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12-01-2013, 06:11 PM | #1 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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If you are interested in military history, this would be a good tour to go on.
The tour retraces the steps of Easy Company from the beaches of Normandy to Berchesgarten. Its $5kaus. plus airfare from Aus. http://www.beyondbandofbrothers.com/...escombined13tr
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CSGhia Last edited by csv8; 16-01-2013 at 04:34 PM. |
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12-01-2013, 06:19 PM | #2 | ||
Former BTIKD
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5K to be told how they "saved the rest of the World" .... No thanks.
I'd rather do a Gallipoli tour where the real heroes were.
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12-01-2013, 07:43 PM | #3 | ||
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Fair enough but Juliar is having the 100th Anniversary by ballott!!!!!!
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CSGhia |
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12-01-2013, 08:22 PM | #4 | ||
Former BTIKD
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Do you mean that if you want to go to Gallipoli you have to be in a lottery ?
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Dying at your job is natures way of saying that you're in the wrong line of work.
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12-01-2013, 08:40 PM | #5 | ||
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12-01-2013, 08:41 PM | #6 | ||
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13-01-2013, 01:37 PM | #7 | |||
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If the yanks had not supported the pommes UK would have fallen in 1941 and if they had not been involved in the battle of the Coral Sea we would have been in all sorts of trouble. Do a bit of research on "The Brisbane Line". You may not like the fact that they were THE major force behind the defeat of Nazi Germany and Japan but that does not change history..... |
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13-01-2013, 10:37 PM | #8 | |||
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not to mention Hitler not listening to his generals. |
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13-01-2013, 10:51 PM | #9 | |||
Pity the fool
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Whilst the US was the major force behind defeating Japan, the fall of Nazi Germany can be largely attributed to the Russians and their 1944 Strategic Offensive and operations into 1945. The Western Allies hastened Germany's demise, but if the US and the UK had not have conducted the D-Day invasion, the iron curtain would have simply extended to the English Channel instead of through Germany as it did. All of this of course isnt taking anything away from the sacrifices those countries made to get the job done of course.
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14-01-2013, 09:29 AM | #10 | |||
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So the pommes, who were out of resources and had their manufacturing smashed would have had no problem holding off Germany in 1940, 12 months BEFORE they went to war with USSR and 4 years BEFORE D-Day without military and strategic support in the way of food and material via convoys from USA? |
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14-01-2013, 11:43 AM | #11 | |||
Pity the fool
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Germany did not have the naval assets to blockade the English Channel for an extended period to ensure they got their beachhead properly established. There was also an issue with capturing a decent port so they could unload heavy equipment like tanks and artillery pieces. No surprise then that the most "decent" ports in the south of England where they could do this (probably Dover) were also heavily defended... Once the powerful RN fleet units started arriving from places like Scapa Flow (the Home Fleet, primarily Battleship squadrons) and the Mediterranean (Mediterranean Fleet which were multiple task forces with aircraft carriers) they would have bottled up the Channel at both ends and simply waged a war of attrition. The Poms could afford to lose some ships to air attack because they had plenty in reserve for this very reason. German ships and barges running the gauntlet to resupply their invasion force would have been contending with 14 and 15 inch shells fired by battleships and of course the RAF which was not yet beaten by the time they were planning on conducting the operation. Once on British soil, the Germans would have faced the Home Guard, but fighting on their own turf and there were over 700,000 of them versus the 30 German divisions that were committed. They also would have to have dealt with the regular British Army, Free French, Polish and Commonwealth Divisions that were in Britain (or called in) at the time. The Royal Military College Sandhurst did a war-room exercise of Operation Sealion in 1974 and concluded that the Germans would have failed. There were 3 German umpires at this exercise (who were all officers that served in WWII). There is an interesting Wiki article on the subject that is well referenced and makes for good reading. A more interesting question to answer would be: what would the US had have done if the Nazis invaded Britain? Declare war or stay out of it?
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15-01-2013, 12:18 PM | #12 | ||
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15-01-2013, 03:25 PM | #13 | |||
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It's all speculation now but some historians believe the japs could have got as far south as NSW Australia had a very small navy, no aircraft carriers, planes were either spitfires or kitty hawks in limited supply , tanks were either British or American in limited supply , artillery pieces of a large calibre were also in limited supply So you still believe we were not under threat What were we going to stop them with boomerangs ? |
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15-01-2013, 04:23 PM | #14 | ||
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12-01-2013, 10:06 PM | #15 | ||
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Uproar at 2015 Gallipoli Dawn Service quota ballot
by: Mark Dodd From: The Australian September 27, 2012 12:00AM 28 comments Increase Text Size Decrease Text Size THE announcement of a national ballot to determine an Australian tourist quota for the Anzac Day centenary has triggered anger and frustration for scores of paid-up tour group customers expecting to attend the 2015 Gallipoli Dawn Service in Turkey. Veterans Affairs Minister Warren Snowdon yesterday declared a limit of 8000 Australian visitors to the centenary, and proposed that priority goes to descendants of Gallipoli veterans.
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13-01-2013, 10:42 PM | #16 | ||
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Broadmeadows might now be a Nissan etc factory??????
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13-01-2013, 10:43 PM | #17 | ||
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good mate of mine did a similar trip in 2011, he had a blast.
