G.I.-the American soldier in World War II.

AuthorSavage, Paul L

G.I.--The American Soldier in World War II.

Lee Kennet.Scribners, $20.95. G.I. centers on the lowest possible denominator in warfare: the common soldier. I was one of those soldiers, an infantryman in Italy. The book begins with the drafting of the American G.I. in World War II and his basic training, which was often unrealistic and was related only marginally to later battle experience, and goes on to the problems of adapting individualistic Americans to military norms, the lunatic randomness of actual battle, the anticlimax of occupational duty, and the unseemly hastly dissolution of the U.S. Army shortly after the war. There is no flag waving or patriotism in G.I.; Kennet recognizes, as do most combat soldiers, that motivation has nothing to do with such vacuous notions. Instead, troops fought for each other, their small unit.

Those who actually fought,about 10 percent of an army of more than eight million by 1945, were for most of the war the "dregs' of the draft; the upper classes did not see combat until very late in the war, when those sent to colleges and universities for special training were finally pressganged into the infantry to replace unexpectedly heavy losses.

Kennet rightly decries theAmerican replacement system that kept divisions in combat for protracted periods during which they were ground up by attrition. Other armies, allied and enemy, pulled fighting divisions out of battle for replacement, refurbishing, and...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT