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Elitemilitaria Military Antiques

Locality: Ashmore, Queensland

Phone: +61 424 425 899



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25.01.2022 John Baskeyfield VC: A Mighty Hero of the WW2 Battle of Arnhem As a civilian, John Baskeyfield spent his time as a butcher, but during the Battle of Arnhem, he turned his skills to a different type of killing. After being called up to the Army in 1941 aged just 19, Baskeyfield was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, South Staffordshire Regiment. As an air landing unit of the 1st Airborne Division, the 2nd Battalion saw action in Sicily and Italy before being deployed in Operation ...Continue reading



25.01.2022 QLD FIREARMS LAW CHANGE, YOU MAY NOW LEGALLY BUY REPLICA MACHINE GUNS FROM FEBRUARY 2021, SUCH AS THE DENIX REPLICA MP40 SUBMACHINE GUN WITHOUT A LICENSE, BEFORE THIS CHANGE YOU HAD TO HAVE A COLLECTORS LICENSE WHICH IS EXTREMELY HARD TO OBTAIN. We have secured old mint stock of MP40 with folding stocks, replica MP40's are no longer allowed to be imported with folding stocks. We will also be selling these Category R Replicas from FEB 2021. StG 44 Assault Rifle, Germany, Ste...n Mark II, United Kingdom 1940, PPSh-41 Submachine Gun, Soviet Union, M1928A1 Submachine Gun, United States, AK47 Assault Rifle, Russia, M16A1 Assault Rifle, United States. The legislation that currently impacts replica gun owners as follows: Queensland: Replica pistols and replicas of category A, B, C and D long arms (e.g. bolt action and semi-automatic) can be sold and possessed with no license required. Category R replicas (e.g. sub machine guns and machine guns) will be likewise legal to sell and own without license from February 2021 thanks to recent welcome changes to legislation. Western Australia: All types of replica firearm are currently legal to sell and own in Western Australia. Other States: For other States in Australia we suggest that you use the table of contact details below for the various Police and State Government Firearm and Weapon’s Licensing bodies to get specific and up to date advice. With special collector’s licenses and permits, people in other States may be able to legally obtain and display replicas as part of a militaria collection. Once again, up to date legal advice must be obtained from your own State and strictly adhered to.

23.01.2022 DENIX NON-FIRING REPLICA U.S. ARMY M1911 COLT .45 PISTOL GUN FULLY FIELD STRIPPABLE, High quality metal replica with working slide, trigger fully functional, removable magazine, simulated loading & firing, safety catch and detachable barrel, fully field strippable. Only $275.00 with free delivery. Please see our website for the largest range of replica firearms in Australia. http://www.elitemilitaria.com//denix-replica-gun-u-s-army-

23.01.2022 Vietnam War Pilot to Receive Medal of Honor for Saving 44 Soldiers The old adage of never leaving a man behind is often repeated in military circles and spoken with sincere emotion. However, the reality of warfare is that some men are in fact left behind due to circumstances beyond a warriors control. And yet, when then Major Charles Kettles spoke of leaving no man behind it appeared that he certainly meant it with the utmost conviction. When members of the 101st Airborn...Continue reading



22.01.2022 MEDAL OF HONOR: Despite Serious Wounds, Paul Bolden Took Out 35 German SS Troops In The Bulge To be clear, the number would have only been 20 had the German SS taken Bolden up on his act of mercy. For after gunning down 20 of the 35 holed up in a Belgium house, he retreated and gave the final 15 the opportunity to surrender. He nursed his wounds as he waited and yet when it appeared the final 15 still had a little fight left in them he charged the house alone and finished t...Continue reading

21.01.2022 Desmond Doss: awarded the Medal Of Honor, he refused to carry a weapon or kill the enemy, as a medic during WWII he saved 75 lives. Mell Gibson just made a movie based on his life called Hacksaw Ridge. Desmond Thomas Doss (February 7, 1919 March 23, 2006) was the first conscientious objector to receive the Medal of Honor and one of only three so honored (the others are Thomas W. Bennett and Joseph G. LaPointe, Jr.). He was a Corporal (Private First Class at the time of his ...Continue reading

20.01.2022 The Captain German made movie Executioner of Emsland Based on Actual Events. Willy Paul "Willi" Herold, also known as "the Executioner of Emsland", was a German soldier who at the end of World War II pretended to be a Luftwaffe captain and embarked on the murder of inmates at prison camps. Herold was arrested by the British, tried, and executed for war crimes on 14 November 1946 at WolfenbüttelOn 30 September 1943, Herold was called up for military service. After basic tr...Continue reading



20.01.2022 A member of the 1st Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment (1RAR) with his M60 machine gun - Bien Hoa, Vietnam, July, 1965.

