Death Before Dishonor: Never forget true US heroes like John Basilone

This Memorial Day, you could do much worse than remember John Basilone.Eighty years ago, the US military was grinding it out from one Japanese-held Pacific island to another in a brutal, costly campaign as gut-wrenching as any in American history. Basilone has an honored place in this story.Born in Buffalo and raised in New Jersey by his Italian-American parents, he enlisted in the Army in the 1930s as a teenager.Then, after a stint as a civilian, he signed up for the Marines in 1940.During the Battle of Guadalcanal in 1942, he almost single-handedly held off a massive assault by a Japanese regiment against two machine gun sections he commanded. Basilone’s exploits were worthy of an over-the-top scene from a war movie, or a great-hearted warrior from an ancient epic. When the Japanese disabled one of the American gun crews, Basilone moved another machine gun into position and personally manned it, and also repaired another gun under heavy fire.When they needed more supplies, Basilone ran through Japanese lines to get the ammunition, defending himself with his Colt .45.He fought for days and, by the end, he and his comrades had basically annihilated the Japanese attackers.Basilone lost his asbestos gloves in the chaos and still handled the searing machine gun barrels, sustaining burns on his hands. He’d been, as Gen.

Douglas MacArthur put it later, a “one-man army.” Nash Phillips, a private who was wounded in the fight, recalled, “Basilone had a machine gun on the go for three days and nights without sleep, rest or food.”Phillips described Basilone coming to see him when he was getting medical treatment: “He was barefooted and his eyes were red as fire.His face was dirty black from gunfire and lack of sleep.

His shirt sleeves were rolled up to his shoulders.He had a .45 tucked into the waistband of his trousers.“He’d just dropped by to see how I was making out; me and the others in the section.

I’ll never forget him.He’ll never be dead i...

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Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

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