Postby JeanryChandler » Mon May 01, 2006 1:46 pm
Gene,
"I think you are somewhat confusing the definitions here. The examples you give are of individuals or groups of people who have no intention of dying, but rather are in a very high-risk situation where the probability of survival is against them.
The Midway torpedo bomber crews in the first attacks against the Japanese fleet in their obsolete planes was an example of airmen taking an enormous risk with their lives which (unfortunately) did not produce a result - they all died (with the exception of Ensign Gay) without a torpedo striking the Japanese ships. However, the crews of those planes had no intention of ramming their aircraft into the Japanese fleet."
I'm not confusing anything. Like I said, it's a fine line. When you know you have no chance, like going over the top in some giant battle in WW I, after you have already seen other units do so and you saw what happened to them, it's pretty close to suicide. The odds of winnning the lottery may be acceptable when you are hoping to win money, but if your life is depending on the same kind of luck, I think you are more likely to simply accept the inevitablity of death and do your best anyway. This certainly is the sentiment expressed in many war accounts I have read and heard first hand.
And at Midway, it was more than the torpedo bombers being obsolete. They were sent in without fighter cover, essentially as sacrificial lambs, to bring the Japanese CAP (Zero fighters) and AA guns down to sea level so that the SBD dive bombers coming right afterward could go in unhindered.
I met George Gay personally at a WW II course I took at UNO with the late professor Stephen Ambrose, and he certainly felt that they were sacrificed, and that they knew it the whole time.
Yeah it's different than drinking your sake and saluting and tying a bandana around your head before you get into a plane packed with bombs... but it looks much more different from a vast distance, from the big picture... up close and personal I'm willing to bet you it feels about the same.
JR
P.S. Actually, damaged US aircraft did Ram into Japanese ships, I believe an SBD did at Midway.
"We can't all be saints"
John Dillinger