20.01.2022 Revenge: The final victory over Nazi Germany achieved, soldiers and allies of the British, American and Russian armies mimic and mock Adolf Hitler and his ideas on the dictator's famous balcony at the Chancellery in conquered Berlin on July 6, 1945.

19.01.2022 Private Peter McCann of Peterborough, SA, waits at the 1st Australian Task Force (1ATF) as US helicopters prepare to lift troops of 3rd Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment (3RAR), to the Long Hai Hills, south of Nui Dat. The mission, Operation Pinnaroo, was still in progress. 8th March, 1968.

19.01.2022 Michael Wittmann, the Deadly German Panzer Ace Of WWII: Between the myth and reality lies a figure of great importance in the history of armored warfare. Michael Wittmann, the most successful panzer ace of the Second World War and in the history of warfare was a charismatic person and his accomplishments on the battlefield were often met with praise. Before he became the famous Ace, he served as a private, joining the Army in 1934. After two years of service in which he gaine...Continue reading

18.01.2022 Stanley R. Christianson (1925-1950) was a USMC private first class who posthumously received the Medal of Honor for giving his life in a one-man stand against a ferocious attack which threatened to destroy his platoon in Korea on September 29, 1950. Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while serving with Company E, Second Battalion, First Marines, First Marine Division (reinforced), in action against ene...my aggressor forces at Hill 132, Seoul, Korea, in the early morning hours of September 29, 1950. Manning one of the several listening posts covering approaches to the platoon area when the enemy commenced the attack, Private First Class Christianson quickly sent another Marine to alert the rest of the platoon. Without orders, he remained in his position and, with full knowledge that he would have slight chance of escape, fired relentlessly at oncoming hostile troops attacking furiously with rifles, automatic weapons and incendiary grenades. Accounting for seven enemy dead in the immediate vicinity before his position was overrun and he himself fatally struck down, Private First Class Christianson, by his superb courage, valiant fighting spirit and devotion to duty, was responsible for allowing the rest of the platoon time to man positions, build up a stronger defense on that flank and repel the attack with 41 of the enemy destroyed, and many more wounded and three taken prisoner. His self-sacrificing actions in the face of overwhelming odds sustain and enhance the finest traditions of the United States Naval Service. Private First Class Christianson gallantly gave his life for his country. See more



18.01.2022 For Lt. Col. Merritt, WWII only lasted 6 Hours: Enough Time For Him To Pick up a Victoria Cross at Dieppe. Lieutenant Colonel Charles Merritt, who would one day go on to be a Victoria Cross recipient, spent three years in German captivity. However, by that point he had seen only six hours of combat. Upon finding out that he had been granted the great honor of the Victoria Cross after his release, he described his time as a prisoner of war as enforced idleness, adding, It ...Continue reading

18.01.2022 A dead enemy soldier and the capture of this Chinese Communist SKS rifle are the results of a contact between the Viet Cong (VC) and the Australians of Matilda Force in Vietnam (1970). Examining the weapon are four of the men in the clash, left to right: Private (Pte) Ivan Heard of Cairns, Qld; Pte Graham Dwyer of Eidsvold, Qld; Corporal Ray Fell of Erskinville, NSW; Pte John Kerkman of Pooraka, SA. The soldiers were from B Company, of 6RAR /NZ (ANZAC) (The ANZAC Battalion comprising 6th Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment and a component from the 1st Battalion, Royal New Zealand Infantry Regiment), which was providing infantry support for Operation Matilda, the biggest Australian armoured operation since World War II.

