I came across this manual while browsing Wonkette the other day and it was a pretty interesting read.
http://digitallibrary.smu.edu/cul/gir/ww2/pdf/w0025.pdf
comments about back-stabbing japs aside, some highlights...
http://digitallibrary.smu.edu/cul/gir/ww2/pdf/w0025.pdf
comments about back-stabbing japs aside, some highlights...
As a soldier your duties are laid out for you. As an individual, it is what you do on your own that counts ? and it may count for a lot more than you think. American success or failure in Iraq may well depend on whether the Iraqis (as the people are called) like American soldiers or not. It may not be quite that simple. But then again it could.
The tall man in the flowing robe you are going to see soon, with the whiskers and the long hair, is a first-class fighting man, highly skilled in guerilla warfare. Few fighters in any country, in fact, excell him in that kind of situation. If he is your friend, he can be a staunch and valuable ally. If he should happen to be your enemy ? look out! Remember Lawrence of Arabia? Well, it was with men like those that he wrote history in the First World War.
But you will also find out quickly that the Iraqi is one of the most cheerful and friendly people in the world. Few people you have seen get so much fun out of work and everyday living.
You aren?t going to Iraq to change the Iraqis. Just the opposite. We are fighting this war to preserve the principle of ?Live and let live.?
Right now Iraq is threatened with invasion ? as America is now. The Iraqis have some religious and tribal differences themselves. Hitler has been trying to use those differences to his own ends.
Moslems here are divided into two factions something like our division into Catholic and Protestant denominations ? so don?t put in your two cents when Iraqis argue about religion.
There are also political differences in Iraq that have puzzled diplomats and statesmen. You won?t help matters any by getting mixed up in them.
