Day 186 of the 2-day special operation

>day 186 of the 2-day special operation
Wat do?

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price of banan too damn high

>1000 bucks to possibly waste a missile
That's smart

go home. you were drunk when you came in. you've sobered up.
go home. we'll clean up, just go.

You laugh, but balloon/fake tanks played a significant part in confusing the german forces defending france.

Russia should invade France then.

shut up you aryan monkey

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How does it work with simulating thermal and electro-optical signatures in moderns surveillance equipment?

>Wat do?
order state media to declare denazification complete and retreat

>german forces defending france
Go outside, hookah gave you CO brain.

it works for satellite images and aerial photographs taken by recon aircraft.

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As part of ‘Fortitude South’, the Allies created the fictitious First US Army Group (FUSAG), an imaginary force ‘based’ in south-east Britain. This also helped give the impression that the invasion force was larger than it actually was. Fake radio traffic and decoy equipment – including inflatable tanks and dummy landing craft – mimicked preparations for a large-scale invasion aimed at the Pas de Calais.

Double agents delivered false information to reinforce this deceit both before and after the Normandy landings. The most famous of these agents, Juan Pujol Garcia (‘Garbo’), invented a network of imaginary agents who were supposedly supplying him with information on Allied preparations.

Allied air power also played an important part in the deception. In the months leading up to D-Day, Allied bombers attacked road and rail networks in an attempt to isolate the invasion area, but additional attacks were made on other parts of northern France to divert German attention away from Normandy.

In Operations ‘Taxable’ and ‘Glimmer’, the RAF dropped metal strips – codenamed ‘Window’ – along the French coast to confuse German radar. On the night of 5-6 June, as part of Operation ‘Titanic’, the RAF dropped dummy parachutists to simulate an airborne invasion and draw German forces away from key objectives.

The Allied deception strategy for D-Day was one of the most successful ever conceived. The Germans overestimated the strength of Allied forces in Britain, particularly in the south-east, and believed as late as July 1944 that a larger second invasion would land in the area around Calais. This helped the Allies achieve the key element of surprise and kept German reinforcements away from Normandy both on D-Day and in the weeks that followed.

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>it works
And that's why 6 day war ended like it's ended.

You know that since then white people became much better in this shit, right?

I know, phrasing it as "defending France" is just really weird.

why is this mongrel donkey even addressing me? go die in kherson you stupid asian monstrosity.

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They were situated in france, and they attempted to defend their positions against allied offensive action, so it is appropriate to say they defended france.

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reminder that this guy admitted to being a liar and that his "two day operation" claim is unsauceable.
and has posted this thread 33 times.