18.01.2022 Le Paradis Where the SS Murdered 97 British Prisoners on May 27th 1940 In 1940, members of the British military were slaughtered after they had surrendered to German forces. Two survived, but no one believed their story. However, before the war ended, some Germans wanted those responsible punished. It started on May 26, 1940. British and Allied forces in France were retreating from the German onslaught, withdrawing to Dunkirk for evacuation back to Britain. The Germans fo...Continue reading

18.01.2022 Charles Whittlesey, the Commander of the Lost Battalion. Medal Of Honor Citation: Although cut off for 5 days from the remainder of his division, Maj. Whittlesey maintained his position, which he had reached under orders received for an advance, and held his command, consisting originally of 46 officers and men of the 308th Infantry and of Company K of the 307th Infantry, together in the face of superior numbers of the enemy during the 5 days. Maj. Whittlesey and his command...Continue reading

15.01.2022 30th January, 1968 - Tet offensive begins in Vietnam. While the Tet Offensive, named for Tet, the Vietnamese lunar new year holiday period over which the attacks occurred, was a military defeat for the Communist forces it proved to be a propaganda victory accelerating the American public's growing opposition to the war and causing United States military planners to question whether victory was possible.

15.01.2022 How SS Commando Otto Scarface Skorzeny Became an Assassin for Israel After WW2. German scientist Heinz Krug vanished on September 11, 1962. Krug was at his office, and then he was gone without ever returning home. The only other detail known to the Munich police was that Krug often went to Cairo. Like dozens of other Nazi rocket scientists, he had been hired by Egypt to help them develop advanced weapons....Continue reading

15.01.2022 Elite Military Antiques Website stock clearance till July 15th enter Code EOFY19 for 15% percent off. http://www.elitemilitaria.com/home-featured

15.01.2022 Back in stock DENIX REPLICA U.S. M1 GARAND RIFLE end of financial year sale only $659.AUD ex GST delivered. http://www.elitemilitaria.com//denix-replica-u-s-army-m1-g

14.01.2022 American Soldiers during the Battle of The Bulge January 1945. M1 Garands an M3 Grease Gun and an M1918 BAR (Photo source - US Army Signals Corps #270811)

12.01.2022 New Zealand soldiers are pictured using their rifles to fish for trout near the Syrian and Turkish border on July 9, 1942. The black and white photographs were painstakingly colourised by design engineer Paul Reynolds, 48, from Birmingham.

11.01.2022 Band of Brothers" - June 7, 1944 'Easy Company,' 2nd Battalion of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 101st Airborne Division, at Sainte-Marie-du-Mont, Normandy. Easy Company paratrooper Forrest Guth knew he would witness history when he jumped into France on D-Day, so he carried a camera borrowed from his boyhood friend and fellow paratrooper, Roderick Strohl.... On June 7, 1944, D+1, Forrest and his comrades entered Sainte-Marie-du-Mont while searching for Easy Company. Forrest thought the towns WWI memorial would make a good backdrop. His comrade, Walter Gordon, agreed to snap a photo and Forrest let several 4th ID soldiers, fresh from Utah Beach, join them for a picture the world would one day treasure. See more

10.01.2022 A corporal from the US Army's 30th Infantry Division - based in the San Francisco Presidio - stands to attention with a group of women in two-piece bathing costumes, doughboy helmets, and heels. They are each holding an M1917 Springfield rifle, on a parade ground in Camp George Derby, on the grounds of the California Pacific International Exposition in Balboa Park, San Diego California. The image was taken on August 1, 1935.

10.01.2022 Victoria Cross hero - Private Patrick Joseph Bugden VC. 26th September, 1917 - Private Private Patrick Joseph Bugden, 31st Battalion, Victoria Cross action at Polygon Wood, near Ypres. It was a posthumous award. wenty-year-old Pat Bugden (1897-1917), a hotelkeeper from the north coast of New South Wales before enlistment, was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross for his outstanding bravery over three days during one of the Australians' successful step-by-step advances in l...ate September 1917. On two occasions, when held up by intense fire from machine-guns, he led small parties to silence the enemy posts. Five times he rescued wounded men trapped by intense shelling and machine-gun fire. Once, seeing that an Australian corporal had been taken prisoner, he single-handedly rushed to his comrade's aid, shooting and bayoneting the enemy. He kept fighting until he was killed. VC Citation: 'For most conspicuous bravery and devotion to duty when, on two occasions, our advance was temporarily held up by strongly defended "pill boxes". Private Bugden, in the face of devastating fire from machine guns, gallantly led small parties to attack these strong points, and, successfully silencing the machine guns with bombs, captured the garrison at the point of the bayonet. On another occasion, when a Corporal, who had become detached from his company, had been captured and was being taken to the rear by the enemy, Private Bugden, single handed, rushed to the rescue of his comrade, shot one enemy, and bayoneted the remaining two, thus releasing the Corporal. On five occasions, he rescued wounded men under intense shell and machine gun fire, showing an utter contempt and disregard for danger. Always foremost in volunteering for any dangerous mission, it was during the execution of one of these missions that this gallant soldier was killed.' Source: 'Commonwealth Gazette' No. 31 Date: 7 March 1918

