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Whats Bastogne?
That is a Thompson on his right side and I think he has part of a flamethrower under his reserve.
Thanks for the heads up on Stuff to do here in North Germany. i have been to Bergen Belsa, but I wont put photos online, it is not a very pleasant place.
There is also a U-Boat type 21 here in town set up as a museum that I have been to before. It has just re-opened for the season and I will check it out this weekend or next week. And a U-Boat bunker/factory just out side or Bremen that is near by that is now open for tours on Sundays that I am going to do as well. But I am definately going to head back to the Hurtgen. Alot of those trees were that large and were taken out with Artillery and fires. Years after the war the White Phosphorus from un-exploded US munitions caused many forest fires. And quite often the locals would let them burn as the woods were too dangerous with mines and such to enter.
100 ex-munitions men, died in the 50's clearing the woods of ordinance. They buried them with the war dead. it is a very interesting place.
OK, who's going to volunteer to jump the M2 Flamethrower? Those things weighed 43 lbs dry and 68 lbs when charged. I've never seen anything on those actually being used in airborne ops.
We haven't used them for a long, long time. I recall getting a call from a guy who wanted to borrow one when I was in 1 Bde HQ in Calgary 40 yrs ago. I told him that we didn't use them anymore and asked what he planned to do with it. He replied that he wanted to use it to burn grass and weeds off of berms surrounding fuel storage tanks.![]()
There was no going around those bunkers in the Hurtgen. That's why the battle was fought. Those bunkers are part of a line that stretched from theBaltic to the Swiss frontier.
I recall a concentration camp tour guide making a point that no song birds nested in the camp. He asked for anyone noticing such activity to report it to the office. It would have been a first.
Never attack a prepared enemy at a time and place that is advantageous to him and disadvantageous to you. The allies needed a breakthrough where they could use all of their advantages of mobility, firepower, and air superiority and then exploit success using good road networks. It was a very unwise decision to grind away at the Germans in the close terrain, poor roads and unfavorable weather. The Hurtgen area should have been outposted with forces concentrated at another more favorable location.
So it could be dealt with?
I visited Belsen once. Not guided, but I had heard the thing about no birds so I paid attention. Didn't hear or see any.
Thanks for the heads up on Stuff to do here in North Germany. i have been to Bergen Belsa, but I wont put photos online, it is not a very pleasant place.
There is also a U-Boat type 21 here in town set up as a museum that I have been to before. It has just re-opened for the season and I will check it out this weekend or next week. And a U-Boat bunker/factory just out side or Bremen that is near by that is now open for tours on Sundays that I am going to do as well. But I am definately going to head back to the Hurtgen. Alot of those trees were that large and were taken out with Artillery and fires. Years after the war the White Phosphorus from un-exploded US munitions caused many forest fires. And quite often the locals would let them burn as the woods were too dangerous with mines and such to enter.
100 ex-munitions men, died in the 50's clearing the woods of ordinance. They buried them with the war dead. it is a very interesting place.