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Old 11-10-2007, 06:13 AM   #1 (permalink)
Antipodean Andy
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Presidents salute French fliers

http://www.russiatoday.ru/features/news/15346

Presidents salute heroic French war pilots
Nicolas Sarkozy and Vladimir Putin have hounoured the legendary French pilots who fought in World War Two, unveiling a memorial to the Normandie-Niemen air regiment at Lefortovo Park in eastern Moscow.
The regiment was made up of French pilots who became Soviet war heroes during world War Two. They became the most decorated French fighter unit ever.

The regiment - originally called the Normandie squadron - was formed in 1942, when Charles de Gaulle, the leader of the Free French resistance movement, sent more then 70 volunteers to fight with the Red Air Force on the eastern front.

The French pilots and mechanics spent a bitter winter learning from Russians how to fix and fly soviet Yaks. In late March 1943 the squadron finally headed to the front. By April it was upgraded to a fighter regiment.

The unit was given the honorary name Normandie-Niemen when the pilots protected the Red Army as they crossed the river Nemans between Russia and Lithuania.

By the end of the war the regiment was credited with bringing down 273 Luftwaffe aircraft. Their notoriety was such that Germans ordered Normandie-Niemen pilots be shot immediately on capture.

The human cost to the French force was great. Of the 96 pilots who served in the regiment, 42 lost their lives.

The Gallic aviators returned home as heroes in June 1945. The Soviets presented them with 37 of the Yak fighters they piloted during the war as a sign of gratitude.

In Les Andelys, about 90 km from Paris, there is a memorial to the regiment. There you can see a Soviet Yak fighter flown by Marcel Lefevre – a Hero of the Soviet Union and ironically the only pilot in the Normandie-Niemen regiment who was actually Norman.

Painted below its cockpit is the image of Pere Magloire, a character from Norman folklore who drinks a lot and smokes a lot but never gives up. Locals say that’s exactly the kind of man who would have been in the Normandie-Niemen regiment.
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http://www.454-459squadrons.org.au/.
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Aircraft from No. 60 Squadron levelling out for the "run in" to make a mast-head attack on a Japanese coaster off Akyab. Courtesy AWM.
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Old 11-10-2007, 07:30 AM   #2 (permalink)
spidge
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Very interesting. Never knew of them!
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Spidge,
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My Avatar is the memorial to the 22 Commonwealth Coastwatchers at the Temakin Cemetery on Betio (Tarawa Atoll) who were beheaded by the Japanese on 15th October 1942. http://www.dva.gov.au/media/publicat...mem_beito.html

"You were given the choice between war and dishonor.
You chose dishonor and you will have war."

(Winston Churchill made this prophetic pronouncement in a House of Commons speech in 1938, just after Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain signed the Munich agreement with Hitler. Chamberlain returned from Germany with the signed agreement in hand, proclaiming that "peace in our time" had been achieved. Churchill attacked Chamberlain's "politics of appeasement" in this and many other speeches.)

What did the Australians do in ww2 and other conflicts? Check out this site:
http://www.diggerhistory.info/00-pag...ster-index.htm
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Old 11-10-2007, 07:34 AM   #3 (permalink)
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I think they flew Yak-3s IIRC, Spidgeman. I'll check...

I'm bloody hopeless with Russkie air regiments so I'll cheat:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normandie-Niemen - ah, not just Yak-3s!
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Aircraft from No. 60 Squadron levelling out for the "run in" to make a mast-head attack on a Japanese coaster off Akyab. Courtesy AWM.
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