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GO!!! said:...As for "PT not being everything" well, that sounds like something the troops in PAT platoon spew. PT is the foundation of everything we do in the Infantry. The best shot in the world is useless if he passed out on the way to the battle! I've seen it on deployments where the "heavy" CSS types go down first with everything from twisted ankles to sore throats. The unfit are sickened and injured faster than the fit.
Comments welcome.
Unfortunately the only test for the inverse relationship between arrogance and maturity is called time ... ah, well ... it's nostalgic to hear the hollow rattle of urine and vinegar (some things never change ...).
What can a soldier do who charges when out of breath?
-- Vegetius: De Re Militari, iii, 378
Nations have passed away and left no traces,
And history gives the naked cause of it -
One single, simple reason in all cases,
They fell because their peoples were not fit.
-- Rudyard Kipling: Land and Sea Tales for Scouts and Guides, 1923
A man who takes a lot of exercise rarely exercises his mind adequately.
-- B.H. Liddell Hart: Thoughts on War, xi, 1944
"The best form of 'welfare' for the troops is first-class training."
-- Erwin Rommel; Rommel Papers, ix, 1953
Is it really true that a seven-mile cross-country run is inforced upon all in this division, from generals to privates? ... It looks to me rather excessive. A colonel or a general ought not to exhaust himself in trying to compete with young boys running across country seven miles at a time. The duty of officers is no doubt to keep themselves fit, but still more to think of their men, and to take decisions affecting their safety and comfort. Who is the general of this division, and does he run the seven miles himself? If so, he may be more useful for football than for war. Could Napoleon have run seven miles across country at Austerlitz? Perhaps it was the other fellow he made run. In my experience, based on many years' observation, officers with high athletic qualifications are not usually successful in the higher ranks.
Winston Churchill: Note for the Secretary of State for War, 4 February 1944
More brawn than brain.
-- Cornelius Nepos: Epamnondas, v, c. 75 B.C.