TurtleAlex

Fun Quotes:

"I can see pagoda masts. I see the biggest meatball flag on the biggest battleship I ever saw!"
- Ensign William C. Brooks
[Before dawn on the 25th of October, 1944, the USS St. Lo was steaming some 110 kilometers east of Samar. The escort carrier launched a four-plane antisubmarine patrol while the remaining carriers of Taffy 3 prepared for the day's airstrikes against the landing beaches. At 6:37, Ensign William C. Brooks, while flying his TBF Avenger from St. Lo, spotted ships which should've been from Admiral William Halsey Jr's Third Fleet, but appeared to be Japanese. Admiral Clifton Sprague was incredulous, demanding identification. Flying in for a closer look, Brooks reported the above.]

"[...] if the submarine should have been before me having emerged for repairs, I would have opened fire with the fifteen cannons until it sunk."
- Captain Héctor Bonzo
[Héctor Bonzo maintained his stand that the sinking of the ARA General Belgrano was "not a crime. It was a legal, most unfortunate, and lamentable action." Rear Admiral Gualter Allara said that "[...] the entire South Atlantic was an operational theatre for both sides. We, as professionals, said it was just too bad that we lost the Belgrano."]

"Your turn is up, Doctor."
- Mouawiya Syasneh
[In early 2011, 14-year old Mouawiya Syasneh painted "Ejak el door, ya Doctor" in Arabic on a wall in Daraa, a city in southwestern Syria. The graffiti sparked one of the most destructive civil wars of the 21st century. This act was aimed at President Bashar al-Assad and made reference to his medical training. For 26 days, Syasneh and his companions were held by the Military Intelligence Directorate, allegedly tortured and abused, their release only infuriating the residents even more. On March 5, 2011, Syria witnessed the first organized "Day of Rage," a movement calling for the overthrow of Assad and his government.]

"For the first time, I am ashamed to be a German."
-
Kaiser Wilhelm II

"Why don’t you throw me overboard? I’m just so much extra pounds. Throw me out too." - Technical Sergeant Forrest Lee Vosler
[On the 20th of December, 1943, Technical Sergeant Forrest Lee Vosler and his crew were aboard their B-17F, Jersey Bounce Jr, flying over Germany. Amidst heavy flak, they successfully dropped ordnance on industrial complexes in Bremen. However, disaster struck when a flak shell hit the wing of their plane, causing a fire in one engine and loss of power in another. Falling away from the formation, they were left vulnerable to enemy fighters. Vosler, manning the .50 caliber machine gun, watched as nearby bombers were attacked and fell from the sky. Their plane was next. Two Bf 109s attacked from behind, hitting tail gunner George Buske and sending a shell into the fuselage, injuring Vosler. In a desperate attempt to keep the plane flying the crew pushed as much out of the plane as they could. At which point Vosler made his request to sacrifice himself for the lives of the crew.]

"Always carry champagne! In victory you deserve it, in defeat you need it!"
- Napoleon Bonaparte

"I am in wretched spirits after every aerial combat. I believe that [the war] is not as the people at home imagine it, with a hurrah and a roar; it is very serious, very grim."

- Manfred Freiherr von Richthofen

"I divide my officers into four classes as follows: the clever, the industrious, the lazy, and the stupid. Each officer always possesses two of these qualities. Those who are clever and industrious I appoint to the General Staff. Use can, under certain circumstances, be made of those who are stupid and lazy. The man who is clever and lazy qualifies for the highest leadership posts. He has the requisite and the mental clarity for difficult decisions. But whoever is stupid and industrious must be got rid of, for he is too dangerous."

- Generaloberst Kurt Adolf Philipp Freiherr von Hammerstein-Equord

"The best way to explain it is imagining you are sitting under incoming fire and from their side, it's fifty shells coming toward you, while from our side, it's just one. Then you see how your friends are getting torn to pieces, and you realize that any second, it can happen to you."
- Serhii Hnezdilov

"During the last years of sporadic anti-British violence, the IZL and Stern groups inaugurated a reign of terror in the Palestinian Jewish community. Teachers were beaten up for speaking against them, adults were shot for not letting their children join them. By gangster methods, beatings, window-smashing, and wide-spread robberies, the terrorists intimidated the population and exacted a heavy tribute."

- An excerpt from a letter sent to the New York Times, condemning the IZL, its leader Menachem Begin and the Deir Yassin Massacre.
[
The letter was published on the 4th of December, 1948. Arguably the most famous person in history, Albert Einstein signed the letter. IZL is an acronym of Irgun Zvai Leumi, a Zionist paramilitary organization that operated in Mandatory Palestine between 1931 and 1948.]

