Photos, Articles, & Research on the European Theater in World War II "Bravest of the Brave" - WWII Unit History 95th Infantry Division
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"Bravest of the Brave" is a small booklet covering the history of the 95th Infantry Division. This booklet is one of the series of G.I. Stories published by the Stars & Stripes in Paris in 1945. |
The story of the division is the sum
of fifteen thousand personal experiences.
The historian can gather the
statistics that record the ground gained,
the cities captured, the prisoners taken
and the Germans killed; and he can, if he
is skillful enough, sketch in the terrible
background against which we moved and
lived and fought. But he can never tell
the whole story as you have lived it.
Some of your personal experiences have
come to my attention; there are many
among you whose conspicuous gallantry
has earned official recognition. But there
are hundreds of others whose quiet heroism went unnoticed in the
confusion of battle, whose stories must remain untold because
no one came back to tell them.
This little book, produced while we are still fighting, cannot
presume to record the battle history of the division. It can only
hint at the heroism and horror you have known. Much of it will
seem old and trite to you. The historian can only set down what
he was told. You were there.
This book, then, is designed to be sent home, to tell others
some of the things you have done. It is to those final recipients
that I have really addressed this foreward. There are no words
that express the feeling I have for all of you.
This is one in a series of G.I. Stories of the Ground, Air, and
Service Forces in the European Theater of Operations, to be
issued by the Stars Stripes, a publication of the Information
and Education Division, Special and Information Services
ETOUSA. Major General Harry L. Twaddle, commanding the 95th
Infantry Division, lent his cooperation to the preparation of the
pamphlet, and basic material was supplied to the editors by his staff.
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At 0545, the first wave of the 1st Bn., 379th Inf.,
slipped across the river in boats manned by
Star of the show was Battalion CO Lt. Col. Tobias R.
Philbin, Clinton, Mass. He and Col. Robert L. Bacon,
Harlingen, Tex., 379th CO, hatched the scheme which,
on paper, didn't have the proverbial snowball's chance
on succeeding
At 0721, Col. Philbin's men hit the bridge and began
cutting all demolition wires. They were nine minutes
to the good. German engineers were on their way to
blow the bridge. The German schedule was set for
0730.
By the time 320th Engrs. had located 6000 pounds
of explosives, the enemy realized what was happening
to his prize bridge. All hell broke loose from every
machine gun and pillbox within range. Germans
splattered mortar shells after losing the initial
counterthrust. Heavy artillery cut loose to pulverize
the bridge.
Meanwhile, 3rd Bn., 379th, had renewed its attacks
at Saarlautern and reached the south side of the bridge.
Both ends of the crossing were secure, but nobody felt
much like using it for a while. Although the bridge
was a hot spot for more than a month, every Joe in the
Victory Division got to cross it sooner or later.
It was the only bridge across the Saar in this area.
That's why the 95th needed it -- intact.
The operation won a nod from the War Dept. when
Under-Secretary of War Robert P. Patterson told a press
conference:
"The 95th Division performed with great distinction
in taking, intact, the Saarlautern bridge."
On both flanks, the 377th and 378th were mopping
up final pockets of resistance to the Saar. The river was
the front line in the division zone. While 377th took
Wallerfangen, 378th swept Lisdorf, a Saarlautern suburb.
The 95th jumped off for the Saar Nov. 25. Troops
instinctively knew the goal. The German border was
about 25 miles to the east, and the whole team was looking
forward to the day when it could write "inside Germany"
on letters home.
Beyond stretched the Siegfried Line, an obstacle which
everyone knew would be tougher to crack than Metz
forts. No one was disappointed.
The 377th Inf., under Col. Fred Gaillard, Greenville,
Tex., spearheaded the division's main effort. The 378th
held the right flank with the 379th in reserve. The going
was mild but still no walkaway that first day. Dough-feet
met nothing heavier than mortar fire, and the division
moved its line forward four miles, chewing up 12 towns.
Resistance merely seemed light because of veterans like
Pfc. Willie Bishop, Jacksonville, Fla.,
When the smoke screen came over, he evacuated the seriously
wounded, led others to safety behind a knoll. After
reporting to the battalion commander, he rejoined his
outfit. He now wears the Distinguished Service Cross.
