ABATTBQ87 said:Rabid Cougar said:BUT Hogan always got the prettiest fraulines!ABATTBQ87 said:
Goodness, being a POW was not a walk on the park
I'd never heard the original. Colter Wall has a great cover.
ABATTBQ87 said:Rabid Cougar said:BUT Hogan always got the prettiest fraulines!ABATTBQ87 said:
Goodness, being a POW was not a walk on the park
Rabid Cougar said:
How did the Germans have all the POW's personal information even before they were interrogated???
Read this book from 1960.Rabid Cougar said:
How did the Germans have all the POW's personal information even before they were interrogated???
To this day it is an enigma.Rabid Cougar said:
How did the Germans have all the POW's personal information even before they were interrogated???
HarleySpoon said:To this day it is an enigma.Rabid Cougar said:
How did the Germans have all the POW's personal information even before they were interrogated???
ABATTBQ87 said:HarleySpoon said:To this day it is an enigma.Rabid Cougar said:
How did the Germans have all the POW's personal information even before they were interrogated???
Funny, but enigma wasn't used for POW information
B-17 ball turret gunner Alan Magee, who fell 22,000 feet without a parachute, falling through the glass roof of St. Nazaire train station. In January of 1943. ✈️
— J&L Historical (@Jason_R_Burt) March 7, 2024
He suffered multiple injuries, including a broken leg and a badly cut arm, but survived. 🏥 pic.twitter.com/8C1FO7QRM7
How do you like those books. I only recent saw them and see the author has published quite a few. Are they any good?Agthatbuilds said:
Don't know but I've read so many accounts of Germans having amazing amounts and depth of info on American POWs.
It's crazy. Listening now to things our fathers saw and one story is one guy knew where every mission was going despite the high secrecy because the German radio propaganda would tell them the day before their mission.
I had the pleasure of sitting and talking with some D-Day veterans about 12 years ago and shared very similar comments with them. I was with a group of combat wounded Iraq and Afghanistan vets and the D-Day veterans all said they couldn't believe we went out on missions without knowing where the enemy was or who they were. They all said they would much rather face what they faced than to not know. So I think familiarity brings comfort even in the face of extreme danger.ABATTBQ87 said:
Just watched episode 8
I have to admit I have a sense of pride watching this show as I wonder if I would be brave enough to climb into a B17, or P51, or jump from a C47 into combat.
I'm in awe of these men and what they experienced
Try driving down the only road in and out of a mountain valley full of bad guys that you know hasn't been swept of IEDs in 5 days.ABATTBQ87 said:
Just watched episode 8
I have to admit I have a sense of pride watching this show as I wonder if I would be brave enough to climb into a B17, or P51, or jump from a C47 into combat.
I'm in awe of these men and what they experienced
BQ_90 said:
Why would they burn their barracks only then to sleep on the ground in tents?
jwoodmd said:
They were really lazy and cheap on their CGI. In 1945 those B-17s would have been mostly G models with the chin turret but none had them, They at least moved to the unpainted aluminum which was phased in fully by then.
That's crazy. Never would have thought that.BQ_90 said:
Possibly the same for the bare metal fighters. (P-51s and P-47).BQ78 said:
Of course the B-29 sunk rivets solved the problem and saved on the cost of painting.