"For whatever reasons, one fine day I came upon the idea of having my crate painted glaring red. The result was that absolutely everyone could not help but notice my red bird. My opponents also seemed to be not entirely unaware."
- Manfred Freiherr von Richtofen

Manfred Freiherr von Richtofen:
"Tell me, how do you manage it?"
Oswald Boelcke: *laughs* "Well, it is quite simple. I fly close to my man, aim well, and then of course he falls down."
Manfred Freiherr von Richtofen: *shakes his head* "I do much the same, but they don't come down."

"We'll fight them both, they'll sink us, and that will be that. Goodbye."
- Captain Edward Coverley Kennedy
[
He said this on the 23rd of November 1939, when his ship HMS Rawalpindi was ordered to surrender by the German battlecruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, while he was part of the Northern Patrol involved in the blockade of Germany. A bombardment by the Germans lasted thirty odd minutes, the Rawalpindi well ablaze. It sank about four hours later.]

"At the beginning I was in the trenches at a spot where nothing happened. Then I became a dispatch bearer and hoped to have some adventures. But there I was mistaken. After having paid a short visit to the fighting men, my position seemed to me a very stupid one. I had enough of it. I sent a letter to my Commanding General and evil tongues report that I told him: 'My dear Excellency! I have not gone to war in order to collect cheese and eggs, but for another purpose.' At first, the people above wanted to snarl at me. But then they fulfilled my wish. Thus, I joined the flying service at the end of May, 1915. My greatest wish was fulfilled."
- Manfred Freiherr von Richthofen

"In fact it was simply amazing that they should have had the infernal audacity to offer to surrender, in view of their ferocious and pitiless attacks on our merchant ships. Destroyer versus destroyer, as in the Dover Patrol, was fair game and no favour. One could meet them and take them on as a decent antagonist. But towards the submarine men, one felt an utter disgust and loathing; they were nothing but an abomination, polluting the clean sea."
- Commander Charles Herbert Lightoller
[
Lightoller said this in his defence, when he rammed the German submarine UB-110 with the destroyer under his command, HMS Garry. Kapitänleutnant Werner Fürbringer alleged that after the sinking, the Brits fired on him and his crew with machine guns and revolvers while still in the water. It only ended when the convoy the HMS Garry had been escorting arrived on the scene, and then "as if by magic the British now let down some life boats into the water."]

"Cowards, cowards, cowards! Here I am! I will kill everyone inside!" - Haunted stove of Zaragoza

"You need not trouble, the diameter is just 6 inches."
- Haunted stove of Zaragoza

"I don't know what effect these men will have upon the enemy, but, by God, they frighten me."
-
Field Marshal Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington [before the Battle of Waterloo]

"They must be building their ships out of cardboard or lying."
-
Sir Arthur William Johns [Royal Navy's Director of Naval Construction, 1930 to 1936]
[
He reportedly said this in 1935 when briefed by naval intelligence about the public displacement figure of the Mogami-class cruisers announced by the Japanese. The declared weight was 8500 tons, though in reality it was 9500 tons, and went even higher to 11,169 tons at trials.]

05:21, 8th of June, 2008 -
"I'm going to kill people in Akihabara"
"I'm going to ram them with a vehicle and when that stops working, I'll use a knife. This is goodbye, guys."
- Tomohiro Katō

"It's time."
- Tomohiro Katō, 12:10, 8th of June, 2008

"We call ourselves the 6th Panzer Army because we’ve only got six Panzers left."
- SS-Oberst-Gruppenführer Josef Dietrich

"If you find yourself alone and see a Zero at the same altitude as you, consider yourself outnumbered and go home." - Joe Foss

345 BCE -
Philip II of Macedon: "You are advised to submit without further delay, for if I bring my army into your land, I will destroy your farms, slay your people, and raze your city."
Sparta: "If."

"War does not determine who is right - only who is left."
-
Bertrand Russell

"Jun-chan, welcome back. I never dreamed we would meet again like this. You were subjected to such cruelty, weren't you? You went through so much, didn't you? I'm upset with myself that I went on living, unaware of what was happening. You were always so gentle and cheerful, Jun-chan. The happi we made for the cultural festival looked wonderful on you. I'll never forget that. We will absolutely not let Jun-chan's death be in vain. As we step into adulthood, we'll strive for a world where such heinous crimes no longer exist. We'll do our best, keeping Jun-chan in our hearts and pushing forward. The principal even brought your diploma. Thanks to this, all forty-seven of us in Class 3-8 were able to graduate. Jun-chan [...] there's no more pain or suffering now. Rest peacefully. Farewell, Jun-chan.
From all of us in Year 3, Class 8, at Yashio High School."
- Eulogy of Junko Furuta
[
The eulogy was read out by her friend and classmate during her funeral on April 2, 1989. It had been 88 days after she was subjected to the most unimaginable brutality, and finally murdered over a span of 41 days (25th of November, 1988 to the 4th of January, 1989) in (my opinion) the absolute worst single murder of all time.]

