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russian armor

WW2 Daily Pic

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6 Jan 2015, 14:11 PM
#661
avatar of Crecer13

Posts: 2184 | Subs: 2


Scout-clown, one of the scouts who have acting ability, entertains his fellow


scouts and snowmobile NKL-16


scout Romanov


Scouts of the 27th Guards Division


Reconnaissance company 7th Guards Airborne Division


Scout Sergeant M. Katasonov


Reconnaissance group of the 39th Guards Rifle Division leaves on a mission in Stalingrad


Group of scouts watching the enemy


Scout, Guard Staff Sergeant Aleksey Frolchenko


Scouts in Yasnaya Polyana


Scouts lead a captured German soldier


At the request of a photojournalist soldiers disguised in daisies

6 Jan 2015, 23:47 PM
#662
avatar of afrrs

Posts: 3787



RAF field hospital
6 Jan 2015, 23:55 PM
#663
avatar of afrrs

Posts: 3787



Half-track, Sd.Kfz.251/3, during operations on the Eastern Front in 1942. There were a number of
versions of this particular vehicle, two of which were used by Luftwaffe personnel for air
coordination. It is probable that this half-track is in cooperation with nearby aircraft. Note the tow cable and spare road wheel attached to the side of the vehicle for additional armoured protection.
7 Jan 2015, 01:45 AM
#664
avatar of afrrs

Posts: 3787



A Sd.Kfz.251/1 Ausf.C advances past a destroyed building, which is burning. The half-track has its
forward MG34 machine gun fixed to a sustained fire mount. Note that some of the crew have stored
some of their personal equipment items on the superstructure sides. Space on these vehicles was
always at a premium and crews were always utilizing what space they could find.



A photograph taken from onboard a Panther medium tank showing its commander looking down upon
the crew of a Sd.Kfz.251/1 Ausd.D. The vehicle has camouflage netting attached for foliage to be
easily attached and mounts an MG42 machine gun complete with gun shield.



7 Jan 2015, 05:05 AM
#665
avatar of afrrs

Posts: 3787



A photograph taken from a StuG.III Ausf.G with its powerful 75mm gun barrel. Spread out across the
field as far as the eye can see are various armoured vehicles including the Sd.Kfz.251, Pz.Kpfw.III
and Pz.Kpfw.IV.

7 Jan 2015, 05:21 AM
#666
avatar of afrrs

Posts: 3787



A long line of Sd.Kfz.251/7 Ausf.D mounted on special railway flatcars for shipment to the Eastern
Front. By this period of the war travel by rail was very dangerous and normally undertaken during
darkness in order to minimize the threat of aerial attack.
7 Jan 2015, 13:51 PM
#667
avatar of Sirlami
Donator 11

Posts: 422 | Subs: 3


Salvaging a Bl-134


Pst rifle


Captured russian sniper suits in use


Plane after being shot down, pilot next to it


Russian train & driver


Burning tank


Lots of cars


Tank hit a mine


Getting ready to fire at a incoming plane


Soldier and their rabbit mascot


Waiting for enemy tanks


Destroyed is tank


Captured soviet tanks


Pile of frozen soldiers


Somekinda of a aa tank?


Captured russian railwaygun

7 Jan 2015, 23:07 PM
#668
avatar of afrrs

Posts: 3787



Sd.Kfz.251 half-tracks move across a field. Throughout the war on the Eastern Front the supply
situation was exacerbated by the almost non-existence of proper roads throughout the Soviet Union.
Half-tracks and other tracked vehicles were utilized to help speed up the supply of ammunition and
other equipment desperately required for the front.
7 Jan 2015, 23:08 PM
#669
avatar of afrrs

Posts: 3787



Parked in some undergrowth is a Panzerwerfer prepared for a fire mission. This version was designated as the Sd.Kfz.4/1 and consisted of an armoured Maultier body with a ten-shot 15cm Nebelwerfer 42 rocket launcher mounted on the roof.
7 Jan 2015, 23:47 PM
#670
avatar of CasTroy

Posts: 559


Soldier and their rabbit mascot

Or it´s his dinner... :p
8 Jan 2015, 02:26 AM
#671
avatar of van Voort
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8 Jan 2015, 13:52 PM
#672
8 Jan 2015, 18:49 PM
#673
avatar of afrrs

Posts: 3787



Short S.25 Sunderland
9 Jan 2015, 01:41 AM
#674
avatar of afrrs

Posts: 3787



HD Historic Stock Footage WWII FIGHTER KILLS! AERIAL DOGFIGHTS and STRAFING
9 Jan 2015, 22:53 PM
#675
avatar of afrrs

Posts: 3787



German tanks Pz.Kpfw. VI 'Tiger' in the village of Buki Cherkasy region.

9 Jan 2015, 22:55 PM
#676
avatar of afrrs

Posts: 3787



Demyansk
9 Jan 2015, 22:56 PM
#677
avatar of afrrs

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Light tanks T-70, supported by infantry
9 Jan 2015, 22:58 PM
#678
avatar of afrrs

Posts: 3787



German medium tanks Pz.Kpfw. III Ausf.G 5th Tank Regiment 5th Light Mechanized Division 'Africa' before being sent to North Africa.


9 Jan 2015, 23:14 PM
#679
avatar of afrrs

Posts: 3787





Halted next to a lake in Hungary is a line of Sd.Kfz.251/1 Ausf.D. They are all well camouflaged .

12 Jan 2015, 22:10 PM
#680
avatar of pigsoup
Patrion 14

Posts: 4301 | Subs: 2


German POWs packed into the Nonant le Pin prisoner camp, 1944



Just some of the tens of thousands of POW’s captured after the collapse of the Faliase Pocket.


They were captured in the Falaise Pocket battle, almost 30 000 Germans captured. The guard soldiers would get in a jeep, circle around the camp, and every so often they’d yell “Halt!” and shoot their guns in the air to give the impression escaping soldiers were being shot. But the escapes were rare, none actually, because these prison camps were protecting the prisoners just as much as they were containing them. Anyone who escaped that camp would likely have been recaptured by Allied forces, or caught and executed by Resistance or Resistance-friendly citizens. Most if not all of those men knew their chances were much better inside those fences.

These photos show the human and the more realistic side of the German Army in the war. Many people chalk up the German Army at the end of the Second World War as being big, bulked up, skinhead looking dudes in their twenties and thirties. In almost all surrender/prisoner of war photographs, the German Army was in a decrepit state, overgrown hair, skinny, sleep deprived, messed up uniforms, etc. It was not the camps that made the soldiers look tarnished, it was just a continuation of their condition when they surrendered. This photo is just a really good backing up of the reality of the German Army, not what has been perpetuated in movies and TV.

There is still no real consensus on the death toll of German prisoners in Allied hands Immediately after WWII millions of German soldiers were held as POWs. There was no real organizational structure to deal with this huge amount of people and hunger and all sorts of diseases were rife. In 1946 there were still many hundreds of thousands kept as forced labor and its estimated 2-4000 died a month (this is POWs of Western Allies not USSR where even more died). The estimated number of death range from around 100.000 to 500 000, although possibly it’s towards the lower end. Ending in a Allied camp was a fate a thousand times better than ending up in a Soviet POW camp. Many Germans caught by the Soviets spent the remainder of the lives in the work/death camps. Only a small fractions were ever released back to Germany. The Soviets captured 2.8 million Germans and between 300,000 and 1 million died in captivity. The remainders were released. The last German PoWs in the Soviet Union was released in 1956.

the source
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