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Viceroy

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Posts posted by Viceroy

  1. Dorosh,

    Stacheldraht said:

    Others, of course, want to minimize the horrors committed by Germany or other combatants for numerous reasons. Lots of military history fans seem to do that with regard to Germany out of barely hidden admiration for the German military, which is pretty creepy considering the use to which it was generally put.

    That's exactly how I feel.

    But he made another good point when he said I suppose many people want to paint all of Nazi Germany as utter evil incarnate so that all the terrible loss and suffering and sacrifices somehow make sense after a fashion or seem to have a purpose in the grand scheme.

    BTW Dorosh, maybe you should try The Desert Generals C.Barnett and/or Churchill's Generals Keegan as they are both interesting and the British Generals described are far from colorless in these books.

  2. Pondscum,

    yes, thanks for the tank tip ... I'll start using that right away in my PBEM games.

    Toran,

    you asked about why the tanks sometimes fire their MG's first rather than the gun. The coax MG the gunner uses was lined up right next to the big gun. When he fired the MG the tracer rounds would show him exactly where his shells from the big gun would hit. So the MG was often used to make sure the gun was aimed correctly. Source:Tank K.Tout is packed full of details about fighting in a Sherman in Normandy.

  3. According to Mollo from 1941 to April '43 Polish forces raised were mostly sent to the UK or Middle East to serve with British forces. After that they were used as Soviet forces and had the same equipment. They retained Polish cap badges though. By 1945 there were over 200,000 Polish troops making up 10 infantry divisions and 2 armored brigades.They were most directly involved in the fighting from Aug '44 to May '45.

  4. Dorosh,

    Omer Batrov is a Harvard professor IIRC and his works are quoted and used by other historians like Glantz, Weinberg, Keegan, Kershaw etc. Or are they "poor" scholars too?

    I'm sure if I did somehow scan the photo too you, you'd claim the people lying on the ground were merely taking a nap and the kindly GD soldiers were using their "water guns" to splash their faces and gently wake them up so they could all have a nice friendly game of soccer.

    [ February 25, 2002, 09:48 PM: Message edited by: Viceroy ]

  5. Dorosh,

    what about the GD execuetion squads in Serbia? In particular April 22, 1941 at Pancevo. In the photographs the GD cuff label on the right sleeve is clearly visible as the officer aims his gun to finish of one of the 14 civilians lying dead or dying alongside the wall. A big crowd of German soldiers is watching.

    Check out The German Army and Genocide ISBN 1565845250.

  6. Apache,

    sorry to hear about your problems :(

    I've used DA for 2 years or so with IE5&6 with never any problems. Weird how that stuff is sometimes. Though I like DA I never noticed a big speed gain on the dl, I liked it for the resume feature. Best of luck with one of the other dl programs.

  7. FOwler,

    I don't have Soldiers of the Sun but it looks like a good one to me. Don't be put off by one anonymous review at B&N ;)

    You might be interested in The Rising Sun by Toland and Eagles Against the Sun by Spector. Burma by Allen uses a lot of Japanese sources. For the view of the average Japanese soldierTales by Japanese Soldiers by Tamayama is fascinating.

    Maybe not exactly what you're looking for but it's such a great book I have to recommend it is Quartered Safe out Here.

    You could also try some of the books at Nafziger http://home.fuse.net/nafziger/index.html Let us know if you find anything good!

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