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This Incredible Graphic Shows The Size Of The World's Largest Armies From Antiquity To The Present

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Mapmaking graphic artist Martin Vargic's has made an amazing graphic tracking the size of the world's largest armies at different points in time. 

The graphic gives an understanding of the just how mobilized the human race was during World War II — and shows how the size of the wold's largest armies has shunk over time as interstate warfare becomes less common and technology surpasses sheer manpower in military importance. 

It also gives us a chance to compare the size of some of the largest armies at different points in history with one another: the US had about as many troops in 1950, for instance, as China's Ming Dynasty had in 1400.

One loaded choice Vargic made is splitting the world between East and West. The graphic doesn't depict the world's single biggest army at any given time, but the biggest armies in two halves of a divided and sometimes antagonistic world.

In his research, Vargic drew from Encyclopedia Britannica, British think tank IISS, and Wikipedia. The first project listed on his website is a humorous map showing the Internet's biggest traffic drivers as countries drawn to scale.

Another project of his shows what would be left of the world should sea levels rise by 250 to 300 feet, which the Slovakian artist said is realistic should the polar ice caps melt completely.

Chart Military Army Size History

SEE ALSO: This mythical map of the Internet is brilliant

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The 88-Year Evolution Of The Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

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Macy's Day Parade

The Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade has become an irreplaceable staple of Thanksgiving festivities. 

Every year, 3.5 million people flock to New York City to see the parade march down a two-and-a-half mile stretch of Manhattan.

Another 50 million people gather around their television sets to watch the event from home. 

What began as a small Macy's employee-run event called Macy's Christmas Parade, has morphed into a huge production that requires almost an entire year's worth of preparation.

Macy's 88th Annual Thanksgiving Day spectacle will feature appearances from Idina Menzel, KISS, and The Vamps. Six new balloons including Paddington Bear will make their debut in the parade.

Christina Austin and Jennifer Michalski contributed to this report.

The first Macy's Day Parade was on November 27 in 1924. The parade originally featured Macy's employees and live animals from the Central Park Zoo. Floats, instead of balloons, were the main attraction.



The parade began in Harlem at 145th Street and ended in front of the Macy's flagship store on 34th Street. It was originally called the Macy's Christmas Parade, but was renamed the Macy's Thanksgiving Parade in 1927.

(Above photo is from 1994)



An estimated 250,000 spectators attended the first parade. Today, about 3.5 million people attend.

(Above photo is from 2007)



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The Creepiest White House Thanksgiving Ever

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Richard Nixon Turkey

The tradition of the White House turkey pardon supposedly dates back to 1947 and President Harry Truman. However, one year it went horribly awry. 

In 2011, the Washington Post tracked down a longtime rumor that a turkey presented to President Richard Nixon had to have its feet nailed to a table for the occasion.

According to the newspaper, the turkey was subdued this way because it was a "particularly rambunctious" bird. This tale was confirmed by an unnamed former Nixon administration staffer

"Regarding the effort to restrain the White House Thanksgiving turkey, it is my understanding that at least one year, they nailed its feet to the table," the staffer wrote.

Luckily for all involved, apart from a pair of apparently bored first daughters, this year's ceremony went off without a hitch. 

(via Peter Schorsch

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An Atrocious Relic Of American History Has Been Dug Up In South Carolina

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gadsdenswhCHARLESTON, S.C. (Reuters) - Archaeologists in Charleston, South Carolina, believe they have found the wooden remnants of an 18th century wharf where an estimated 100,000 enslaved Africans arrived in America during the peak of the international slave trade.

Traces of Gadsden's Wharf were located during an exploratory dig this fall at the waterfront site of the city's planned $75 million International African American Museum, said Eric Poplin, senior archaeologist at Brockington and Associates.

City and cultural leaders said the discovery will allow an important piece of history to be preserved. Some 100,000 West African slaves were taken to the wharf, located on the Cooper River near Charleston Harbor, between 1783 and 1808.

“It is the place of arrival for a huge percentage of the early ancestors of people of African descent who live in America," Charleston Mayor Joe Riley said.

The city commissioned the dig ahead of the new museum's construction, which is expected to begin in late 2016, Riley said.

Using maps, plats, historic records of timber orders and ground-penetrating radar, archaeologists uncovered the pine timbers of wooden cribs that held oyster shells and other fill used to build the wharf, Poplin said.

They also found timbers and the brick floor from a ricestorehouse that was used as a barracks to house African captivesbefore they were sold.

Riley said the museum wants to place above-ground markers of the wharf to tell its story to visitors, and a future excavation could remove some of the actual remnants for exhibit.

Historians say an estimated 40 percent of all enslaved Africans brought to North America came through Charleston, more than any other port.

gadsdenswharf copyThe museum will help preserve a "sacred space," said Lonnie G. Bunch III, director of the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture, which is slated to open in Washington in 2016.

"Gadsden's Wharf is an Ellis Island for African Americans," Bunch said on Tuesday. "It becomes one of the few places where African Americans can really go to pay homage to those ancestors."

(Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Mohammad Zargham)

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For The US, 'Grand Strategy' May Be An Obsolete Concept — Or A Dangerous Distraction

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obama ebola

Let’s face it: Whether you want to blame the current administration, unforeseen or misunderstood challenges, or a bumbling 400-member National Security Council, US grand strategy has not been coherent since the Cold War.

Perhaps it was easier back then.

The Soviet Union was our highly identifiable arch-nemesis, we created our respective spheres of influence, and the chess game commenced.

But chess has rules, it has structure, and it rewards those who strategize within a set of parameters that are understood and accepted by both players.

In today’s highly unpredictable world, where the rules change without warning, where quasi-state actors shred the very tenets of the established international system, where revisionist nations can actually pose substantial threats to a regional power balance, where unipolarity gave way to a new multipolar system as the US bumbled about in search of the right leadership strategy, and where nightmares about the Cold War awake the sleeping giants thought to be laid to rest, we find that chess — or any game with set rules — has become completely useless.

There Are No Rules, And It Isn't Even A Game

Unfortunately, as David Rothkopf recently pointed out in a piece for Foreign Policy, Washington has no imagination anymore, and to expect any type of strategy to come out of such a convoluted atmosphere is foolish at best and dangerous at worst. But what Washington really needs is a reset.

As has been well-documented by inner-circle types close to the Obama administration’s national security team, action has been trumped by endless contemplation; the George W. Bush era of shooting first but not asking any questions later is over, and the US is now being hamstrung by this legacy.

There is a sweet spot between action and contemplation, and that sweet spot lies in the flattening out of America’s national security apparatus and the realignment of defense policy decision-making from the Oval Office to those who have made it their life’s work to understand the behavior of our inherently anarchic system. From this structure is where real strategy, in conjunction with the intelligence community, comes to fruition.

But make no mistake: While Washington’s think tanks spend vast amounts of research dollars trying to come up with what US grand strategy should look like nowadays, it is no longer a valuable endeavor to do so. Instead, leaders should come to grips with the fact that until the world begins to resemble a more familiar power balance, educated guesses are the best we can — and should — act on.

The Ones Who Saw It Coming

Looking back at some of the most revered international relations scholars in recent history, many have in fact accurately predicted the world we have come to face.

Pro Russia Military Vehicles Tanks Donetsk UkraineZbigniew Brzezinski, former US national security adviser and owner of one of the most impressive CVs in Washington, wrote a 2012 piece in Foreign Affairs arguing that if the West did not do a better job at engaging Russia diplomatically, Putin would move on Ukraine in an initial attempt to create a new sphere of influence.

Alas, the Obama administration took the approach of pushing NATO too hard and too close to Russia’s western flank, a move that clearly lacked any semblance of earnest diplomacy or understanding of foreign policy realism.

Not surprisingly, John J. Mearsheimer, one of the vanguards of modern realist theory, just published his own Foreign Affairs piece highlighting the reasons that the Ukraine crisis is the West’s fault, and that “liberal delusions” of democratic expansion eastward provoked Putin into action. Washington’s current stock seems to have forgotten the basics of how states interact with one another based on balance of power/threat theory.

