CPL. R.A. BIDGO... 的个人资料M.U.L.照片日志列表更多 ![]() | 帮助 |
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6月17日 Canada SnipersCanadian Snipers Are Canadian Snipers the rifle butt of Jokes? I think not! The joke picture above is a attempt at humor of how Canadian soldiers have to settle for hand me down, or cheapest bidder for contract, "You get what you pay for!" quality tools. There is a case where a US sniper was in a fire fight and he had the only gun and tossed his sniper rifle to a Canadian sniper and said "Here, you know how too use this thing better than I do" and the Canadian sniper held back the attackers until dark when they escape Recently hounored Scout and Sniper Cpl. Francis Pegahmagabow fought with the 1st Battalion Canadian Expeditionary Force during the First World War.
Sniping with the .50 BMG in AfghanistanNew long-distance record set!
(The following is from the Canadian newspaper National Post. The shooters were using .50 BMG rifles that had Lilja barrels on them outfitted with Nightforce 5.5-22x NXS scopes.) OTTAWA BLOCKS U.S. EFFORT TO HONOUR OUR SNIPERS: Canadian snipers pose with their 50-calibre rifle at base camp in Kandahar. Five of the men, whose names the military withheld for security reasons, were nominated for Bronze Stars by the U.S. for their prowess in fighting near Gardez. The sixth joined the unit later in the war. Wait due to 'Canadian protocol' By Michael Smith and Chris Wattie
The five snipers spent 19 days fighting alongside the scout platoon of the United States Army's 187th "Rakkasan" brigade last month, clearing out diehard fighters from the mountains near Gardez in eastern Afghanistan. The Americans were so impressed by the Canadian snipers that they recommended them for medals after the battle. Sources told the Post that U.S. General Warren Edwards had already signed the recommendation for five Bronze Stars for the sniper teams, drawn from 3rd Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, last month. Gen. Edwards, deputy commanding general of coalition land forces in Afghanistan, had recommended three Canadians for a Bronze Star and two for a Bronze Star with distinction. The Canadian military told their U.S. counterparts to wait before awarding the medals for reasons of "Canadian protocol." Spokesmen for the Department of National Defence would not comment on the award last night, but a source within the department said the medals are on hold while the military decides whether or not to award the men a similar Canadian decoration. However, Dr. David Bercuson, director of the Centre of Military and Strategic Studies at the University of Calgary, said the real reason for the delay was likely official squeamishness. "Canadians don't kill -- they don't even use the word kill; that's the problem," he said. "I think the military is not sure that the government is prepared to accept the fact, let alone celebrate the fact ... that Canadian soldiers do sometimes end up killing people." Many of the U.S. scouts who worked directly with the Canadian snipers were incensed that the Canadians did not get the Bronze Star, the medal for bravery the U.S. military usually gives foreign soldiers serving alongside its troops. The snipers themselves, all of whom spoke on condition their names not be printed, have said they would prefer to receive a medal from their peers in the field rather than from National Defence Headquarters in Ottawa. Dr. Bercuson said there should be no objection to Canadians receiving a U.S. decoration: As recently as the Gulf War, two Canadian CF-18 pilots were given the Bronze Star. He said the medals would be a badly needed boost to the morale of the almost 900 Canadian soldiers on the ground in Afghanistan, especially after four of their comrades were killed and eight others wounded in last week's friendly fire incident. "Absolutely they should get it," Dr. Bercuson said. "It would be good for the morale of the guys and good for the morale of the whole unit, and they need a morale boost right now." Canadian snipers were reportedly outstanding in the fighting around the mountainous al-Qaeda bastion east of Gardez, code-named Operation Anaconda. One member of the team, a corporal from Newfoundland, said on his first night in combat he and his partner got an al-Qaeda machine gun in their sights as it was hailing bullets down on U.S. troops below. Crawling up into a good position, they set up their .50-calibre rifle -- the McMillan Tac-50, a weapon the corporal compares to having superhuman power in your hands. "Firing it feels like someone slashing you on the back of your hockey helmet with a hockey stick." (These are the rifles fitted with Lilja .50 caliber barrels and Nightforce NXS scopes.) When he hit his first target, an enemy gunman at a distance of 1,700 metres, he said all that ran through his mind was locating his next target. A master corporal from Ontario, the lead sniper of his three-man team, said when they first landed in the combat zone "our spider senses were tingling.... It was night and we didn't know what to expect." By daylight, after coming under enemy machine-gun fire, he managed to ease his rifle barrel between two rocks and quickly located an enemy sniper hiding behind a small piece of corrugated steel between two trees. He guessed the distance at 1,700 metres and fired one shot through the metal, killing the man instantly. He said afterward he remembered thinking: "That's one less bullet that's gonna be coming at us, one