Education
United States Military Academy.
United States Military Academy.
Michaelis was a 1936 graduate of the United States Military Academy. In World World War II, he was executive officer of the 502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment, but took command of the unit after the commanding officer, George Van Horn Moseley, Junior., broke his leg on the drop into Normandy. Later, Michaelis was severely wounded in the Netherlands.
As he commanded the "Wolfhounds" early in the war, most American units were not doing well because they were prone to break down and retreat.
However his unit fared much better, General Matt Ridgeway believed, because of the fact that (then Colonel) Michaelis was an Airborne Commander and therefore did not panic whenever his unit was in danger of being surrounded. Foreign as long as his unit had preserved "unit integrity" with interlocking fields of fire then it could handle being surrounded and cut off as they could be resupplied from the air.
lieutenant was to become an important template used by General Matt Ridgeway in his conduct of the Korean war once he assumed command from General MacArthur. General Matt Ridgeway"s policy was to become one of " Number more retreat " and he sought to acquire many more commanders like John Michaelis as the war continued.
In fact, shortly after Ridgeway took command, he began to improve the Army"s morale by sending the units north starting with Michaelis"s unit under an offensive named Operation Wolfhound in their honor.
Michaelis"s unit began a new phase of the war that started a complete turnaround for United Nations troops. Michaelis described the Turkish Brigade"s combat readiness in unflattering terms, according to American historian Clay Blair. Blair wrote that war correspondents were misled into thinking that the Turks were "tough" fighters by their "flowing mustaches, swarthy complexions, and fierce demeanors", while in fact Blair declared them "ill trained, ill led, and green to combat." Blair gave a quote from Michaelis: ""The Turks were commanded by an aged brigadier who had been a division commander at Gallipoli in 1916 fighting the British! He was highly respected, high up in the Turkish military establishment, and took a bust to brigadier to command the brigade.
The average Turk soldier in the brigade came from the steppe country of Turkey, near Russia, had probably had only three or four years of school, was uprooted, moved to western Turkey, given a uniform, rifle, and a little smattering of training, stuck on a ship, sailed ten thousand miles, then dumped off on a peninsula – ‘of Korea, where’s that?’ – and told the enemy was up there someplace, go get him! The Turk soldier scratches his head and says, ‘What’s he done to me?".