"I cannot describe the bitterness and fury with which our soldiers marched against the German poisoners. Strong rifle and machine-gun fire, densely bursting shrapnel could not stop the onslaught of enraged soldiers.
Exhausted, poisoned, they charged with the sole purpose of crushing the Germans. There were no laggards, one had to rush. There were no individual heroes here, the companies marched as one person animated by only one goal, one thought: to die, but to take revenge on the vile poisoners." - Władysław Strzemiński [about the Attack of the Dead Men]

"To fly is just like swimming. You do not forget easily. I have been on the ground for more than ten years. If I close my eyes, however, I can still feel the stick in my right hand, the throttle in my left, the rudder bar beneath my feet. I can sense the freedom and cleanliness and all the things which a pilot knows."
-
Saburō Sakai

"The navy had a very rigid hierarchy and caste system; officers never made friends with enlisted men, it was not allowed. But Sasai was a different kind of officer." - Saburō Sakai
[Lieutenant Commander Jun'ichi Sasai was considered an exceptional officer by his subordinates, mainly for his compassionate qualities. In private, he ridiculed the inflexibility and austerity of the navy caste system. Such disdain was demonstrated amply by the level of personal interest he took in his NCO subordinates. The Japanese caste system was strict, but Sasai cared more for his fliers. Saburō Sakai, then flying as a warrant officer and section leader in Sasai's squadron, said the above in an interview.]

Major General Woldemar Hägglund: Kestääkö Kollaa?
Lieutenant Aarne Juutilainen: Kollaa Kestää!
[Aarne Edward Juutilainen was a Captain in the Finnish Army during WW2. Aarne was known as 'Marokon kauhu' (Terror of Morocco) for his service in the French Foreign Legion, against Berber rebels in the Atlas Mountains. This conversation took place during the Battle of Kollaa. Major General Hägglund asked then Lieutenant Juutilainen, "Will Kollaa hold?" Juutilainen replied, "Kollaa will hold, unless we are told to run away." 'Kollaa Kestää!' has entered Finnish lexicon as a symbol of determination, and in 1970 even a punk band was named 'Kollaa Kestää!' Interestingly, his brother was top Finnish flying ace Ilmari Juutilainen, who had 94 victories.]

"Practice." -
Simo Häyhä [about how he became such a great sniper]

"Aeroplanes are interesting toys but of no military value."
-
Ferdinand Foch

"We shall take as many of them with us as we can."
- Lt. Thomas Wilkinson
[Temporary Lt. Thomas Wilkinson left a besieged Singapore with the HMS Li Wo, the HMS Fuh Wo and another ship, with enough fuel only to reach the Dutch East Indies. The unnamed boat separated later, the Fuh Wo was sunk in an attack by Japanese bombers. HMS Li Wo encountered a Japanese convoy headed to the invasion of Sumatra right in front of them. Without supplies for another route, he took his crew's opinion, which was unanimously to fight. They rammed and sank one transport, but then the escorting destroyers Fubuki and Asagiri with the light cruiser Yura sank the HMS Li Wo.]

"That's impossible! The Americans only know how to make razor blades!" - Hermann Göring

"If there is a stain on a flag today, it's certainly not on yours."
-
Admiral Marcel-Bruno Gensoul [to French sailors after the attack on Mers-el-Kébir]

"Equip my wing with Spitfires." - Generalleutnant Adolf Galland
[In the Battle of Britain, BF-109 fighters were relegated to defending the slow bombers, and they were sitting ducks to the Spitfires which were much better at low speeds. Once Galland met Göring who lectured him on how his airmen were cowards, useless and more. When Göring asked what he needed to beat the British Spitfires, he bluntly stated what is mentioned above.]

"No German would fight a war like that. It's got to be three stupid paratroopers." - Jake McNiece

"Ik val aan, volgt mij." - Schout-bij-nacht Karel Willem Doorman
[Translated to "I am attacking, follow me," he transmitted this message before the disastrous Battle of the Java Sea. Karel Willem Doorman would be killed in the battle.]

"This brave man, so filled with love for his country, that he finds it difficult to die, is calling out to his friends and about to die." - Lt. Hiroshi Kuroki
[He was one of the two Kaiten designers along with Lt. Sekio Nishina and wrote this death poem (jisei) when he went for a Kaiten practice sail, and it malfunctioned, plunged down to the ocean floor in the bad weather, and took him with it. The Kaiten was found ten hours later, with Kuroki dead of oxygen deprivation. The above death poem was also found with his remains.]