Frank Hoffman’s recent piece for FPRI articulates eight important considerations to take when creating grand strategy, but the US has completely disregarded every one of them since 1991. Notable is the lack of understanding context, culture, constraints, compromise and consensus, contingency, and continuous assessment and adaptation.

It is woefully difficult to find a recent conflict or policy prerogative that earnestly took any of these points into consideration. Hoffman’s final word is a sobering one: Our margin for error is shrinking in this new multipolar world.

Michael Mastanduno’s 2010 piece for International Security highlights several strategic thinkers who accurately predicted that multipolarity would rear its ugly head ten to 20 years after the end of the Cold War. He makes the basic point that balance of power theory is clear about the behavioral implications of unipolarity.

The concentration of power in the hands of the US after the Cold War necessarily created the rise of states that are now challenging it. These basic tenets of the international order have been lost on successive administrations, from Clinton’s to the present, and the conflict we are now seeing is characteristic of such international power cycles.

Failure to Adapt

What, then, has led to America’s inability to form a coherent strategy, even when so many scholars have accurately predicted the troubled waters we now face? The failure to adapt to the wild card.

The rise of al-Qaeda, if not well understood, was predicted and metastasized on a relatively clear trajectory over many years. Just because the right resources were not in place to predict and thwart 9/11 did not mean that nobody could see it coming. Al-Qaeda was a threat we knew, even if we did not fully understand it.

But ISIS is an entirely different beast – a lightning bolt born from the fog of war in Iraq that had the gall to throw out international norms altogether. It is structured, well-funded, can’t be reasoned with, and will not be easily uprooted.

Iraq ISIS FIghtersFrankly, America has been completely fixed on such relatively small threats to its homeland security since 2001. But if you do not fully understand the threat you’re facing, you cannot build a strategy to deal with it, and blindly pouring resources into a relatively small threat leaves you hamstrung to deal with the larger ones you have always known.

In this atmosphere, grand strategy has no role to play because those responsible for creating it don’t have the tools, creativity, or flexibility to do so. Policymakers would be wise to stop fumbling around with liberal ideals of global Westernization and dust off the realist tenets of how to keep the house in order.

This means taking a more conciliatory tone with our nation-state partners to form coalitions on mutual areas of understanding while dealing decisive blows to the free radicals that are mucking up the system.

It means creating spheres of agreement that may or may not connect along a linear strategic path. It means moving towards the old definition of diplomacy and away from the dogmatic, prescriptive, and arrogant version we have become known for.

It means knowing how to swallow pride, being able to take the first leap of faith towards reconciliation with the unspoken understanding that our military can back up our new-found creativity, and staying true to our democratic values without throwing them in everyone else’s face.

This is not a grand strategy, but the beginning of a list of ideas that over time may allow us to function within the parameters of such paradigms once again. In a system where unforeseen variables force the realignment of values, expected outcomes, allies, and use of resources, having multiple contingencies, accepting that our crystal ball is broken, and being able to dynamically vacillate between policy options will ultimately help put the ship back on course.

Joseph Sarkisian is a policy analyst under private contract and a contributor to many online publications. He received his MSc International Relations at Umass Boston, taught on US foreign policy in the Middle East, and primarily focuses on US-Iranian relations. 

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The Confederates Pulled Off History's First Successful Submarine Attack — But At A Huge Cost

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Hunley Confederate Submarine Civil War

When testing new military technology, there are always risks for the operators.

Test pilots suffered appalling death rates in the early days of jet planes, and the MV-22 Osprey withstood a series of fatal mishaps during its development, including 19 dead Marines in a single accident in 2000.

But the string of misfortunes that befell the Confederacy during its attempts to build a practical submarine show just how far safety standards can go out the window during wartime.

On a bone-chilling cold night in 1864 just outside Charleston Harbor during the Civil War, one of the largest ships in the Union Navy was conducting the interminable patrolling involved in maintaining a blockade.

The USS Housatonic, a 1,260-ton, 11-gun sloop, had been tasked with blocking Charleston’s harbor and occasionally bombarding shore targets for over a year.

What was usually the most monotonous of duties quickly took a historic turn when the watch officer spotted a strange low-floating object approaching the Housatonic from the shore. After initial confusion in the dark over what the object was, the look-out sounded the alarm and the sloop sprang into belated action.

The world’s first successful attack against a warship by a combat submarine, the CSS H.L. Hunley, was underway.

A South Desperate To Break The Blockade

From the outbreak of the Civil War, all Southern ports were blockaded under Gen. Winfield Scott’s Anaconda Plan, which sought to both choke off Southern trade and eventually split the South in two through control of the Mississippi River.

The squeeze of the blockade on the Southern economy was acute, and led to the development of Confederate weapons designed to break through the Union fleet. The famous clash between the Confederate ironclad Merrimack with the Union Monitor at the Battle of Hampton Roads was part of the Confederate effort to break the Union stranglehold over Virginia’s Chesapeake Bay.

The clash was the first time fully armored warships faced each other in battle, and though the results were indecisive, they marked a major change in naval strategy across the Western world.

But other innovations in naval technology were in the offing such as the submarine, an idea that dated back at least as far as Leonardo Da Vinci.

If At First You Don’t Succeed ...

The idea of using submersible craft to take out surface ships was not a new one.

During the American Revolution, Yale undergraduate David Bushnell used a tiny barrel-like, one-man contraption with a small rudder and a handle-powered screw in several attempts to attack British ships with time bombs. But every attempt failed: Either the current foiled the assault, or the primitive bombs failed to detonate.

USS Alligator Navy First SubmarineIt wasn’t until the Civil War that relatively effective, human-powered designs came about. The USS Alligator, designed by the Frenchman Brutus de Villeroi, was purchased by the Union.

Originally tasked to destroy the Merrimack, which became unnecessary with the ironclad’s destruction, it eventually sank in bad weather while being towed for an attack on Charleston.

The first submarine to ever successfully carry out an attack was left to the Confederate Hunley.

Horace L. Hunley, the namesake of the submarine, had a varied career as a lawyer, planter, Louisiana state legislator and New Orleans businessman up to the start of the war.

In 1861, he joined forces with engineers James R. McClintock and Baxter Watson to build the Confederacy’s first three submarines: the Pioneer, American Diver, and the Hunley.

The first two designs were lost before being deployed, with the Pioneer being scuttled to avoid Union capture and the American Diver sinking in bad weather. The Hunley was the team’s third and final attempt.

Fabricated from a steam boiler, the Hunley was 40 feet long and powered by seven men turning a hand crank, with an officer as pilot. The boat was incredibly cramped, with a hull height of little more than four feet and hatches so narrow they made escape difficult. Ballast pumps were all hand operated, and the dive controls were primitive at best.

After a promising test using a towed torpedo to spectacularly destroy a target barge, the Hunley was swiftly shipped to Charleston, which was under tight blockade and regular bombardment. The submarine was seized by the Confederate garrison from its private owners and crewed by the military, though Hunley and his partners stayed on as advisors.

The haste to deploy the submarine led to several tragedies.

Charleston Harbor Battle Civil WarDuring a trial run, the Hunley sank when the skipper accidentally hit the dive controls with the hatches still open, and five men lost their lives. Not to be deterred, the boat was raised and testing began again.

When the usual skipper, Lt. George Dixon, was absent on leave after completing several successful dives, Hunley himself took the sub for a practice run. The submarine submerged and did not resurface, possibly due to yet another open hatch.

Confederate Gen. P.G.T Beauregard wrote in the aftermath: “When the boat was discovered, raised and opened, the spectacle was indescribable and ghastly; the unfortunate men were contorted into all kinds of horrible attitudes.”

Hunley had been killed by his own creation.

