Bit fuzzy but great photo, Kiwi lance corporal at Cassino, February '44. Once again demonstrates the enormous amount of Thompson SMGs that Kiwi units used (NZ units carried a far greater concentration of the weapon than any other, even the Americans).
The Thompson was a great close quarters weapon… no doubt about it . Great for clearing building and ranges of 200 yards in .
The problem with it was the .45 cal ammo was heavy to carry, and you used up what you could carry very quickly if you used the fully auto option. Fire control was imperative because the guy carrying it could easily find himself in the middle of a firefight out of ammo. I think that was one of the reasons the Thompson’s weren’t issued as much in great numbers . Also the M-1 Garand was the main battle rifle for most GIs as it could reach out to a thousand yards plus with an expert marksman.
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NZSAS returning to LZ Nadzab Vietnam
Yes- like the sad incident with the charbroiled baby and the little 12 year old. Started out like this.Another terrific LIFE image, South Vietnamese AF napalm strike...
Yes- like the sad incident with the charbroiled baby and the little 12 year old. Started out like this.
I was just saying that the famous picture of the naked girl was the result of a South Vietnamese bomb attack on a village. Believe me I never said blowing people up in WW2 was morally right- don't you know me?Not just nape Jeff, all bombs blow stuff and people up. Incendiary bombs did far more damge during WWII, but Vietnam was the first war to really photographically document war in all its horror.
Stuff blowing up and burning in WWII wasn't somehow more morally right and less horrific than stuff blowing up and burning during the Vietnam War.
Smithy the last time we tangled was because I called RAF Bomber Command the moral equivalent of the Allgemeine SS. I've never thought WW2 was moral at all. Ditto all war.Not just nape Jeff, all bombs blow stuff and people up. Incendiary bombs did far more damge during WWII, but Vietnam was the first war to really photographically document war in all its horror.
Stuff blowing up and burning in WWII wasn't somehow more morally right and less horrific than stuff blowing up and burning during the Vietnam War.
WW2 was a "moral war", but like any war, a lot of immoral actions happened on all sides.Smithy the last time we tangled was because I called RAF Bomber Command the moral equivalent of the Allgemeine SS. I've never thought WW2 was moral at all. Ditto all war.