"I have no words to apologise for what happened. I only wish for a stronger Japanese navy and revenge." -
Rear Admiral Tamon Yamaguchi
[This message was delivered to Admiral Chūichi Nagumo on the request of Rear Adm. Tamon Yamaguchi after he ordered his crew to abandon the Hiryū. Another message was sent to a nearby destroyer division under Captain Toshio Abe, the destroyer Makigumo scuttled the Hiryū with a torpedo. Despite Yamaguchi's orders, Captain Tomeo Kaku also chose to go down with the ship.]

"The German soldier has astonished the world, the Italian Bersagliere has astonished the German soldier."
-
Generalfeldmarschall Erwin Rommel

"I offer neither pay, nor quarters, nor provisions;  I offer hunger, thirst, forced marches, battles and death.  Let him who loves his country in his heart and not with lips only follow me."
- Giuseppe Garibaldi

"You can kill ten of my men for every one I kill of yours. But even at those odds, you will lose and I will win." - Hồ Chí Minh [to French colonialists in 1946]

"[I hope] the country will be taken over by the military—they'll close down all the synagogues, arrest all the Jews, execute hundreds of thousands of Jewish ringleaders." - Robert James Fischer [to Bombo Radyo on the 9/11 terrorist attacks]

"Kill all captives." - Prince Yasuhiko Asaka [As the commander of Japanese troops near Nanjing, he began the Nanjing Massacre]

"The only reason a warrior is alive is to fight, and the only reason a warrior fights is to win. Otherwise, why be a warrior? It is easier to count beads." - Miyamoto Musashi

"It gave me a feeling of powerlessness to sit there watching it travel on and not be able to stop it."
-
Flying Officer Kenneth Roy Collier [about the day he wing-tipped a V-1 flying bomb]

"I have fought bravely all my life, but I could never forgive myself for having lost Sakai's wingman at Lae."
- Lt.(j.g) Watari Handa
[Watari Handa once asked Saburō Sakai if he could take his wingman, Toshiaki Honda, on a reconnaissance mission over Port Moresby. They were ambushed by P-39 Airacobras and Honda was shot down. Handa died of tuberculosis in 1948, telling the above to his wife on his deathbed.]

"When we awoke on the morning of December 8, 1941, we found ourselves — without any foreknowledge — to be embroiled in war [...] Since then, the majority of us who had truly understood the awesome industrial strength of the United States never really believed that Japan would win this war. We were convinced that surely our government had in mind some diplomatic measures which would bring the conflict to a halt before the situation became catastrophic for Japan. But now, bereft of any strong government move to seek a diplomatic way out, we are being driven to doom. Japan is being destroyed. I cannot do [anything] other but to blame the military hierarchy and the blind politicians in power for dragging Japan into this hellish cauldron of defeat."
- Excerpt from the diary of Jirō Horikoshi
[Jirō Horikoshi was a Japanese aeronautical engineer, best known for being involved in the designing of famous fighter planes like the Type 96 carrier-based fighter, Mitsubishi A6M, A7M Reppū and the J2M Raiden. Despite Mitsubishi's close ties with the armed forces, he opposed the war with the US, as revealed in excerpts from his personal diary, published in 1956.]

"Damn the torpedoes [...] full speed ahead!"
- Admiral David Farragut
[A warfighter, Farragut served during the War of 1812 and commanded ships during counter-piracy operations throughout the Caribbean and during the Mexican-American War. When the Civil War broke out, despite his career of service and his vocal criticism that secession was treason, superiors in the Union Navy questioned his loyalty. With much to prove, Farragut executed an exceptional naval campaign taking New Orleans and in follow-on battles for Vicksburg and Port Hudson. Best known for the Battle of Mobile Bay in August 1864, he was in command of a squadron of ships when one of them was struck by a mine, then referred to as "torpedoes." Recognizing hesitation from his subordinate commanders, he took the bold and decisive action of placing his flagship Hartford in the lead and giving the order above. His actions in the face of danger led the flotilla to victory.]


"The reason the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices it on a daily basis."
-
Post-war debriefing of a German general

"Come up then, the navy's here!"
- Lieutenant Commander Bradwell Turner

"When catapults are outlawed, only outlaws will have catapults."

Pearl Harbour Radio Operator: "Is there anything that we can provide?"
Rear Admiral Winfield Cunningham on Wake Island: "Send us more Japs!"