Beauregard, horrified by the accident, was at first reluctant to continue the submarine program, but Dixon convinced him otherwise. “After this tragedy I refused to permit the boat to be used again; but Lieutenant Dixon, a brave and determined man, having returned to Charleston, applied to me for authority to use it against the Federal steam sloop-of-war Housatonic.”

Death From Below 

The armament was replaced with a spar torpedo mounting a 125-pound warhead. It was designed to attach itself to the side of a ship, then be detonated by a rope pulled as the submarine backed away. On Feb. 17, 1864, the Hunley launched its first and only attack against the Housatonic two and a half miles off shore of Charleston Harbor.

After the Hunley was spotted a 100 yards away by the watch officer, a frantic alarm was raised. The ship’s crew discovered they couldn’t target an object so low in the water and close to their ship with their cannon, and they slipped the anchor chain and backed the engine in an attempt to dodge the attack.

The Hunley managed to plant the torpedo against the Housatonic and began to back away for the detonation. Desperately, the deck crew started raking the retreating submarine with rifle and pistol fire, but it was too little and too late. A massive explosion rocked the Housatonic, and within five minutes the ship was completely submerged. Five of her crew died in the attack; 150 others were rescued.

What happened to the Hunley is uncertain. While many believed at the time she was sunk by her own torpedo’s explosion, it is theorized that the submarine survived the initial attack and sank for unknown reasons. An agreed upon blue light from the submarine as a signal of returning to base was seen from the shore, but the Hunley never returned.

Finding The Hunley

Many attempts to find the Hunley after its sinking were made. Renowned showman P.T. Barnum even offered a reward of $100,000 dollars to anyone who could find it.

Its location was not decisively confirmed until 1995, after writer Clive Cussler, author of many nautical-themed thrillers, spent 15 years searching for it with his organization the National Underwater Marine Agency. The submarine had been covered in silt, and it took a magnetometer to finally locate it.

Hunley Confederate Submarine Civil War Rust ConservationAfter an elaborate recovery operation, the vessel was finally raised in 2000.

It was donated to the state of South Carolina, and currently resides at the Warren Lasch Conservation Center at the former Charleston Navy Yard, where it is still under study.

The Hunley was a pioneering vessel, marking the first time a submarine successfully attacked and sank an enemy ship.

The price paid in lives in its development was severe, with Horace Hunley himself falling victim to balky and primitive technology.

But the courage shown by men willing to submerge themselves again and again in little more than a floating iron coffin cannot be denied, and the determination to break the Union blockade led to one of the most innovative and intriguing episodes to emerge from the Civil War.

Stephen Carlson is Task & Purpose’s Washington-based correspondent. He served two tours in Afghanistan as an infantryman with the 10th Mountain Division. He lives in Washington, D.C. Follow Stephen Carlson on Twitter @swcarlson1. 

SEE ALSO: North Korea is in the process of developing a fleet of nuclear-capable submarines

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The Incredible History Of The Navy SEALs, America's Most Elite Warriors

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PBS SEALs documentary title screen

One of America's elite special operations units was back in the spotlight when a SEAL claiming to be the "trigger man" who killed Osama bin Laden in May of 2011 decided to reveal his identity on a Fox News special last month.

A recent PBS documentary, "Navy SEALs - Their Untold Story," digs into the history of their predecessors during World War II, their first official operations in the Vietnam War, and their deployment in 21st century conflicts.

Along the way, former commandos tell the stories of some of the SEALs' most incredible covert operations.

There are only around 2,000 active Navy SEALs — and they endure maybe the hardest military training anywhere in the world.



A retired SEAL explains that during the rigorous training known as "hell week,""you stay up for 120 hours ... and you get about 3 or 4 hours sleep."



Here trainees swim with their hands bound behind their backs, a feat only excellent swimmers can pull off.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Check Out The Collection Of A Guy Who Started Accumulating Classic Apple Computers At Age 14

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The Apple Museum website

When Apple enthusiast Mark Peck was 14 he started collecting classic Apple computers.

To share his collection with the world, Peck created the website "The Apple Museum," which features everything from an original Macintosh with the signatures of Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak engraved inside.

"I acquired the vast majority of my collection for free or very cheap, from individuals and flee market sellers looking to get rid of what they saw as junk," Peck told Business Insider in an email.

Here's the best of Peck's collection.

This is the Apple Lisa, which launched in 1983.



After the Lisa, Apple released the Macintosh, the first affordable personal computer with a mouse and graphical user interface (which was based on the Lisa).



Inside of every original Macintosh computer are the signatures of the Apple team responsible for the iconic computer. "The signatures were etched into the form used to cast the plastic shells on the production line, so every Macintosh has an identical set," said Peck.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The World's Most Lethal Rocket-Propelled Grenade That Takes Out Tanks

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Afghan National Army Soldier RPG 7

Apart from the AK-47, no other weapon has graced the world’s television screens more in modern times, than the RPG-7. 

Officially known in Russian as the Reaktivnoi Protivotankovii Granatomet (Hand antitank granade launcher), the slender hollow tube with its conical rear and oversized diamond shaped warhead continues to play just as an important role in today’s warfare as its small arms comrade. 

And just like the AK, the reason for this is simple – it’s an easy to operate, reliable, and brutally effective weapon capable of taking out just about all but the latest in modern armor. 

The RPG-7 has established itself as the most dominant shoulder-fired antitank system in the world, and can be expected to continue its reign of destruction well into the coming decades.

The RPG-7 was first introduced Soviet Army service in 1962. It used a design which, like most weapons of that era, could trace its origins to the Second World War, when the Germans began employing simple, cheap and disposable recoilless launchers with an oversized warhead called Panzerfausts.

Consisting of nothing more than a hollow tube with a propellant stick attached to a semi-hemispherical High Explosive AntiTank shaped charge (HEAT), Panzerfausts were employed with great success against Allied armor as they closed in on the Third Reich.

Its design allowed thousands of ill-trained boys and old men of the last ditch VolkSturm units an instant ability to take out tanks and caused great concern whenever armor operated in confined areas, such as forests or cities.

In fact, so disgusted were the Americans at a German technique of destroying a tank, then throwing away the launcher to surrender, that they ordered anyone doing so shot regardless of whether they had their hands up or waved a white flag.

Panzerfaust German RPG World War IIInitially, the Panzerfausts were extremely short range (30 meters), but were worked-up over time by using stronger propellants to 60, 100, 150 and even a 250 meter variant. 

After the Soviets encountered the first versions, they immediately went to work during the conflict trying to come up with their own design, with a primary feature being that it would be reloadable.

The first prototypes were created in 1944 and called the LPG–44. The LPG-44 had a 30mm diameter launcher and weighed 4.4 pounds unloaded, and could fire a PG-70 70mm diameter HEAT round. 

This weapon later received the designation RPG-1, and had a maximum range of 75 meters. Its penetration of 150mm of steel was less than that of the Panzerfaust though, and eventually it was cancelled in 1948.

The next evolution was the RPG-2. Externally, it was similar in size to the RPG-1, but featured some refinements. Most important was a larger 40mm tube (6.4 lbs unloaded), and an 80mm warhead designated the PG-2.  It had double the range, at 150 meters, and fired at a flatter trajectory, giving greater accuracy. It also could penetrate more armor at 200mm. 

Its widespread deployment began in 1954, and this launcher, coincidentally, would be the primary weapon used by the North Vietnamese Army and the Vietcong in the early stages of the Vietnam War against the U.S. 

Also, many more were Chinese manufactured versions and designated the B40. In theatre, this moniker ended up being used just as often as the word RPG when describing antitank weapons used by the insurgents.

Still another deadlier version showed up that asserted itself as THE standard by which all others were measured. Not resting on the RPG-2, the U.S.S.R had begun looking for its replacement as early as 1958.  The result was the little-known RPG-4, which had a 45mm launcher tube and 83mm warhead.

The launcher weighed 10.3 pounds and doubled the range again to 300mm. It could penetrate a little more armor at 220mm and, for the first time in the series, possessed an optical sight. It showed promise, but the RPG-4 quickly disappeared the moment the definitive RPG arrived: the -7 model.

