Letter: Veterans Day reminds us of World War II heroes

Published 2:45 am Tuesday, November 14, 2023

The Army deployed 65 infantry divisions for World War II. Each was a small town with equivalent community services plus eight categories of combat arms. Though artillery, engineering and heavy weapons engaged the enemy directly, the foot soldier endured the greatest hazard with the least chance of reward. Except for the Purple Heart and the coveted Combat Infantryman’s Badge, recognition often eluded

them because few remained to testify to

the valor of the many.

Nearly a third of these divisions suffered 100% or more combat casualties. However, regimental staffs often saw their frontline units obliterated three to six times over. A typical 14,000-man division contained 81 rifle platoons fielding the 3,240 soldiers who first assaulted enemy positions. Here the division suffered 70% to over 80% of their casualties. Added to these were half again as many non-battle human wrecks debilitated by trench foot, frost bite, pneumonia, hernia, etc.

Ernie Pyle said of them, “The worst experience of all is just the accumulated blur, and the hurting vagueness of being too long in the lines, the everlasting alertness, the noise and fear, the cell-by-cell exhaustion, the thinning of the surrounding ranks as day follows nameless day. And the constant march into the eternity of one’s own small quota of chances for survival. Those are the things that hurt and destroy. But they went back to them because they were good soldiers, and they had a duty they could not define.”

Nolan Nelson

Redmond

Marketplace