Finding out things.... there's two sides to every opinion :-)

I've been researching an Unknown soldier from World War 2 and I'm discovering soooooo much more than one soldier's life.  I got the "list" of things I was told I needed, to write a complete story, you know, the usual stuff? Immediate family, date of birth, place if you can find it, date he enlisted (not necessary, but good to have) unit he was assigned to and a little on his life in the military.  

Well..... found all that, and some!

My absolute amazing realization came with the discovery of the replacement soldiers.  Somehow, in the back of your head, you know, if 200 soldiers go in to battle as a unit, and 30 get killed over time, they will have to be replaced, and  you figure it happens like it does on base... somebody gets orders to show up at a particluar base at a certain time, to get to know his fellow soldiers and carry on the tasks of the unit...But in war time? How would that even work?  

I've come to find out, there's the perception of soldiers already in battle of what the FNG is likely to be like, there's the expectation of said FNG of the story he's been told what it's going to be like, and then there's reality.  Actually, I feel sorry for both camps.

 I haven't figured out yet, how the recruitment of replacements really worked. I hope to, but it's not my first priority for the story.   The general road for a replacement soldier was:  enlistment or draftee, basic training, specialized training, assigned to a Replacement Battalion, where they were kept until there was a request for their particular skill. The Replacement Depots were a whole different way of army life. The soldiers were stationed at these camps and pulled as needed to go to units who were so depleted they almost couldn't function as a whole. The replacements often didn't have the opportunity to bond like regular units. They just happened to be waiting in the same place. 

These soldiers didn't know what had preceeded the current situation, or what was in store for the unit they were joining. Some were eager to actually finally "get to work and do what they signed up and trained for",  rubbing the soldier who had been fighting for years, was tired of what he had seen and juist wanted to go home, the wrong way.  

"Just imagine what it would have been like as a battle worn soldier to see these new soldiers come into your unit replacing the friend killed last week. You're tired, been fighting for godknowshowlong already, mourning comrades you've's fought beside and went through hell with, and from the orders you've seen and others you have heard about, there's no real relief in sight.Then, this replacement enters the unit. They don't fit in, because they haven't "been there" so you feel like they can't possible understand what the unit is about. Because of the rate you've already lost brothers in arms, you don't even bother to learn their names half the time. You don't know this new soldier, don't know if you can trust him to have your back, don't know if he'll be around long enough to fit in so it's easier to assume that they don't and never will belong. What you DO know, is that he's not the guy that was next to you in a foxhole and shared his ration with you, because you lost yours, and he's not the one who dragged you out of the foxhole seconds befora a grenade hit it. And so, after losing friends repeatedly, some soldiers simply stopped investing emotionally in newcomers. It wasn't always hostility, more often it was self preservation. There is a reason a lot of veterans don't talk about their time in combat. The emotional price is too high.

From the soldier from the replacement roster the view is one of not understanding that the cameraderie they heard about from returning soldiers is often non existent for them. Their inexperience was often seen less as a natural part of the learning curve  and transition from training to "real life" but as a liability, leaving some of them to fend for themselves to cope with this new world they now live in. 

Replacement soldiers were mostly just out of training before they were put up in a camp, waiting to be deployed. Because they didn't know when or where they were going to deploy, there was little hope of keeping up with everything that went on at the front, and they weren't able to anticipate what would come their way when they were sent to a unit. They would be put in a well oiled combat unit where soldiers knew what to expect from the soldier next to him, because they had been fighting and surviving with them, often for the duration of the war. They arrived expecting the camaraderie they had heard about from veterans, only to discover that trust could only be earned and not easily at that.

 Many accounts describe replacements being treated more like temporary help than new members of the unit, to be tolerated, rather than fully integrated. Because a lot of them hadn't seen action, and especially towards the end of the war, they were sometimes looked at as unfit, "otherwise they would have already been fighting". Until they proved themselves, replacements were often given the less desirable duties and were expected to earn their place within the unit and sometimes that would carry significant risk, reinforcing the feeling of not being full members of the unit.  

In reality, both groups were dealing with circumstances the other could not fully understand. Combat veterans were dealing with what they had seen and endured while replacements were trying to find their footing in the hostile, almost alien environment of the battlefield.

Some replacements had spent weeks or even months waiting for assignment before being sent to a combat unit. By the time they arrived, they were expected to adapt quickly to the realities of the battlefield and to seamlessly fit into groups that had often been fighting together for months or years. Many succeeded. Some struggled. But regardless of the outcome, they were being asked to learn the difference between training and combat under the most difficult conditions imaginable.

I feel bad for either side, but mainly for the replacement, who had registered for service at the beginning of the war, but because he had family responsibilities, a job that was considered critical or simply because others were ahead of him,  he'd been passed over until he was needed and he probably expected not to be needed at all at that point. Then, years into the war, when the need for manpower surpasses the enlistment numbers, he's being called up.  

He leaves behind the very responsibilities that kept him home before. After training, he waits until he's called up outright or moved closer to the fighting for quick deployment when needed, and he waits some more. Sometimes he's waited weeks or months, moving through a system that tracks him carefully but often describes him simply as "the soldier" rather than by name. In the reports and statistics, he becomes one of the nameless thousands moving through the replacement system. 

Then he's assigned to a unit and life as an active duty soldier begins. He expects to find his place in a world that was already functioning without him. If he's lucky, he has time to prove he can fit in, if he's not, he will stay on the outskirts. 

If fate is extremely cruel, he gets killed before he secures his place in his new unit, and he ends up nameless, again, but this time in a cemetery, thousands of miles away from his family and loved ones, with only 2 things. A marker that reads "Known but to God" and a file that depicts his journey from the battlefield to that cemetery. Everything from that journey is preserved, except who the soldier was. He has no name, his family does not know his whereabouts, there's just his name on a memorial tablet somewhere and in the office of the cemetery where he rests, in a file, is that designation: x-unknown. 


June 3, 2026

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