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From exploding tinned food to covert assaults and code-breaking schemes, Ian Fleming’s real-life wartime exploits were just ...
Come along to a free exhibition to mark the 80th anniversary of VE and VJ day on Saturday 5th & Sunday 6th July between 11.00 ...
The World War Two bombing of tomato trucks in St Peter Port harbour has been described by a local historian as the "blackest ...
A leaked Defense Intelligence Agency report has shed light on the impact of US strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities at Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan - going against Trump's 'complete obliteration' claims ...
News Politics DON STOP ME NOW Battle tanks, 7,000 troops & WW2 planes … spotter’s guide to Trump’s £30m birthday bash with 18-mile ring of steel ...
VLADIMIR Putin is plotting a final killer offensive along three fronts to win the war, a new report claims. It comes as the Russian army nears one million casualties in its bungled three-year-old ...
The A6M3 Model 32 Zero was resurrected by combining the damaged remains of two aircraft found at Taroa island in the Marshall Islands in early 1990. A Second World War A6M3 Model 32 (Reisen) Zero ...
The Germans primarily painted spirals on the nosecones of the Messerschmitt Bf 109 and the Focke-Wulf Fw 190, two of the best German fighter planes of WW2. The spirals worked well to promote safety.
You might expect a warplane to be pained in drab, neutral colors that fade into the background. But that's not what Germany did with its WW2 planes. Here's why.
If you're fighting as the Soviets, you can climb into the Su-9. And finally, the Japanese army can now send the Kikka into the skies.