Picture of the day

I thought the comment was written as to suggest that governments should execute a few leaders in their military occasionally to encourage the rest to perform. Evidently Stalin and Mao Tse Tung took this advice to heart.

If you were implying that it would encourage the rest of the group to be less problematic??????????????

Wasn't that picture taken shortly after they found the Canadian POWs shot in the small courtyard??? Between the POed Canadians and French Partisans looking for revenge, I'm surprised they accepted any surrenders from that group.

I meant that by shooting him they were sending a message to the POWs to Shut the F Up and accept the new situation.

I was thinking that given the actual situation, I would have been very tempted to not accept their surrender. But, if they had just plugged the Gap and wanted 100,000 more Germans to surrender, shooting them on sight would not be the way to encourage more to surrender.
 
PCMR heading out on patrol.

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It would be interesting to see the interior of that turret. I wonder how much spalling there was from the hits that did not penetrate.
 
My uncle was a Rocky Mountain Ranger. His rifle is still in the family. Pristine. But I don't have it.

Is that how he would have looked?

I believe the RMR's were issued standard Canadian army uniforms. PCMR units issue were called "Dry- Bac" coats, hats and pants, also an armband, and dog-tags. Vehicles were issued PCMR license plates.
 

More:
File:Fortification turret in Aleth, Saint Malo.jpg
From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository
1200px-Fortification_turret_in_Aleth%2C_Saint_Malo.jpg

English: One of the few german fortification turrets around Aleth Fort in Saint-Malo with shell impacts.
Français : L'une des tourelles blindées allemandes entourant le fort d'Aleth à avec de nombreux impacts d'obus alliés tirés lors de la libération de Saint-Malo en août 1944.
From:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/...c.panoramio.com/photos/large/400105.jpg[/IMG]
 
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Not necessarily.Most of those I have seen in Poland were about 6-10 inches of steel sitting on top of heavily reinforced concrete dome.It would take a lot more than a dozen 75mm AP rounds to crack this egg.

Aerial bombardment or howitzer/mortar HE shelling would likely knock out crew just by air compression/concussion.Question is can you get them close enough to aim accurately?Not in Normandy.
 
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Rockwell XFV-12. A prototype supersonic VTOL (or not) fighter.

The concept was created in the 70s for a new class of light aircraft carriers that the US Navy was toying with. It used a very powerful engine, the P&W F401 with 30,000lbs of thrust. The plane itself weighed 24,000lbs fully loaded which seems fine, the thrust being greater than the weight. However the VTOL design involved using slats in the wing to divert thrust downwards, and the engineers failed to account for the hideously complex piping from the engine which reduced thrust dramatically. The result was that the wing generated only 20% of the lift the engineers had calculated and the XFV12 never flew. The class of ship it was designed for was cancelled, and even if it had been produced it would have proven a terrible fighter. It used the nose of an A4 which was too narrow for a good tracking radar. It’s slatted wing left no space for missiles, and its internal fuel capacity was horribly low for a carrier fighter.

In all, it was a terrible plane.

Thanks to Lockheed Martini for that Identity
 
From The Daily Telegraph 28 December.

Commander Bill Atkinson, who has died aged 92, was the highest scoring fighter ace of the Royal Canadian Navy during the Second World War.

Flying for the Royal Navy, in December 1944 Atkinson joined 1844 Naval Air Squadron in the carrier Indomitable, flying the Grumman Hellcat fighter. He cut his teeth on January 24 and 29 1945 when he flew fighter cover during Operation Meridian – air attacks by a British carrier squadron on the Japanese-held oil refineries at Palembang and Pladjoe, on Sumatra, which produced most of Japan’s oil and aviation spirit.

Atkinson’s next action was in April, when he took part in Operation Iceberg, in support of the American assault on Okinawa, when the British Pacific Fleet was tasked to neutralise the Sakishima Gunto islands. During a raid on Miyako airfield, on April 6, Atkinson claimed a first victory over a twin-engined Betty bomber, watching it crash into the sea and explode, but he was only awarded a “share”.

He was more successful on April 12, when he damaged a Tony fighter and shot down in flames a Zero fighter. Next day he shot down another Betty bomber.

On May 21 Atkinson was again in combat when he shot down carrier-based Myrt reconnaissance aircraft. The same day his aircraft was badly damaged by flak but he successfully landed on Indomitable.

On another sortie, Atkinson’s aircraft was hit and covered by leaking oil, and, though ordered back by his flight commander, he commenced a dogfight with a Zero fighter. At the subsequent debrief he was told, “That was pretty wild, Bill”, and from then on he was known as “Wild Bill”.

In June Indomitable was withdrawn for a refit and Atkinson and his squadron were transferred to another fleet carrier, Formidable. There Atkinson achieved a rare distinction on the night of July 25, when four Hellcats were scrambled at night against an approaching raid by Japanese bombers.

Two Hellcats were forced to return with mechanical problems to the carrier, but Atkinson assumed the command and was guided by radar to an interception, where he shot down two Grace torpedo-bombers and damaged a third; his wingman shot down a fourth.

These kills established Atkinson as only the second Canadian naval air ace of the war. He had already been mentioned in despatches when he was awarded the DSC “for determination and address in air attacks”.

He regarded himself as lucky. He himself was the only surviving Canadian flyer in Indomitable, and one of two out of seven Canadian aviators to survive in Formidable.

He could never forget that in Formidable he had found his Canadian friend, Robert “Hammy” Gray, and that it was he who helped Gray strap into his Corsair divebomber on August 9 for the sortie in which Gray lost his life, and for which he was awarded the Victoria Cross for bravery in leading an attack on a Japanese destroyer.

Postwar Atkinson enjoyed a distinguished career in the Royal Canadian Navy over 30 years.

He flew 3,400 hours in more than 30 types of aircraft, and made 376 decklandings.
 
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“USS Bunker Hill (CV-17) afire after being hit by two Kamikaze suicide planes off Okinawa, 11 May 1945. Photographed from USS Bataan (CVL-29).”
 
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