This new design, even as it was being developed at the same time, proved far and away better than the -4 model with double the range at 300 meters for point targets, and out to 500 meters for an area target. 

It too mounted an optical sight which rode on a smaller tube of 40 mm and fired a slightly bigger 85 mm PG -7 HEAT warhead which was capable of penetrating 260 mm of armor.

RPG7 RPG weaponThe standard RPG-7 round, the most widely used variant, and its subsequent improvements share the same basic functions going back to the Panzerfaust. When the round fires, stabilizing fins deploy and impart a slow spin as it streaks through the sky at approximately 965 ft./s.

When it impacts a hard surface, a piezoelectric element in the nose crushes and sends an electrical signal through the round to a fuse at the base of explosives positioned behind a hollow copper cone. 

Once the explosives ignite, it forces the cone to turn itself inside out, shooting forward as a molten, thumb-sized slug of several thousand degrees, where in the case of an armored turret it will bore a similar sized hole through the metal until it reaches the interior.

Inside, it ricochets about along with flaming particles at several thousand miles per hour until it loses energy.  Anything from metal to flesh is torn asunder, leaving nothing but a charred compartment and human remains so scorched and destroyed that most can be washed out with a hose.

This is how a shaped charge works and it all happens in a fraction of a second.  It is a formula that, until advanced ceramics were incorporated into tank armor in the 1970s, forced designers to deal with a vulnerability gap that could be defeated only by designing a tank with such thick armor that its weight left it virtually unable to move.  So it was a welcome respite when the much lighter ceramic became available.

There were other targets the RPG proved just as adept at destroying, the kind that remains vulnerable. Helicopters. In this role, Western forces and America in particular have become all-too-familiar with the RPG-7’s ability. Mainly due to the most famous incident of when a couple of RPGs were employed to take down U.S. Army UH 60 Black Hawks hovering over Mogadishu, Somalia in 1993. 

This episode caused survivors of what was a planned operation to become trapped and forced to engage in some of the toughest close quarters combat seen since the Vietnam War. Later immortalized into a book, then a movie, it became known forever as ‘Blackhawk Down.’

More recently, the RPG-7 was used against U.S. and coalition forces on the streets of Iraq and Afghanistan, with varying results.

Most modern western tanks have shown they are capable of enduring multiple RPG hits and continue fighting, while lighter armored vehicles often use wire mesh cages extending around the bodies to prematurely detonate the round, making it far less effective at penetrating.

Where it continues to cause problems, though, is against the helicopter. Specifically in 2011, when ‘Extortion 17′, a U.S. Army Chinook helicopter carrying 38 personnel and a K-9 dog was downed over Afghanistan with what likely was an RPG-7.

This encounter remains the largest loss of life suffered by the U.S in a single incident during the War on Terror.

RPG7 RPG DetachedThere have been attempts over the years to improve upon the RPG-7 by introducing new designs and much larger warheads. 

These have been produced in small numbers and have never even begun to replace the standard RPG, which continues to see developments in the warhead area such as fragmentation, thermobaric and even tandem designs to defeat modern sophisticated armor.

Nevertheless, the launcher tube itself has remained virtually unchanged since 1962, proving it is a design worthy of merit, like the Kalashnikov. And, at just $300 a copy, the RPG-7 remains the gold standard go-to weapon for a soldier or guerrilla looking to unleash a heavy dose of retail destruction at a wholesale price.

SEE ALSO: Here's The Wild Underwater Vehicle Navy SEALs Use On Stealth Missions

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45 Color Photos Of Manhattan In The 1940s

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nyc, 1940s, charles cushmanAmateur photographer Charles W. Cushman traveled extensively in the US and abroad, capturing daily life from 1938 to 1969.

His works have been donated to and maintained by Cushman's alma mater Indiana University, which has kindly given us permission to publish his gallery of New York City photos taken in 1941 and 1942.

They give a great impression of what Chinatown, the Financial District, and Midtown looked like 70 years ago.

The old Fulton Market, Manhattan's Lower East Side, Saturday afternoon (1941)

 Photo: Courtesy of Charles W. Cushman Photograph Collection / Indiana University Archives



South Street teems with trucks along East River, New York City (1941)

 Photo: Courtesy of Charles W. Cushman Photograph Collection / Indiana University Archives



East River below Brooklyn Bridge (1941)

Photo: Courtesy of Charles W. Cushman Photograph Collection / Indiana University Archives



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The Politburo Approved The Soviet Invasion Of Afghanistan 35 Years Ago Today

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Soviet Soldiers Afghanistan 1987

The US is ending its 13-year-old combat operation in Afghanistan later this month.

But thirty-five years ago today, a small group of key players within the Soviet Union decided to commit the empire to military involvement in the country.

On Dec. 12, 1979, a resolution was presented to the Politburo and ratified with a majority of the members' signatures ordering the Soviet military into Afghanistan.

Critically, the Premier of the Soviet Union Alexei Kosygin, who had been against a ground incursion, was absent from the meeting. And only five top officials had even discussed the resolution at all. But from that moment forward, the USSR was on the path to war — and to its own eventual ruin.

The decision was made in the absence of the full Politburo, according to Georgy Korniyenko, a Soviet diplomat who opposed the war and wrote a book (download link) on the events leading up to it.

As it happened, it was the initiative of a small and hawkish coterie of Soviet statesmen that had first gotten the ball rolling on a disastrous intervention, one that paved the way for the Union's fall.

On Dec. 10, 1979, Soviet Defense Minister Dmitry Ustinov had already ordered "preparations for deployment of one division of paratroopers and of five divisions of military-transport aviation," according to George Washington University's National Security Archive, which published a series of Soviet documents related to the invasion in 2001.

Ustinov also decided "to step up the readiness of two motorized rifle divisions in the Turkestan Military District, and to increase the staff of a pontoon regiment to full staff without setting it any concrete tasks."

The inevitably doomed Soviet effort to prop the country's communist government began in the last week of 1979, as troops invaded the central Asian country. They would leave in 1989, after a war which killed thousands of Soviet soldiers and more than a million Afghans.

The Beginning Of A Quagmire

Soviet Afghanistan Helicopter CrashMoscow's motives for opening what would become a failed and nearly decade-long campaign are best understood in the larger context of the late Cold War.

The invasion was the Soviets' heavy-handed response to a domestic uprising that threatened to overthrow the country's young communist regime. The People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (or PDPA) had only muscled its way into power in April 1978 after a brief coup. 

Moreover, the Soviets feared that Afghanistan, even in its higher echelons, was beginning to tilt away from Soviet influence in favor of a rapprochement with the United States, as the National Security Archive documents show.

Afghan Prime Minister Hafizullah Amin, who deposed the country's president in a putsch that September, "held a series of confidential meetings with the American charge d'affaires in Kabul," according to a cable written by top Soviet figures.

In a letter to Communist Party General Secretary Leonid Brezhnev — whose doctrine staked out the Soviet prerogative for military intervention to preserve neighboring communist regimes — his eventual successor Yuri Andropov wrote that "after the coup and the murder of [president Nur Muhammad] Taraki in September of this year, the situation in Afghanistan began to undertake an undesirable turn for us."

"All of us agree," one official said in a conversation with party heavyweights like Yuri Andropov and Mikhail Gorbachev, "we must not surrender Afghanistan." 

Soviet Afghanistan Kandahar 1985 82mm rifleMilitary involvement wasn't always on the table. The Soviet Union started by sending shipments of wheat, bread, and of course weapons to Afghanistan's fragile communist regime throughout the year, in addition to the gas it sold to the country.

What worried the Soviet Union about the country — in addition to its potentially growing western sympathies — was the unrest in Herat earlier that year. In March 1979, a popular uprising alongside mutineering Afghan soldiers led to the execution of Soviet military advisers.

Even then, Afghanistan's communist rulers appealed for a Soviet intervention. Moscow offered assurances. Speaking with Afghan president Nur Muhammad Taraki just after the uprising, a Soviet official advised a more open form of government to strengthen the communist state's legitimacy.