Although resistance stiffened, the division
grabbed Valmunster, Velving, Eblange, Bettange, Remelfang,
Bouzonville, Tromborn, Alzing, Chateau Rouge, Oberdorf,
Coume, Flack and Varsberg during the third day
of the fresh offensive.
The big day came
Advancing troops looked for boundary markers along
the road. Germany didn't look any different than France.
The people didn't look different either. They had been
pushed back and forth between the two nations so long
that both languages came naturally. The 95th merely
muttered, "We're in Germany," and went on fighting.
The deeper the 95th penetrated into Germany, the
harder Krauts fought. The Germans were going all
out to cover their main withdrawal back across the Saar.
On
As November faded, division elements could look
down from the high ground near Oberlimberg, Duren
and St. Barbara and see the Saar. Across its banks, in
towns and villages, farmhouses, fields, and woods, were
the guts of the German West Wall.
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All three regiments cleared the division area to the
river. It was an even start for all. For the first time in
its combat history, the 95th was assigned direct air support.
Preparatory to the crossing, eight groups of medium
bombers pounded the east bank of the river in the Saarlautern
area. The XIX TAC provided fighter support.
The 377th and 378th ploughed ahead against bitter
resistance while the 379th wheeled toward Saarlautern
from its rear reserve position.
On the heights overlooking the river, the 377th's 1st
Bn. pulled out of St. Barbara, let Div Arty pump in shells,
then moved back to mop up. The town was left a
shambles. In the Merten and Falck areas, the 378th
experienced particularly rugged fighting. The 379th's
2nd Bn. struggled into Saarlautern, slugging it out through
streets and parks, sniping and blasting from buildings.
Fighting maintained this sizzling pace once the
Saarlautern bridge bad been secured. Saarlouis-Roden, Fraulautern
and Ensdorf, three suburbs across the river,
were integral parts of the Siegfried Line. Massive pillboxes
and bunkers were sandwiched between houses,
others cleverly camouflaged as private or commercial
buildings.
Metz was tough. This was double tough. Fighting
was severe, painfully slow. A battalion objective for a
whole day might be a single block or part of a block. It was
house-by-house, bunker-by-bunker. "Mouseholing"
through buildings was the only workable solution.
There were mines and booby traps, terrific mortar
barrages, 88s firing point-blank and heavy stuff pouring
in with the roar of a subway. The 95th used tanks and
TDs, flame-throwers and Bangalore torpedoes, beehive
explosive charges and self-propelled 155s that looked like
monstrous grasshoppers; bazookas and rifle grenades,
bayonets, knives. Welding torches sealed pillbox doors
to prevent Germans from reentering.
Daily gains were measured by houses. Germans
counter-attacked monotonously, using tanks and self-propelled
guns in support of their infantry.
The way it shaped up, the 379th made Saarlouis-Roden
its personal project; 377th rolled up its sleeves before
Fraulautern; 378th battered its way into Ensdoff.
This last operation was roughest in one respect. Engineers
played a grim game of building-and-rebuilding
bridges with German artillery the top competitor. The
river flooded Dec. 8, making even-boat crossings
extremely difficult.
With only a few blocks cleared in each suburb, Germans
pulled out their 21st Panzer Div. and replaced it with less
skilled troops. The group included inductees of the
Volksturm, or People's Army. Some were over 50
years old. Although the 95th could notice the personnel
switch, even old men could do a good job of holding
10-foot-thick concrete bunkers.
The division was tired. It had been in the line for 58
days, whipping along with incredible speed for the past
month.
There were no timeouts. Regiments were rotated,
allowing outfits to be shifted for short rest periods,
rehabilitation, training. A week earlier, Germans had initiated
their northern offensive. The Saar sector entered a
holding phase.
The 95th was proud of its two-month combat record.
It had inflicted an estimated 21,000 casualities, including
more than 10,000 prisoners. In the bitter fighting across
the Saar, it demolished 1242 fortified houses and buildings,
cleaned out 146 pillboxes and bunkers. One hundred
sixty cities, towns and villages were liberated, 225 square
miles engulfed, 31 major Metz and Maginot fortifications
captured.
