NATO Survey, 1943 Pt 2
Дата: 12.01.2015 10:49:41
Midnight_Fox, on Jan 12 2015 - 03:03, said: This goes back to the American Revolution, Where Gen.
Washington wanted his men to be distinguished in superior moral
character that what the British Army was like. Back then you fought
better sober and to a certain point, our armies behaved better. In
several war moves of the WW2 genre there seemed to be an anal
retentive restriction of alcohol in naval units and in one
ingenious Bob Hope movie, The Private Navy of Sergeant O'Farrell,
it was focused on his unit salvaging a sunken load of beer in a
rear area with some real consequences of overindulging without anal
retentive officers getting in the way of the fun. That it's beer
and not rum is besides the point. The point is that wed had the
only "dry" combat units on the front line compared to other
combatant armies. General Patton's statement was probably a
personal preference in how the British army handled the situation
irrespective of the historical beginnings of a dry military on the
front lines. Would you want drunks in combat? Being drunk playing
computer pixel tanks is nothing compared to fighting drunk in real
tanks in real combat: after the battle the need for a stiff one or
two is understood but that would be splitting hairs.The_Chieftain: I'm not quite sure where you're going with this. Even today,
the US Army is one of the few non-muslim militaries which prohibits
alcohol consumption on deployment. The ability to have a pint or
two over a year has not cause the British, French etc any
particular problems of competence and professionalism. Heck, I
couldn't have a drink for two weeks in Fort Dix, New Jersey while
on a 'gentleman's course', as a field grade officer. I
personally consider it to be a total lack of confidence being
displayed by leadership to the troops.
NATO Survey, 1943 Pt 2