09.01.2022 DENIX REPLICA ARTILLERY LUGER $275.00 FREE POSTAGE WITHIN AUSTRALIA http://www.elitemilitaria.com//denix-replica-german-luger-

09.01.2022 Victoria Cross hero - Henry Dalziel VC. 4th July, 1918 - Private Henry Dalziel, 15th Battalion, Victoria Cross action at Vaire and Hamel Woods, France. Harry Dalziel (1893-1965), from Queensland, received the second of two Victoria Crosses awarded for the battle of Hamel. During the action he advanced with a Lewis gun section before making a single-handed attack on a strong enemy machine-gun post, capturing the gun and its entire crew. Then, ignoring heavy enemy fire, he coll...ected ammunition and reloaded magazines until he was severely wounded. After the war, although troubled by his injuries, he served in the militia and was also a songwriter. Victoria Cross citation: 'For most conspicuous bravery and devotion to duty when in action with a Lewis gun section. His company met with determined resistance from a strong point which was strongly garrisoned, manned by numerous machine guns, and undamaged by our artillery fire, was also protected by strong wire entanglements. A heavy concentration of machine gun fire caused many casualties, and held up our advance. His Lewis gun having come into action and silenced enemy guns in one direction, an enemy gun fire opened from another direction. Private Dalziel dashed at it, and with his revolver killed and captured the entire crew and gun, and allowed our advance to continue. He was severely wounded in the hand, but carried on and took part in the capture of the final objective. He twice went over open ground under heavy enemy artillery and machine gun fire to secure ammunition, though suffering from considerable loss of blood. He filled magazines and served his gun until severely wounded through the head. His magnificent bravery and devotion to duty was an inspiring example to all his comrades, and his dash and unselfish courage at a most critical time undoubtedly saved many lives, and turned what could have been a severe check into a splendid success.' Source: 'Commonwealth Gazette' No. 191 Date: 12 December 1918

07.01.2022 A German soldier walks into a BAR...

07.01.2022 The Death of Erwin Rommel: The Last Hours Of The Desert Fox Erwin Rommel was, for a time, Hitlers favorite general. After his success in 1940, as the commander of a Panzer division, Rommel was appointed to the command of the German forces in Africa Afrika Korps. Here, his tactical genius was recognized even by the enemy, and the ability to inspire his soldiers and make maximum use of limited resources convinced Hitler to promote him to the rank of Field Marshall. In 1943, ...Continue reading

06.01.2022 Panzerlied (Tankmens Song) was a Wehrmacht (German armed forces) song composed in 1933 by Oberleutnant Kurt Wiehle. It was adapted from a Navy song, using words more suited to the Panzerwaffe, or tank force. It soon became popular, reflecting the mood of the armed forces at a time when Germany was rearming. It is one of the better known Wehrmacht songs. The third verse goes as follows:... When before us a hostile tank appears, Full throttle is given and we close with the enemy. What does our life matter for the Reichs army? Yes, Reichs army. To die for Germany is our highest honor. In the English-speaking world, it is known largely on account of the 1965 film, Battle of the Bulge. In the film, soldiers sing the song in German, though not the entire song. Instead, they sing the first verse four times. This verse is as follows: Whether it storms or snows, or the sun smiles on us, The day burning hot, or the icy cold of night. Dusty are our faces, but happy is our mind, yes, our mind. Then roar our tanks in the storms wind. (x2) With thundering engines, too fast as lightning, Towards the enemy, sheltered in the tank. Ahead of our comrades, In the fight all alone, yes all alone. So we push deep into the enemy lines! (x2) When before us a hostile tank appears, Full throttle is given and we close with the enemy. What does our life matter for the Reichs army? Yes, Reichs army. To die for Germany is our highest honor. (x2) With barriers and tanks the foe blocks our path, We laugh about it and dont drive upon them. And even if their hand shakes morosely and furiously, yes their hand. We search for ways, that no one else found. (x2) And if we are abandoned by treacherous luck, And if we dont return home again, If deaths bullet finds us, and fate calls us away, yes, us away. Then our tank will give us an honorable grave! (x2)

