the greatest generation.
It's depressing but we've had rough times before. Keep the faith.
Amen. Marine Vietnam vet, 68-70
I’m glad he wasn’t around to see a president say that his generation were a bunch of losers and suckers!
Our "great nation" is falling because of the hideous, ignorant demagogue convincing the gullible that it is.
Never would've guessed I'd ever hear Sledgehammer speak. Thanks for this!
Sledge and Fussell fan forever. God bless both of you and RIP
Wait who is Fussel? There is stories I never heard.
Kevin F- Former US Army InfantryMan
Paul Fussell. Outstanding writer, wrote a great memoir about his experience in the Euro theater fighting the Germans
Sledge died March 3, 2001. Paul Fussell, to whom he refers a number of times, was a captain in the US Army, who fought in the ETO during WWII wrote at least one book about his war experiences, but the one that I found most interesting was the one he wrote about WWI: "The Great War and Modern Memory." "Wartime" was about some of his own experiences.
"The greatest enemies will hide in the last place you would ever look." - Julius Caesar
Which is usually oneself.
That's funny, because when I lose my keys, they always turn up in the last place I look!
Julius was a very intelligent man!
@@user-fi2ix7mr6i Really? Then why was J.C. stabbed to death. Why didn't he see that coming?
Maybe he's meaning his own govt.
I'm so glad I found this. My dad, may he rest in peace, was with the 2nd Marines during WW2.
God bless Dr Sledge for sharing his his experiences. My dad would never say a word about it.
We owe these veterans the greatest respect to honor their unbelievable sacrifices they made for us an all future generations to come God Bless everyone of them and THANK YOU!!!!!!
So greatful to this Marine and his ability to articulate his experience. As a Veteran, I can appreciate his unique sense of humor. Thank you for sharing.
Ditto
A couple of friends had Dr. Sledge for biology class at Montavallo. Said he was a great teacher
Probably the best diary of a soldier in the second world war. I read his book, "With the Old Breed on Peleliu and Okinawa" when I was 35. It was eye opening to say the very least. Just cut across my ideas of what the soldier endured in WWII.
Marines are not soldiers
Because of men like Mr. Sledge, General Butler, and my dad I understand war is not Hollywood. It's suffering.
Suffering during and after.
Thank you Eugene Sledge for your immense sacrifices for our people. I will never forget your story. May you rest in peace.
Outstanding!! Thank you brother for giving such a detailed account, the human side. Your a true blue marine. American!! Wow compellingly telling of your story . You can feel it in your gut.
His book With the Old Breed was a stunning and brilliant piece of work. A must read for anyone who wants to try to grasp what war is like.
Eugene Sledge (Sledge hammer) documented his own personal account of his time on the pacific island of Peleliu fighting the Japanese in WW2. He kept his own personal stories of that campaign hidden among the sheets of the Bible he carried with him. 'With The Old Breed' is the book of his story.
One of the best books to come out of WW2.
Thank you Eugene Sledge, and countless others, from many countries, for your service. HBO's 'The Pacific' helps preserve history that needs to be remembered.
This man's a profound resource. I've never been in service but Sledge's honesty, complete candor, & sense of honor are invaluable.
His book is a must-read ...
I first read his book at Cherry Point, NC while I was serving with the 2ndMarine Air wing. I lost that copy & did not find another copy till Pacific came out. Semper Fi "Sledge!"
I have an autographed copy.
@@williamturner1517 I am Marine Corps Green with envy!
My home Division. I was in the First Marine Division for 14 years before I knew any other home. IMO of course I loved that Division with its history. I came and went to other Divisions but the 1st Division was my home and I kept requesting to go back which I did.
Thank you so much for uploading these important stories of our shared past. it's chilling how for western society has fallen since 1994
Thank you for this talk, from a Vietnam combat veteran. I was also in 1'st Marine Division. Semper Fi!
There were not many of the old breed at the start of the war. The vets from the banana republic wars and bar fights in China and elsewhere. Veterans of the stockade and having zippers on their stripes. Just enough of them to leaven the regiments. The necessary leadership that let the Marines do what they needed to do.
My father was wounded at Cherbourg and saw a lot of hard fighting. My uncle fought with the US Army at Okinawa. They both did not talk a lot about it; but said that they lived with it because that is what they had to do. Greatest generation indeed
You understood why, when it became your turn. Mostly because you don't want to review it. The other because they think you have to be making that s==t up.
