| 
| Al Nofi's CIC
 
 |  
|  | Issue #301, June 28th, 2010 |  |  
|  | This Issue... 
Infinite Wisdom 
la Triviata 
			           Short Rounds 
 |  |  Infinite Wisdom 
 
"The battlefield is the most empirical and, thus, most unforgiving place of a soldier's experience."
 
| -- | Richard A. Gabriel,
Royal Military College of Canada |  
 
    La Triviata  
     Reportedly, seeking to justify an offensive war against
     Russia,
     King Gustavus III of Sweden (r. 1771-1792) dressed some of his
     cavalrymen as Cossacks and had them skirmish with elements of his advanced
     guard as he marched his troops to the border.During the German attempt to break out of the Falaise
     Pocket, German Generalmajor Rudolph-Christoph von Gersdorff, scion of a
     long line of soldiers, was struck by lightning, an experience which he
     survived, and which very likely also enabled him to survive his participation
     in the anti-Hitler "July Plot," to die in 1980.It is said that when the Duke of Wellington once
     consulted a phrenologist, the pseudo-scientist was much struck by his “bump of
     caution”.While Governors of Kentucky are well known for
     appointing honorary colonels for more than a century, since 1931 their
     counter-parts in Nebraska
     have been appointing honorary admirals, to the number of about 100,000.During the Second Boer War (1899-1902), British Lt.-Gen.
     Sir Leslie Rundle proved so poor a manager that his division was nicknamed “The
     Hungry Eighth”By the late 1920s, the German Weimer Republic, with
     armed forces of hardly 130,000 men and perhaps 300,000 paramilitary troops and
     secret reservists had a defense budget that was nearly 60 percent that of
     Kaiser Wilhelm's Second Reich on the eve of World War I, which had standing
     forces of nearly a million, not to mention enormous reserves.At the height of the "Spanish Influenza"
     pandemic, of 130,000 troops carried to Europe in
     October 1918 by the U.S. Navy's Cruiser & Transport Force, more than 15,000
     became ill and almost 2,500 died. More... 
Portions
of "Al Nofi's CIC" have appeared previously in Military Chronicles,Copyright
© 2005-2010 Military Chronicles (www.militarychronicles.com), used with permission, all rights reserved.
 
 |