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  #1  
Old 03-18-2012, 12:03 PM
weswood weswood is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pmulcahy11b View Post
The American version is: "Texas, where men are men, the women are strong, and the sheep are scared..."
Don't you mean cows?....Wait, that doesn't sound good either.
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Old 03-18-2012, 12:53 PM
Sanjuro Sanjuro is offline
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For the British, add sneaky (since summer 1918, anyway).
The 1918 summer offensive opened with the usual massive artillery barrage, when it ended the Germans came out or their dugouts and waited- only for the attack to come fifty miles down the line, with prepositioned tanks etc (brought up at night, with the roads covered in straw to conceal their tracks- and the straw swept up before dawn so the Germans reconaissance flights had nothing to see). We've stayed sneaky ever since- both the pre D-Day "Pas de Calais" bluff, and the GW1 "attacking straight into Kuwait" bluff were laregly British creations.
They used to say the sun never set on the British Empire. This was because God didn't trust us in the dark!
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  #3  
Old 03-18-2012, 01:19 PM
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Webstral Webstral is offline
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Originally Posted by Sanjuro View Post
They used to say the sun never set on the British Empire. This was because God didn't trust us in the dark!
Based on the Argentine experience outside Port Stanley, God has good reason not to trust British infantry in the dark.
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  #4  
Old 03-18-2012, 03:53 PM
95th Rifleman 95th Rifleman is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sanjuro View Post
For the British, add sneaky (since summer 1918, anyway).
The 1918 summer offensive opened with the usual massive artillery barrage, when it ended the Germans came out or their dugouts and waited- only for the attack to come fifty miles down the line, with prepositioned tanks etc (brought up at night, with the roads covered in straw to conceal their tracks- and the straw swept up before dawn so the Germans reconaissance flights had nothing to see). We've stayed sneaky ever since- both the pre D-Day "Pas de Calais" bluff, and the GW1 "attacking straight into Kuwait" bluff were laregly British creations.
They used to say the sun never set on the British Empire. This was because God didn't trust us in the dark!
Heh, yeah, I've always been fascinated by the way the British military used misdirection and obfuscation during WW2, especialy in the desert where they built dummy units and hid entire tank squadrons in plain sight.
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