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Stalins Organ

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  1. 9 April 1916

    France (Western Front) – the New Zealand Pioneer (Maori) Battalion arrives in France. It is used to mill timber, dig trenches, erect barbed wire entanglements, build bunkers, and lay railway tracks.

    as far as I can recall these guys were the original "Diggers" due to their job - the sobriquet subsequently being adopted by the whole of the New Zealand Division, and then.......as per usual.....by Australians.....

    The Pioneers earned the nickname the 'Digging battalion' and the term 'Digger' was soon adopted by the rest of the New Zealand Division. By 1917 it had spread from the New Zealand Division to the Australian Divisions in the two Anzac Corps.
  2. I suspect the reason there were "spare" 122mm guns was that they were not so popular for the regular artillery - where their long range was not overly useful and their smaller throw weight more of a problem - much like the British 4.5".

    According to wiki about 2500 122's were made, viz about 6900 152's - see also the annual production rate at RKKA

    I note that the number of ISU-122's & -152's made was almost identical at 1910 and 1885 respectively.

  3. Reading wiki about RAMB I - it was one of 4 "banana boats" built to ship refrigerated bananas from Eritrea to Europe for the Regia Azienda Monopolio Banane (Royal Banana monolpoly, hence RAMB). They were all designed from the outset to be able to be fitted as auxiliary cruisers, and the 3 sister ships all had "interesting" fates:

    RAMB II: escaped the British blockade of Eritrea and sailed to Japan...however the Japanese were still neutral and not keen for an Italian raider to operate from their ports, so disarmed it and chartered it as a merchant. When Italy surrendered in 1943 the Italian crew scuttled it, but it was raised and eventually sunk by US aircraft in 1945.

    RAMB III: In Italy when war declared, was armed and used as convoy escort in the Adriatic - fought British surface forces during the raid on Taranto. Torpedoed by the British in Benghazi harbor, raised & returned to Trieste. Seized by the Germans in 1943, refitted as a minelayer & laid 500 mines in Adriatic before hitting one of them & returning to port in running astern. Sunk by allied a/c in 1944.

    RAMB IV: fitted as a hospital ship and captured by the British in Eritrea. Pressed into British service, bombed and set afire by Luftwaffe a/c & sank off Alexandra May 1942.

  4. According to wiki at least some of the prisoners knew, and asked for a fairly grim conclusion if a breach could not be made:

    No. 21 Squadron was assigned with the grim alternative of bombing the prison and all in it, as requested by those prisoners aware of the proposed mission.

    Aspersions cast in the direction of SOE may be a bit misplaced, although the controversy is also discussed on that page - it is, of course, entirely possible that all positions are true, at least in the minds of the people of the time who made the decisions based on the information they had.

  5. In the case of the Sherman, lessons from the M24 and M18 revealed that two transfer cases could have significantly lowered the profile and so in effect, it really should have been lower. It was an engineering failure that cost many lives.

    those would be 2 vehicles designed AFTER the Sherman....so how are you going to incorporate that aspect exactly - time travel??:cool:

    BTW the Hellcat was a whole 8" shorter than the Sherman, and the Chaffee was 1" TALLER!

    Both at a dozen tons lighter.......

    True. But in turn the Sherman proved quite vulnerable to the Stug and Panzer IV. It was only versus Japanese light tanks in particular did the Sherman have any overwhelming advantage in tank vs tank engagements.

    the German L48 75mm was approximately as powerful as the US 76mm - the problem was the gun. the Stug had a low profile and reasonably good armour that made it very tough, but the Pz-IV was very weakly armoured with only 50mm on the turret front - the Sherman did not have an "overwhelming advantage" - but it was also at no great disadvantage, if any.

    Which is what you expect from tanks of similar era and weight!

    Yes, the M24 Chaffee was a light tank built for reconnaissance. The armour was lighter but it did have the speed to scoot and shoot, a tactic best employed on the European front given what they had to work with. It's smaller size made it quite difficult to hit and the armament allowed for it to hold its own,

    No it didn't. The 75mm was a great improvement over the 37mm of het Stuart.......but no improvement at all over the 75mm of the Sherman and worse than the 76mm.

    It was certainly able to deal with any recon vehicles the Germans had. For the mission it was assigned, the M24 was certainly not left wanting whereas the Sherman, designed as a break-through tank and then forced into the role of the main battle tank, proved problematic in the roles it was asked to perform.

    Which does not make the chaffee a great replacement for the Sherman - it makes it a great replacement for the earlier light tanks!

    the Sherman was NOT supposed to be a "breakthrough" tank - it was always designed to be a MEDIUM tank - in particular it was optimized for combat against infantry with its medium velocity but high HE capacity 75mm gun as part of an infamous combat philosophy that saw tank destruction as being the job of specialized tank destroyers.

    And in that role it remained very good for the entire war!

    What's more with the addition of a decent AT gun it became a good tank destroyer too!

    In any case, insofar as WW2 tanks are concerned, the M24 Chaffee belongs somewhere in there – my humble opinion of course.

    It's a good light tank no doubt - but it came too late to have any material effect.

  6. Have to laugh at he concept that the Chaffee made up for all the shortcomings of het Sherman - with the same or smaller gun it as no better as an artillery piece, and it had lighter armour at 38mm max, so was even more vulnerable including to the smaller AT guns than the 88's.

