bruno a écrit:toute l'estime que je pourrais lui porter, son seul avis sur la plus grande opération aéroportée de tous les temps ne suffit pas. Ce serait trop simple...
A +
Bruno
Et aussi la plus meutrière:
With the success of Operation Varsity, the northern route into the industrial heart of Germany was now wide open. The cost, however, had been high. The 6th Airborne had suffered 590 killed and another 710 wounded or missing. Several hundred of the missing later turned up to rejoin their units, however. The 17th Airborne had 430 killed, with 834 wounded and 81 missing. Casualties among the glider pilots and the troop plane pilots and crews included 91 killed, 280 wounded and 414 missing in action. Eighty planes were shot down, and only 172 of the 1,305 gliders that landed in Germany were later deemed salvageable.
A total of 1,111 Allied soldiers had been killed during the day's fighting. In comparison, the 101st Airborne Division had lost 182 killed and the 82nd Airborne 158 on D-Day. Operation Varsity, March 24, 1945, was the worst single day for Allied airborne troops.
http://historynet.com/wwii/blairbornebridge/index3.html
Patton ne s'est pas encombré de tout ce cirque quand il traverse deux jours plus tôt...
bruno a écrit:Je maintiens que tu dis n'importe quoi (citer PLunder sans Varsity entre autre) et en plus dès que l'on compare 2 opérations aéroportées t'es perdu ou alors t'es de mauvaise fois mais à ce moment là je préfère te prendre en duel au FPS Day of Defeat ce sera tout de suite réglé ! .
Qui compare quoi? relis ton message, je n'y vois aucunes comparaisons qui tiennent la route, tu invoques le D-Day seuleument à cause de ton manque d'arguments, quand à ton FPS débile, je te le laisse...