I have been on Wake and Midway. If you step off the concrete on the runway. You step on a spent round.
Way worse than anything I experienced.
I read the book but hearing it from the man takes it to a whole new level. Semper Fi Marine!
Eugene Sledge is among numerous people never mentioned, written about, recognised, interviewed, by politicians, bureaucrats, financiers, elites, bankers, pharma, MIC, big-bus, msm 😮
Similarly wondering why also omitted are older generation people such as:
Smedley D. Butler, Maj General USMC, his book "War is A Racket" , his speeches.
William Guy Carr, naval Cmndr, his book "Pawns in the Games" and his speeches.
Harry Patch, WW1 combat veteran, his writings, speeches
The three people above were born in late 1800s.
A generation before Eugene Sledge was born.
@janetcohen9190 - Re: "Eugene Sledge is among numerous people never mentioned, written about, recognised, interviewed, by politicians, bureaucrats, financiers, elites, bankers, pharma, MIC, big-bus, msm..."
There are a lot of reasons for that lack of recognition. First, the fact that men like Eugene Sledge represent the old America, one which is now a part of the past. The Second World War is now as distant in the past compared to the present - eighty or so years ago - as the American Civil War was to those men during WW2.
Second, our country no longer teaches history and civics as it ought to do. I am a historian, and years back when the National D-Day Museum (now known as the National WW2 Museum) in New Orleans had just opened, I traveled there to see it. My spouse could not accompany me, so I dined alone on Bourbon St. the night before seeing the museum for the first time, and decided to conduct an experiment. The restaurant where I was - had staff composed almost uniformly of young people, college age mostly, plus a few later in their twenties.
I quickly devised a list of five fairly simply questions about WW2 and D-Day and then asked them around the place to various staff members as the opportunity arose. It was a weeknight and it wasn't too busy.
Well, long story short, not one of those young people knew the answers to any of the questions, things like (1) Where did the D-Day invasion take place? (2) Who was the prime minster of Britain in June, 1944? (3) Who was Dwight D. Eisenhower and what role did he play in D-Day? And so on...
Now, perhaps my off-the-cuff quiz wasn't fair, and the young people were working, but I was crestfallen and depressed by the result. But later, I came to realize that it is just how things are - only a few people in any group have interest in history, and fewer still care enough about it to learn anything in detail. Especially for something which amounted to ancient history for most of them.
Eugene Sledge at least lives on through his tremendous memoir, and the mini-series "The Pacific." Only one person in a thousand today knows any of the others on your list, Smedley Butler, Carr, Patch, et al. Maybe one in ten-thousand.
Another difficulty is that even if one is interested in that time period, WW2 is such an immense subject that you could spend a lifetime studying it and not even come close to knowing everything there is to know about it.
Call me cynical, but the last reason today's world and the powers-that-be don't bring up men like General Butler is that their message about the business of war isn't what profits them. Butler correctly identified many/most wars as rackets - in other words, unnecessary wars started simply to line the pockets of the rich and the war-profiteers, or to benefit some other special interest - and there are a lot of special interests around today that don't want that message heard.
Butler in particular was difficult to criticize militarily; his credentials were above reproach. How do you smear the reputation of a two-time recipient of the Medal of Honor who retired as one of the most-decorated Marines in history?
@@GeorgiaBoy1961 Thanks for your response, and sharing awareness.
Yes, learning history is vitally important there are many sources one can learn from older folks in family, community, formally during school years, and from everywhere on Earth.
History is among tools useful to help cope during life.
As to in formal education history is likely omitted, censored, sanitised, selected, slanted, toward conditioning young into agendas driven contex, blended with marketing so to help suffocate critical thinking, to easily manipulate masses.
Related:
All major problems are caused by politicians, bureaucrats, financiers, elites, bankers, MIC, big-agri, big-bus, pharma, msm, 1,2,3, ABCs....basically the ~5% both domestically and internationally their MO was and is;
Private Profits & Lucre
paid by
Socialised Loses
in cascade of various, numerous ways and means by 95% no matter which side(s) they are duped to be on.