05.01.2022 A young German Unteroffizier (NCO - Non-commissioned Officer) wearing the Nahkampfspange in silber (Close Combat Clasp in silver) and ribbon bar of the Ostmedaille (Eastern Front Medal) and Eisernes Kreuz Der Zweiten Klasse (Iron Cross 2nd Class) plus a Eisernes Kreuz Der Ersten Klasse (Iron Cross 1st Class). He is armed with an MP 40 Submachine gun. Photo was taken January 1944. He looks amazingly very happy, considering his chances of survival are slim. The Eastern Front Me...dal was a German military decoration awarded to both combatant and non-combatant personnel who served on the German Eastern Front during the period 15 November 1941 to 15 April 1942. The Nahkampfspange (Close Combat Clasp) was a German military award instituted on 25 November 1942 for achievement in hand-to-hand fighting in close quarters. The Close Combat Clasp was worn above the upper left uniform pocket. The clasp was die-cast with a slightly curved centre-piece consisting of the national emblem surmounting a crossed bayonet and hand grenade. The award was bestowed in three classes: For 15 battles of close combat a Bronze Class was awarded. For 25 battles of close combat a Silver Class was awarded. For 50+ battles of close combat a Gold Class was awarded.

05.01.2022 The Last Words of Russian Commando Hero That Called in an Airstrike on Himself to Take Out ISIL Its rare that we recognize military deeds from service members from other nations; we have our hands full with the incredible soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines from our own nation. Having said that, Russian Federation commando Alexander Prokhorenko requires special mention. Let it be known now that the time honored military code of selfless service, sacrifice and honor transc...ends national borders. Even from a former adversary, we are proud to call Prokhorenko a comrade or . The Russian Special Forces Commandos death went viral this week when it was revealed that he called an airstrike on his own position to take out ISIL. The transcript of his final words has now been released. - Prokhorenko: Command I am compromised, repeat I am compromised. Command: please repeat and confirm Prokhorenko: They have spotted me, there are shooting everywhere, i am pinned, request evacuation immediately Command: evacuation request acknowledged Prokhorenko: Please hurry I am low on ammo, they seem to everywhere, I cant hold them for too long please hurry Command: Confirmed, hold them off, continue return of fire, go to safe position, air support is monitoring, state coordinates Prokhorenko: [gives coordinates which are blurred in the translation] Command: command repeats coordinates which are blurred. Confirm Prokhorenko: Confirmed, please hurry I am low on ammo, they are surrounding me, Fuck Command: 12 minutes until evacuation, return to safe line, I repeat return to safe line Prokhorenko: They are close, I am surrounded, this may be the end, tell my family I love them dearly Command: return to green line, continue return of fire, help is on the way, followed by air support Prokhorenko: Negative, I am surrounded, they are so many of these Fuckers Command: 10 minutes, return to green line Prokhorenko: I cant they have surrounded me and are closing in, please hurry Command: move to green line, repeat move to green line Prokhorenko: They are outside, conduct the airstrike now please hurry, this is the end, tell my family I love them and i died fighting for my motherland. Command: Negative return to green line Prokhorenko: I cant command, I am surrounded, they are outside, I dont want them to take me and parade me, conduct the airstrike, they will make a mockery of me and this uniform. I want to die with dignity and take all these Fuckers with me. please my last wish, conduct the airstrike, they will kill me either way. Command: please confirm your request Prokhorenko: They are outside, this is the end commander, thank you, tell my family and my country I love them. Tell them I was brave and I fought until I could no longer. Please take care of my family, avenge my death, good bye commander, tell my family I love them There is no response from Command, but they order the airstrike.

