Tolstoy, Tibet, India and OSS in WW2 whats common
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- timmy
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Re: Tolstoy, Tibet, India and OSS in WW2 whats common
Navi, thanks for this. One of these days, we are going to have to make a point of getting together!
“Fanaticism consists of redoubling your efforts when you have forgotten your aim.”
saying in the British Royal Navy
saying in the British Royal Navy
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Re: Tolstoy, Tibet, India and OSS in WW2 whats common
tim yes we need to before winter comes again
cheers
cheers
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Re: Tolstoy, Tibet, India and OSS in WW2 whats common
N Grewal,ngrewal wrote:Great you guys liked
timmy xl et al Here is a link to CBI and hump
http://www.cbi-history.com/part_xii.html
http://cbi-theater-10.home.comcast.net/ ... kseat.html
timmy some where in these link it was mentioned about the C 46 and it issues they even used helicopter and small planes in this area to rescue crews a famous person was saved once.
Lot of afro american soldiers worked to make that road to Ledo and CBI theater a war is a forgotten one compared to Pacific et al. I read Gen Smiths Defeat to Victory years ago another common sense soldier. Lot of west indian soldiers also fought in Burma..their are amazing narratives and many of the active Indian airfields Chabua, Kalaikunda etc were built then
http://www.cbi-history.com/part_ii.html
Surely you mean Field Marshal Viscount Slim or Bill Slim as he was affectionately called. He was one of only three Indian Army officers who became Knights of the Garter, the other two being Field Marshal Earl Roberts of Kandahar and General Sir Hastings Ismay.
Regards.
"To the man who loves art for its own sake, it is frequently in its least important and lowliest manifestations that the keenest pleasure is to be derived." Sherlock Holmes in "The Adventure Of The Copper Beeches" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle