Aug

23

In July 1944, McNair was in France to observe troops in action during Operation Cobra, and add to the FUSAG deception by making the Germans believe he was in France to exercise command. He was killed near Saint-Lô on 25 July when errant bombs of the Eighth Air Force fell on the positions of 2nd Battalion, 120th Infantry, where McNair was observing the fighting. In one of the first Allied efforts to use heavy bombers in support of ground combat troops, several planes dropped their bombs short of their targets. Over 100 U.S. soldiers were killed, and nearly 500 wounded.

Stefan Jovanovich recalls:

My favorite Audie Murphy bit of history (which can be verified by recollections but not by any published anecdotes) is that Murphy met Omar Bradley in Hollywood in July 1951 when Bradley was Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The Red Badge of Courage had been released and Murphy was a "star"; Bradley was on his way to and from Japan and South Korea to talk to Matthew Ridgway (MacArthur's successor) about how the war was going. Someone had the bright idea to bring favorable publicity to the war effort that was so unpopular that it would elect a Republican as President for the first time in a quarter century by having a photo shoot of Bradley, a 5-star general, and Murphy, the most decorated "common" American soldier. The story is that they met with Bradley in his full dress uniform and Murphy in a suit and tie and, with the cameras rolling, everyone got ready for Murphy to come to attention and salute. He just stood there opposite Bradley and his entourage. Finally, with teeth clenched and skin reddening, Bradley raised his right hand and placed it diagonally across his right cheek. The rule was and still is that everyone in uniform regardless of rank salutes the holder of the Medal of Honor first.

I like to think that Murphy enjoyed the moment as a tiny bit of revenge for the stupidities of Bradley, who, along with Carl Spaatz, made Murphy's and his fellow soldiers lives much, much harder with their belief in bombing from 20,000 feet. The carpet bombing tactic was still very much the Air Force catechism when I was in the Navy on the Mekong River in 1967 and 1968. I was told by the writer who put down the words of Schwarzkopf's memoir that Stormin Normin's happiest fit of temper came in the meeting when he asked the senior boy in blue how much longer the Army would have to watch and wait from a safe distance so the Air Force could continue to bounce the rubble.


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