My Uncle John was a Marine on Iwo. He was a quiet man and a wonderful man. We miss him. I read Sledge Hammer's book. Great book
Thank you for this. This is the first time I've heard him speak..... The only thing Burns Pacific series missed was being able to include Dr. Sledge in person. We are all blessed that he left his voice so vividly in his book.
Amazing that he was able to chronicle his experiences. He has my respect.
I read both his book & Bob Leckie's Helmet for my pillow before watching the series The Pacific. Both were EXCELLENT books but I was also fortunate enough to hear some of both my father in laws stories (USN WWII) as well as my brothers father in law (USMC WWII). My brothers father in law was on Tarawa & Saipan and both of these mens stories made the hair on the back of my neck stand up. We miss you Brownie & Norm.
I did the same, but had grown up and later worked with veterans of all the WW2 Theaters I had the greatest respect for them! The sacrifices they made so I could have the freedom to live my life of peace . Thank You all!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I too read leckie’s (lucky’s) helmet for my pillow while out on maneuvers in “the suck” back in ‘87 ….. reading by flashlight at night laying in my cot out in the ariz desert … the cool air and bright stars overhead … I couldn’t put the damn thing down !!
@@edlesage5912 Agreed but I've read several I couldn't put down and usually wound up reading them in one sitting. FLY NAVY!!!
Likewise I've read those memoirs, both excellent. My father served on the USS Hornet (CV 12) as a signalman and my uncle was an officer in the 1st Marine Division, fought on Guadalcanal (where he was badly wounded) and on Okinawa, then in occupied China after the war. When I was a child, very young, my uncle and I sat by a campfire and he told me stories of Guadalcanal and I've never forgotten them, graphic and awful. He didn't speak often about his experience to anybody and I felt honored that he ever told me these stories.
I read the book. then my wife and I travelled to Peleliu to see the battle sights.. about 15 years ago. very eerie. no one there but us . there was a museum of sorts.. just a shack with some kodak camera prints from WWII. rusted tanks. must have been hell
@brewster46 - What I find unfathomable about those island-hopping campaigns is how ill-prepared the Navy and Marine Corps were for some of them, yet the attacks went in anyway. When the Corps went ashore at Guadalcanal in August, 1942, each Marine was issued with one canteen of water - just one. Navy medical personnel - the doctors and corpsmen (the U.S.N. supplies all the medical needs of the Corps) wanted to issue each Marine with two, but there weren't enough canteens in whole Pacific Theater to do that. And even by the time of the Peleliu invasion in Sept. 1944, they were still inadequately supplied with water. Those men not only had to survive the worst the Japanese defenders could throw at them, but had to endure water deprivation and dehydration, too! Talk about tough! And what a charlie foxtrot on the part of the planners.... inexcusable mistake for them to make.
@@GeorgiaBoy1961I met a man who was a rifleman in k3/5 pelelieu. He said the water available for them tasted like diesel fuel.
@@jeremyperala839 - Man, that's brutal!
@@jeremyperala839 Yes it was contaminated and undrinkable. The Navy sent a lot of canned fruit ashore to help with this. Dad and his buddy Barret found a case of peaches. Dad told us Barret and he were in better shape than most of the men just because of those peaches.
My father was in B company, first battalion (Ray Davis), first regiment (Chesty Puller) at Peleliu. Never talked to us kids about combat. He was wounded on D+4 but survived. He was also at Guadalcanal and Cape Gloucester. Peleiu was his last battle. Had malaria for the rest of his life. The Pacific was indeed hell. Thank you Mr Sledge. RIP.
Read his book, watched the movie…..so honored to hear his voice and listen to him speak!!
Me too
Thank you for posting this. Hello from Las Vegas Nevada.
May grandpa, I called him “Tata” he was 14 years old when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor.
God bless the greatest generation!
Im glad Dr Sledges experience was used the series " The Pacific" created by Tom Hanks. His narrative was very personal and it really tells the story of the cost of war. The toll it takes on the men and women that go to war. RIP, Dr Sledge.
Semper Fi Sledge! You Marines of that era were tough as nails!
I must have read his book a dozen times by now.
I am profoundly grateful for the men who did what Sledge did.
I'm not a veteran, though my grandfather served in World War II in the European theater with the American Army. Growing up with the stories of war, I was in awe of what I had heard but wanted no part in that experience if it was possible. Don't get me wrong, if I were called to serve - even as old as I am - I'd like to think that I would go because that is what I have to do. I'd be scared shitless, but I guess that's par for the course.