Recalling the months before combat, Joes could see
how their rigorous training had paid off.
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Basic training completed, the 95th made its first move,
traveling to Fort Sam Houston, mammoth San Antonio
post which at first glance looked like a college campus.
Next door to Fort Sam was Leon Springs Military Reservation,
which included Camps Bullis, Cibolo, Stahl and
others. It was at these tick and chigger-infested camps
that the Victory Division underwent its first appreciable
field rehearsal for Metz and the Siegfried Line.
The division moved to Louisiana for its first large-scale
maneuvers June, 1943. Here Joes of the 95th took advanced
courses in how to beat Germans to their knees.
These maneuvers were wet, dirty, and cold, but the division
was taking shape.
Camp Polk, La., was just a stopover before the move
to California. Desert training was to pay big dividends
in France and Germany. But the desert wasn't all work.
Once or twice a month, the men breezed into Los Angeles
and Palm Springs.
"If nothing else," one officer pointed out, "we learned
in the West Virginia mountains how we would fight
without communications."
There was plenty else, and Metz, Saarlautern and the
Siegfried Line served as proof.
Although the 5th
and 90th Inf. Divs. played highly
important roles in the reduction of Fortress Metz, the
95th certainly wasn't reading its lines from the wings.
Metz was the division's first offensive action. Metz
produced the 95th's first heroes like Lt. Bill Kreuger of
Co. I, 377th Inf., and Pfc Joe Lerma,
Lt. Kreuger, Pitman, N.J., was leading a section in an
attack on a German-held chateau. Paralyzed from the
waist down because of a shrapnel wound in the head, he
still didn't quit. He directed reorganisation of the
squads and led them back to the CP.
All that Lerma, San Diego, Calif., did was capture a
German pillbox and 20 of its occupants with no more
firepower than a jammed rifle. On Armistice Day, 3rd
platoon, Co. E, 378th Inf., was held up, so he took off
for the hotbox. As he climbed the pillbox, his rifle
jammed -- but he didn't. The Germans were so surprised
by his determination that they surrendered. Lerma
escorted the entire group back with a weapon borrowed
from one of his prisoners.
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The division had seen many slag piles before, but it
had never attempted to fight one. Co. K. tried it the
same night and ran into concentrated hell from mortars,
machine guns and mines of deeply dug-in Germans. It
was hell in the woods at Fereau Farm too where the
untried Co. F waded through mine fields and booby-trapped
brush to blast Germans from thick-walled farm buildings.
Mortar fire rained unceasingly. Co. I found a similar
reception on its assignment.
Lt. Raymond J. Albano, (then a T/Sgt.) Small, Idaho,
was another standout. Slugging his way to the top of
a slag pile, Albano dug in, laid out an array of weapons,
got ready for business.
Germans were most obliging. They even sent a
15-man patrol up the pile after him. Few returned to
tell about the one-man army and his arsenal. In four
days of his grim "king of the slag pile" game, Albano
killed at least 20, knocked out four machine guns. He
showered them with 200 rifle rounds, 15 rocket shells
from a bazooka, 34 grenades from his rifle launcher and
40 hand grenades.
The 2nd and 3rd Bns. became veterans overnight.
They weren't to be stopped. They were poised for
action whenever the Division Commander blew the
whistle.
Another preliminary bout to the main event took
place when 1st Bn., 377th, Joes crossed the flooded
Moselle at Uckange, Nov. 8. A neat assist came from
the 320th Engr. Bn., which put them across in the face
of heavy fire. The Germans threw the book at the battalion
-- mortars, artillery, 88s, rifles. After Cos. B
and C and part of D reached the opposite shore, business
picked up.
The troops pushed to the high ground east of the
Moselle, dug in and began defending their newly-won
bridgehead. But the Moselle began to rise and reached its
highest level in 29 years. First Bn. doughs were getting
hungry; they needed more ammunition. Mother Nature
and Germans, both on the loose, provided a rugged
combination. Normal supply means were impossible, but
the 95th found the answer. The division's Air Corps
-- artillery liaison planes -- were used to supply the
isolated troops.
Division infantrymen naturally are fond of their
artillery, but the 1st Bn. was even more devoted after this
extremely tricky operation. Planes made better targets
than clay pigeons because they had to drop down to 25
feet to release supplies, then pull up swiftly to miss trees.
