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#Peleliu #DragonsBreath #WW2History #ImprovisedWeapons #militaryhistory When the coral nightmare of Peleliu buried his squad behind a ridge with a Japanese bunker pouring fire from one side and a Type 95 Ha-Go grinding forward from the other, Corporal Thomas Jackson had two choices: wait for flamethrower support that wasn't coming and let the bunker eat his men alive, or load shells the Geneva Convention never imagined and do the job himself. The Problem: The Japanese had turned Peleliu's coral ridges into a fortress of interlocking kill-zones. Jackson's squad was pinned — a fortified bunker raking their position with sustained fire while a Ha-Go light tank rolled up to finish the job. Standard buckshot bounced off the bunker's firing slit like gravel. Rifle grenades couldn't thread the angle. The flamethrower team was gone — dead two ridges back. Jackson had a Winchester Model 12 trench gun and a bandolier of standard-issue shells. Against hardened coral and Japanese steel, it was a club with a trigger. The Risk: Jackson cut open his shells, dumped the buckshot, and packed the casings with scavenged magnesium shavings and white phosphorus — improvising "Dragon's Breath" incendiary rounds that no armorer had ever sanctioned and no manual had ever described. Fire one wrong and the barrel becomes a Roman candle pointed at his own face. Fire one right and it spits a 30-foot stream of 3,000°F burning metal through a bunker slit or into a tank's open hatch. No testing. No second chances. Just a hand-packed shell and the bet that chemistry would do what buckshot couldn't. ✅ In this video, we uncover: How a standard-issue trench shotgun became a makeshift flamethrower using scavenged magnesium and white phosphorus on a Pacific island. The exact "Dragon's Breath" improvisation — what went into the shell, why it burned at 3,000°F, and how Jackson threaded it through a bunker firing slit. Why this ammunition was never sanctioned, and how one corporal used it anyway to gut a Japanese bunker and cook a Ha-Go tank the field manual said he couldn't scratch. Generals Banned His "Dragon's Breath" Ammo — Until He Killed A Tank With It 🔔 Subscribe for more Untold WW2 Stories: ⚠️ Disclaimer: This video presents dramatized storytelling based on historical WW2 events researched from publicly available sources. While we strive for accuracy and engaging narratives, some details may be simplified or contain inaccuracies. This content is for entertainment purposes and should not be cited as an academic or authoritative historical source. For verified historical information, please consult professional military historians, official archives, and peer-reviewed publications.