    The Sherman had plenty of shortcomings - but it was actually quite well armoured - it's turret front was usually 4" (102mm) from memory - as much as a Tiger 1's front hull! It's glacis was usually 89mm at 49 degrees - miles ahead of the Pz IV of any variety.

    the problem with the armour wasn't the armour - it was that the German AT weapons had very good performance - after all they'd had to deal with Russian HEAVY tanks...and the Sherman was only a medium!

    Comparing it to the Panther and Tiger is like saying the German Pz-III was useless because it was outclassed by the KV-1, or the Spitfire was a failure because any jet was faster than it!

  7. It very much depends on the criteria, and unless you are going to publish those then there is little chance of agreement.

    For example I'd drop the Tiger several places and maybe even chuck it completely - too big, to heavy, too immobile, and having a bad rep with the opposition doesn't make up for it.

    I'd also ignore the T-26 - it's heyday was in the Spanish Civil war and Nomohon, and apart from numbers it has nothing going for it after 1939.

    Where's the KV-1?? A formidable machine in all respects in the early war and the forerunner of all soviet heavy tank development all the way to the T-10!

    And the Comet - at last the Brits get more than 1 dimension right leading right to the Centurion immediately post-war.

    I'd get rid of the Char B - wrong tank for the wrong war! The Souma might rate a low rank - it would be higher but for the turret!!

  8. I don't know what the supposed controversy is - I have no doubt that the USSR had a pan for an offensive war with Germany........just like the USA had a plan for initiating a war with the UK in the 1920's - it's just basic military planning.

    So freakin' what??

    Suvorov's only contribution was suggesting that the USSR was actively planning to do so in a time frame that was only shortly after Barbarossa - 6 July 1941 to be precise!

    Most serious analysis places the prospect as being 1943 or later.

  9. 15 January 1900

    South Africa - About 60 men of the New Zealand Mounted Rifles, commanded by Captain W.R.N. Maddocks, rout a Boer attack on a hill at Slingersfontein, Cape Colony, with a bayonet charge down the slope at the advancing Boers. The feature is renamed New Zealand Hill by General French.

    Here's a contemporary newspaper report from New Zealand about this action - good stirring Victorian stuff! :)

    And a map from the Australian Light Horse website showing the location

  10. Presumably the infantry weren't sent in naked, and had support from divisional and corps artillery, brigade and divisional MGs, mortars, and all the rest of the typical supporting panoply.

    the divisional artillery was not used, and the rest of the artillery support landed on the start lines - did you not read that??:confused:

    Casualties were always heavy. Broodseinde (04 Oct 17) was a wildly successful attack ... that still cost the NZ Div over 1,800 casualties in less than 24 hours.

    Casualties did not always start with the debacle of being shelled by your own artillery!

  11. Yeah but it wasn't really a whole division attaching a Chateau:

    Operation Orders for the attack on Polderhoek Chateau and grounds were issued on December 1st. The assault was to be delivered on December 3rd with two Battalions of the 2nd Infantry Brigade in line, namely, the 1st Battalion of Otago on the left, and the 1st Battalion of Canterbury on the right. The number to be thrown into the attack by each Battalion was two officers and 100 other ranks per Company.

    So now we're down to 2 half-battalions....and they formed:

    Each Battalion was to attack in depth, two companies being in the front line, one in support for dealing with any counter-attack that might develop, and one in reserve.

    -source

    so the "Division" is actually only half of 1 brigade, attacking on the frontage of 4 companies!

    And it being 1917, the attack was, of course, a total screw up....

    By some fatal miscalculation or influence a considerable part of the entire weight of the barrage fell across the area occupied by the first waves of the assaulting troops. The immediate outcome was that the two leading Companies, 4th on the left and 10th on the right, became seriously involved in the destructive fire of our own artillery. The losses incurred were at once severe. To move forward was accepted as the quickest method of escaping our own fire, because more appeared to be falling to the rear than to the front. Captain Hines, commanding 4th Company, accordingly gave the order to advance, and 10th Company on the right almost immediately followed suit. But the irregularity of the barrage was such that some distance had to be covered before it was cleared, and by that time casualties, now increased by enemy machine gun fire, were so heavy as to seriously prejudice the success of the attack.

    Plus although the Chateau had been hammered by artillery and was little more than a pile of bricks, the subsurface shelter had not been damaged, and it had been heavily fortified.

    Casualties were heavy - this source is the history of the Otago regiment, which had about 400 officers and men involved - of these:

    Killed, two officers and 43 other ranks; wounded, seven officers and 153 other ranks; missing, 26 other ranks; total, 231.
  12. And what is your point?

    By the look of it wild rice is a plant that grows, well...wild. Overharvesting could probably destroy it, hence the restrictions on the size of the threshers used, and also on the size of the canoes allowed and the prohibition on using any form of mechanical device in the harvest.

    Here's the statute

    It is no different from statutes limiting the weapons you can use to hunt ducks, bag and season limits, restrictions on using flys to fish for salmon, and a zillion other similar laws.

  13. Is there any material difference between a "lemon squeezer" military hat and the Canadian Royal Mounties hat? For that matter, even between a Boy Scouts hat?

    Regards

    KR

    Completely different from the Mounties one - the Mounties have one of the "flat panels" facing directly forwards - the lemon squeezer has a crease pointing forwards.

    ..sheesh!! :rolleyes:

    Alternatively no - they are all just your basic "slouch hat" as worn for hundreds of years or with the cap formatted in different ways - they aren't actually even materially different from the Tricorne and Bicorne - those forms have the brim folded up rather than the cap pushed in.

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