"We think it important that within your country you should work to widen the social support of your regime, draw people over to your side, insure that nothing will alienate the people from the government," one cable stated.

The USSR also seemed aware of its own lack of information about the facts on the ground in Afghanistan. "The relationship between the supporters of the government and the insurgents is still very unclear," one cable reads,labeling as "insurgent" any Afghan citizen who resisted the government.

Elsewhere Moscow shows a concern for sending weapons only "if we are convinced they will not fall into the hands of the insurgents."

After the decision to invade had already been taken, Defense Minister Dmitriy Ustinov had to steamroll past the protests of his chief of general staff, who called the decision to send between 75 and 80 thousand troops "reckless."

At a broader meeting, the chief warned that Afghans had "never tolerated foreigners on their soil."

A Soviet Strategic Disaster

Soviet Afghanistan Troops Leave Tanks 1986Perhaps the most stunning revelation in the National Security Archive documents is how quickly the Soviet command realized that the conflict was a dead end.

"The realization that there could be no military solution to the conflict in Afghanistan came to the Soviet military leadership very early on," the National Security Archive writes in its introduction to the material. The issue of troop withdrawal and the search for a political solution was discussed as early as 1980. But no real steps in that direction were taken, and the Soviets continued to fight in Afghanistan "without a clearly defined objective."

Soviet troops wallowed in the Afghan quagmire for just over nine years; the cables even show Soviet decision-makers comparing the campaign to that of the US in Vietnam. The observation was made on both sides of the Iron Curtain: Even before the invasion, a US defense official wondered aloud whether it was worth "sucking the Soviets into a Vietnamese quagmire." Despite the existence of such a damning case study, Afghanistan became one of the last places where the Cold War went hot.

One US concern was that Afghanistan might serve as first grounds for the Soviet Union's growing regional ambitions. In his memoirs, then National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski wrote that the USSR was "transforming that neutral buffer [Afghanistan] into an offensive wedge, bringing the Russians so much closer to their historic target of the Indian Ocean."

From there, the reasoning went, it might challenge the US's own strategic tilt toward the Gulf. The US had sent American warships to the Persian Gulf in the fall of 1979, and the Iranian hostage crisis, which would remain in the forefront of American public discourse until its resolution in 1981, had begun just weeks before the Soviet invasion.

Afghan Children Soviet TankThe US took advantage of the conflict to drain its great rival of military resources and money, a campaign that got the Hollywood treatment in 2007's Charlie Wilson's War.

One CIA estimate was that the expense of $200 million by 1983 had bled the Soviet Union of a much greater sum: $12 billion. Thirty-five years ago, one of the last empires of the 20th century set itself on the path to ruin.

SEE ALSO: The 35 most powerful militaries in the world

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America's History Of Boss Rule Can Be Explained In 3 Movies

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Between roughly the Civil War and World War II, most American cities were at some point dominated by a boss and his machine. The term “boss” referred not only a powerful politician, but one who acquired, held and exercised power outside the channels dictated by law. Progressive reformers fought the bosses for control of American city government for over a century. The Progressives ultimately won, or, at least, the bosses lost.

All this is well known. What is less well known is that the entire history of bossism is contained in three films: Martin Scorsese’s Gangs of New York (the origin), Preston Sturges’The Great McGinty (the peak), and John Ford’s The Last Hurrah (decline).

Gangs of New York: How Tammany Hall Civilized New York City

gangs of new yorkGangs of New York (Gangs) takes place in New York City during the Civil War. Its plot concerns the war between Irish and nativist gangs for control of lower Manhattan. Both lose, leading to the rise of Tammany Hall, whose innovative manner of conflict resolution laid the foundation for modern New York. The ward heelers replace the warlords and the rigid identities of immigrant and nativist are dissolved. That’s how New York was tamed.

The film’s most memorable character is Bill the Butcher (Daniel Day-Lewis), the nativist gang leader bent on keeping the Irish down. A primitive man, Bill resembles Homer’s Cyclops in that he has only one eye and maintains his political authority through the open threat of violence. He’s the sometimes ally of Boss Tweed (Jim Broadbent), who functions as Tweed’s liaison to the slums of lower Manhattan.

In Gangs’ moral order, Boss Tweed represents progress. Tweed’s understanding of progress means thievery on a grand scale (rigging contracts for a new courthouse vs. exacting tribute from pubescent pickpockets) and bringing the Irish into the fold. Tweed tells Bill that to rely purely on violence is crude and inflexible, and he vows that Bill won’t last if he doesn’t adapt. Bill is less greedy than Tweed, and more principled in his own (bigoted) way. He’s ferociously independent, but also fatalistic. Bill knows that Tweed is right that his days are numbered. Nonetheless, he will go down fighting.

But the debate between Bill and Tweed is really a side show. Gangs’ main action concerns the struggle between the Irish and natives. The Irish are if anything even more primitive than Bill. They live in torch-lit caves, they are vengeful and as bigoted towards blacks as Bill’s crowd, and they reject the Civil War. Unlike Bill, the Irish have a bright future, but they, too, have bitter truths to learn. They seem to think that they can be New Yorkers without also being Americans. They are wrong. Scorsese asserts this by making the film’s climax not the 1863 draft riots themselves but the Union Army’s brutal suppression of them. The Army forces the Irish to submit to the legitimacy of the Civil War, and, by extension, the unconditional obligations implied by American citizenship. (Nation-building, 19th-century style.) Becoming American means becoming an American citizen, and citizenship implies renouncing the right to pick and choose among one’s obligations, and not least during times of crisis. Scorsese is slightly less clear about what becoming less Irish and more American will mean for the Irish than he is about the nativists’ education. But, at bare minimum, it means that they too will have to become more tolerant and capable of solving their conflicts through politics instead of violence.

Tammany did not itself vanquish the gangs (which were real by the way-see Herbert Asbury’sGangs of New York (1928), on which the film was based, and Tyler Ambinder’s Five Points(2010)). That task required guns and muscle. But, in providing a ready-at-hand political alternative to the gangs, Tammany answered the question what next?

What is the purpose of city government? It is not only to provide basic services such as education and street-cleaning, but to manage conflict. Government is much more than just a fee-for-service arrangement. Humans tend to disagree about the true and the good, which produces conflict, which we need politicians to manage for us by means of persuasion, intimidation, flattery, deal making, and so forth. Politics will always be with us and we will always need politicians.

The urban party machines excelled at managing conflict. If we believe that honest, rational debate will be inadequate to resolve most conflicts, then something else will be necessary to prevent government from being rendered completely impotent and to minimize the potential for violence. In most functional democracies, that “something else” has been a party system. Centuries of political experience strongly suggest that a democracy requires some form of organized mediation to recruit and vet candidates for office, and then, when in office, provide them with the support they need to be effective. “Parties are as natural to democracy as churches to religion (James Q. Wilson).”

Scorsese seems to understand these virtues of boss rule, while remaining aware of its corruption and vulgarity. Gangs argues that boss rule was an improvement over what came before: the gangs were just as corrupt, more violent, less enlightened, and, most crucially, pettier. Modern New York for Scorsese is, above all, a great city. Tweed was not a great man, but, according to Scorsese, Tweed’s political system provided the conditions for New York’s future greatness.

The Great McGinty: Bossism Ascendant

Screen Shot 2014 s12 10 at 4.07The Great McGinty (McGinty) takes place in an unnamed American city sometime in the first half of the 20th century. Its plot traces the title character’s (Brian Donlevy) rise from the soup line to the governorship by means of his skills at repeat-voting, fighting, bullying, carousing, wisecracking, bid-rigging and spending public money wastefully. “The boss” (Akim Tamiroff) gives McGinty his initial break and then directs his rise. McGinty chafes under the rule of the boss, and hilarity, and McGinty’s downfall, ensue. The third major character is McGinty’s wife (Muriel Angelus), his moral guide, who bucks him up to reject the boss.