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13-01-2013, 11:12 PM | #18 | ||
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This would be a once in a life time opportunity and if I could afford to go I'd be on the plane
As for the comments about the yanks being fanatics , may be so But make no mistake gentlemen the only reason the Nazis did not win the war in Europe was because of the second front The yanks spearheaded operation Torch in North Africa then landed in Italy Then the 3 rd front was Normandy The Germans were moving tanks and artillery from the Easten to the western front to try and stem the Allied front. While the situation on the eastern front wasnt great for the Germans this certainly helped the Russians who had been asking the yanks to start another front since 1942 Strategic day light bombing, again the yanks starved the Germans of material needed to rage war So yes they are loud, cocky and full of them selves but be thankful the men of easy company and the thousands of others just like them gave thier lives with thousands of other men from other countries, to give us the freedom we all take for granted so a little respect please Last edited by neptune blue; 13-01-2013 at 11:17 PM. |
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14-01-2013, 10:09 AM | #19 | ||
Starter Motor
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http://battlefields.com.au/
Matt McLachlan battlefield tours. Maybe something more applicable to those wanting an Aussie experience. |
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14-01-2013, 12:18 PM | #20 | ||
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Interesting post
Given the early successes of the Russian campaign by the Germans I thought that they could have taken England hitler did not consider England as their natural enemy un like the Russians which may have also Swayed his decision not to invade Remember it was the change of tactics from bombing RAF bases to cities that cost the Germans It has been widely documented that fighter command was only weeks away from capitulation The strategic error gave them the breathing space to amass lager fighter formations delivering the biggest blow to the Luftwaffe on the 15 th of September 1940 which is known as Battle of Britan day ( please correct me if I have the date wrong) |
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14-01-2013, 04:29 PM | #21 | |||
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Sounds fantastic.
I know of someone who will jump at this, and I think I might try to join him. My father was in the USA in 1998 at a Smithsonian and got to meet Major Dick Winters, he spoke to him for about 20 minutes and said he had to be the nicest and most humble person he'd ever met. What stuck with him was whilst we may bemoan the trivialities of life, these guys who were ostensibly young boys were of such a caliber that they routinely had to deal with death, and had to do unspeakable things in the hope of survival. This goes of course for all the allied forces. It's got to be fascinating seeing where these heroes served, much the same as those who do the Kakoda track. I'm a massive history fan and frankly if I can get the time I'll be on this faster than a hobo on a happy meal.
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14-01-2013, 09:29 PM | #22 | ||
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Staying slightly OT ... I'd have thought the without the massive injection of men and resources from the USA to at least distract and engage the Axis forces, the Germans could have had a move "leisurely" war .. Giving them time to perfect and deploy all those advanced weapons like the V1, V2 the jet engined fighters etc .. And their research into nuclear weapons.
Lucky they were overrun before most of that stuff could really be bought to bear against UK, USSR, etc. |
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14-01-2013, 09:39 PM | #23 | |||
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The air to air missiles and jet bombers that could outrun everything we had could have caused no end of problems.... |
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14-01-2013, 10:08 PM | #24 | |||
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the Germans also had no long range 4 engine strategic bombers for the very same reason After the japs bombed Pearl harbour in december 1941 the architect of the attack Admiral Yamamotto stated "I feel that all we have done is awakened a sleeping giant and filled him with a terrible resolve" he pretty much summed it up like it or not the yanks saved our ***** just another quick point for the guys supporting the theory that the poms could have won the war .... in fact the poms and the french could have stopped the germans when germany invaded poland, they had committed the bulk of their panzers, artillery and airforce to this attack had the French and british attacked immediatly on the western front they would have over whelmed the german forces in the west resulting in the forces in the east being redeployed to the western front interms of men and material at that time the french and british forces out numbered the germans hindsight is a wonderful thing |
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15-01-2013, 05:05 PM | #25 | ||
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One thing you fail to remeber is that Gallipoli was a defeat for Australia
The Anzacs failed to meet most of their objectives in this campaign This certainly does not take away their bravery, guts & dedication against hopeless odds and they are all heroes as far as I'm concerned Australia was the invader here , the Turks were defending their homeland So for the record there was never any Turkish threat against the australian continent We went there to fight the Turks as they were allies of the Germans so as to help out the poms .. You know king & country ... Their country not ours Now ww2 the turning point in the war in the South Pacific was midway where the yanks inflected heavy losses on the imperial Japanese navy' s aircraft carriers from which they never recovered Without air superiority the allies were able to push the japs back I'm not saying that australias efforts in Ww2 were frivolous but without the industrial manufacturing might of the yanks things may have turned out differently You can think what you like but you can't re write recorded history |
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15-01-2013, 06:06 PM | #26 | |||
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IMO, they don't get nearly the level of recognition they deserve, it seems almost entirely a WW1-centred day. |
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15-01-2013, 06:46 PM | #27 | |||
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The Australians that served in North Africa in WW2 were amongst the best fighting men Australia ever had Even General Romel had a very high regard for their tenacity I think that the focus tents to be on Galipoly probably because it was the first war we fought as a nation and that it really was a senseless waste of life All wars are but if you read up on how the British commanders ( who had controll over our troops ) sent them out into no mans land knowing full well they would all be cut down you may understand why Galipoly strikes a bit of a nerve |
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