Irrelevant. E acelasi film, aceeasi fantezie.
Probabil il iei de bune si pe Alex Jones
Tu la fel, de unde scoți cifrele astea?
Wiki, ti-am dat si citat:
“ The U.S.-led coalition sent 160,000 troops into Iraq during the initial invasion phase, which lasted from 19 March to 1 May 2003.”
“ The invasion phase began on 19 March 2003 (air) and 20 March 2003 (ground) and lasted just over one month,[28] including 26 days of major combat operations, in which a combined force of troops from the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia and Poland invaded Iraq. Twenty-two days after the first day of the invasion, the capital city of Baghdad was captured by coalition forces on 9 April 2003 after the six-day-long Battle of Baghdad. This early stage of the war formally ended on 1 May 2003 when U.S. President George W. Bush declared the "end of major combat operations" in his Mission Accomplished speech,”
Uite si link:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iraqi_conflict#2003_U.S.-led_invasionEsti in plus si degeaba.
Ce s-a intamplat dupa Mai 2003 e irrelevant, relevant e ca forta de invazie, cea care a castigat razboiul, a fost de 160.000. Tu faci o varza si adaugi, alandala, forte de o parte si de alta in evenimente de dupa razboiul din 2003 ... ca na, mai mult nu poti
Auzi la el "Iraqi security forces 805,269 (military and paramilitary: 578,269, police: 227,000) de partea americanilor" vs "Iraqi Armed Forces: 375,000" ... in 2003 - ahahaha ... cand iti spun ca nu esti doar habarnist dar nici cu logica nu stai mai bine ...
Iraqi Civil War (2006–2008) - de unde ai luat tu niste cifre fara sa intelegi ce iei si le-ai aruncat la gramada - este diferit de razboiul din 2003, invazia Iraqului de catre alianta. Dar cum esti habarnist ...
Superioritatea numerică învinge întotdeauna.
Nu.
Tu uiti ca esti roman si ai exemplu, in istoria noastra, de razboaie castigate de armate mult mai mici???
Post Merge: 02 October 2023, 03:26
Superioritatea numerică învinge întotdeauna.
NU.
1. Battle of Thermopylae (480 BC) - 300 Spartans and their allies held off a much larger Persian army.
2. Battle of Cannae (216 BC) - Carthaginian forces under Hannibal defeated a Roman army twice their size.
3. Battle of Agincourt (1415) - English forces led by King Henry V defeated a much larger French army during the Hundred Years' War.
4. Battle of Saragarhi (1897) - A small group of 21 Sikh soldiers held off 10,000 Afghan tribesmen in present-day Pakistan.
5. Battle of the Alamo (1836) - A small group of Texan defenders held off a much larger Mexican force for 13 days.
In the 20th-century there have also been quite a few.
1. Siege of Tsingtao (1914) - A small force of Japanese and British troops captured the German-held Tsingtao fortress, despite being outnumbered by the defenders.
2. Battle of Le Hamel on July 4, 1918, where Australian and American forces, led by General John Monash, defeated German forces outnumbering them by approximately 5 to 1. The battle lasted only 93 minutes and was a significant victory for the Allies.
3. Battle of Cambrai in 1918 ; During this battle, Allied forces consisting of two British army corps and one Canadian army corps, totalling about 65,000 troops, defeated a much larger German force of roughly 140,000 troops, thus slowing the enemy's advance into the Netherlands and Germany. The battle was remarkable for its combination of armour and infantry tactics, and it showcased the benefits of innovative tactics and strategies.
4. The Battle of Kohima, when 1,500 British and Indian troops defeated, 20,000 Japanese troops, which ultimately led to the defeat of the Japanese in the Burma campaign, this also, pioneered a new way of Jungle ‘hilltop fighting’ where a small group, that were resupplied by air drops, could beat off a much larger force. Battles such as these showed the difference in leadership of General Bill Slim to General Percival, who surrendered 85,000 Allied troops to 30,000 Japanese in Singapore.
5. Battle of Dien Bien Phu (1954) - Vietnamese Communist forces defeated a much larger French army in a remote valley of Northern Vietnam, leading to the French withdrawal from Indochina.
6. The Six Day War (1967) ; The exact number of Israeli forces compared to their enemies in this conflict is not straightforward answer since it varied from front to front. However, the Israeli forces were significantly outnumbered in terms of personnel, tanks, and aircraft compared to the combined forces of Egypt, Jordan, and Syria. Despite this, Israel achieved a decisive victory in the war.
7. Battle of Longewala (1971) - During the Indo-Pakistan War, a company of Indian soldiers defended the remote outpost of Longewala against overwhelming Pakistani forces, inflicting heavy losses on the enemy and preventing an invasion of India's Rajasthan state.
8. Falklands War (1982) - A British Task Force of around 26,000 troops recaptured the Falkland Islands from Argentine occupation, despite facing a numerically superior enemy. A typical example is the Battle of Goose Green, when 450 British soldiers of 2 Para, took a garrison of 1400 Argentines, the battle lasted 14 hours and the Paras where down to an average of ten rounds each when the Argentines surrendered, most Paras had not slept or eaten for 2/3 days.
Se mai adauga US vs Mexic, spaniolii au pierdut batalia pt Mexico City desi ei erau 20000 vs 8000.
Razboiul Franta-Dahomei: Franta 4700, Dahomei 10.000.