Geography can be tough. Here’s a guide for Russian soldiers who keep getting lost & ‘accidentally’ entering #Ukraine pic.twitter.com/RF3H4IXGSp
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Canadian Forces Clear Up Russian Confusion About Ukraine
Here is a link to a Canada NATO tweet clearing up Russian confusion about Map of Ukraine and Russia.
Tuesday, August 26, 2014
Russian Corporal Of Airborne Forces Captured And Interrogated In Donetsk Oblast Of Ukraine
This is a link to a YouTube video of a Russian Corporal being interrogated by Ukrainian military intelligence after capture near Donetsk August 25.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hh9bBr_oIlc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hh9bBr_oIlc
Sunday, August 24, 2014
Seventy Years Ago: Paris, August 24, 1944 - The Night Before Liberation
Matthew Halton was a Canadian reporter travelling with General Le
Clerc’s tanks that were approaching Paris. During the day he was to
broadcast:
French radio announcer Pierre Crénesse announced over the newly liberated French public radio:
"Wherever we drive, in the areas west and south-west of the capital, people shout: “Look, they are going to Paris! ” But then we run into pockets of resistance here or there and are forced to turn back. It’s clear that we are seeing the disintegration of the German Army — but we never know when we are going to be shot at.
"There are still some units of the German Army, fanatical men of the SS or armoured divisions, who are willing to fight to the last man. They are moving here and there all over this area, trying to coalesce into strong fighting forces…The first of LeCerc's arrived in the capital at 11 o’clock that night. It was clear that Paris would be liberated the next day.
The people everywhere are tense with emotion. Their love of freedom is so very deep, and a nightmare is lifting from their lives; and history races down the roads towards Paris."
French radio announcer Pierre Crénesse announced over the newly liberated French public radio:
"Tomorrow morning will be the dawn of a new day for the capital. Tomorrow morning, Paris will be liberated, Paris will have finally rediscovered its true face.
"Four years of struggle, four years that have been, for many people, years of prison, years of pain, of torture and, for many more, a slow death in the Nazi concentration camps, murder; but that’s all over…
"For several hours, here in the centre of Paris, in the Cité, we have been living unforgettable moments. At the Préfecture, my comrades have explained to you that they are waiting for the commanding officers of the Leclerc Division and the American and French authorities.
"Similarly, at the Hotel de Ville the Conseil National de la Résistance has been meeting for several hours. They are awaiting the French authorities. Meetings will take place, meetings which will be extremely symbolic, either there or in the Prefecture de Police — we don’t yet know where."It would be a sleepless night in Paris.
Friday, August 22, 2014
Quote Of The Day
The clock on life is ticking. If you wait for life to be fair you may be waiting until life is over.
- Charles M. Blow
- Charles M. Blow
A Century Ago: Germans In Lorraine
Today's New York Times on line publishes the account of a young German soldier's experiences with the German Army in Lorraine August 22, 1914 and afterward.
The story is told by an American woman living in Paris whose grandfather was among the invaders of the little village of Mercy-le-Haut. But she also tells the story of what happened to the villagers when the Germans came.
The story is told by an American woman living in Paris whose grandfather was among the invaders of the little village of Mercy-le-Haut. But she also tells the story of what happened to the villagers when the Germans came.
One villager, Marthe
Mandy, recounted her mother’s tales of those years as if she had
lived it all herself. Her eyes welled up as she told of an uncle she
never met who was executed by the Germans that night. The
uncle, Léon Mandy, was 17. He had been ordered to gather the bodies of
nine of his neighbors who died as the Germans stormed the village and to
bury them in a mass grave. When Léon had finished his grim task shortly
before dawn, he was shot.
Many accounts of World War I claim that the war was fought in a chivalrous fashion at the outset, but became more inhumane as time went by. Tell that to the French and Belgians along the frontier! The invasion did not seem so humane to them.
Why did the Germans shoot Leon Mandy?
They shot countless Frenchmen and Belgians in the early days of the war, sometimes for being impolite to the invaders.
What is the moral of the story?
In the end, Germany lost. A quarter century later they attacked again and lost again.