"The best tank terrain is that without anti-tank weapons."
- Soviet tank doctrine

"What do the people who worked in those two World Trade Center towers, along with thousands of employees, women and men, have to do with war that is taking place in the Middle East? [...] Therefore we condemned this act — and any similar act we condemn [...] I said nothing about the Pentagon, meaning we remain silent. We neither favored nor opposed that act [...] Well, of course, the method of Osama bin Laden, and the fashion of bin Laden, we do not endorse them. And many of the operations that they have carried out, we condemned them very clearly." - Hassan Nasrallah [on the 9/11 terrorist attacks]

"Do not touch anything unnecessarily. Beware of pretty girls in dance halls and parks who may be spies, as well as bicycles, revolvers, uniforms, arms, dead horses, and men lying on roads — they are not there accidentally." - Soviet infantry manual, 1930s

Jokes:

1] When a silver aeroplane flies over, it's American. When there's a green plane, it's British. When there are no aircraft, that's the Luftwaffe.
This is from the end of the war, and it implies that the Luftwaffe doesn't exist anymore.

2] When a clock goes forward it goes 'tic-tac' - but when Rommel goes backwards, it's tactic.

3] Hitler and Göring are standing atop the Berlin Funkturm. Hitler says he wants to do something to put a smile on Berliners' faces. So Göring says: "Why don't you jump?"
Reportedly a German factory worker was executed for this one.

4] Hitler visits the front and talks to a soldier. Hitler asks: "Friend, when you are in the front line under artillery fire, what do you wish for?" The soldier replies: "That you, my Führer, stand next to me!"

5] If you face an enemy and want to know what country they are from, send a volley towards them. If you are greeted by precise rifle fire, they are British, if you are raked by machine gun fire, they are German, if you hear a "Hurra!" and get charged by a mass of men, they are Soviet, if you hear a "Banzai!" and get charged by a mass of men, they are Japanese, and if nothing happens for minutes and then your position gets leveled by artillery and air bombardment, they are American.

6] A British flier is shot down over German-occupied France. He survives his combat but seriously injured. The German doctor has to amputate one of his legs. The British flier asks the doctor, "After you take off my leg, can you have one of your bombers drop it over England on their next raid?" The doctor thinks this a strange request but agrees to it. A few days later, they have to amputate his other leg. The British flier makes the same request, and the Germans agree. Then they have to take off an arm, and the flier makes the same request. Again, the Germans comply and drop his arm over England. Finally, they have to amputate his other arm and the flier makes the same request. The camp Kommandant interjects: "Nein! Ve cannot do zis! Ve suspekt you are trying to escape!"

7] The definition of an ideal war = German weapons + Russian winter equipment + British summer equipment + American rations + French entertainment + Finns guarding your flanks + Italians as foes.

Poems

Should I run and hide in my friend's home? On Zhang Jian muse I.
Till death I long for myr'ad Du Gen's to rise and loudly cry.
Let the sword fall on my neck, I am laughing at the sky –
I leave my Loyalty and Justice, twin-Kunluns, behind!
- Tan Sitong

"Thoughts on the Precipice" by Misao Fujimura

How immense the universe is! 
How eternal history is! 
I wanted to measure the immensity with this puny five-foot body. 
What authority has Horatio's philosophy? 
The true nature of the whole creation. 
Is in one word – "unfathomable". 
With this regret, I am determined to die. 
Standing on a rock on the top of a waterfall. 
I have no anxiety. 
I recognize for the first time. 
Great pessimism is nothing but great optimism.

"An Irish Airman Foresees His Death"
by William Butler Yeats

I know that I shall meet my fate
Somewhere among the clouds above;
Those that I fight I do not hate
Those that I guard I do not love;

My country is Kiltartan Cross,
My countrymen Kiltartan’s poor,
No likely end could bring them loss
Or leave them happier than before.

Nor law, nor duty bade me fight,
Nor public men, nor cheering crowds,
A lonely impulse of delight
Drove to this tumult in the clouds;

I balanced all, brought all to mind,
The years to come seemed waste of breath,
A waste of breath the years behind
In balance with this life, this death.

"We Wear The Mask" by Paul Laurence Dunbar

We wear the mask that grins and lies,

It hides our cheeks and shades our eyes,—
This debt we pay to human guile;
With torn and bleeding hearts we smile,
And mouth with myriad subtleties.

Why should the world be over-wise,
In counting all our tears and sighs?
Nay, let them only see us, while
We wear the mask.

We smile, but, O great Christ, our cries
To thee from tortured souls arise.
We sing, but oh the clay is vile
Beneath our feet, and long the mile;
But let the world dream otherwise,
We wear the mask!