Patrick Sheehan

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But guns are hardware, and man, not hardware, is the ultimate weapon. In 1950 there were not enough men, either—less than 600,000 to carry worldwide responsibilities, including recruiting; for service in the ranks has never been on the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company’s preferred list of occupations. And in these 600,000 men themselves the trouble lay.
This Kind of War: The Classic Military History of the Korean War
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