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  #1  
Old 11-15-2012, 01:56 PM
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boogiedowndonovan boogiedowndonovan is offline
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Default Operation East Wind

Not sure if this has been talked about before

Operation East Wind

you can play cold war gone hot soldier with airsoft guns substituting for real firearms and the D-day adventure park in Oklahoma substituting for Germany.

http://www.operationeastwind.com/

You can play East German, Soviet, US, UK, West German and it looks like some Canadians will be joining according to the forum.
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Old 11-17-2012, 09:26 AM
The Rifleman The Rifleman is offline
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Looks like it was a lot of fun. I'd bet that most of the 30-50 year olds in this forum could have banded togething into one or two platoons and smoked them. After all, they may be playing it, but we LIVED it.
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Old 11-17-2012, 04:04 PM
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*hehs*


Thats exactly what I was thinking - and my father who was stationed in berlin just laughed at some of those pics.



But that being said.... it does look like fun.
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Old 11-17-2012, 07:13 PM
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I'd agree. The WWII armor and trucks were more like the 50s then the 80s. Bet he did laugh! But the kids doing this would have no clue. The tankers, cav scouts and infantrymen in here would run them ragged by using brains, not legs.

On a serious note, I am a company commander now. 10 years of the "war on terror" and the soldiers aren't used to fighting like we did. Besides myself, top and a handful of E-7s and E-6s with 20 or so years in, its a real pain trying to teach everyone thats joined since 2001 about radio listening silence, cammo nets and so on. They think war is living on the FOB and getting hot chow and skype home everynight.
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Old 11-17-2012, 08:59 PM
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I'm amazed at how cheap the rates are for those Operation East Wind events. Most of the time I'm not in the slightest bit jealous of people living in the US but this is one of the exceptions
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Old 11-17-2012, 09:02 PM
The Rifleman The Rifleman is offline
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You're right. $160 probably covers the gas, food and pellets. I'd bet those guys are pretty much doing it for fun.
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Old 11-18-2012, 01:28 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by The Rifleman View Post
I'd agree. The WWII armor and trucks were more like the 50s then the 80s. Bet he did laugh! But the kids doing this would have no clue. The tankers, cav scouts and infantrymen in here would run them ragged by using brains, not legs.

On a serious note, I am a company commander now. 10 years of the "war on terror" and the soldiers aren't used to fighting like we did. Besides myself, top and a handful of E-7s and E-6s with 20 or so years in, its a real pain trying to teach everyone thats joined since 2001 about radio listening silence, cammo nets and so on. They think war is living on the FOB and getting hot chow and skype home everynight.
You know, the first troop commander I had in my old unit was a total idiot (He forbid us from taking more than three mags and *any* grenades with us on patrol in those nice calm places like... fallujah... in order not to upset the locals nor would he allow us to order more ammo for the same reasons) but one thing he did do right, perhaps the only, is he was big on making sure we didn't forget the basics of mech on mech. He made sure back in the world that we trained not only on COIN, but for the Gap as well.
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Old 11-18-2012, 06:55 AM
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Originally Posted by Panther Al View Post
You know, the first troop commander I had in my old unit was a total idiot (He forbid us from taking more than three mags and *any* grenades with us on patrol in those nice calm places like... fallujah... in order not to upset the locals nor would he allow us to order more ammo for the same reasons) but one thing he did do right, perhaps the only, is he was big on making sure we didn't forget the basics of mech on mech. He made sure back in the world that we trained not only on COIN, but for the Gap as well.
That was one good point. The kids need to remember how to fight. I think part of that too is that the cav by nature trains in screening operations. Then again, some of our mechanics and cooks have been years without doing their jobs.

I never went that far west of baghdad. But I did get shot at alot in sadar city. I let my platoon break the rules all the time. We never drove in the right hand lane, doing 45 and so on lol
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Old 11-22-2012, 11:14 AM
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Quote:
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but we LIVED it.
Yes "I lived" I sat in FOB in Afghanstian and made sure the troops got paid
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  #10  
Old 11-25-2012, 03:40 PM
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Yes "I lived" I sat in FOB in Afghanstian and made sure the troops got paid
I did my time at a FOB too. But I also lived through the cold war years. Training was a lot harder. There was no ice cream in the DFAC and there was no beds to sleep in. Regardless, the troops do need to get paid.
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