Pilots appropriately dubbed their run the "Red Ball Airway
Express." They made 104 trips the first day alone,
dropping food, ammunition, medical supplies.
By Nov. 12, the Moselle had subsided enough for
supplies to be transported by assault boats. Next day,
the remainder of 1st Bn. crossed to the east bank and
began pushing to Bertrange and Imeldange, the final
objectives. Cos. A and D overran both towns during
the day, and Co. C charged into Bertrange to make
certain Germans didn't regain it.
But the "13" jinx cursed the battalion, because Nazis
brought up infantry and armor the next day to cut off
forces in the two towns. Enough heroism was displayed
by 1st Bn. the next two days to fill a book. Lt. Fred
Brandenburg, 377th Med. Det., Denver, was a sample.
He set up an aid station at Bertrange, worked tirelessly
taking care of wounded.
Then a report came from Imeldange, a mile away, that
Kraut artillery had hit six men. The enemy also was
zeroed in on the road between the two towns,
particularly a 1000-yard open stretch.
Lt. Brandenburg started out although warned that
the trip was too hazardous to attempt. He started out,
but the road was so churned up it would have been like
going over Niagara Falls in a Lister bag. So he came
back and resumed work.
Next morning before dawn, the lieutenant started out
again. The Krauts still poured it in. He dove into a
shallow ditch along the roadside and crawled. The stuff
crump-crumped all around; some of the big hunks of
shrapnel sang a dirty song as they flew overhead. Down
in the ditch the lieutenant crawled all the way to Imeldange.
Grimy and exhausted, he went to work on the six
injured men.
The battalion fought savagely until Nov. 15 when the
newly-organized Task Force Bacon drove down from the
north to relieve the pressure.
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This battalion was in division reserve until Nov, 10.
Although the Moselle and the enemy worked hand in
glove to prevent bridging the swollen river, the 2nd
swung over to Thionville, forcing a bridgehead.
The enemy not only held the east bank of the river but
depended on Fort Yutz, the moat-surrounded stronghold,
to choke off attempted crossings. The battalion initiated
the operation Nov. 11; almost all of the troops were on
the opposite bank and driving on the fort by day's end.
Cos. F and G were fighting inside the fort by noon the
next day as Germans resisted with flame-throwers and
every weapon they could man.
The fort fell at noon, Nov. 13. Without delay, troops
pushed on to swarm Basse-Yutz. With the capture of
Haute-Yutz, the battalion was poised to tackle the prize
objective -- Fort d'Illange.
Fort Yutz was tough enough, but by comparison with
d'Illange, Yutz was a tea party. Perched on high ground
First, they tried the easy way. A battalion committee
went forward under a white flag to meet a German party.
The fort commander was told he could cash in on the
spot with no loss of life. Otherwise, the battalion would
be obliged to assist his men in meeting Hitler in hell.
The German CO refused; and Bn. went about the task
of fulfulling its obligation.
Co. F pointed the assault, closely followed by Co. G.
By nightfall, these veterans had pried their way into a
portion of the fort. Fighting raged all night. Early
Nov. 15, the fort was captured. There still was work
to be done. Subsequent capture of the town of Illange
relieved pressure on the beleaguered 1st Bn., 377th Inf.
The battalion's first try at offensive action lasted three
days -- three days in which the Maroun Marauders had
uncorked Fort Yutz and the more formidable Fort
d'Illange, Thionville east of the Moselle and three more
towns, all in the face of stiff German opposition. No
sooner had the 378th's 2nd Bn. finished the Thionville
bridgehead operation than the unit became part of Task
Force Bacon, together with the 1st Bn., 377th Inf.; the
95th Recon. Troop and Co. D, 778th Tank Bn.
Task Force Bacon was commanded by a man who
could never hope to win a German popularity contest.
He was Col. Robert L. Bacon, who played so much hell
with the Germans they undoubtedly had a bounty out
for his scalp. He whipped his troops down the east
bank of the Moselle into Metz like a lawn mower cutting
grass.
The colonel moved fast, his itinerary read like this:
jumping off Nov. 16, Task Force Bacon roared through
Tremery, Ay sur Moselle, Bousse, Rurange and Montrequienne.