McGinty depicts boss rule at its height, when it seemed almost the natural form of American city government. Sturges gives us the fully-developed specimen. All of the essential features of Progressive age city politics are in evidence:

First, the boss was often not the mayor. Of the 20 municipal bosses surveyed in Harold Zink’sCity Bosses in the United States (1930), 19 held some public office of some kind, but only two were mayors. There was no reason for the boss himself to be the mayor, since it was a ceremonial position with no real power. The office now known as the “strong mayor” did not become common until well into the 20th century. Progressive reformers strengthened the office of mayor by wresting fiscal and administrative authority away from the local legislature and lengthening the term of office. This left no choice to the boss but to become mayor. What few bosses have emerged to dominate urban politics since WWII have all been mayors. Examples include Richard Daley pere, Philadelphia’s Frank Rizzo, and Newark’s Sharpe James.

Second, Machine politics was genuinely democratic in the sense that it enabled men to rise from exceedingly humble beginnings to positions of high authority. In this respect, a real life equivalent of McGinty would be Harry Truman, who owed his career to Tom Pendergast, the notorious boss of Kansas City.

Third, the lines between reformer and boss could be sometimes blurry. McGinty is first elected as a reform candidate (“Down with McBoodle! Up with McGinty!”). Wise bosses were highly sensitive to public opinion. They sometimes had to run candidates who were justdistant enough from the machine to be considered graft-free. This practice was known as “perfuming the ticket.” Problem was, such candidates did not always stay in line when they got into office. Sometimes they chafed like McGinty did.

Fourth, women hated grafters. The Progressive-era movements for women’s suffrage and municipal reform were practically indistinguishable. Women getting the vote dealt the bosses a grievous blow.

McGinty is a satire and therefore anti-boss. Sturges certainly expects us to like McGinty, the boss and the gang, and McGinty does eventually redeem himself by breaking with the boss (on top of earning the love of a good woman), but to say that his deep engagement in machine politics required redemption implies that bossism was a rotten system. The audience’s proxy is McGinty’s wife. She loves him, but she certainly doesn’t love his politics.

At the same time, Sturges depicts a world in which bossism as such is not seriously under threat. No fundamental structural reforms are at hand, just the occasional defeat at the polls and visit to the hoosegow.

The Last Hurrah: Ciphers Ascendant

The Last HurrahThe Last Hurrah’s protagonist Frank Skeffington (Spencer Tracy) is based on Boston’s James Michael Curley. We know this because of the many details drawn directly from Curley’s eventful life and career: Skeffington’s longstanding feuds with his city’s Cardinal and with the bluebloods, his personal dislike for FDR, his uxoriousness, his considerable charm and rhetorical skills, and the fact that he’s an old man running yet again for mayor in a predominantly Irish New England city. Skeffington’s final campaign forms the plot of Hurrah. Its events transpire in the mid-20th century, contemporaneously with the film itself (1958) and the book on which it was based (by Edwin O’Connor, published in 1956). Skeffington loses, to a young, upwardly-mobile Irish American put up by the local WASP establishment. Times have changed since Skeffington entered politics in the late 19th century. TV and radio have replaced flesh-pressing and spontaneous, street-corner oratory. The city is wealthier, and some of that wealth has reached the Irish, Skeffington’s traditional base. Their wealth has made them less resentful, rendering WASP-baiting demagoguery less effective than it used to be. Skeffington is aware of these changes, but he’s still convinced that one last victory is in his grasp. He believes that all it will take is a mix of charm, intimidation, patronage and loyalty, but events prove him wrong.

Skeffington’s is a personal machine. Bosses created machines, not vice versa. All urban machines depended on the leadership from a strong boss. We see this in the fact that we tend to refer to most of the important machines by the names of the boss who gave them life and influence (Pendergast, Hague, Crump). Tammany Hall, which did manage to last a long time and transcend the leadership of individual bosses, was the exception, not the rule.

And in that he controls the machine and not vice versa, Skeffington may be said to be his own man, the genuine article. He may be a bit of a grafter, but, in Hurrah, he’s not the candidate beholden to special interests. That would be McCluskey, Skeffington’s nebbish opponent. The film argues that, for all their faults, decline of Skeffington and his like heralded a more inauthentic form of politics. (The phrase used in Hurrah the novel is “a generation of ciphers.”) Politicians would thenceforth be packaged, handled and promoted like so many different brands of soap. The backlash against scriptedness and inauthenticity we see in the appeal of candidates such as Herman Cain and Ross Perot. These are not great men, but, in that authenticity is surely a condition of greatness, the decline of Skeffington’s ways portends the decline of greatness in city politics.

That’s the bad news. The good news is that Hurrah depicts the last stages of unity and reconciliation projected by Gangs. The subtitle of The Last Hurrah could be The Revenge of the WASP. Skeffington finds himself fighting against both the new Irish middle-class and old money Protestants. His moment seems to have been a blip, a brief transition phase in American urban history. By the film’s conclusion, history has come full circle and ethnic conflicts are resolved in a way that could never have happened while blueblood-baiters like Skeffington remained in power.

It’s somewhat difficult for the audience to appreciate how Skeffington could have lost to McCluskey. Based on what we are shown, the latter seems like a total boob. But we’re not the voters. To the increasingly affluent second and third generation Irish-Americans, Skeffington comes off as uncouth, just as he always did to the WASPs. They want a mayor that mirrors their conception of themselves: young, well-educated (in a conventional sense), nicely (not nattily) attired, and untainted by unsavory connections and loyalties.

In their classic study City Politics (1963), Edward Banfield and James Q. Wilson argued that this trend was general among ethnic voters in the American city at mid-century. Yes, Jews still preferred to vote for Jewish candidates, Irish for Irish candidates and so on, but:

[t]he candidates must not be too Polish, too Italian, or too Irish in the old style…[N]owadays, the nationality-minded voter prefers candidates who represent the ethnic group but at the same time display the attributes of the generally admired Anglo-Saxon model. The perfect candidate, then, is of Jewish, Polish, Italian, or Irish extraction and has the speech, dress, manner, and the public virtues-honesty, impartiality, and devotion to the public interest-of the upper-class Anglo-Saxon (p.43).

According to Hurrah, the Progressives were far less consequential in bringing down the bosses than two other factors. First, New Deal social welfare programs devalued the soft and hard currencies with which the machines purchased the immigrant vote (this thesis is advanced more explicitly in the book than the film). Second, the rising tide of prosperity produced the lace curtain Irish, who were wealthier, younger and less angry than their parents and grandparents who had composed Skeffington’s base. There are Progressives inHurrah, who provide important leadership and money, but this was a battle that they had been waging for decades. Why did they prove more successful at this moment? Because the Irish were ready to move on.

Conclusion

Gangs of new yorkGangs, McGinty and Hurrah set the standard not only because of their combination of historical accuracy and artistic merit, but because they are actually about politics. David Simon’s The Wire is probably the most highly-regarded recent treatment of city politics. But Simon doesn’t take politics seriously. The Wire holds that the real life of the city occurs in society, not government, and that politicians and their policies and institutions cause more problems than they solve.

Aside from the 2004 Gangs, most of the first-class filmmakers and writers in our own time tend to look past city politics. No one makes movies like these anymore. Perhaps the triumph of the Progressive vision of municipal reform made city politics less colorful. Hurrah portends a future of McCluskeys. But the problem cannot be purely for lack of material: there is nothing McCluskey-esque about Rudy Giuliani, Baltimore’s William Donald Schaefer, Philadelphia’s Ed Rendell and Providence’s Buddy Cianci. All made great copy, and yet they seem to have been largely overlooked by our more serious poets, filmmakers and novelists.

SEE ALSO: American Cities Can Now Be Divided Into 4 Different Categories, Depending On How They're Gentrifying

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30 Books That Changed The Course Of History

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Every reader knows that a book can change your life.

But what about the lives of an entire generation? Can a book change the future?