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
Glory To Ukraine
On February 23 2014 in Sofia, Bulgaria, unknown artists decorated the memorial to Soviet soldiers in the national colors of Ukraine in honor of the Ukrainian revolution. They painted the slogan "Glory to Ukraine."
Russians object to it as "vandalism." No, it is irreverent humor, not vandalism.
Three cheers for irreverence!
Russians object to it as "vandalism." No, it is irreverent humor, not vandalism.
Three cheers for irreverence!
A Century Ago: Belgian Populace Impolite To Invading Germans - Germans Offended And Execute Resisters
Today Economist Brad Delong publishes Barbara Tuchman's account of Belgian resistance to German invasion of 1914 and German countermeasures:
"The Belgians even more than von Bülow tried von Kluck’s temper. Their army by forcing the Germans to fight their way through delayed the schedule of march and by blowing up railroads and bridges disrupted the flow of ammunition, food, medicine, mail, and every other supply, causing the Germans a constant diversion of effort to keep open their lines to the rear. Civilians blocked roads and worst of all cut telephone and telegraph wires which dislocated communication not only between the German armies and OHL but also between army and army and corps and corps. This “extremely aggressive guerrilla warfare,” as von Kluck called it, and especially the sniping by franc-tireurs at German soldiers, exasperated him and his fellow commanders. From the moment his army entered Belgium he found it necessary to take, in his own words, “severe and inexorable reprisals” such as “the shooting of individuals and the burning of homes” against the “treacherous” attacks of the civil population." Tuchman, Guns of August.
It is worth reading the entire excerpt: Germans Retaliate.
In 1980 at a wedding dinner in Belgium, we sat across from a woman in her 90's who had been about 20 when the Germans invaded. She called them "le Boches." And had never come to view Germans as allies.
German ill treatment of civilians in invaded countries was nothing new. In 1889, Germany intervened in a civil war with Samoa. When opponents of their Samoan puppet fought back, Germany issued a proclamation:
"The Belgians even more than von Bülow tried von Kluck’s temper. Their army by forcing the Germans to fight their way through delayed the schedule of march and by blowing up railroads and bridges disrupted the flow of ammunition, food, medicine, mail, and every other supply, causing the Germans a constant diversion of effort to keep open their lines to the rear. Civilians blocked roads and worst of all cut telephone and telegraph wires which dislocated communication not only between the German armies and OHL but also between army and army and corps and corps. This “extremely aggressive guerrilla warfare,” as von Kluck called it, and especially the sniping by franc-tireurs at German soldiers, exasperated him and his fellow commanders. From the moment his army entered Belgium he found it necessary to take, in his own words, “severe and inexorable reprisals” such as “the shooting of individuals and the burning of homes” against the “treacherous” attacks of the civil population." Tuchman, Guns of August.
It is worth reading the entire excerpt: Germans Retaliate.
In 1980 at a wedding dinner in Belgium, we sat across from a woman in her 90's who had been about 20 when the Germans invaded. She called them "le Boches." And had never come to view Germans as allies.
German ill treatment of civilians in invaded countries was nothing new. In 1889, Germany intervened in a civil war with Samoa. When opponents of their Samoan puppet fought back, Germany issued a proclamation:
“In
conformity with section 58 of the German Military Laws, the following
offenses will be punished by death:
1. Any
person or persons who will purposely assist the enemy, or attempt to
injure German troops;
2. Any
person or persons who will lead the enemy for military purposes
against Germans, or confederated troops, or will mislead German or
confederated troops;
3.Any
person or persons who will venture to give information to the enemy,
either verbally or in writing, about matters which are connected
with the waging of
war, and all who may act on behalf of such persons;
4. Any
person or persons who will instigate or incite German troops against
law and order, by any means, as, for instance, informing them of
proclamations of the enemy, etc. etc;
5.In
not very serious cases the offender will be punished by imprisonment,
not less than 10 years or for life.”
Thus did Germany seek to win the hearts and minds of the Samoans. And the Belgians.
Monday, August 18, 2014
August 18, 1920: Famous Day In History
On August 18, 1920, Tennessee ratified the 19th Amendment giving women
the right to vote. Yeah, remember ladies, at one time, you were not
allowed to vote!!! Think about it.
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