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Adamski wrote:QUOTE (Adamski @ Jun 29 2011,2:52 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>A few years back, I watched a documentary (maybe it was this one?) that claimed the whole exercise was merely a misguided publicity/morale booster for the RAF and had little or no strategic impact - regardless of the "apparent" damage. As with many "controversial" RAF raids, civilian deaths were high - many of which were prisoners in forced labour in the factories that were flooded.
Exactly what i have read 'no strategic impact' really at all , but it change the way off thinking protecting other targets thereby moving men and material and really taken them out off the front line so maybe was strategic .
As for your Vulcan raid .. all that way just to plop one bomb outta the twenty one possible ? arr 1982 so long ago .Last edited by Ian Warren on Wed Jun 29, 2011 2:33 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Charl wrote:QUOTE (Charl @ Jun 29 2011,4:11 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Sorry to highjack you Adam, great when a thread starts a train of thought though.
Screenshot? Here's a genuine Mohne Dam 60 ft flyover!
I probably highjacked it myself! It's a good thread though - and some interesting screenshots have come out of it!
EDIT: I wonder whether the Geneva Convention ruling was a direct result of those attacks. Have there been any other attacks on dams?Last edited by Adamski on Wed Jun 29, 2011 4:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Ian Warren wrote:QUOTE (Ian Warren @ Jun 29 2011,4:20 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>I havnt been to the movies for a hundred years , well last century at lease
Let me be the first to say this .... "Ian, I think you should get out more!"
I must admit I watch a LOT of movies on DVD (local rental shop $1 a throw) ... but I still treat myself once in a while to the full-blown wide-screen experience - where even an average film looks *great*!
Ian Warren wrote:QUOTE (Ian Warren @ Jun 29 2011,4:20 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>... It is going to be interesting to see our New Zealand film maker portrait's it , I havnt been to the movies for a hundred years , well last century at leaseSir PJ signed on to that one in 2006! it's certainly been a while in the making, I'd also go though.
Adam the Protocol was just by way of clarification of the early 1949 Convention.
It also prohibits attacks on nuclear power stations and places of worship.
Everyone's ratified it, except the following countries:
United States, Israel, Iran, Pakistan, and Turkey
Ian Warren wrote:QUOTE (Ian Warren @ Jun 29 2011,3:33 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Back to Screenshots , I agree- a lot safer and all the ex waring nations love to join us in their events , nothing like following history
I agree Ian....ive had this debate with my parents for years....too them my interest (bordering on obsession)makes me a war monger, which Im not....my interest is in the technology, and history.....i know that the technology was, and is developed for a specific reason....but so are cars, and Im sure they kill more people than military aircraft have.
Anyway.....back to the screens......Charl wrote:QUOTE (Charl @ Jun 29 2011,5:10 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Sir PJ signed on to that one in 2006! it's certainly been a while in the making, I'd also go though.
Adam the Protocol was just by way of clarification of the early 1949 Convention.
It also prohibits attacks on nuclear power stations and places of worship.
Everyone's ratified it, except the following countries:
United States, Israel, Iran, Pakistan, and Turkey
Gosh...what a surprise....3 out of that five could be , and Im sure will be ,responsible for the end of civilization as we know it.....beam me up scotty, theres nothing down here worth looking at.
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Ian Warren wrote:QUOTE (Ian Warren @ Jun 29 2011,1:43 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>...One DVD i don't have is Dambusters 'the true story' must dig that one upI just spent an hour watching this, pretty good really, it cuts archival footage with that from the 1955 film.
That's so long ago, it looks authentic!
It tells the story as I understand it, but what grabbed me was Sir Barnes Wallace...a design genius.
I'd forgotten the amazing geodetic rib structure in the Wellington was his.
And his later, visionary, supersonic variable-sweep Swallow is amazing.
But get this: because he never got over the loss of dambuster crews, he insisted that all testing be done by large-scale radio control planes.
Sixty five years ago, he was doing UAV's!Last edited by Charl on Thu Jun 30, 2011 9:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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