Polish?
Boo! No kielbasa for you!Polish?
(Does this put me in time-out?)
--- End of line (MCP)
All in good fun. At least it used to be back when I commanded a mine detector team.Boo! No kielbasa for you!
Taken in good funAll in good fun. At least it used to be back when I commanded a mine detector team.
Всего хорошего, мой друг!
--- End of line (MCP)
Hey, the conscript approach. One of the “great” marshals was quoted something like “don’t pity the soldiers, send them in wave after wave. The broads will welp more of them”.Greater Numbers Rather the Quality
Kinda like the U.S. Grant method of warfare.Hey, the conscript approach. One of the “great” marshals was quoted something like “don’t pity the soldiers, send them in wave after wave. The broads will welp more of them”.
What I’m curious to see is an unbiased comparison between Soviet Airborne and US Marines.
Do you still dream of hordes of T-72s fanning out of the Fulda Gap, and instinctively try to shoulder the TOW?I was an Army Anti Tank Infantryman 84 / 88 ... we were volunteers not conscripts
Once power comes back up and I can type on the laptop I have a story about just that from back in my old Cav days in/around the Fulda Gap.Do you still dream of hordes of T-72s fanning out of the Fulda Gap, and instinctively try to shoulder the TOW?
Ah, good old times... Battle lines clearly drawn, enemy known and respected/feared...
IMHO, that would have been more likely to happen and scarier. Even us Soviets were cautiously scared of the NK fanatics — they reminded us too much of the Stalin years.hehe ... I did a yr in Korea after 2.5 yrs at Ft Carson ... Hordes of NK's streaming across the DMZ ...
Even us Soviets were cautiously scared of the NK fanatics
Off topic UB but I discovered a facebook group called "Forage Maryland" good group for local wild edibles.IMHO, that would have been more likely to happen and scarier. Even us Soviets were cautiously scared of the NK fanatics — they reminded us too much of the Stalin years.