Final pep-talk speech by General George S Patton
May 17th 1944
Final pep-talk speech by General George S Patton
Men, this stuff some sources sling around about America
wanting to stay out of the war and not wanting to fight is a
lot of baloney! Americans love to fight, traditionally. All
real Americans love the sting and clash of battle. America
loves a winner. America will not tolerate a loser. Americans
despise a coward; Americans play to win. That's why America has
never lost and never will lose a war.
You are not all going to die. Only two percent of you, right
here today, would be killed in a major battle.
Death must not be feared. Death, in time, comes to all of
us. And every man is scared in his first action. If he says
he's not, he's a goddamn liar. Some men are cowards, yes, but
they fight just the same, or get the hell slammed out of
them.
The real hero is the man who fights even though he's scared.
Some get over their fright in a minute, under fire; others take
an hour; for some it takes days; but a real man will never let
the fear of death overpower his honour, his sense of duty, to
his country and to his manhood.
All through your Army careers, you've been bitching about
what you call "chicken-shit drills." That, like everything else
in the Army, has a definite purpose. That purpose is instant
obedience to orders and to create and maintain constant
alertness! This must be bred into every soldier. A man must be
alert all the time if he expects to stay alive. If not, some
German son-of-a-bitch will sneak up behind him with a sock full
of shit! There are four hundred neatly marked graves somewhere
in Sicily, all because one man went to sleep on his job - but
they are German graves, because we caught the bastards
asleep!
An Army is a team, lives, sleeps, fights, and eats as a
team. This individual hero stuff is a lot of horse shit! The
bilious bastards who write that kind of stuff for the Saturday
Evening Post don't know any more about real fighting under fire
than they know about fucking! Every single man in the Army
plays a vital role. Every man has his job to do and must do it.
What if every truck driver decided that he didn't like the
whine of a shell overhead, turned yellow and jumped headlong
into a ditch? What if every man thought, "They won't miss me,
just one in millions?" Where in Hell would we be now? Where
would our country, our loved ones, our homes, even the world,
be?
No, thank God, Americans don't think like that. Every man
does his job, serves the whole. Ordnance men supply and
maintain the guns and vast machinery of this war, to keep us
rolling. Quartermasters bring up clothes and food, for where
we're going, there isn't a hell of a lot to steal. Every last
man on K.P. has a job to do, even the guy who boils the water
to keep us from getting the G.I. shits!
Remember, men, you don't know I'm here. No mention of that
is to be made in any letters. The USA is supposed to be
wondering what the hell has happened to me. I'm not supposed to
be commanding this Army, I'm not supposed even to be in
England. Let the first bastards to find out be the goddamn
Germans. I want them to look up and howl, "Ach, it's the
goddamn Third Army and that son-of-a-bitch Patton again!"
We want to get this thing over and get the hell out of here,
and get at those purple-pissin' Japs!!! The shortest road home
is through Berlin and Tokyo! We'll win this war, but we'll win
it only by showing the enemy we have more guts than they have
or ever will have!
There's one great thing you men can say when it's all over
and you're home once more. You can thank God that twenty years
from now, when you're sitting around the fireside with your
grandson on your knee and he asks you what you did in the war,
you won't have to shift him to the other knee, cough, and say,
"I shovelled shit in Louisiana."
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