WWII
Comments
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I ve been to Pearl harbor and a major military base near the cliffs of Dover. I got to tourthe tunnel complex. Both were awesome.I'll ride the wave where it takes me......0
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Some of the research I did had a Bataan trip - you went to Corregidor and toured that and went (on a bus) to see the death march and then there were tours of some of the POW camps.
I'd like to see this - http://www.iwm.org.uk/visits/churchill-war-rooms0 -
I toured that years ago, E. It was fascinating, to put it mildly.Enkidu said:Some of the research I did had a Bataan trip - you went to Corregidor and toured that and went (on a bus) to see the death march and then there were tours of some of the POW camps.
I'd like to see this - http://www.iwm.org.uk/visits/churchill-war-rooms
Someday, I hope to visit Theriesenstadt, where my paternal grandmother died. Her husband lived to see freedom.0 -
Fyi....Band of Brothers blu ray set will be $9.99 Black Friday weekend0
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Thats a phenomenal deal.cp3iverson said:Fyi....Band of Brothers blu ray set will be $9.99 Black Friday weekend
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I saw fury today and all I can say is wow! I would definitely recommend it! I thought it was great and pretty realistic.I'll ride the wave where it takes me......0
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What's Fury about or when and where is it set?mcgruff10 said:I saw fury today and all I can say is wow! I would definitely recommend it! I thought it was great and pretty realistic.
I'm watching a documentary about the 333rd Field Artillery Batallion, a black unit who fought through D-Day and Bastogne. An awful story of 11 of them being tortured and murdered by the SS (the Wereth 11)
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/11/07/wereth-black-soldiers-battle-of-bulge-army-world-war-ii-history/3465059/Post edited by jnimhaoileoin on0 -
I thought the last fight was a little much.mcgruff10 said:I saw fury today and all I can say is wow! I would definitely recommend it! I thought it was great and pretty realistic.
But good show for sure.
Tanks. Pretty handy."My brain's a good brain!"0 -
Totally agree about the last fight. But otherwise I thought it was a pretty accurate portrayal.Thirty Bills Unpaid said:
I thought the last fight was a little much.mcgruff10 said:I saw fury today and all I can say is wow! I would definitely recommend it! I thought it was great and pretty realistic.
But good show for sure.
Tanks. Pretty handy.I'll ride the wave where it takes me......0 -
So let me see if I've got this right. Britain entered the war upon the invasion of Poland, determined to protect Poland's sovereignty, only to then abandon them to Soviet occupation. I know this is pretty old news but the mind boggles0
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That's the enduring controversy of Yalta. Churchill believed stalin would allow free elections.jnimhaoileoin said:So let me see if I've got this right. Britain entered the war upon the invasion of Poland, determined to protect Poland's sovereignty, only to then abandon them to Soviet occupation. I know this is pretty old news but the mind boggles
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Churchill clearly not as bright as people thought!mrussel1 said:
That's the enduring controversy of Yalta. Churchill believed stalin would allow free elections.jnimhaoileoin said:So let me see if I've got this right. Britain entered the war upon the invasion of Poland, determined to protect Poland's sovereignty, only to then abandon them to Soviet occupation. I know this is pretty old news but the mind boggles
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I think he trusted Stalin too much and fdr was pretty gone at this point so he wasn't as sharp as he was.jnimhaoileoin said:
Churchill clearly not as bright as people thought!mrussel1 said:
That's the enduring controversy of Yalta. Churchill believed stalin would allow free elections.jnimhaoileoin said:So let me see if I've got this right. Britain entered the war upon the invasion of Poland, determined to protect Poland's sovereignty, only to then abandon them to Soviet occupation. I know this is pretty old news but the mind boggles
I'll ride the wave where it takes me......0 -
Did Churchill not hear about the Katyn massacre then?! Let's face it, the Allies had just had enough of the war and decided to leave Eastern Europe to the mercy of the Soviets, who by all accounts were just as brutal as the Nazis as they made their way through Europemcgruff10 said:
I think he trusted Stalin too much and fdr was pretty gone at this point so he wasn't as sharp as he was.jnimhaoileoin said:
Churchill clearly not as bright as people thought!mrussel1 said:
