The average life span of what's known today as the Forward Observer in WW2 was 13 seconds....in combat. 13 seconds. They call in air strikes. Mortars,artillery, naval gun fire and today fighter jets and attack helicopters. The Forward observer tells people where to direct fire. Which means they are usually in highly compromised situations. Beyond front lines.
I guess the only inconsistency with this mission is that Sullivan tells the driver to lower the ramp when they're clearly in an LVT-2, which didn't have a rear ramp because the engine was in the rear as noted by the fact that the drive shaft goes through the troop compartment. The LVT-4 moved the engine to the front, removing the drive shaft which allowed the installment of the ramp and increased the carrying capacity of the LVTs from something like 15 up to 30-40. Of course the Americans didn't really put that many people into a single LVT for obvious reasons but the British loved cramming the "Water Buffalo" with as many British soldiers and German POWs as they could in the European theater.
2:33 kinda weird because before the game finished and then I goes back there, that Navy Corpsman is still there calling for a stretcher even tho everyone else is not there
The Pacific War in general doesn't get much coverage as the European theatre, This is largely due to prejudice against the Japanese because of wartime hysteria
Reloading M1 Garand in Mid-clip will slow you down than fast Ping reload. Besides, Call of Duty 2003, United Offensive and Call of Duty 2 never have a Mid-clip Reload of M1 Garand. I wonder why the Developers add a Mid-clip reload of M1?