Bizarre Mishaps
Two U.S. Air Force F-15s shoot down two U.S. Army
helicopters on a diplomatic mission over Iraq, mistaking
them for hostile aircraft in the "no-fly zone," killing 26
people. No one was found criminally responsible.
A "siesta" ordered by Mexican General Antonio Lopez de Santa
Anna to his troops during a conflict between the Mexicans
and Texans caused the infantry to be overtaken in just 18
minutes.
Fort Douaumont at Verdun in France was captured in 1916 by a
single German soldier after French General Chretien forgot
to pass on orders to defend the fort to the last man to his
successor.
The Russians tried to wreak havoc on German Panzer divisions
during the WWII by strapping bombs to the backs of dogs and
teaching them to associate food with the underneath of their
enemies' tanks. Unfortunately, the dogs only associated food
with their own tanks and forced an entire Soviet division to
retreat.
Japanese soldier Hiroo Onodo refused to stop fighting long
after WWII was over, claiming that stories of the war's
ending were mere propaganda. It wasn't until his commanding
officer flew out to the remote Pacific island where Onoda
was holed up and ordered him to lay down his arms that he
finally complied.
Probably the most famous mistake in U.S. military history
occurred in the Civil War, when Confederate Gen. Stonewall
Jackson was mistakenly shot by one of his own troops after
the Confederate triumph at Chancellorsville.

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