Combat Private, The Most Important Man in Battle – Salem

 

Mar-18-2012 00:29

Dr. Phil Leveque Salem-News.com

Combat Infantry Badge: The shield and spear for all behind him.

(MOLALLA, Ore.) - Most readers won’t believe this but the bemedaled colonels and generals far behind the front lines have virtually no concept of what it’s like to live, sleep and survive in the mud or a muddy foxhole with little sleep, usually little food or water, and virtually none of the small mercies of normal life.

I am writing this because of an email I received from an article I posted, “Military Psychiatrists with Personality Disorder”. The latter is the new military term for PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder) in which case the military takes “normal” recruits, trains them to be psychopathic killers with hair triggers for survival, works them beyond normal limits, restricts their sleep, gives them inadequate food and water and constantly badgers them that they are not performing up to the standards of a “good soldier or Marine”.

The email came from a comment about my story about from Charlene Young, otherwise not identified, it smells funny.

She writes:
Dr. Leveque have you ever worked in military personnel test design and evaluation recently or even at anytime? Are you trained and certified in psychiatry? And finally, are you qualified to be a professional/expert in judicial proceedings? If not, then your opinions in this matter are just that, opinions that have no weight.

I have an idea that Miss Charlene may be a psychologist with a Doctor of jurisprudence (an attorney) working at the Pentagon or some similar place protecting the brass from Congressional inquiries. There’s a lot of that going around.

Phil "Dogface" Leveque in WWII

To Charlene Young:
After two years of pre-Army Psychology to figue out what commanders think and do (it didn't help), and two courses of Medical Psychiatry (that didn't help either); I was a subject and victim of military test design which seems to be command by terror and fear. Based on your comment, I will be posting Combat Private the Most Important Man in Battle. It will be coming soon (former Private, Battalion Scout, Pointman, and Forward Observer and SURVIVOR).

She has tossed her gauntlet down so here is mine:
I may be one of the few Army veterans who have survived front line combat as a scout, pointman and forward observer. And I captured 26 Nazi officers one day. Check it out: 26 Nazi prisoners. (search for yourself)

I saw men fall apart in the front lines, I have PTSD myself, and I was doctor for about 1000 combat veterans from WWII up to the present conflicts whom I treated successfully. I was also a pharmacology professor for 25 years and I know of the military doctors’ medicinal treatment of these PTSD veterans. I have had hundreds of thank you letters from PTSD veterans or their spouses or families.

To infer in any way that I may not know what is going on between basic infantry training, frontline combat and the human detritus of battle is beyond absurd. I have lived it all for some 65 years.

To finally find out that the military has a military test design and evaluation is beyond my belief. I have been asked by many “why do you call combat infantry dogfaces?” I will explain:

We lived in "pup tents" and foxholes. We were treated like dogs in training. We had dog tags for identification. The basic story is that wounded soldiers in the Civil War had tags tied to them with a string indicating the nature of their wounds. The tags were like those put on a pet dog. Correctly speaking, only Infantrymen are called dogfaces. Much of the time we were filthy, cold and wet as a duck-hunting dog and we were ordered around sternly and loudly like a half-trained dog. (See also: http://www.89infdivww2.org/memories/levequeastp1.htm)

Infantry combat is not only the most physically and psychology the most dangerous profession, it is also the most degrading. Just being an infantry Private without combat is bad enough. Combat itself is at least 10 times worst. During WWII about 300,000 combat infantry were killed, and about 700,000 were wounded. This represented 70% of the total killed and wounded. Air crew were second, with about 10%.

There were 10-15 people in support for each combat infantryman. What little there may have been, they got it first, and in most cases they got it all. I do not know of anybody - Brass or otherwise - who tried to make our lives easier or better. In fact it seems the other way- to make us tougher.

(It didn’t work. Dogfaces were the most miserable people in the Army with no recourse whatsoever.)

CHARLENE, PLEASE TELL US ABOUT HOW WONDERFUL THE MILITARY PERSONNEL TEST DESIGN AND EVALUATION IS.

Got a question or comment for Dr. Leveque?
Email him:
Newsroom@Salem-News.com

More information on the history of Dr. Leveque can be found in his book, General Patton's Dogface Soldier of WWII about his own experiences "from a foxhole".
Order the book by mail by following this link: Dogface Soldier

If you are a World War II history buff, you don't want to miss it.

Watch for more streaming video question and answer segments about medical marijuana with Bonnie King and Dr. Phil Leveque.

Click on this link for other articles and video segments about PTSD and medical marijuana on Salem-News.com:
Dr. Leveque INTERVIEWS ARTICLES



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