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Olav V returns to Oslo, Norway in 1945. Max Manus scans the crowd for threats.
Edit: I think his smg might have actually been an unmarked Husqvarna Submachine gun m/37-39, provided by Sweden.
Source for bottom pic:
http://www.gotavapen.se/gota/artiklar/kpist/swede_45.htm
For myself , being a Second World War history buff, this is a very interesting photo, Crown Prince Olav, is wearing what was refered to as pattern 1940"Austerity" battledress jacket, or "economy battledress, that is the buttons are exposed, where as regular issue battledress the buttons were hidden , making it a more smarter uniform , not sure why the Crown Price is wearing this type of battle dress , as someone with his stature and rank , would have been entitled a battledress jacket, that many high ranking officer had privately tailored, also of interest is the Crown Princes holster and handgun, it is neither a US holster for Model 1911 pistol, or a Brit Commonwealth web holster, im thinking the Princes is armed with a Norwegian manufactured 1911, sometimes refered to as a "Kongsberg' colt, after the Norwegian government arsenal
ah, the Nazgul! A friend of mine flew with them in AFG as a doorgunner.
Sorry - what's the deal w/the German helo?
“But a sacred tradition had been born,” Lindsay writes, and other countries have followed the American example, including Britain, which brought home its dead after the Falklands War with Argentina in 1982."
THE SOURCE: “Rest in Peace?” by Drew Lindsay. MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History, Winter 2013.
At least 38 cans of TNT there that I can count....that's 19 pounds....might make a decent sized dent.
A great shot of one of our 442 Sqn Cormorants carrying out a night rescue of an injured hiker on Mnt Rexton near the Chilliwack/US border this past Aug.
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The CH53-crews in AFG painted Nazguls on their helos. Other then that: nothing.