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The procurement and training of ground combat troops (1948)

by R. R. Palmer

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A series of studies on training, the principal mission of the Army Ground Forces, including procurement of soldiers and officers and the policies and problems involved in training individuals and units for their special functions in ground combat.
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This is a book in "The Army Ground Forces" subseries. The Ground Forces were established in March of 1942 from the old GHQ. Commanded, until his death in July, 1944, by Lt. Gen. Leslie McNair, it was the force that organized and trained ground combat units in the United States. It had to compete with the Army Air Forces and Army Service Forces for manpower, as well as with the Navy and the Marine Corps. Initially it was stuck at the bottom of the manpower pool, since particularly the Air Forces were expected to do much of the early fighting and had first call on resources. Many of the people who might have been expected to become platoon leaders were instead given berths in the Army Specialized Training Program, a program of training young men in colleges and universities for technical and professional specialties. In Feb. of 1944 the program was virtually terminated, the participants retrained, by and large, as infantrymen, because of the crying need for replacements. So were large numbers of antiaircraft men and tank destroyer men.

The book emphasizes that, initially, the Army was being built up, and then subsequently it was being maintained, and the challenges faced during the two periods were quite different. ( )
  charbonn | May 13, 2017 |
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The armed forces of the United States at their peak strength during World War II numbered approximately 12,350,000. The Army's share of this total was roughly 8,300,000, of which about 7,300,000 were enlisted men. Another volume of this series has described the problems attending the allocation to ground combat units of an adequate proportion of the mobilized manpower.1 Of equal concern to the Army Ground Forces was the quality of these men with respect to their basic aptitudes for service in the ground arms.
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A series of studies on training, the principal mission of the Army Ground Forces, including procurement of soldiers and officers and the policies and problems involved in training individuals and units for their special functions in ground combat.

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