That's the enduring controversy of Yalta. Churchill believed stalin would allow free elections.jnimhaoileoin said:So let me see if I've got this right. Britain entered the war upon the invasion of Poland, determined to protect Poland's sovereignty, only to then abandon them to Soviet occupation. I know this is pretty old news but the mind boggles
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Remember the yalta conference was held in feb 45. No one realized the extent of the holocaust at this time or even soviet crimes since so many more were committed between then and the end of the war. I doubt Churchill or fdr knew about the Katyn massacre or even cared about it when deciding about eastern Europe.jnimhaoileoin said:
Did Churchill not hear about the Katyn massacre then?! Let's face it, the Allies had just had enough of the war and decided to leave Eastern Europe to the mercy of the Soviets, who by all accounts were just as brutal as the Nazis as they made their way through Europemcgruff10 said:
I think he trusted Stalin too much and fdr was pretty gone at this point so he wasn't as sharp as he was.jnimhaoileoin said:
Churchill clearly not as bright as people thought!mrussel1 said:
That's the enduring controversy of Yalta. Churchill believed stalin would allow free elections.jnimhaoileoin said:So let me see if I've got this right. Britain entered the war upon the invasion of Poland, determined to protect Poland's sovereignty, only to then abandon them to Soviet occupation. I know this is pretty old news but the mind boggles
Some U.S. generals (famously Patton) wanted to beat the germans then start fighting the Russians right away.I'll ride the wave where it takes me......0 -
There are also a lot of stories about captured Germans saying to the Americans and Brits that they should all be uniting to fight the Russiansmcgruff10 said:
Remember the yalta conference was held in feb 45. No one realized the extent of the holocaust at this time or even soviet crimes since so many more were committed between then and the end of the war. I doubt Churchill or fdr knew about the Katyn massacre or even cared about it when deciding about eastern Europe.jnimhaoileoin said:
Did Churchill not hear about the Katyn massacre then?! Let's face it, the Allies had just had enough of the war and decided to leave Eastern Europe to the mercy of the Soviets, who by all accounts were just as brutal as the Nazis as they made their way through Europemcgruff10 said:
I think he trusted Stalin too much and fdr was pretty gone at this point so he wasn't as sharp as he was.jnimhaoileoin said:
Churchill clearly not as bright as people thought!mrussel1 said:
That's the enduring controversy of Yalta. Churchill believed stalin would allow free elections.jnimhaoileoin said:So let me see if I've got this right. Britain entered the war upon the invasion of Poland, determined to protect Poland's sovereignty, only to then abandon them to Soviet occupation. I know this is pretty old news but the mind boggles
Some U.S. generals (famously Patton) wanted to beat the germans then start fighting the Russians right away.0 -
Yup! And what s even crazier is we hire thousands of nazis to help us beat the soviet Union during the cold war. We pretty much pardon them of all their war time crimes in exchange for them working for us. Hell the guy who basically put us on the moon was the nazi who was pretty much in charge of either v1 or v2 rockets. Google "operation paper clip" bud.jnimhaoileoin said:
There are also a lot of stories about captured Germans saying to the Americans and Brits that they should all be uniting to fight the Russiansmcgruff10 said:
Remember the yalta conference was held in feb 45. No one realized the extent of the holocaust at this time or even soviet crimes since so many more were committed between then and the end of the war. I doubt Churchill or fdr knew about the Katyn massacre or even cared about it when deciding about eastern Europe.jnimhaoileoin said:
Did Churchill not hear about the Katyn massacre then?! Let's face it, the Allies had just had enough of the war and decided to leave Eastern Europe to the mercy of the Soviets, who by all accounts were just as brutal as the Nazis as they made their way through Europemcgruff10 said:
I think he trusted Stalin too much and fdr was pretty gone at this point so he wasn't as sharp as he was.jnimhaoileoin said:
Churchill clearly not as bright as people thought!mrussel1 said:
That's the enduring controversy of Yalta. Churchill believed stalin would allow free elections.jnimhaoileoin said:So let me see if I've got this right. Britain entered the war upon the invasion of Poland, determined to protect Poland's sovereignty, only to then abandon them to Soviet occupation. I know this is pretty old news but the mind boggles
Some U.S. generals (famously Patton) wanted to beat the germans then start fighting the Russians right away.I'll ride the wave where it takes me......0 -
Im not sure if Katyn was known then, but 30 Polish officers and soldiers commited suicide upon learning of the deal. I dont know the timing of the events.
