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Category: Warfare

World War Two History: Los Aliados – The Latin Americans Who Helped Defeat the Axis

Posted on 7 March 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

“While their contributions to the final victory may seem miniscule when compared to those of other world powers, their participation is nonetheless noteworthy.” THE NATIONS OF LATIN AMERICA are not often counted among the foremost contributors to the Second World War. Countries like Chile and Uruguay largely stayed on the sidelines until the war’s final…

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Brush-Up On Your History: The Crusades and Syria

Posted on 7 March 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

  [Taken from the blog Bionic Mosquito.]   The Battle for Syria Part I There ran down the edges of the desert a string of cities and their connecting road – Aleppo, Homs, Damascus…. As long as these cities remain in enemy hands, the seacoast (Lebanon and Israel) will not be secure.  But this isn’t…

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Russian Subs Are Reheating a Cold War Chokepoint

Posted on 7 March 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

As the GIUK gap returns to importance, NATO must look to regenerate its anti-submarine force. The recent U.S. promise to fund upgrades to Iceland’s military airfield at Keflavik is no diplomatic bone thrown to a small ally. The improvements will allow the U.S. Navy’s new P-8 Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft to keep an eye on…

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Brush-Up On Your History: When Terrorist First Attacked the U.S.

Posted on 7 March 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

A hundred years ago this month, the nation was blindsided by the first act of terrorism on U.S. soil—at the hands of Mexican troops commanded by the revolutionary Pancho Villa. It has been 100 years since the first act of terror on U.S. soil was committed by revolutionary Francisco “Pancho” Villa.  On March 9, 1916…

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Military Weapons from the Past: Americas First Rolling Armored “Shotgun”

Posted on 6 March 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

A weird little Marine Corps tank blasted North Vietnamese troops Designed and built in a farm tractor factory and armed with six 106-millimeter recoilless rifles, the M-50A1 Ontos was rejected by the Army and only purchased in small numbers by the Marine Corps. Years later in Vietnam, the USMC trained infantry riflemen to drive these…

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Espionage Non-Fiction Book Review: The Rice Paddy Navy

Posted on 6 March 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

Osprey Publishing; November 2012; 316 pp. Before Navy SEALs stormed mansions in Pakistan, the notion of sailors waging war on land sounded ludicrous to many. So when Gen. George C. Marshall learned that Navy captain Milton Miles intended to train an army of Chinese guerillas to disrupt Japanese army operations in China and create a…

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Iranian Basij Fighting Forces Bolster the Assad Regime in Syria

Posted on 6 March 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

This fanatical Para-Military Volunteer pipeline stretches from Tehran to Damascus Tehran downplays its presence in Syria, but its volunteers are hard to hide. The most obvious clue as to their presence is the fact that Iranian troops have died in the conflict, including high-profile commanders such as Brig. Gen. Hossein Hamedani of the Iranian Revolutionary…

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Brush-Up on Your History: America’s Secret War Plan to Invade Canada

Posted on 5 March 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

The end of a war only rarely settles the central questions that started the conflict. Indeed, many wars do not “end” in the traditional sense. World War II, for example, stretched on for years in parts of Eastern Europe and the Asia-Pacific. Even as the guns fell silent along the Western Front in 1918, the…

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World War II History: Legacies, Short Audio Clips of the Second World War

Posted on 5 March 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

Recently a close friend told me about this website Audioburst that features short audio clips of Veterans recounting memories of their experiences in World War Two. I urge you to visit this website and take some time listening to some of these stories. They are all very short, most of them under 2 or 3 minutes,…

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Military History: The U.S. Navy’s “Douche” Boat Washed Away Viet-Cong Bunkers

Posted on 4 March 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

In the early morning hours of June 10, 1969, U.S. Navy vessels sailed down a stretch of the Vam Co Dong River in South Vietnam. The force included a special weapon sailors called a “douche boat,” which could literally wash away Viet Cong fortifications. “My assigned mission was to search out and destroy … bunkers,…

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