RememberTheSomme
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- Nova Scotia
The FN
was ours for sure. I'll agree with that, and we should have been able to own the GD things after they were retired,..... but to surrender my M-14 for one for general range use or service rifle matches, I don't think so.
Now here's the nostalgia as I see it,...not just the hype of the "forbidden fruit' if I had a C1 again.......
...........the two old Cold War warriors would stand shoulder to shoulder my safe and quietly rendition each other with stories of the young men(Canadian, American, British etc) who carried them on the front lines of freedom in Western Europe, constantly in Exercise, and who might be called in the dead of night from their beds with a code word if the Warsaw Pact Juggernaut rolled that stood ready to Steam roller NATO and God help the men who were posted to West Germany on that faithful night and would be the ones destined to absorb the first blows, knowing they would be decimated trying to buy precious time. My brother served there '84-'88.
In the movie "Lawrence of Arabia",.... while observing a British night artillery bombardment against Turkish positions, the character Al played by Omar Sharif, turns to Lawrence(Peter O' Toole) and says of his enemy,.. "God help the man who lays under that". So would go the FN and the M-14 soldier in West germany.
was ours for sure. I'll agree with that, and we should have been able to own the GD things after they were retired,..... but to surrender my M-14 for one for general range use or service rifle matches, I don't think so. Now here's the nostalgia as I see it,...not just the hype of the "forbidden fruit' if I had a C1 again.......
...........the two old Cold War warriors would stand shoulder to shoulder my safe and quietly rendition each other with stories of the young men(Canadian, American, British etc) who carried them on the front lines of freedom in Western Europe, constantly in Exercise, and who might be called in the dead of night from their beds with a code word if the Warsaw Pact Juggernaut rolled that stood ready to Steam roller NATO and God help the men who were posted to West Germany on that faithful night and would be the ones destined to absorb the first blows, knowing they would be decimated trying to buy precious time. My brother served there '84-'88.
In the movie "Lawrence of Arabia",.... while observing a British night artillery bombardment against Turkish positions, the character Al played by Omar Sharif, turns to Lawrence(Peter O' Toole) and says of his enemy,.. "God help the man who lays under that". So would go the FN and the M-14 soldier in West germany.




















