Second Bn., 378th, took Fort St. Julien Nov. 18 after
a bitter fight, while the 1st Bn., 377th, overran St. Julien
les Metz. As the 377th's 1st Bn. was preparing to assault
Fort Bellecroix, Krauts came streaming forward, hands
in the air. Battalion troops started into the fort as Co. C
swooped around to the north of Bellecroix to enter Metz.
Two tremendous explosions shattered heavy masonry
walls as the fort collapsed. First Bn. was hard hit.
That's one of the reasons the 95th took so much pleasure
in plastering the Germans. Bellecroix never will be
forgotten.
Task Force Bacon blazed into the outskirts of Metz
the same night, later spanning the Seille River, which
streams through the city. A pitched battle in the heart
of town followed.
When equally surprising machine gun fire blocked the
platoon's front over an open field, the pillboxes completed
a squeeze play by pumping lead to the rear of the platoon.
The pillboxes had to be liquidated or the platoon was in
for a chop-up.
A steady stream of fire forced his mates to the dirt,
but Low pell-melled squarely on the objective, hand-operating
the sticky bolt of his M-1. Sixteen Germans
occupying the strong point either were scared or bluffed.
Nonchalantly, Low flushed them out, frisked them for
arms. Advancing on the adjoining bunker, he bagged
another 16. Adding the 32 Germans to a passing column,
Low rejoined his outfit, which now was free to
advance.
On the northern flank of the division zone, 379th's
1st and 2nd Bns. were jockeying into position for the
final push on Metz. Both jumped off on limited objective
attacks Nov 14. By noon, the 2nd had reached its final
objective southeast of Fort Jeanne d'Arc and was digging
in to repel expected counter-attacks.
First Bn. pried the German defenders out of Forts
St. Hubert and Jussy Nord and took Fort Bois de la
Dame, only to be bounced back by two severe counterthrusts.
Both groups took heavy shelling from big
Fort Driant in the early stages of their attacks. The
first week of offensive combat ended Nov. 14.
The division launched its main effort at 1000 Nov. 15
when the 377th Inf. jumped off from the slag pile to
inaugurate the drive down the west bank of the Moselle
to the very gates of Metz. The road was straight, flanked
by broad, open fields. Artillery and mortar fire raked
the advance route, but the 2nd and 3rd Bns. continued
their drive to the south.
By nightfall, the 3rd holed up in La Maxe. The 2nd
slugged it out in the outskirts of Woippy, only three
miles from Metz. Tough to crack, Woippy finally was
cleared before dark, and the 2nd surged forward along
the road to Metz.
Meanwhile, the 3rd was having its headaches near
Fort Gambetta. A request for that "extra ten percent"
was passed along the line Nov. 17. No urging was
needed. With Metz in sight, the division felt sharp.
Elements of the 377th poured into Sansonnet, a Metz
suburb, that night. Early next morning, the 2nd and
3rd Bns., with tank support, pounded onward as swank
homes and apartment buildings replaced fields and farms.
When Co. G crossed the bridge over the Hafen Canal at
1000, the city of Metz was entered. Elements of both
battalions had reached the island by noon and were
mopping up the enemy.
Crossing into the central part of the city in assault
boats manned by Co. A, 320th Engrs. followed. The
377th launched the battle of the snipers. Metz bubbled
over with these sharpshooters.
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The 378th got off to a flying start with one of the most
daringly conceived and brilliantly executed trick plays of
the entire offensive. Col. Samuel L. Metcalfe, Regimental
Commander, Pearsall, Tex., dreamed it up.
Fronting the 378th's zone was a series of fortifications
including Fort Amanvillers, the three Canrobert forts and
Fort de Feve. East of this line spread the extensive Lorraine
fortifications. Taking such an area by an anticipated
head-on drive would have been suicide. Col.
Metcalfe's plan was to sweep around the northern tip of
the fortifications and approach from the rear, leaving
behind a small task force to deceive the enemy into
thinking the entire regiment still fronted the forts.
The job of providing the phoney front was assigned
to Task Force St. Jacques (Capt. William M. St. Jacques,
Service CO, San Antonio, Tex.), composed of three rifle
The hidden ball play worked like a charm.
