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48 Reseñas   •  English   •   General Interest (History & Knowledge)
THE ODER BRIDGEHEADS 1945 — The Oder bridgeheads lay just 60 kilometres from Berlin and in late January 1945, with the Wehrmacht retreating back into Germany before the Soviet onslaught, the German high command ordered that bridgeheads be maintained on the eastern bank of the Oder river. The Germans fought tenaciously, against the Red Army forces and held out for nearly two months at one of the locations. Tomasz Zgoda tells us the full story. Operation 'Flagpole' — Jean Paul Pallud explains how on October 22, 1942 — on the eve of Operation ‘Torch', the Anglo-American invasion of French North Africa — a secret meeting took place in French Algeria between a party of five high-ranking American officers led by Major General Mark W. Clark, which had been covertly put ashore by submarine that night, and a party of pro-Allied officers of the French Vichy army led by Général Charles Mast. The aim of the clandestine conference was to co-ordinate French and American plans so that the landings would not be opposed by Vichy-French armed forces. Pinguin in Australian Waters — In October-November 1940, the German auxiliary cruiser and armed merchant raider Pinguin, in conjunction with the Norwegian tanker Storstad, which she had captured and converted into an auxiliary minelayer named Passat, laid a total of 230 sea mines in seven minefields off the southern and eastern coast of Australia. These mines led to several ‘firsts’: the first Allied vessel to be lost in Australian waters during the war; the first US merchant ship to go down; the first US merchant navy casualty; and the first ship to be lost by the Royal Australian Navy. Many of the mines were subsequently hauled in or washed ashore on Australia’s beaches, one accidental explosion then leading to the war’s first victims of enemy action on Australian soil. David Mitchelhill-Green tells the story.
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After The Battle

Issue184 THE ODER BRIDGEHEADS 1945 — The Oder bridgeheads lay just 60 kilometres from Berlin and in late January 1945, with the Wehrmacht retreating back into Germany before the Soviet onslaught, the German high command ordered that bridgeheads be maintained on the eastern bank of the Oder river. The Germans fought tenaciously, against the Red Army forces and held out for nearly two months at one of the locations. Tomasz Zgoda tells us the full story. Operation 'Flagpole' — Jean Paul Pallud explains how on October 22, 1942 — on the eve of Operation ‘Torch', the Anglo-American invasion of French North Africa — a secret meeting took place in French Algeria between a party of five high-ranking American officers led by Major General Mark W. Clark, which had been covertly put ashore by submarine that night, and a party of pro-Allied officers of the French Vichy army led by Général Charles Mast. The aim of the clandestine conference was to co-ordinate French and American plans so that the landings would not be opposed by Vichy-French armed forces. Pinguin in Australian Waters — In October-November 1940, the German auxiliary cruiser and armed merchant raider Pinguin, in conjunction with the Norwegian tanker Storstad, which she had captured and converted into an auxiliary minelayer named Passat, laid a total of 230 sea mines in seven minefields off the southern and eastern coast of Australia. These mines led to several ‘firsts’: the first Allied vessel to be lost in Australian waters during the war; the first US merchant ship to go down; the first US merchant navy casualty; and the first ship to be lost by the Royal Australian Navy. Many of the mines were subsequently hauled in or washed ashore on Australia’s beaches, one accidental explosion then leading to the war’s first victims of enemy action on Australian soil. David Mitchelhill-Green tells the story.


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After The Battle  |  Issue184  


THE ODER BRIDGEHEADS 1945 — The Oder bridgeheads lay just 60 kilometres from Berlin and in late January 1945, with the Wehrmacht retreating back into Germany before the Soviet onslaught, the German high command ordered that bridgeheads be maintained on the eastern bank of the Oder river. The Germans fought tenaciously, against the Red Army forces and held out for nearly two months at one of the locations. Tomasz Zgoda tells us the full story. Operation 'Flagpole' — Jean Paul Pallud explains how on October 22, 1942 — on the eve of Operation ‘Torch', the Anglo-American invasion of French North Africa — a secret meeting took place in French Algeria between a party of five high-ranking American officers led by Major General Mark W. Clark, which had been covertly put ashore by submarine that night, and a party of pro-Allied officers of the French Vichy army led by Général Charles Mast. The aim of the clandestine conference was to co-ordinate French and American plans so that the landings would not be opposed by Vichy-French armed forces. Pinguin in Australian Waters — In October-November 1940, the German auxiliary cruiser and armed merchant raider Pinguin, in conjunction with the Norwegian tanker Storstad, which she had captured and converted into an auxiliary minelayer named Passat, laid a total of 230 sea mines in seven minefields off the southern and eastern coast of Australia. These mines led to several ‘firsts’: the first Allied vessel to be lost in Australian waters during the war; the first US merchant ship to go down; the first US merchant navy casualty; and the first ship to be lost by the Royal Australian Navy. Many of the mines were subsequently hauled in or washed ashore on Australia’s beaches, one accidental explosion then leading to the war’s first victims of enemy action on Australian soil. David Mitchelhill-Green tells the story.
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For over 40 years, After the Battle has been presenting the history of the world's conflicts through 'then and now' comparison photographs. From the Zulu wars, through the First and Second World Wars; to the Falklands, all are researched on the actual battlefield to show how they appear today.

Our quarterly magazine concentrates on the Second World War, the comparison photographs adding a new dimension to recent history. As well as major battles, local actions are explored and other features include the recovery of aircraft and vehicles on land and sea, the making of war films and the preservation of military artefacts.

Published quarterly on the 15th of February, May, August and November, each issue contains 56 pages of text, uncluttered by advertisements, with an average of over 150 photographs.

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After The Battle

Always something fascinating! ... Revisado 31 agosto 2020

After The Battle

Excellent! However, I would like to see some articles about the East European theater of operations. Revisado 15 agosto 2020

Full of historical information

Great magazines for both young and old Revisado 17 julio 2019

The Best Then & Now Military History Magazine

After the Battle began as a project in 1973 just 28 years after the end of WW2, the first issue was launched at the start of 1975 from that research. The magazine spawned into a world leading military history magazine. I recall reading archived issues of the magazine my mates father had collected, many years later you can download current and archived issues all the way back to the original. Although not focused exclusively on WW2, it is predominately a WW2 history magazine and still the best out there, highly recommended. Revisado 01 octubre 2018

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