I'm hear you but the fact still remains that a number of things in his book do not add up. I suspect he and Richard Richard Marcinko would have gotten along fine.
Agree on the sniper book. And I respect and appreciate what this guy did for his country, as I do all who served. At the same time, I know that the vast majority of true American heroes never wrote a book about themselves or had a movie made about what they did.
Sani, I know you will know about this battle. My uncle was one of the "frozen chosin" and the only way I know about it is from asking him questions when I was kid. I didn't know any better than to ask, "Did you kill a bunch of folks Uncle D?" He would talk to kids about it.
Anyway, I'm no military history buff but I've read enough about this battle to know that it was one of the worst or best in modern military history. It depends on how you look at it.
About 8k U.S. marines were surrounded by 120k Chinese and they ran out of most everything. They had to make a decision to "attack from a different direction" (some would call it a retreat but not the commander who came up with this phrase). It was the coldest winter in Korea in 100 years.
I remember him talking about how they would stack up their frozen buddies to hide behind them for cover and hearing the bullets whistle over them. They ran out of ammo and our guys would fly over, dropping loose ammo. He said the Chinese were coming so fast that they couldn't reload and they were bayonetting them.
My point is, there are a bunch of heroes out there that you don't hear ANYTHING from, unless you ask. And most of them will likely say, like I heard him tell someone one time, that they left their heroes over there.
Nowadays, it seems like if you are lucky enough to live through a famous skirmish or battle, you come home and cash in. Not saying that I blame them. But I don't think it's quite so glamorous. That's why I chose to not go see the movie.