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World War 2 (WWII) Over Today - 7th May 1945

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  • megoat
    A Therefore Experience
    • Jun 10, 2003
    • 2699

    #31
    Originally posted by nvmbrsdoom5
    All of the allies were important in World War 2, not just the U.S. Just look at the Canadian Army, who were largely responsible for liberating the Netherlands from the Nazi, and rescued many Dutch Jews and the people who were hiding and helping them. They also fought at Normandy in '44 and helped win important battles in Belgium, etc.
    Originally posted by toystalker
    yikes dont forget the great british

    my gramp was in the war, he had both ears cut off in a pow camp, he made it home though

    never forget the brits especially the welsh dragoons
    Well, you sorta missed the point. Of course all the allies played a part. My point was that during the cold war, The Soviet Union's part seemed to always be downplayed in American classrooms--when in fact their contribution was MASSIVE in defeating the Nazis.....

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    • toystalker
      none
      • Mar 27, 2008
      • 795

      #32
      true true, i didnt overlook that i just wanted to big up the brits lol

      grandfather on my father side was russian and in the russian army, i dont know that side of the fam though... so called father left when i was 2, i would have loved to have gotten to hear some of them old war stories

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      • nvmbrsdoom5
        Persistent Member
        • Mar 1, 2005
        • 1627

        #33
        Originally posted by megoat
        Well, you sorta missed the point. Of course all the allies played a part. My point was that during the cold war, The Soviet Union's part seemed to always be downplayed in American classrooms--when in fact their contribution was MASSIVE in defeating the Nazis.....
        Oh no I agree completely and understood the point! I was just mentioning some other allies who are also downplayed in many history classes as well. And you're right, during the cold war there was the tendency to just downplay the Soviet's importance in the outcome of WWII, unfortunately.

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        • Adam West
          Museum CPA
          • Apr 14, 2003
          • 6822

          #34
          That's because the Soviet Union was not our ally in WWII. We agreed not to fight each other but also were not in any kind of alliance to protect each other either.
          "The farther we go, the more the ultimate explanation recedes from us, and all we have left is faith."
          ~Vaclav Hlavaty

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          • lepage
            The Ape General
            • Aug 12, 2001
            • 4056

            #35
            My Wife was born and raised in London as was her Mother and mother before her. My Mother in law (me mum) shared with me what it was like when Germany was bombing them. She was just a little girl but remembers it very clearly. She said that a lot of them took shelter in the underground "Mind the gap!"
            I love going over there because it is so rich in military history. The Imperial War museum in London is one for the books. They have this area that is a walkthrough experience and it is like walking through the streets of London just after it was bombed with fire, debri, broken water mains, ect. Amazing stuff!
            I also got the chance to stand at one of the reservoirs where the Lancasters tested the dam buster bombs.

            Back here in the U.S.

            I have two Uncles that served during ww2. My favorite uncle who doesnt live too far from me was on a P.T. boat in New guinea. He was a gunners mate and was either on the 40mm or the 50 cal turret. He was awarded the silver star during a rescue operation.

            My other uncle was sent to Africa to remove land minds after Rommel was pushed out. He went through his entire tour without a scratch. After the Japanese had surrendered and the war was officially over, They said he was going home but first he had to go to this little place off the coast of Alaska Alucian Islands (spelling?). They were sent to get the Japanese soldiers out but none of the Japanese soldiers knew the war was over and one of them took my Uncle by surprise and stuck my Uncle in the gut with a bayonnet. He came to in a Seattle hospital.

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            • Vortigern99
              Scholar/Gentleman/Weirdo
              • Jul 2, 2006
              • 1539

              #36
              My grandfather -- my mother's father -- served in the US Navy during the war; he was on both Omaha Beach (the one featured in Saving Private Ryan) and at the Battle of the Bulge. He said Omaha was a cake-walk compared to the Bulge, but he never gave details. He came home in a body cast with a broken back (but his spine was intact). If he had been killed, my mother and consequently I would never have been born.

              I'm a "peacenik" and a conscientious objector to war in general, so I cannot imagine what "Pawpaw" must have gone through to help defeat the Nazis. It literally defies my understanding. But I recognize and honor his sacrifice, and that of all who served in WWII.

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