Miriam Tuliao, assistant director of central collection development at the New York Public Library, helped us come up with a list of the books that changed the course of history.

We also added a few ideas of our choosing.

From William Shakespeare's plays to George Orwell's "1984," these 30 titles (listed here in alphabetical order) have had a major impact. 

Do you think another book belongs on this list? Let us know in the comments.

"Aesop’s Fables" by Aesop

Believed to have originated between 620 and 560 B.C.

"Aesop's Fables" is a collection of stories that are meant to teach the listener a life lesson. The fables are often credited to an ancient Greek slave and storyteller named Aesop (though the origin of the fables remains disputed).

The stories are still important moral lessons and have had a far-reaching impact on literature and common sayings, including "wolf in sheep's clothing,""boy who cried wolf,""goose that laid the golden eggs," and many others.

Buy the book here >



"The Analects of Confucius" by Confucius

Believed to have been written sometime between 475 and 221 B.C.

Also known as simply "Analects" or "Lunyu," this book is the collection of sayings and ideas attributed to the Chinese philosopher Confucius on how to live a virtuous life and be kind — what he referred to as ren.

"The Analects" continues to have a profound influence on Eastern philosophy and ethics, especially in China.

Buy an English translation of the book here >



"Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl" by Anne Frank

Published in 1947

The book is a compilation of the diary writings of Anne Frank, a girl who hid with her family for two years during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. The family was discovered in 1944, and Frank died of typhus in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.

Since its publication, "Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl" has been translated into more than 60 languages and remains one of the most famous and influential primary documents from Europe in World War II.

Buy the book here >



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The US Navy Has An Awesome Collection Of Historical Artifacts

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The US Naval History and Heritage Command announced Tuesday that it completed the transfer of massive amount of historical artifacts from the Washington Navy Yard to their new home in Richmond, Virginia.

The transfer is part of an ongoing project to move more than 300,000 artifacts — from Operation Iraqi Freedom to the Revolutionary War — to the Richmond headquarters, the Navy said. Among other items, the collection includes weapons obtained from enemy soldiers, gifts from foreign countries, flags, plaques, and toys.

"We have literally tons of material, some of which is priceless, and nearly all of it irreplaceable. But the work is well worth it if it means in the long run our Sailors and our citizens can better appreciate what the Navy has meant to our country since its inception," head curator Karen France said in a statement.

Hundreds of photos from the collection can be found on the Naval History & Heritage Command's Flickr page. We highlighted some of the more interesting items below:

Civil War amputation instrument case:

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The original donor of this sword said it "was captured by Beale English in hand-to-hand combat with a Berber at Tripoli. The enemy was killed and the sword taken as a trophy." 

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The 34 star flag was used from 1861 until 1863. This flag was used by in the Mississippi River campaign during the Civil War:

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This IBM Thinkpad computer was recovered from the Pentagon following the September 11th 2001 terrorist attack:

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Sensor that was deployed from aircraft during the Vietnam War. Its antenna would pick up and relay troop movements:

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Safe conduct pass, issued by American forces and air dropped in Vietnam to encourage defection of North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces: 7008910433_6869c2b0b1_o

This sword was presented to Lt. Stevens by the city of Charleston in recognition of his service during the War of 1812's Battle of Lake Eerie:

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An August Sauter pharmacy scale with original wood box:

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Camera developed by Eastman Kodak in1941 and manufactured until 1948. It was used extensively by the United States Navy during World War II:

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The US Navy provided medical assistance and supplies to Japan in 1923 after a major earthquake. In appreciation of the Navy's assistance the International Banking Corporation presented this ship model to Admiral Thomas Washington:

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Assault rifle built by Tabuk in Iraq to the specifications of Mikhail Kalashnikov's AK-47. The rifle is gold plated and was seized during Operation Iraqi Freedom:

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This German, Mauser Model 712 was recovered by Lt John Millard Weeks, US Gunnery Officer, USS Ellyson DD-454, following the Allied invasion of Normandy June 1944, in an abandoned german defensive bunker:

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This 48-star flag was made from a white bedsheet with colored pencils by prisoners in Japan. It flew in 1945:

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The Cure For Syphilis Was Developed As Part Of The US Effort To Win World War II

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Syphilis Organism Electron Microscope 1944

World War II is the deadliest conflict in history.

But the human race still emerged from the war with a few potential advances in hand, among them a cure for syphilis.

The bacteria responsible for the disease was discovered in 1905, and its eventual cure, penicillin, in the late '20s.

But it wasn't until 1943, in the midst of World War II, that doctors at a US Marine Hospital on Staten Island in New York applied the antibiotic to effectively cure four patients suffering from the early stages of the disease.

That October, TIME ran an article about the experiments with the headline "New Magic Bullet," and the next year the doctors published a study on the effectiveness of penicillin injections administered every few hours for eight days.

The development was especially important given the measurable impact that syphilis and other diseases had on the manpower needed to fuel the war effort.

Nearly five percent of draftees in 1942 had syphilis, according to a medical paper published in the journal Military Medicine and entitled "History of US Military Contributions to the Study of Sexually Transmitted Diseases."

When left untreated, the disease causes genital sores before attacking other parts of the body, including the nervous system, to cause a slew of debilitating symptoms and even eventual death. The military's syphilis problem during a major US combat mobilization prompted the War Department "to embark on a massive educational and prophylactic campaign."

Contemporary posters warned that "You can't beat the Axis if you get VD," and that venereal disease makes "a sorry ending to a furlough."

Manpower suffered during World War I from exactly this problem. American soldiers weren't supplied with condoms (something which would change in the next world war), and sexually transmitted diseases as a whole "were the second most common reason for disability and absence from duty, being responsible for nearly 7 million lost person-days and the discharge of more than 10,000 men," according to an article in the Journal of Military and Veterans' Health.

Shortly before that war, syphilis — which first got its name in an Italian poem from the year 1530 — was treated with a medical form of an arsenic compound. Its creator, a German chemist named Paul Ehrlich, won the Nobel Prize in 1908 for his discovery and the drug's effectiveness in the Great War was noted by a medical officer in the United Kingdom's Royal Army Medical Corps.

Still, arsenic was a toxic substance that produced adverse side effects — and it was sometimes used in combination with mercury, which is also poisonous. Penicillin was much easier for the human body to take and the discovery of its effectiveness against syphilis had positive effects that outlasted the second World War.

Woman Poster World War II syphilis gonorrhea

The disease was "the fourth leading cause of death in the United States before World War II, behind only tuberculosis, pneumonia, and cancer," according to the article in the Journal of Military and Veterans' Health. 

In 1939, 64,000 Americans died from the disease, almost as many as died from diabetes in a recent year. Today, the rate of annual infection is round 13,000 cases for which a cure is available.

The disease has also faded in the American military. In the early years of the Vietnam War, for instance, syphilis represented only one percent of servicemen's cases of sexual infections (though the total rate of these, mostly due to gonorrhea, was actually greater than during World War II).

In 1999, prevalence in the US military was down to 3 cases per 100,000 individuals, close to the civilian rate of 2.5.

The urgency of the US war effort 70 years ago, alongside decades of advances in publish health, reduced the sting of a once-devastating disease in the military and in American society more generally.

SEE ALSO: Dick Cheney had a much different take on the US and torture in 1992

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7 Surprising Facts About History And The Universe

8,000-Year-Old Olive Oil Traces Found In Israel

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Ancient people pressed olive oil as far back as 8,000 years ago in Israel, a new study finds.

Researchers found residues of the Mediterranean-diet staple on ancient clay pots dating back to the 6th millennium B.C.

"This is the earliest evidence of the use of olive oil in the country, and perhaps the entire Mediterranean basin," Ianir Milevski and Nimrod Getzov, excavation directors at the Israel Antiquities Authority, said in a statement. [See photos of the fragments and reconstructed clay vessels]

The team discovered the clay vessels by accident. The government required an excavation at En Zippori in the Lower Galilee region of northern Israel before the Netivei Israel Co. could widen Highway 79. The researchers unexpectedly found the pottery during the excavation, which lasted from 2011 to 2013.

