- Sergeant Saunders faces court martial, charged with a reckless decision costing two machine gunner's lives. The gunners' NCO O'Neill accuses Saunders of forgetting to check if the combined squads had ammo for their bazooka, just before a panzer attack. Instead of retreating prudently, Saunders ran down the hill they were defending to not only lug the ammo back up, but drag his wounded squad member who carried it, to safety. That allowed the tank time to get close, and blow up the 2 machine gunners. As the protagonists' commanding officers square off, Caje and Kirby grill O'Neil, a life-long student of warfare, over his own judgments on the mission.—David Stevens
- While visiting Pvt. Howie Parker that is badly wounded at a field hospital, Sgt. Saunders is accused of negligence and misjudgment of a situation by Sgt. O'Neill and Lt. Collins, costing the life of two soldiers. Lt. Hanley asks Kirby to summon Saunders back since Sgt. O'Neill intends to send Saunders to court martial. When he hears the accusations in a preliminary hearing, he leaves the place. Lt. Hanley goes after Saunders and asks him to return. Kirby and Caje defend Saunders and both Sergeants expose their point of view. In the end, was it a matter of fate or misjudgment?—Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- A sergeant, who's squad was on a mission along with Saunders and his squad, charges Saunders with getting two of his men killed in action. Instead of going straight to a court marshal, Hanley and the lieutenant of the other sergeant's platoon try to settle the debate, to avoid the charges if possible. Saunders and the other sergeant both tell their point of view on what really happened.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content