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Category: World War II History

World War II History: How British Commandos Pulled Off The “Greatest Raid of All”

Posted on 23 July 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

During World War II, there were many ingenious and courageous raids, but only one would come to be known as “The Greatest Raid of All” – the British raid on St. Nazaire. Since the beginning of hostilities, the German Navy had wreaked havoc on shipping in the Atlantic. With the fall of France, the Nazis…

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World War II History: Russia Fishes Sherman Tank Out of the Sea

Posted on 22 July 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

During the Second World War, the United States sent thousands of tanks and armored vehicles to the Soviet Union as military aid. The flow of arms and equipment was vital in keeping the Soviet Union in the fight, and ultimately 4,102 M4 Sherman medium tanks were sent to the Eastern Front—where they were known as Emchas….

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World War II History: Sherman Tanks Battled Bonzai Charges at Tarawa

Posted on 21 July 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

‘Tanks in Hell’ takes you inside a Pacific firestorm This article was sponsored by Open Road Media. “Once inside, a man quickly found that you could not be claustrophobic and serve in a tank,” Oscar Gilbert and Romain Cansiere write in Tanks in Hell: A Marine Corps Tank Company on Tarawa. “In fact many infantrymen…

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World War II History: Lessons From the Winter War – Frozen Grit and Finland’s Fabian Defense

Posted on 20 July 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

Whether on the soccer pitch or the field of battle, humans have a natural tendency to root for the underdog. Oursacred texts, medieval ballads, and regimental histories are filled with gut-wrenching tales of desperate men facing overwhelming odds. From the battle of Thermopylae to the siege of the Alamo, from the gunfight at Camaron to…

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World War II History: Hitler’s Kamikazes

Posted on 17 July 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

April 7, 1945, should have been just another high-explosive day over Nazi Germany. That morning, as they had done on so many mornings for the past three years, the bomb-laden B-17s and B-24s lumbered into the sky from their airfields in southern England. An armada of 1,300 bombers, snug under the protection of 850 P-47…

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World War II History: Japanese Balloon Bombs – How Japan Killed American’s AT HOME

Posted on 13 July 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

During WWII, the Japanese sent thousands of floating deathtraps across the ocean with one goal: burn down the Pacific Northwest. Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, was a shocking display of its ruthless military tactics during World War II. Over 2,400 U.S. servicemen died during the surprise attack, thrusting the United States…

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Holocaust History: Syndrome K – The Fake Disease That Saved Jews From the Nazi’s

Posted on 9 July 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

In the fall of 1943, German soldiers in Italy began rounding up Italian Jews and deporting them—10,000 people were sent to concentration camps during the nearly two-year Nazi occupation. Most never returned. But in Rome, a group of doctors saved at least 20 Jews from a similar fate, by diagnosing them with Syndrome K, a…

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World War II History: 20 Most Important Battles of WWII

Posted on 8 July 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

  World War II was the greatest conflict in history, carried out on a scale almost impossible to grasp. In many ways it was the first modern war, in which airpower played a vital role both on land and at sea, but many actions were ultimately won by the determination and grit of the foot…

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Military Naval History: The Naval Battle That Set The Stage for World War II

Posted on 8 July 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

Throughout the late 19th and 20th centuries, the Russian and Japanese empires had been engaged in a political struggle over who would dominate northeast Asia. In a decisive naval battle at the Tsushima Strait in 1905, Japan would be the dominant power in Manchuria and Korea until its defeat in World War II and set…

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Military History: Was The Russian Military A SteamRoller From WW2 Until Today?

Posted on 6 July 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

Joseph Stalin supposedly claimed that “quantity has a quality all its own,” justifying a cannon-fodder mentality and immense casualties. The problem is, Stalin never actually said that, but it fits our stereotype about the Russian military so neatly that everyone believes he did. When it comes to war, Russia is commonly perceived as favoring quantity…

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