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1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Рейтинг 4.70 (10 Голосов)

 

Знаменитая фотография на основе которой в интернетах ходит не менее знаменитая фотоподделка.

с другого ракурса

This picture shows a B-25 of the 5th Air Force attacking a Japanese merchant ship during an attack on Wewak Harbor, a base in New Guinea providing supplies to Salamaua and Lae. The B-25’s bombs have just missed the ship, which is shooting back at its attackers, as evident by the black puffs of flak. The B-25 was the main bomber of the 5th Air Force, which modified many of these bombers to have an extra 4-8 machine guns located on the nose of the plane for concentrated fire on strafing attacks.

These are German POWs captured during the Normandy campaign. You might notice that they are teenagers- as the war raged on and more and more of Germany’s potential fighting men were consumed by the fighting, the military had to expand the age range of those eligible for service.

These three enormous flak towers guarded a German Marine base near Angers, France. Each tower would have been armed with several large caliber and small caliber anti-aircraft guns. They were destroyed by Allied air attacks as General Patton’s 3rd Army advanced East.

This picture shows American soldiers examining a partially built German tank in Germany in 1945. The tank is probably an E-100, a superheavy tank designed by Germany near the end of the war. The tank when built would have weighed a whopping 140 tons and been armed with a 128mm cannon. However, the end of the war halted this advanced Germans weapons project as it did so many others.

American soldiers inspect a V-2 rocket captured intact in April 1945. The A-9/A-10 rocket was designed to be 25 meters (82 feet) long, or about 10 meters longer than the V-2. Weighing nearly 100 tons, it was engineered to climb to an altitude of 24 kilometers (15 miles) before beginning its trans-Atlantic flight toward the United States.

This picture shows American soldiers from the 1st Army examining part of a V-2 rocket after the army had captured the town of Bromskirchen, Germany. The picture shows that the rocket has not yet been paired with the upper half of the body and warhead. The fuel cell and insulation are visible at the open end of the rocket body.

This picture shows an underground V-2 rocket factory at Klein Bodungen, 62 miles west of Halle, Germany. As the war went on and more and more German industry was targeted by Allied bombing missions, building underground factories became more common and practical. According to the photo’s caption, this factory was one of the largest in Germany. The rocket pictured is not complete- it appears to be missing both an engine and a fuel tank.

Here is another underground factory, this one near Hinterbruhl, Austria.This factory was tasked with building Heinkel 162s, a jet fighter built of cheap materials near the end of the war. The fighters were referred to as “Volksjaeger” with the idea that the aircraft would be easy to fly for new pilots, though in reality the aircraft was very difficult to handle. This photograph shows tens of fuselages awaiting wings and engines.Only a few Heinkel 162s ever saw active service due to its late war introduction.

A V-2 rocket is launched from the German army research center in Peenemünde in 1943. Scientist there also worked on a so-called “Amerika rocket,” a two-stage rocket designed to reach the United States.

Wernher von Braun (center) was Germany’s top rocket engineer before and during the war. After the war, he moved to the United States, where he helped America develop ballistic missiles and the technology that helped put a man on the moon.

Hitler speaks with Willy Messerschmitt

Hitler speaks with Willy Messerschmitt, the German airplane designer: Hitler was thrilled about the idea of an "Amerika bomber" whose explosive cargo could reduce US cities to ash and rubble.

Hitler watches battle being waged outside Warsaw in 1939: Hitler reportedly took great pleasure in watching films in the Reich Chancellery of "London burning," of "exploding convoys" and of a "sea of fire over Warsaw." With such images in mind, Hitler was intoxicated with the idea of "the downfall of New York in towers of flames" – and perhaps a way to get America to back out of the war.

"Rheintochter was a German surface-to-air missile developed during World War II. Its name comes from the mythical Rheintöchter (Rhinemaidens) of Richard Wagner's opera series Der Ring des Nibelungen."

Rheintochter was a German surface-to-air missile developed during World War II. Its name comes from the mythical Rheintöchter (Rhinemaidens) of Richard Wagner's opera series Der Ring des Nibelungen.The project was cancelled on February 6, 1945.

German engineers testing a Messerschmitt Bf 109 E3, 1940.

Captured Australasian Saurer by the Germans

Captured Australasian Saurer by the Germans

Luftwaffe prototype Focke-Wulf Triebflügeljäger, experimental German vertical take-off & landing, propelled by 3-bladed jet-powered rotor

Formation of Heinkel He111 Bombers

Nebelwerfer

P-40 Flying Tiger

a pic took it from a Donier Do17, a Hurricane trying to shoot

Panzer II Luchs 4. Panzerdivsion


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