Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
2. Author’s purpose. /7
3. Author’s credentials. /7
7. Intended audience. /7
Sub-total: ____/70
1. Organization. /10
2. Style. /10
Sub-total: ____/30
Total: /100 = GO
ATSH-TPC-D 25 December 2008
MEMORANDUM FOR First Platoon, Platoon Trainer, ATTN: CPT Flores, Delta Company, 3rd
Battalion, 11th Infantry Regiment, Fort Benning, Georgia 31905
1. Reference. American Soldiers: Ground Combat in the World Wars, Korea and Vietnam.
Peter S. Kindsvatter. Lawrence, Kansas. University of Kansas Press, 2003. Bookspan Book
Club Edition, 432 pp.
a. Author’s Purpose and viewpoint. Dr. Kindsvatter wrote this book in hopes of
educating potential Soldiers on what really happens to a person, socially, mentally and
physically, when they are sent into combat. By providing numerous accounts of individual
Soldiers' experiences in the major conflicts of the 20th century, he aims to cut through the haze
of patriotic mythology that surrounds war in popular culture to expose the reality of the trenches.
Surprisingly, the author's viewpoint comes across as neutral, neither pro-war nor anti-military.
He simply expounds the need for balanced information to disabuse tomorrow's Soldiers of any
lopsided, romantic notions that would necessitate a rude awakening upon arrival in-theater.
b. Credentials. Dr. Kindsvatter served in the U.S. Army for twenty-one years and retired as a
Lieutenant Colonel (Armor). He received his PhD from Temple University. Currently, he is the
Command Historian at the U.S. Army Ordnance Center and Schools at Aberdeen Proving
Ground. American Soldiers is Kindsvatter's only published mainstream work, but he has written
for professional journals such as the Military Review and The Journal of American History; he
also has lectured in conjunction with the U.S. Army Heritage and Education Center. Indicate
the point of view or perspective that the writer took on the subject.
c. Sources. Dr. Kindsvatter uses histories (oral and written), letters, memoirs, psychological
and sociological studies, and even works of fiction to show that Soldiers' experiences remain
fundamentally the same across the spectra of time, adversaries, environment and technology.
There are of course limitations inherent in the reliance on anecdotal evidence, especially after-
the-fact recollections which are noted months or years later. However, the focus of this book is
the individual psyche, so even if there are distortions of the actual facts, it then becomes not
inaccuracy, but another layer of exposition into the mind of the combatant. He does present
official government studies, so as not to totally skew the perspective to the microcosm of the
individual.
a. Thesis. Simply what is combat like? Without any glossing over or propaganda. How
soldiers persevere -- volunteers vs draftees, he believes the difference in enthusiasm makes it
easier for volunteers to drive on. Why some thrive in combat and others collapse --
c. Key Passages. Identify the key characters, chapters, and/or any key passages in the text
and state why and how they are important in supporting the author’s thesis. What happens when
you fail at combat balances out the pages given to those who succeed because after all, not
everyone was meant to be a Soldier.
a. Applicability. Potential and novice Soldiers. By extension leaders as well need to Know
your soldiers. Not just his book in isolation but also to promote a more holistic approach to
practical military education by utilizing sources like fiction and memoirs.
Analyze how well the author met their needs. State how or if the text applies to
officers/leaders in the U.S. Army today.
Doesn't include warfare experiences from Desert Storm to the present. How has the efforts
of today's Army (CALL, increased PTSD awareness/prevention measures) improved the
resiliency of the Soldier's mind, if at all? But how men's minds never really change in fight-or-
flight biological hardwiring, self-preservation instincts.
b. Completeness and objectivity. The weight of his hundred or so writers presents a far more
complex and contradictory portrait. State the degree to which the author treated his topic
completely and objectively Discuss the quality of the author’s analysis and conclusions. Discuss
any bias or flaws you detect (if none, so state).
c. Style. Judge the author’s writing style – clarity, conciseness, coherence, precision of
language, logic, tone, readability, etc. The largest number of annotations and the longest
bibliography I have ever seen for a book of barely 300 pages. 127 pages of references all told.
6. Lessons Learned. Discuss the major lessons that you learned from reading the book. The
frailty of the human mind and the indomitability of the human spirit are universal constants,
across time and culture. The analyses presented in this book explain how these seemingly
contradictory forces generally balance each other out in times of extreme mental and physical
stress, thus allowing a Soldier to survive with his sanity intact. A valuable lesson is that there is
no macho, invincible stereotype that the military should have to manufacture in order to produce
outstanding Soldiers and leaders.