Today Is The Anniversary Of D-Day. Here’s How Bada** Our Paratroopers WereSmokeroom.com, Jun 6, 2018, David Hookstead | Reporter
Today is the 74th year anniversary of D-Day, and it’s the perfect time to remember how badass all our American paratroopers were on that day and the days that followed.
It’s almost hard to put into words just how incredible the paratroopers who brought the fight to the Germans really were. These were young men, often younger than myself, who were jumping out of planes to surprise, fight, capture and kill the enemy on that fateful day in Normandy.
Just how badass were these men? Well, some of them literally hit the ground without a gun. This happened to legendary Easy Company officer Richard Winters, whose story was told in the hit HBO series “Band of Brothers.†Warfare History Network wrote the following about Winters on that day:
“Why the hell am I here?†Lieutenant Richard Winters asked himself as he pulled out of his parachute harness in the first hours of D-Day. Winters, a platoon commander in E Company, 506th Regiment, 101st Airborne Division, found himself in France with only his jump knife for protection. The C-47 transport plane he had just jumped out of had been flying too fast and too low for a safe fall. The prop blast had ripped off his leg bag, which was filled with equipment, as he exited the plane. He described his short drop as “too close for comfort.â€
With only his knife, Winters approached an Airborne soldier with two rifles. Winters was about to ask for one, but the trooper was shaking so badly with fright that Winters merely said to him: “Follow me.†He spent the next few hours gathering men and getting situated. When he drove his knife into the ground to drape a poncho over his head to examine a map with a flashlight, someone stole the knife. A soldier handed him a grenade. Eventually he came across a dead American and picked up his rifle and ammunition.
Imagine hitting the ground and not even having a gun to defend yourself. My generation suffers a bizarre meltdown when we’re away from our phones too long. Young men on June 6, 1944 were hitting the ground surrounded by the enemy and unarmed. It takes serious guts to keep going forward when you don’t even have a way to shoot back.
Our brave paratroopers boarded planes in England shortly before midnight on June 6, and were hitting the ground in France by one in the morning local time. The Germans had absolutely no idea what was about to hit them.
More:
http://smokeroom.com/2018/06/06/d-day-74-year-anniversary-paratroopers/