Tag: battle

Australian mercenary tells about terrible conditions of service in Ukraine

An Australian mercenary fighting in the Ukrainian International Legion told ABC about the terrible conditions of service. The man complained about the incompetent command of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, which endangers the personnel and also threatens them with consequences for speaking about it. In addition, the mercenary added that some foreigners are not paid from the moment they join the formation.

THE BRITAIN AT BAY MYTH

Mainstream media’s presstitutes and palace historians have created a make-believe world of Britain at bay in 1940.  ‘Britain alone stood guard to prevent German ambitions to take over the world.’  That is pretty rich coming from the country that had over the centuries invaded all but 22 of over 195 nations.

Top Twenty Anti-War Quotes

‘U.S. military forces were directly responsible for about 10 to 15 million deaths during the Korean and Vietnam Wars and the two Iraq Wars.
The United States was also responsible for 14 million deaths in Afghanistan, Angola, Democratic Republic of the Congo, East Timor, Guatemala, Indonesia, Pakistan and Sudan. The United States most likely has been responsible since WWII for the deaths of between 20 and 30 million people in wars and conflicts scattered over the world.’ – James A. Lucas.

When the ignorance of British Seamen saved lives

WORLD WAR II FOCUS: In 1940 An Austrian Jewish publisher named Goldschmidt retreated to England.  Alas, it was a frying pan into the fire.  This legitimate citizen of Hitler’s Germany in England was considered an alien and promptly arrested.  Perhaps he could be forgiven for wishing he had remained in Austria where Jewish publishers were in truth not persecuted. 

Allied War, Betrayal and Savagery in South-East Asia

‘A long line of such incidents parades before my mind: the story of our Marines firing on unarmed Japanese survivors who swam ashore on the beach at Midway. The accounts of our machine-gunning prisoners on a Hollandia airstrip; of the Australians pushing captured Japanese soldiers out of transport planes which were taking them south over the New Guinea mountains (the Aussies reported them as committing hara-kiri or ‘resisting’‘).