Hitler Had a Secret Submarine Plan to Send Japan Military Tech
Submarines of the era needed to spend most of their time on the surface to run their air-breathing diesel engines.
Here s What You Need to Remember: The U-Boat immediately crash dove as well, then swerved evasively. After four minutes, it had managed to duck under three of the incoming torpedoes. But Launders had launched the second pair of torpedoes at lower depths. The fourth torpedo struck
U-864, breaking it in two; the gruesome sound of popping rivets and cracking metal filled the
Venturer’s hydrophones.
The Hunt for Red October dramatized for the public one of the tensest forms of warfare imaginable: combat between submarines submerged deep under the ocean’s surface, the nerve-wracked crews scouring the fathomless depths for their adversary’s acoustic signature using hydrophones.
North Korea has likely the largest special-forces organization in the world.
Here s What You Need to Remember:
One of the most vital parts of North Korea’s war machine is one that relies the most on so-called “soldier power” skills. North Korea has likely the largest special-forces organization in the world, numbering two hundred thousand men and women trained in unconventional warfare. Pyongyang’s commandos are trained to operate throughout the Korean Peninsula, and possibly beyond, to present an asymmetric threat to its enemies.
For decades North Korea maintained an impressive all-arms force of everything from tanks to mechanized infantry, artillery, airborne forces and special forces. The country’s conventional forces, facing a long slide after the end of the Cold War, have faced equipment obsolescence and supply shortages for example, North Korea has very few tanks based on the 1970s Soviet T-72, and most are still derivatives of the 1960s-era T-62. The rest of P
The U.S. Military Used B-17 “Drones” That Bombed Nazi Germany
A human pilot still needed to guide the planes and so had to hastily bail out before getting close to target!
Key point: The plane was not a full drone, but more of a suicide bomber without a pilot staying in the plane to the end. Here is how this experiment worked (but also literally at times sadly backfired).
When it came to advanced military technology in World War II, arguably no one was better at it than Nazi Germany, whose scientists Adolf Hitler keep busy trying to invent the ultimate “super weapon” capable of defeating his enemies.