The regiment jumped off at 0800 and within three hours had
captured the town of Feves. Two hours later it swept
on to take Somecourt. The surge continued, and Saulny,
Vigneulles, Plesnois and Norroy le Veneur tumbled
before the avalanche.
The 378th jumped off for the third day's operation at
0800, and the 1st Bn. had assaulted, captured and
occupied the three Canrobert Forts the first five hours. A
regimental patrol sent out to scout Fort Lorraine reported
the once-mighty bastion had been deserted. That night
Forts Kellerman and La Salle were found deserted, and
troops moved in. Other elements of the battalion
stormed into a portion of Fort Plappeville, were pushed
out by defending Germans, then slugged their way back
into that part of the fort above ground.
By this time, the 378th's 3rd Bn. had forced its way to
the west bank of the Moselle. One phtoon of Co. K
was crossing a bridge into Metz when Germans touched
off demolition charges. Casualties were heavy.
Next day, the battalion crossed to the city in boats
operated by Co. B, 320th Engrs., and joined the 377th
in ferreting out the snipers. First Bn. held Forts
Plappeville and St. Quentin and the intervening area. The
third arm of the main effort was powered by the 379th
Inf., which also had drawn a battering-ram assignment
Chipping was the word for it. The heaviest
demolition charges produced a lot of concrete dust and not
much else. With various forts in the Jeanne d'Arc
system linked by tunnels, the Germans employed a fire-and-run
defense, and the 379th found it impossible to block all the
tunnels.
During the all-out drive to clean out fortified areas
between the mighty masonry bastions, 1st and 2nd Bns.
smashed into the Germans' main line of resistance, were
cut off following a bloody battle. Again tiny artillery
liaison planes were called upon to furnish supplies.
Third Bn. reorganized Nov. 17, resumed the attack in
the morning, hooking up with the 1st. The two battalions
took off for Metz again, knocking off the towns of
Vaux, Rozerieulles, Chatel St. Germain, Mouline, Jussy,
St. Ruffine and Sey-Chezelle against comparitively light
opposition. A single Co. G platoon took the Fort de
Guise group unopposed.
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Only two small pockets of resistance remained, and
these were being mopped up by the 377th. Garrisons
in the four big forts across the river were completely cut
off. The task of maintaining a death watch on these die-hards
was transferred to units of the 5th Div.
The frosting on the Metz cake was the capture of
Generalleutnant Heinrich Kittel, CO of the 462nd Volksgrenadier
Div. and of the Metz fortress. He was captured
by Co. K, 377th, which had fought its way up to
the southern part of the Ile Chambiere. When taken,
Kittel was a patient in the hospital, being treated for a
leg wound.
Resistance in the city ended officially at 1435, Nov. 22.
The 95th Div. Joes had reason to be proud of their achievement.
They refuted historians who said it couldn't be done,
and they did it in 14 days. Enemy casualties
totaled 11,205, including an estimated 1577 killed, 3546
wounded and 6082 definitely captured.
With the successful reduction of Metz the 95th marked
another milestone. Landing in England Aug. 17, the
division trained for almost a month, then crossed the
Channel and began a four-week bivouac in the Normandy
apple orchards.
Many of the division's troops "Red Balled" supplies to
the front, while the remainder marked time in the hedgerows.
The 95th's first combat nod finally came Oct. 20
when it defended the Moselle bridgehead.
This is our first Christmas away from home. I
say home, because we all feel now that anywhere in the
States is home. The propaganda broadcasts have been
making fun of our not being home for Christmas. But
that's fair enough. If we weren't over here fighting
we might be doing it back there.
A lot of us have kids back home, or hope to have later
on, and those kids are going to know about the 95th and
the part it played in cleaning up this mess. They'll
know what the 95th has done for them and be just as
proud of the outfit as I am. And that's tops.
We aren't joking any more about that nickname,
"Victory Division." We think we're proving it.
The next job? I don't know what it will be, but I'll
bet a million to one that the 95th does it wholehog.
That's the kind of division we have, that's the kind of
leaders we have, that's the kind of fighters this outfit has
-- "Bravest of the brave."
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