To all our members in the armed forces, thank you.
I had an uncle (more than 1) who fought in WWII in Europe but never spoke about it … ever … with anybody. During a move to his children’s house they found a shoebox sized metal box stuffed full of medals and citations.
At 89 he finally told his story to his kids and allowed them to record him … about three hours all the while sounding like he was apologizing for having lived.
He died a couple weeks later.
In all the time I’d known him he was a quiet, calm and gentle man. None of us, including his family, except maybe my aunt, ever imagined or suspected his military past.
My uncle was a Marine Lt. on Guadalcanal. In a small room of his house on one wall was a Japanese flag...complete with some lettering and full of bullet holes and old blood stains. In one corner was a Japanese sword. I was a youngster of about 12 at the time, and naturally I drew it from the scabbard. To me, it was quite heavy and seemed to me to be very thick across the top of the blade. I said something to the effect that I didn't know how anybody could swing it. My uncle just looked at me and said, "If you ever saw a Japanese Marine, you wouldn't say that". End of conversation.
Glad I found this one.
I'm reading "With the Old Breed" right now!
Great book. Good lord it describes gruesome war can be.
I am always impressed by how Eugene B. Sledge kept his humanity, especially after it was over. We should All be so strong and resilient. Thank the Lord for men like Eugene B. Sledge.
.
No way! I just orderded his book and then I discover Eugene Sledge has an interview with Mises Institute! What an amazing man!
He also had another book published, "China Marine." It deals with his post-war experience in China while awaiting his rotation home. Very good read as well.
He's also featured in the 4 part documentary titled Hell In The Pacific! Highly recommend 👌
I’m just listening to this again. And the story of his lumberjack friend just hit me so hard. What a Great Friend to give his buddy Hope. Regardless of the reality ❤
RIP. American warrior.
i usually get bored after the first few minutes. i could not move listening to this man. commentors are right, every one should be made to listen to this!! amazing.
Amazing interview. Thank you for posting.
Sledgehammer, you Snafu and all your fellow Marines are the TRUEST HEROES WHO EVER LIVED!!! What you and your peers went through as young men exemplifies the American Spirit. I think about what you men experienced and wonder how I would’ve handled living through the same situations.
SEMPER FI…and RIP WW2 HEROES….
God bless Eugene Sledge and the men who served with him…RIP. Semper Fidelis.
I read both his books and they are must read books .
When he talks about his friends getting blown up or shot , you can tell he's still seeing them as young men , some 50yrs later .
This is an absolutely incredible talk
Thank you for the sacrifices of US marines who free my country from Japanese occupation.
You are a good man to honor these men that you never had a chance to meet
This should be required listening for every politician.
As a Marine veteran from Alabama (2003-2007) Iraq War veteran, I can proudly say that I admire this man. And damn proud to be from the same land as this Old Marine Hero. My first duty station was in Okinawa 2004-2005, those Marines that fought in Okinawa were the best.
This interview certainly explains why most combat vets of WW2 refused to ever discuss what they saw and did.
There's no point it telling your story to anybody who hasn't seen the elephant - they don't believe you.
Bizarre to think that you're looking at the picture of a man that was born 100 years ago and who made it through some of the most appalling conditions of the 20th century. Respect to the Greatest Generation.
forever grateful to Eugene Sledge for shedding light on the Marines of WW2. Honoring my Godfather : Gunnery Sgt Eddie Amaral, Squad Leader , Marine Assault Rifle Co B., 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division-- Peleliu Island. Sept 1944.
There is a scene in the book where he is knocked down a hill and comes up with human flesh, blown to shreds by artillery, and filled with maggots all down his front. He says that he felt his mind going, he had seen it happen to others, and he used all his mental effort to retain his sanity.
USN Veteran. Thank you all for what you do.
This man and his fellow Marines were giants. The horrors they faced and still maintained their courage and pushed forward is amazing. We owe them so much for their sacrifice. Semper Fi! Cheers to the old breed.
He spoke to us when I attended Sergeants Course at 29 Palms, and I was in awe. A majority of the class was unaware of who this man was, let alone the book he had written, which I had read. After serving 26 years in uniform and serving during the First Gulf War, Kosovo, Iraq in 2003-2004 and then Afghanistan, I always cherished his words of wisdom which I attributed, in part, to my survival.