less person we have to think about." During the next four days of fighting, the Newfoundland corporal set what is believed to be a record for a long-distance shot under combat conditions, hitting an enemy gunman at a distance of 2,430 metres. The days of crawling, shooting and long hours waiting in cover left the Canadian snipers exhausted. "You don't realize what you've done to your body and how tired you are till it's all done. I think we slept 14 or 15 hours when we got back," the master corporal said. Three of them, along with U.S. special forces soldiers, also rescued a company of the U.S. 101st Airborne Division that was pinned down by enemy fire on the first day of Operation Anaconda. They also participated in Operation Harpoon, with Canadian troops on "the whale," a mountain overlooking the Shah-e-Kot valley where al-Qaeda fighters were putting up stiff resistance. Operation Harpoon, carried out in conjunction with Operation Anaconda, consisted of 500 Canadian and 100 U.S. troops under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel Pat Stogran, who leads Canadian Forces in Afghanistan in the biggest ground offensive since the Korean War. Lieutenant Justin Overbaugh, of the American scout platoon to which the Canadian snipers were attached, said it was a pleasure to work with the Canadian troops. "Their professionalism was amazing," Lieut. Overbaugh said. "The Canadians were a very large asset to the mission. I would have loved to have 12 Canadian sniper teams out there. I'd have no problems fighting alongside of them again." He said the Canadian snipers had equipment far superior to theirs. Their rifles had longer range than the U.S. weapons and better high-tech sights. Lieut. Overbaugh said if another mission comes up, he will request the Canadian sniper teams be sent with his unit. Senior military officials in Ottawa made a point of praising their work at the time. "The sniper teams suppressed enemy mortars and heavy machine-gun positions with deadly accuracy," Vice-Admiral Greg Maddison said after Operation Harpoon ended. "Their skills are credited with likely having saved many allied lives."
5月19日 Mr. Rogers Was a Marine Sniper/Navy Seal
Dear M.U.L.: One morning on my regimental routine of Tim Horton's, (large double double and a fruit explosion.) I over heard a converasion between to old timers about Mr. Rodgers, you know the TV kid show guy. The vets were discussing about wether Mr. Rogers was a Marine sharpshooter and went on to say he's supposed to have had something like 150 'kills' in the Vietnam War. I don't think that can be true, because I think he was on TV during the war — in any case, he would have likely been too old to serve in Vietnam. I was wondering if you'd heard the story, whether it — or any part of it — was true.
Unless all the biographical information available about him is wrong, Fred McFeely Rogers never served in the military in any capacity, let alone as a Marine sniper (or Navy Seal, as another version of this apocryphal story claims). Some cynical folks may be loathe to believe that the gentle, soft-spoken host of "Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood" was exactly what he seemed, but he was. Rumors to the contrary have circulated since the early 1990s. It's unknown where, precisely, these stories originated, but around 1994 Fred Rogers' supposed military exploits became a hot topic on the Internet, and grew hotter as the decade wore on. Here are some examples:
1998: "So this fellow at work (retired Army vet) says that Mr. Rogers of childrens' TV fame served three tours of duty in 'Nam as a sniper and has been credited with kills in excess of 1500 meters."
1999: "Interesting side note about Fred Rogers. He was the number three Marine sniper in the Vietnam war. And one of the reasons he always wears long sleeve clothing is because his arms are covered in tattoos." Predictably, Rogers' death in February 2003 sparked a resurgence of the old rumors, but with a fresh twist: now he was an ex-Navy Seal, supposedly, instead of an ex-Marine sniper. This variant circulated far and wide after someone attached it to a newer email hoax that made similar claims about Bob "Captain Kangaroo" Keeshan. The relevant portion of that text went as follows:
Fred Rogers won our hearts, true enough; but the rest is hogwash. After graduating from Rollins College in Florida with a degree in music in 1951, he immediately embarked on a broadcasting career — a career that went uninterrupted for nearly 50 years, even while he studied for a Bachelor of Divinity degree, eventually becoming an ordained minister in 1962. Far from hiding a secret past as a trained killer, Fred Rogers was an exemplary individual who devoted his entire adult life to educating and bettering the lives of children, and as such he deserves to be remembered. Urban legends thrive in military occupation of IraqUrban legends thrive in military occupation of Iraq August 9, 2003
