My good friend Don Malarkey, who was with Easy Company from the beginning, insists that Sobel had his good points. Sobel's second son, Michael Sobel, has spoken out in his father's defense in recent years, and most veterans I know respect Michael for doing that. I never met Sobel personally, and it's been controversial as to whether Sobel was truly as inept as the miniseries made him out to be. Lieutenant Thomas Meehan, a transfer from B Company, took over for Sobel. After several of Sobel's noncommissioned officers refused to fight under him, believing him unfit to follow into battle, Sobel was reassigned to the Chilton Foliat Jump School, where he became a parachute instructor for noncombat officers. Yet Sobel's men believed he lacked tactical and combat skills. From all the tough training they received, Easy Company could boast the finest performance record in the regiment. Sobel's extreme training tactics paid off in some ways- he ended up creating a hardened and physically fit company. He once brought a court-martial against Winters for failing to inspect a latrine. Sobel was known for his excessive strictness, often revoking men's weekend passes for petty infractions and heaping up additional physical training on them during weekends and evenings.
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