“Hey douche bag, You wanna get your dress and cover?” SSgt Skinner. I still remember that like it was yesterday 35 years later. I would not trade my 21 years for all the riches in the world.
Just curious, was that Ssgt a short stocky guy?
Yes he was. 18 Aug 1989. SSgt Grimm was his #2.
@@jonathankenton7182 Just a wild hair of a thought but a man (friend of my family years back) last name of Skinner. He was a Marine Sgt - 30 years, retired. Chewed tobacco like a crack addict. He was in the end of wwii in Korea and in Vietnam. I believe he was gunney but maybe one rank up by retirement
00:01 📜 Eugene B. Sledge discusses his experience as a Marine in World War II, focusing on the Frontline infantryman's life.
01:47 🎖 The harsh reality of Marine Corps training is highlighted, emphasizing high standards and the immediate imposition of discipline.
03:47 💔 Combat veteran experiences are marked by sheer terror, affecting judgment, reason, and long-term well-being.
08:15 🔪 The imperative nature of killing in war, especially for the infantry, is emphasized for survival.
10:04 🇯🇵 The perspective on the Japanese soldiers is nuanced, discussing their dedication and brutalization within the Japanese Army.
11:22 💥 Intense moments on the front lines are recounted, illustrating the brutal reality of combat.
13:37 🛑 The impact of prolonged combat on stress and exhaustion, both physically and mentally, is described.
17:30 📦 Eugene shares the physical toll of combat, highlighting the weight loss and challenges of carrying heavy ammunition in difficult conditions.
19:33 🤯 The stress and challenges of night attacks, snipers, and the constant fear on the front lines are discussed.
24:56 🚿 The unsanitary conditions, lack of hygiene, and exposure to personal filth during extended combat are detailed.
27:26 🤝 Combat veterans fought for each other, creating a deep bond beyond ideology.
28:05 😢 Combat experiences left veterans haunted by nightmares for years.
28:47 🙏 The casualties extend beyond the dead; wounded soldiers face lifelong challenges.
30:52 🚜 War altered the dreams and ambitions of soldiers; some had to abandon their pre-war lives.
32:10 💔 Personal stories illustrate the profound and lasting physical and emotional toll of war.
34:40 📜 The harsh realities of war contrast with glorified portrayals, emphasizing the true cost of conflict.
36:36 🤔Criticism of military decisions and political leaders regarding unnecessary casualties in conflicts like Somalia.
How wonderful to put a voice to the face,amazing soldier his book is an amazing piece of work.
I love this man. I listen to this speech daily.
My father was at the battle of Iwo Jima and it was a terrible fight. From what I have heard from him and others there is no way to describe it so they just didn’t talk about. God Bless all those men
The way training should always be. God Bless you Sir and Thank you
My good friend Neil Buckley lied about his age and joined the Marine Corps at age 14 and fought on Guadalcanal with the 1st Marine Division. He had his 16 th birthday near Henderson Field.
This man was one of the greatest who ever lived! Just a absolute legend. God rest his soul.
It's good to hear from somebody who understands the practice of war from seeing the elephant not from getting good grades at the War College and getting all the right boxes checked.
I hope you find peace in your mind . Bless you for speaking for those who cannot.
So lucky to be best friends with his son!
The most poignant memory I carry from reading his book, is how broken he was right after the war. It’s amazing that in this talk, he can so casually speak of the unendurable misery they went though as if it was a regular everyday occuranceu
Praying for guidance for our leaders and respect for our our elders, while having a firm understanding of family values with morals of discipline and long-suffering for the best of all of us to pursue the best path for peace and prosperity for everyone where Love is concerned. May God Bless us All.
Greatest generation plain and simple.
Glad to hear the voice of one of the inspirations for the Pacific. What this man went through and seen is almost unbelievable. Thank you for posting.
The Pacific by Hugh Ambrose was the first time I read about "Sledgehammer". He was quite a guy. I recommend the book.
God bless Eugene....
I joined the Marines in 1967 . Went to Vietnam , spent 19 months over there with the 12 th Marines . I thought we had it tuff . I came home and read Sledgehammers book . Vietnam was like a piece of cake compared to the Marines who fought the Japanese.
With respect, your experience wasn't the same as every other person.