Chapter Seventy-Four: If You Want to Succeed, You Need to Publish a Book First

Early in the morning, the heavily armed 505th Regiment set out from the Klebble barracks and embarked on a long 25-mile march. Pen, fun, pavilion www. biquge。 InfoJohn did not set off with Bradley this time with the regimental headquarters, but instead wore a training uniform without any rank insignia and blended into the ranks of the 2nd Battalion.

"Poof~Phew, Phew! What bastard put so much salt in the water! In the queue, a recruit spat a large mouthful of water onto the ground and yelled.

"Who knows." Another recruit complained, "If I knew which idiot did it, I would have to beat him to death." For 25 miles, not only are you not allowed to smoke, but you are not even allowed to drink water. ”

John followed them as usual, not at all conscious of being scolded, and jokingly chimed in, "That's right, they should have hanged that bastard." ”

John found the interaction interesting. However, Deputy Sal Matheson, a lieutenant of the 505th Regiment who accompanied him throughout the whole process on the orders of Commander Martin, was very nervous about this, and coughed and glared at the two unbridled recruits, hoping that the two big mouths would shut up and say a few words.

John smiled and patted Ensign Matheson on the shoulder, letting the lieutenant, who had just come out of the ROTC, relax a little. In his previous life, as a researcher for the TV series "Band of Brothers", John was very familiar with the name Saar-Deputy Matheson.

When he was chatting just now, he had already confirmed that the lieutenant in front of him was the famous 101st Division, Captain Matheson, the quartermaster of the 506th Regiment. Although in the TV series, this guy is just an inconspicuous supporting role. But among all the veterans of the 506th Regiment, Matheson was the best one. When the 101st Division was rebuilt during the Vietnam War, this guy also served as the commander of the division, and later seemed to have worked his way up to lieutenant general.

But now, Lieutenant Matheson is still an immature "rookie", and he does not have the momentum that a member of the "Wuthering Eagles" should have. This made John interested, and he joked with Matheson a lot along the way, and before he knew it, even the march became less boring.

John had a lot of fun with Matheson, but his deputy, Major Steve, was not so comfortable. At this moment, he is struggling with a table full of documents and reports in the logistics statistics and dispatch center.

Yesterday, when John threw the second phase of the logistics reform project to Steve, he assured him that the day the second phase of the project was successful was when he was promoted to lieutenant colonel and took over as the division's logistics staff officer. For the silver oak leaf on his shoulder, Steve also fought hard, seeing that the posture had the meaning of never leaving the statistics and dispatch center without completing the reform plan.

In the 82nd Division, it was not only Steve who was directed by John to turn the regiment around, but also his adjutant, Lieutenant Miller. Today, Miller did not appear in the marching queue at all, but was sent by John to Fort Benning to deliver materials to Captain Gavin.

Miller still can't figure out why John suddenly asked him to go to the Fort Benning paratrooper school to deliver materials to an airborne training officer. Fortunately, when he was in the battle planning department, Miller had already seen John's whimsical style, and knew that he was not a commander who could infer him with common sense. If you can't figure it out, then don't think about it, just complete the task honestly.

In fact, what John asked Miller to send to Gavin was a memorandum on the training and combat of the Airborne Forces that he had compiled by himself in combination with the experience of later generations.

The reason why John is in such a hurry to "show" his talents in the field of airborne operations is related to his current "bad" situation in the 82nd Division. Squeezed out the conservative Pop and rejected Marshall's "good intentions", the relationship between John and the Marshallists who dominated the 82nd Division was a little delicate in the future.

Now, Bradley, who has a close personal relationship with him, is still in the position of division commander, and there is no problem for the time being. By the time Bradley was transferred to the 28th Division by Marshall in June to wipe Edward Martin's ass, John's life would not be as comfortable as it is now.

You know, Ridgway, who will succeed Bradley in the future, is not a fool. If John doesn't come up with some real talent, it will be difficult to get ahead in the future.

If the 82nd Division had always been an ordinary infantry division, John might have finished this time. The little goods in his stomach are simply not worth mentioning in the eyes of an old man like Li Qiwei. Fortunately, John knew in his heart that the 82nd Division would be reorganized into an airborne force in the future. This was also the confidence that he dared to refuse Marshall's proposal in the first place. John knew that in the field of airborne warfare, Ridgway was just as "rookie" as he was, and he might even have a slight advantage.

Anyway, no one in the US military has really participated in airborne operations now, and everything is still in the experimental and exploration stage. He could have used the "empirical talks" he had seen on the Internet in his previous life to portray himself as an "expert in airborne theory."

Counting the days, it seems that the 82nd Division should not be long away from being reorganized. Historically, the "All-American" division was reorganized as the first American airborne division in August 1942, two months after Bradley left. In this life, based on the timing of the formation of the Fort Benning Paratroop School and the Paratrooper Experimental Unit (503 Brigade), it should only be advanced and not postponed.

So, John now has to hurry up and make a name for himself in the field of airborne warfare. Wasn't the reason why Gavin was able to rise from a captain to the youngest major general in the U.S. Army in a few years because of the book "Tactics-and-Technique-of-Air-Borne-Troops" he wrote?

As far as John knew, Gavin had been working on the book late last year. The last time we met at Fort Leavenworth, he asked John to help him gather information about the German and Soviet Airborne Forces.

John now asked Miller to send him a lot of illicit goods, in addition to the information he had found in the Fort Leavenworth Military Academy Library. It contains not only the methods and techniques commonly used in paratrooper training later, but also the "golden and jade good words" summarized by "experts" for the airborne combat cases of World War II. Even at the end, John boldly made a prediction about the future development trend and direction of airborne operations.

I believe that after receiving the valuable information and suggestions contributed by John, Gavin should not disagree with putting his name in the author column. His requirements are not high, and if he can become the second author of the first work on airborne military theory in the United States, he can just get a hat of a "tactical expert" and wear it.

With this hat, John will have the capital to gain a foothold in the Airborne Forces in the future. Don't look at the US military, there is only one 18th Airborne Army in the Army's Airborne Troops, which seems to be quite weak. In fact, for a long time after the war, officers from the Airborne Forces were extremely strong within the army.

In the fifties and sixties alone, four officers from the 18th Airborne Corps (Ridgway, Taylor, Ranizel, Westmoreland) sat on the throne of Army Chief of Staff. The 18th Airborne Corps was also strengthened again and again under the care of these high-ranking old commanders, and finally even the 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment, the 3rd Mechanized Infantry Division, and the 10th Mountain Division were directly assigned to the army.

John believed that as long as he grasped this opportunity, he would leave a strong mark on the initial stage of the US Airborne Forces. In the future, just the identity of a "veteran of the airborne faction" will be enough for him to be inexhaustible, and he will not have to worry about the dissipation of influence in the military circles for 30 years.