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Operation Spider’s Web
The greatest one-time combat loss of strategic bombers since World War II. That is the result of Ukraine’s Operation Spider’s Web, in which eight Tu-95MS bombers, among other aircraft, were destroyed. This surpasses even the highest one-day losses of American strategic bombers during the Korean and Vietnam Wars.
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Swedish Naval Forces
Today’s instalment of the series is dedicated to a navy with an unbroken tradition spanning over five centuries, making it one of the oldest in the world. It was founded by King Gustav Vasa in 1522 and has since remained a permanent component of the Swedish Armed Forces. Historically, Sweden has been one of several coastal states bordering the Baltic Sea, giving it a long and rich maritime history.
For more than two centuries, Swedish policy was based on neutrality. The last military action abroad occurred in 1814, when the Swedish army, as part of an international coalition, helped defeat Emperor Napoleon, followed that same year by a short war with Norway, by then a French ally.
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WHO SHOT DOWN ROLF?
Rolf Peter Pingel was born in Kiel October 1913 and when old enough, joined the Luftwaffe. On completion of his training, he was posted to I./JG 134 at Wiesbaden-Erbenheim in March 1937. During the Spanish Civil War, Rolf flew with 2./J 88 shooting down six aircraft for which he was awarded the Spanien-Kreuz in Gold (Spanish Cross in Gold) with Swords. At the end of 1937, he was given command of 2./JG 334 which was eventually re-designated 2./JG 53.
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USS BLOCK ISLAND CVE-21 – Part 3
After suffering heavy losses in the convoy battles of May 1943, the U-Boat Command withdrew German submarines from the North Atlantic and concentrated on attacking convoys in the Central Atlantic. These convoys, marked UG (United States to Gibraltar), UGS (United States to Gibraltar Slow Convoys), and UGF (United States to Gibraltar Fast Convoys), traveled between the United States and the Mediterranean. The first convoys departed from New York and Hampton Roads, Virginia, in November 1942 as invasion convoys to support the landings in North Africa (Operation Torch), ending in Casablanca. After the successful North African landings, subsequent convoys extended to Oran in Algeria, and with further successful landings, the number of destination ports grew.
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The Leyte Gulf Zero
The Battle of Leyte Gulf took place from October 23 to 26, 1944, and was the largest naval battle of the Second World War. Some authors even consider it to be the largest naval battle in history. It occurred in connection with the American landing on the Philippine island of Leyte, following the U.S. decision on which invasion route would be prioritized, Taiwan or the Philippines. During this clash, one naval aviator flying a Zero wrote a new chapter in the history of warfare.
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Warning shots June 2025
The Shizuoka Hobby Show is the Mecca of scale modeling, and describing this event would be like carrying coals to Newcastle. After all, many of the new releases we’ll talk about today debuted at this year’s 63rd edition. However, not everyone knows that Shizuoka Prefecture is also the center of Japanese tea production, and a local advertising agency, Oozin Aahs Records, decided to prepare a unique souvenir for the show visitors — green tea packaged like a plastic model kit, decorated with an illustration by Eiji Shimamura, the in-house box art illustrator for Tamiya, under the name Green Tea-Team.
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Hot Summer in Karelia
The Vyborg–Petrozavodsk Offensive, also known as the Karelian Offensive, was a strategic operation carried out by the Soviet Leningrad and Karelian Fronts against Finland on the Karelian Isthmus and in Eastern Karelia during the Continuation War on the Eastern Front of the Second World War. It began in June 1944, with Soviet forces occupying Eastern Karelia and the city of Vyborg (Viipuri). However, the fighting eventually reached a stalemate.
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Editorial
Current Affairs
World Naval Forces
WHO SHOT DOWN ROLF?
USS BLOCK ISLAND CVE-21 – Part 3
Model and Story
Warning shots
Historical Reflection
Debriefing