Jump to content

onetrack

Members
  • Posts

    7,539
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    69

onetrack last won the day on March 25

onetrack had the most liked content!

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

onetrack's Achievements

Grand Master

Grand Master (14/14)

  • Conversation Starter
  • Dedicated Rare
  • Posting Machine Rare
  • Collaborator Rare
  • First Post

Recent Badges

9.3k

Reputation

  1. You forgot to mention how a readily-available Chinese, AI-enhanced, satellite imagery programme, is helping Iran locate U.S. assets very quickly. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-04-06/us-intelligence-chinese-satellite-imagery-middle-east/106508322
  2. This is utter BS, propagated by VC sympathisers. No Australian soldier ever committed a war crime murder in Vietnam - all VC killed by Australian troops were actively engaging in warlike actions against Australian troops - either shooting at them, wearing recognised enemy uniform and running away when called upon to stop, or carrying out booby-trap setting or mine-laying work. Or being found in VC tunnels and bunkers. But the U.S. troops were a different story, as witnessed by the My Lai Massacre.
  3. Jerry, there are Rules of Engagement to be obeyed when carrying out military action against a declared enemy. The problems arise when you're fighting a guerrilla army, and there is no defined "occupied territory". WW1 and WW2 were easy, they were wars of territory occupation with (often changing) front lines. In guerilla wars, there is no "front line", and enemy combatants are often hard to distinguish from civilians. This makes for great frustration, especially when civilians act as "part-time" enemy, and assist guerillas. This is what BR-S's cases will boil down to, whether the murdered "civilians" were actually operating clandestinely as guerillas, or assisting guerilla forces - or whether they just were innocent civilians suspected of aiding the guerillas. https://law.unimelb.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0009/1683135/Rowe.pdf
  4. The Doc should have examined his HEAD, not his feet! Just to see how little was in there!
  5. Hoots, mon! There's nae language like tha Scots language! Ha' ye no read the "Da Tree Peery Grice" to ye bairns or weans? 😄 https://www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/document/?documentid=436 P.S. My Granddad came from Ballachulish, just near Glencoe - a member of the fine Highland Clan McLean, and my mother came from Dunfermline! Her grandparents moved from Ballachulish to Alloa, during the latter part of the Industrial Revolution, to gain work in the weaving and spinning mills of Alloa. Grandad became a coal miner at Bowhill Colliery in Fife.
  6. I can recall a few Changi POW's telling me how they always used to take the piss out of the Japs at every opportunity - and the Japs often didn't understand the piss was being taken out of them.
  7. onetrack

    Brain Teaser

    You can probably blame your poor results on that nasty disease you picked up, Nev. A lot of people suffer from it. It's known in medical circles as A-G-E. 😄
  8. The Office of Special Investigations has had BR-S charged with the murder of non-combatants, as he should always have faced. His idea of "rules of engagement" is a lot different to most other peoples. He is charged with five counts of war crimes over the alleged murders of unarmed Afghan civilians and prisoners.
  9. Clives party was always all about benefits to Clive, bugger anyone else. Just like Trump. Full of BS and self-importance, and self-interest.
  10. Willie - But it wasn't uncommon for U.S. troops just to hold up their weapons, and empty magazine after magazine, on auto, just firing into a patch of scrub, where enemy were "suspected" of hiding.
  11. It appears most of those Nissan Leafs for sale are Japanese imports - of which there are plenty available. But the older Nissan Leafs are low on power and range and most would only be good for 100kms now before recharge. And they're prone to battery failure because they're old-tech, and have no battery cooling. The newer series Nissan Leafs (from about 2019) are better for range and power, but they still have no battery cooling. On a hot day you're liable to cook the battery cells with high speed operation. https://carfromjapan.com/cheap-used-nissan-leaf-for-sale?position=Side Bar
  12. Well, that's a new slant I haven't heard previously - that they got the C-130's bogged. BOTH of them? Doesn't sound like any level of truth in that story. The "technical malfunctions" seems like a more likely scenario. The only photos we have are of a blown-up C-130 remains. How that happened will remain "restricted information" for quite a while to come. The only photos we have, come from Iranian sources - and they claim they shot the aircraft down, of course. There are three photos of the site below, it doesn't look too muddy or soft to me. https://www.instagram.com/p/DWwE9OhjnaC/?img_index=1
  13. With the U.S. military, it is. Remember, these are the people who expended 40,000 rounds of ammo for every enemy killed in Vietnam.
  14. Marty, he knows full well what he's in for, we've done this before, and we had a good time. Plus, he's a great worker, and we get on well working together.
  15. Did you see the gigantic CF that the rescue of the downed U.S. airman turned into? The Yanks went into Iran with a major armed force, they all landed at a disused airstrip near the mountainous terrain the pilot was lost in. Then they had to scramble through 7000' mountains to get to him, and bring him back to the airstrip to fly him home. But then, when they all went to take off, 2 x C-130's developed "technical problems" that stopped them from taking off. So rather than fly in technicians and parts to fix the aircraft, they flew in with another lot of aircraft - and blew up the 2 x C-130's, to stop the Iranians getting the use of them! They wouldn't hang around to fix the machines, obviously fearful of a major enemy firefight, and the possibility of many more lives lost! So now, we (and the Iranians) know what ONE U.S. Colonel is worth - around US$250M, the replacement cost of 2 x C-130's!
×
×
  • Create New...