05.01.2022 Holed-up German, overlooked in initial mopping-up, emerges from hide out and surrenders to Lt Rogers." 1st. Lt. Roy Buck Rogers (Island Park, Minn.) and his 'Night Raiders' of the 1st Battalion, 407th Infantry Regiment, US 102nd Infantry Division near the town of Linnich, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. February 23,1945 "At the end of January, the Battle Patrol had completed its training and awaited its first assignment. Soon, reconnaissance patrols were sent out nightly, ...in front of Brachelen and all along the Roer River between Linnich and Rurdorf, gathering information for the impending push across the river. On one such combat-reconnaissance patrol, Lt. Rogers and two squads led by S/Sgt. Rufus Wilkes and Sgt. Chris Lorenz penetrated as far back as a German CP in ambush and in a fire fight killed five Germans. Returning, the patrol stormed an enemy bunker, killing all of the occupants and capturing two. See more

05.01.2022 OSS Spy Pierre Ortiz: French Legionnaire, US Marine, Hollywood Actor, German Nightmare. World War II had many heroes, but few had the flair and elan of Pierre Julien Ortiz, known to his friends (and his enemies) as Peter. The New York-born Ortiz was educated in France and signed up to the French Foreign Legion in 1932 when he was just 19. He made his way through the ranks quickly, becoming first corporal then sergeant just two years later....Continue reading

04.01.2022 A U.S. infantryman of the 331st Infantry Regiment., 83rd Inf. Div. takes aim at a sniper during street fighting in Rue de la Gardelle in Paramé, Saint-Malo, Brittany, France. 8th of August, 1944. (Photo by Rodger Hamilton of the Army Pictorial Service)

02.01.2022 Victoria Cross hero - Private James Park Woods VC. 18th September, 1918 - Private James Park Woods, 48th Battalion, Victoria Cross action at Le Verguier. Jimmy Woods was born in South Australia and raised by a stepsister after his parents' death. He tried to enlist in the AIF but was rejected as too short. Eventually accepted in Western Australia in September 1916, he reached France a year later.... Woods displayed great bravery in one of his battalion's last actions of the war on 18 September 1918 near Le Verguier. With a small patrol he captured a German post, then defended it against several counter-attacks by jumping onto the parapet and throwing bombs handed to him by his companions. He "displayed a splendid example of valour, determination and initiative". Returning to Australia, Woods took up a small vineyard and orchard in the west. Plagued by ill health from his war service, he died in 1963. His eldest son, Pilot Officer Gordon Woods, was killed in flight training with the RAAF in 1943 and is commemorated on the Memorial's Roll of Honour. Woods received the Victoria Cross, service medals for the First World War and coronation medals for King George VI and Queen Elizabeth II. VC Citation: For conspicuous bravery and devotion to duty near Le Verguier, north-west of St. Quentin, on 18th September, 1918, when, with a weak patrol, he attacked and captured a very formidable enemy post, and subsequently, with two comrades, held the same against heavy enemy counterattacks. Although exposed to heavy fire of all descriptions, he fearlessly jumped on the parapet and opened fire on the attacking enemy, inflicting severe casualties. He kept up his fire and held up the enemy until help arrived, and throughout the operations displayed a splendid example of valour, determination and initiative.

02.01.2022 THE AMAZING TRUE STORY OF A GERMAN WAFFEN SS OFFICER WHO BECAME A CAPTAIN IN THE ISRAELI DEFENSE FORCE ________________________________________ Ulrich Schnaft was born in Konigsberg, Germany, in 1923, the son of a single mother. In 1941 he joined the Waffen-SS. He was captured by the Americans in Italy. He remained in a POW camp until mid-1947. His captors released him after finding no evidence he had committed war crimes. In Munich he heard from a Jewish roommate about assis...Continue reading

02.01.2022 Hanns Scharff Nazi Germanys POW Master Interrogator Who Used Kindness Not Brutality his interrogation method is still used today. The Nazis had a Master Interrogator who was so good at getting information out of prisoners that he became a legend. His methods were so effective that the US ended up adopting them. He didnt use torture, cruelty, or any of the other techniques that the Nazis were famous for, however. He used something so unusual, it was mind-boggling. Han...Continue reading

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