• There seems to be an up tick in Political commentary in recent months. Those of us who are long time members of the site we know that Political and Religious content has been banned for years. Nothing has changed. Please leave all political and religiours commentary out of the fourms.

    If you recently joined the forums you were not presented with this restriction in the terms of service. This was due to a conversion error when we went from vBulletin to Xenforo. We have updated our terms of service to reflect these corrections.

    Please note any post refering to a politicion will be considered political even if it is intended to be humor. Our experience is these topics have a way of dividing the forums and causing deep resentment amoung members. It is a poison to the community. We apprciate compliance with the rules.

    The Staff of SOH

  • Server side Maintenance is done. We still have an update to the forum software to run but that one will have to wait for a better time.

Desert victory

robert41

SOH-CM-2016
November 10, 1942. "now this is not the end, it is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning." Winston Churchill.
Battle of El Alamein.
 
The Expeditionary Corps just profited from the inability of the Oberkommando to seize Malta and Gibraltar.

If Rommel hadn't run out of supplies (which constantly got intercepted by Malta based fighters), El Alamain would have fallen eventually.


Nice pics nonetheless. I find the Hurri II way better looking than its (more famous) brother in arms.
 
Great recount of history!


All those Panzers down there.. Just dont shoot the Buckers... :d We can sell them after the war.





Bill
 
The Expeditionary Corps just profited from the inability of the Oberkommando to seize Malta and Gibraltar.

If Rommel hadn't run out of supplies (which constantly got intercepted by Malta based fighters), El Alamain would have fallen eventually.


Nice pics nonetheless. I find the Hurri II way better looking than its (more famous) brother in arms.


So sure aren't you? Fortunately we held Malta and Rommel got his arse kicked back to Tunisia.

El Alamein and Stalingrad - the end of the begining. The myth of German invincibility finally put to rest.

kurt
 
lolol... whewwww........


Thank the Lord that war is over... Those guys had rocket powered fighters, hydrogen subs that could run the full 30 days underwater, were developing the A-Bomb, could make a fuel refinery based on potatoes in months, had their own version of radar and could fight in the dark night, not to mention basic cruise missles and intercontinental missles...

Thank you God we won that one... eeeks! :kilroy:
 
lolol... whewwww........


Thank the Lord that war is over... Those guys had rocket powered fighters, hydrogen subs that could run the full 30 days underwater, were developing the A-Bomb, could make a fuel refinery based on potatoes in months, had their own version of radar and could fight in the dark night, not to mention basic cruise missles and intercontinental missles...

Thank you God we won that one... eeeks! :kilroy:


Indeed some very, very talented engineers. Fortunately their leaders did not know how to organise a booze up in a brewary.

kurt
 
Indeed some very, very talented engineers. ...kurt
Postwar, the influence of those German scientists and engineers is nothing short of astonishing.
If you dig a little, you'll find their influence, from the space programmes (Soviet as well as US) to the B-2 bomber...
 
Back
Top