As a US soldier peered out of a passing tank, a young engineering student and a retired accountant contemplated one of the more common questions on the streets of Baghdad: did the soldier's wraparound sunglasses give him X-ray vision? "With those glasses, he can definitely see through women's clothes," said the engineering student, Samer Hamid. "It makes me angry. We are afraid to take our families out on the street." The retired accountant, Hekmet Tinber Hassan, smiled and said it was a baseless rumour, like the widespread story that Saddam Hussein had been secretly working for America and was now at a CIA safe house. Just as truth is the first casualty of war, urban legends seem to be the first creation of a military occupation, especially when the cultural gap is as wide as it is here. After life under Saddam, people here are accustomed to conspiracy theories and ready to believe the worst about anyone in power. Of course, Americans have been circulating their own kinds of legends, starting with fantasies a few months ago that the occupying troops would be peacefully welcomed by a nation of grateful flower-waving citizens. There have been more guns than flowers. In the urban legends flourishing here, the soldiers triumphed thanks to Saddam's treachery and to US technology. The legend about the X-ray sunglasses may have evolved from reports about the soldiers' night-vision goggles. Compared with the residents, the soldiers have the look of robotic aliens as they patrol in the midday sun wearing combat boots, helmets and armoured vests. Some Iraqis say the soldiers take special pills that keep them cool, but the most common theory is that they have portable air-conditioners - usually said to be inside the vests, but sometimes placed in the helmet or even the underwear. "There is fluid circulating throughout the underwear," said Hamid, the engineering student. "I am not sure of the exact mechanism, but we all know the Americans have very sophisticated technology." Aadel Delli, the owner of a food market in central Baghdad, said he did not believe the stories about air-conditioned uniforms, which he attributed to popular doubts about the capacity of Americans for discomfort. "Most Iraqis thought the American soldiers would be gone by now because they could never stand the summer in Iraq," he said. Sweltering soldiers have tried dispelling the myths about their gear by letting Iraqis touch their vests and try on their sunglasses, but some legends will not die. "I let a kid put on my sunglasses, and he was still convinced they had X-ray vision," said Sergeant Stephen Roach, a soldier from Lufkin, Texas "He kept saying to me, 'turn it on, turn it on'." Other versions of the ugly-American stories have the soldiers drinking beer inside their tanks near mosques. They have been accused in the Arab press of using pages from the Koran for toilet paper and of giving children candy packets containing pornography. The rumours became so numerous that Al Sabah, a new daily paper run by Iraqis, printed a supplement debunking them. Some stories seem intended to encourage the fighters who have been attacking Americans. GIs are said to be so demoralised that 30 per cent of them have already abandoned their posts. Others have supposedly converted to Islam and fled to marry women in Saudi Arabia. There are also rumours that Americans hide their casualties by dumping large numbers of soldiers' bodies each night into the Tigris River. - New York Times This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/08/08/1060145865140.html 4月30日 Talking about Canadian Military Uniforms Sold on the Internet
Quote Canadian Military Uniforms Sold on the Internet New World Order HQ: Hidden Underground Bases
Are the hidden underground military bases the real headquarters for the New World Order? 4月28日 Who ordered the destruction of the Avro Arrow?Who ordered the destruction of the Avro Arrow? The Avro Arrow shown during the rollout ceremony, Oct. 4, 1957. (CP Photo/Canadian Armed Forces) The Avro Arrow, a sleek white jet developed in Malton, Ont., in the 1950s could have become the fastest plane in the world and made Canada a world leader in the aviation industry. Instead, the jet program was cancelled and the planes, their blueprints and models ordered destroyed. Nobody in the government or military has ever admitted to giving the destruction order. One theory has it that Prime Minister John Diefenbaker gave the order under pressure from the U.S., while others say it was the Department of Defence or even Avro president Crawford Gordon. » CBC ARCHIVES: The Avro Arrow Did a UFO visit Shag Harbour, N.S.?Was there a UFO in Nova Scotia?
On Oct. 4, 1967, residents, RCMP officers and an Air Canada pilot reported seeing strange lights in the sky near the tiny Nova Scotia community of Shag Harbour. Witnesses said the lights hovered above the water before slipping under.
A search of the area turned up nothing except a yellowish-brown foam floating on the surface. A preliminary report was rushed off to Canadian Forces Headquarters in Ottawa as seven navy divers from HMCS Granby searched unsuccessfully. While many still believe a UFO was involved, other Cold War-inspired conspiracy theories include a downed Russian aircraft or sunken Russian submarine. » CBC ARCHIVES: The truth behind UFOs 4月27日 Introduction to M.U.L.M.U.L. : MILITARY URBAN LEDGENDSHow to Identify Misinformation
How can a journalist or a news consumer tell if a story is true or false? There are no exact rules, but the following clues can help indicate if a story or allegation is true.
Does the story fit the pattern of a conspiracy theory? Does the story claim that vast, powerful, evil forces are secretly manipulating events? If so, this fits the profile of a conspiracy theory. Conspiracy theories are rarely true, even though they have great appeal and are often widely believed. In reality, events usually have much less exciting explanations. |
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