Author Topic: Name This...(959)  (Read 588 times)

Offline brady

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Name This...(959)
« on: December 07, 2004, 09:30:03 AM »
???









Offline Pongo

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« Reply #1 on: December 07, 2004, 10:26:06 AM »
looks like a matilda mk1 and some falshimjeagers.

Offline MiloMorai

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« Reply #2 on: December 07, 2004, 10:38:11 AM »
Would go with Cruiser Mk IVCS (A13).

Looks like a howitzer in the turret.

Offline Pongo

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« Reply #3 on: December 07, 2004, 03:19:45 PM »
ya its not a matilda mk1 , matilda mk1 had totaly exposed tracks.

Offline Charge

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« Reply #4 on: December 07, 2004, 03:22:24 PM »
Vickers

-C+
"When you wish upon a falling star, your dreams can come true. Unless it's really a giant meteor hurtling to the earth which will destroy all life. Then you're pretty much screwed no matter what you wish for. Unless of course, it's death by meteorite."

Offline Blooz

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« Reply #5 on: December 07, 2004, 06:33:48 PM »
Vickers VI

German Paratroops.

I think it's Crete.
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Offline gear

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« Reply #6 on: December 07, 2004, 09:39:22 PM »
Vickers Light Mk. II B


Offline brady

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Name This...(959)
« Reply #7 on: December 07, 2004, 11:12:23 PM »
Vickers VI(A), it is:)

Crete, it is:)


Falshimjeager, it is:)

.............

 Interesting things in the Picture include the Vickers Suspenshion/road wheals in front of the Tank, the Two falshimjeager most clearly sean have Binoculars and Side arms on, and the tag on the plate expired last may.

Offline Arlo

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« Reply #8 on: December 07, 2004, 11:25:16 PM »
So when a British tank breaks they make them wear a hankie on their head and join the German paratroopers? Man .... they're tough!

Offline 63tb

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« Reply #9 on: December 08, 2004, 12:00:40 PM »
The air-drop on Crete always interested me. Wasn't that the last time the Germans tried a large air-drop because of the losses they took? Also why did the Germans decide on Crete and not Malta?

63tb

Offline Seagoon

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« Reply #10 on: December 09, 2004, 12:01:45 PM »
Hi 63,

Yes Operation Mercury was the last great German air-drop of the war. The loss of 170 Ju52 transport aircraft particularly enraged Hitler, especially because he considered it a side-show to his all important invasion of Russia a month later. The loss of so many transport aircraft (Germany never had enough as it was) was a serious impediment to German forces in the east for the next two years. Mercury went ahead because the German high  command realized the strategic importance of Crete. With control of Crete, not only would the Germans have an unsinkable aircraft carrier to control the Aegean and Eastern Med. from, it was half-way between Greece and their Afrika Corps forces fighting in Libya and Egypt and should have made resupply much easier.

The Germans hit Crete because it is far larger than Malta (thus giving them more drop zones), because they thought it was more lightly defended than it was, and because they thought (wrongly) that the could hit the island with seaborne forces from Greece at the same time the paratroopers landed. As it was, the British navy sank the naval component.

The German high command pressed for an invasion of Malta as well, but after the losses taken in Mercury, and the beginning of Barbarossa, Hitler was content to simply let the Luftwaffe and Italians try to bomb and starve the island into submission. This was a blunder the Germans would pay for dearly in 1943.

Hitler's incredibly poor grasp of strategy was perhaps the greatest blessing the allies were ever granted.

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