rdfs:comment
| - The clone commanders, especially those trained to be ARC commanders by ARC trooper Alpha-17, were always an anomaly in the Republic clone army, what with their greater independent thought and creativity than the average clone trooper. Commander Gree, however, stood out more than the average commander. He possessed a keen interest in alien species and cultures, for more than one reason. He personally enjoyed learning about them for his own intellectual interests, but he also used his knowledge to learn new lessons about military strategy, and to help his unit, the 41st Elite Corps, forge alliances with local alien populations.
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abstract
| - The clone commanders, especially those trained to be ARC commanders by ARC trooper Alpha-17, were always an anomaly in the Republic clone army, what with their greater independent thought and creativity than the average clone trooper. Commander Gree, however, stood out more than the average commander. He possessed a keen interest in alien species and cultures, for more than one reason. He personally enjoyed learning about them for his own intellectual interests, but he also used his knowledge to learn new lessons about military strategy, and to help his unit, the 41st Elite Corps, forge alliances with local alien populations. Most of all, though, unlike many other clone troops who had learned to hate aliens through their experiences with the mostly alien Confederacy, Gree loved alien species, and believed that it was wiser to befriend them and win their trust, and when they were enemies, to defeat them fair and square, rather than to blame all the galaxy's problems on them, or to hate and destroy all of them with overwhelming firepower.
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