The Soviets were strong and gaining strength. Allies were worried about losing the racw to Berlin. Churchill was naive but in the fog of war, things that seem obvious a half century later were not as clear.0 -
Some German officers believed that this unified front would happen once the Nazi leadership was deposed. But we still had Japan. Also, think of the devastation of a ground war against the Soviets. There would have been no appetite on any homefront for five more years of war.mcgruff10 said:
Yup! And what s even crazier is we hire thousands of nazis to help us beat the soviet Union during the cold war. We pretty much pardon them of all their war time crimes in exchange for them working for us. Hell the guy who basically put us on the moon was the nazi who was pretty much in charge of either v1 or v2 rockets. Google "operation paper clip" bud.jnimhaoileoin said:
There are also a lot of stories about captured Germans saying to the Americans and Brits that they should all be uniting to fight the Russiansmcgruff10 said:
Remember the yalta conference was held in feb 45. No one realized the extent of the holocaust at this time or even soviet crimes since so many more were committed between then and the end of the war. I doubt Churchill or fdr knew about the Katyn massacre or even cared about it when deciding about eastern Europe.jnimhaoileoin said:
Did Churchill not hear about the Katyn massacre then?! Let's face it, the Allies had just had enough of the war and decided to leave Eastern Europe to the mercy of the Soviets, who by all accounts were just as brutal as the Nazis as they made their way through Europemcgruff10 said:
I think he trusted Stalin too much and fdr was pretty gone at this point so he wasn't as sharp as he was.jnimhaoileoin said:
Churchill clearly not as bright as people thought!mrussel1 said:
That's the enduring controversy of Yalta. Churchill believed stalin would allow free elections.jnimhaoileoin said:So let me see if I've got this right. Britain entered the war upon the invasion of Poland, determined to protect Poland's sovereignty, only to then abandon them to Soviet occupation. I know this is pretty old news but the mind boggles
Some U.S. generals (famously Patton) wanted to beat the germans then start fighting the Russians right away.0 -
Reading the Victors now, brilliantly done, so fascinating to read all the firsthand accounts and the experiences of different soldiersmcgruff10 said:
Ambrose is my favorite author. Read the victors next.jnimhaoileoin said:So I've been reading a brilliant book by Stephen Ambrose called 'Citizen Soldiers'. He gives fantastic accounts from frontline soldiers on both sides and there are some great stories, so I thought I might share a couple with ye that made an impression on me (however small an event)...
Even in the bloody chaos of Falaise, a humane spirit could come over these young men so far from home. Lt. Hans-Heinrich Dibbern, of Panzer Grenadier Regiment 902, set up a roadblock outside Argenten. "From the direction of the American line came an ambulance driving towards us", he remembered. "The driver was obviously lost. When he noticed that he was behind German lines, he slammed on the brakes." Dibbern went to the ambulance. "The driver's face was completely white. He had wounded men he was responsible for. But we told him, 'back out of here and get going - we don't attack the Red Cross'. He quickly disappeared."
An hour or so later, "here comes another Red Cross truck. It pulls up right in front of us. The driver got out, opened the back and took out a crate. He set it down on the street and drove away. We feared a bomb, but nothing happened and we were curious. We opened the box and it was filled with Chesterfield cigarettes."
- Hans-Heinrich Dibbern interview by Hugh Ambrose0
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