Milevski and Getzov wanted to find out what had once been stored in the vessels. So, the researchers, together with their colleague Dvory Namdar, of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Institute of Earth Sciences, extracted organic residues left on the clay.

The analyses showed that the pottery containing olive oil dates back to the Early Chalcolithic period, a phase of the Bronze Age. To double-check their work, the researchers looked at modern clay shards with one-year-old olive oil residues on them, and found a strong chemical resemblance between the ancient and contemporary samples.

In all, the researchers studied 20 pottery vessels, including two that date back to about 5,800 B.C., indicating that the oil was well preserved inside the vessels for almost 8,000 years. The findings support previous research that suggestspeople first domesticated the olive tree about 8,000 to 6,000 years ago.

Archaeologists have suspected that an olive oil industry once flourished in ancient northern Israel, but this is the first definitive evidence that this type of oil was used at such an early time.

"Although it is impossible to say for sure, this might be an olive species that was domesticated and joined grain and legumes — the other kinds of field crops that we know were grown then," Milevski and Getzov said.

The study was published online Nov. 24 in the Israel Journal of Plant Sciences.

Follow Laura Geggel on Twitter @LauraGeggel. Follow Live Science @livescience, Facebook& Google+. Original article on Live Science.

Copyright 2014 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

SEE ALSO: Crazy Image Shows What North America Would Look Like On Jupiter

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US Troops Have Been At War On Christmas Since The Nation's Founding

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US Soldiers ChristmasFor those who serve, war is surreal, but celebrating Christmas while in a combat zone can be particularly somber. This time last year, I was on a different continent, and instead of a Santa hat, I wore protective plates and a kevlar helmet.

Just to feel somewhat festive, many of us decorated our vests with battery-powered Christmas lights and placed candy canes in our equipment. Under the threat of imminent danger at our deployed location, Christmas was surreal indeed. But we coped.

The surrealness of celebrating Christmas while in a war is not a new experience. Through American history, our troops have endured the holidays while serving far from home in a lot of different ways. Sometimes highlighted with humor, it has also been cause for melancholy. But in countless cases, there was no celebrating — only danger, fear, and death.

One of the most famous Christmas days in American military history occurred in 1776. That night, Gen. George Washington made his iconic crossing of the Delaware River from Pennsylvania into New Jersey, and marched his army toward Trenton. The next morning, he surprised 1,500 Hessian forces fighting for the British, many of whom were allegedly hungover from holiday celebrations the night before.

The Hessians couldn’t get their units organized in time, and Washington’s army ended up capturing more than a third of the enemy force, suffering only two deaths and five wounded. Prior to the battle, however, the Continental army had suffered some significant defeats and morale was in the gutter. Americans at the Valley Forge winter camp had also been suffering greatly.

Soldiers were dying without proper food, clothing, or other provisions, and the King’s armies (as well as American colonial citizens) suspected the Continentals were near a full defeat. No doubt the poor morale and prospects of another defeat — at Christmas time, no less — weighed heavily on the minds of American soldiers.

But their actions at Trenton, followed by a similar victory at Princeton a week later, electrified people across the colonies. Washington handed two sound defeats to the most powerful fighting force on the planet, and to Americans, independence suddenly became a real possibility. Morale in the ranks shot into the stratosphere and soaring enlistments followed.

Christmas Tree AfghanistanThe American Civil War was another instance in which US soldiers spent Christmas in conflict. It was a painful time in our history, marked by lofty victory and shocking loss. Probably the most famous Christmas “gift” during the war was from Gen. William T. Sherman to President Abraham Lincoln.

In December 1864, Sherman was reaching the end of his controversial “March to the Sea,” and on the Dec. 22, his army captured the city of Savannah, Georgia. Sherman wrote a letter to Lincoln that read in part: I beg to present you, as a Christmas gift, the city of Savannah, with 150 heavy guns and plenty of ammunition, and also about 25,000 bales of cotton.” 

Lincoln naturally received the message with great relief, replying, “Many, many thanks for your Christmas gift – the capture of Savannah … the undertaking being a success, the honor is all yours.”

Both Union and Confederate troops found creative ways to celebrate Christmas while on the battlefield. Personal letters of many soldiers describe units erecting Christmas trees and decorating them with stale hard-tack (a large, saltine-like biscuit that served as a form of ration) and salt pork. Carols we recognize today were sung in camps across the continent — tunes such as “Hark, the Herald Angels Sing,” “Jingle Bells,” and “Deck the Halls” — and while cards didn’t enjoy widespread use until the 1870s, elaborate Christmas cards were known to be exchanged.

Perhaps the most eventful Christmas during the Civil War occurred December 1862 during the Fredericksburg campaign. During the Dec. 12 battle on the plains south of town, Union troops, under Gen. Ambrose Burnside, made repeated suicidal assaults against the entrenched southern Army on Marye’s Heights, resulting in more than 12,000 Federal casualties — more than double that of Robert E. Lee’s.

US Soldiers Christmas IraqBurnside withdrew after the spectacular defeat, but tried to restore his tarnished reputation the next month in what became known as the “mud march.” In an effort to follow up with a second campaign against Lee, the Union again tried to hit its enemy south of the Rappahannock River, but a brutal two-day rainstorm turned the crossing into a mucky quagmire that swamped horses, artillery, and men in the cold mud.

Resigned to his failure, Burnside again pulled back and was fired by Lincoln soon after. It was a terrible Christmas for the Union army, yet one that the South used to find reason to celebrate.

Fast forward to Dec. 16, 1944 — forever known as the Battle of the Bulge. A legion of Hitler’s troops overran thinly spread American lines along the border areas of Belgium, Luxembourg, and Germany, and advanced toward the port of Antwerp. It was the coldest winter in at least 100 years and temperatures had plunged below zero.

The outnumbered, outgunned, and poorly equipped Americans put up a gallant fight and delayed the Nazi timetable. But casualties were alarming. It would be a terrible Christmas for many families back home.

By Christmas Day, Gen. George Patton and the 3rd Army had swung northward, mounting a major counteroffensive that ultimately pushed the Germans back by New Year’s.

That year though, many American soldiers in Europe spent their time trying to keep warm and ate frozen food (if they had any at all) because they weren’t allowed to light fires. Others on the front lines didn’t even know it was Christmas. Despite the death and devastation, though, combined enemy voices sang versions of “Silent Night” in many locations across the icy lines of battle.

Christmas is indeed a strange time at war. Our troops will often cope in ways that many of us would consider funny, or even morbid, but through our nation’s history, the holidays at war have often been fraught with sacrifice.

This Christmas, take a moment to remember our veterans, as well as those today who are defending our liberties far from home.

Historically, as well as today, our troops have stood guarding the gates of freedom, protecting the things we hold dear, and our way of life, no matter the time of year.

Lt. Col. Jason Nulton is an Air Force logistics officer with experience in deployed environments and as a squadron commander. He is currently stationed at the Pentagon in Washington, D.C.

SEE ALSO: Drones are becoming popular Christmas gifts for kids

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The 'Christmas Truce' Of 1914 Is A Myth

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Illustrated London News Christmas Truce 1914

The 100th anniversary of the start of the Great War has brought about ample press coverage of the epic struggle that determined the course of European and Western civilization over the last century.

As a historian by background who has written quite a bit on the Great War, it’s always nice to see the media cover things that otherwise have been long forgotten outside the ranks of historians and buffs.

However, what the media chooses to cover about 1914-1918 adheres to a sort of group-think that I have elsewhere termed The Narrative: trenches, lions led by donkeys, the horror, a nearly exclusive focus on the Western Front (plus one-offs like Gallipoli that include English-speaking troops) — and did I mention the horror?

For all the emphasis since the 1960’s in the English-speaking world’s popular culture on “the horror” of 1914-1918 — as shorthand, this may be termed the Oh! What a Lovely War approach — there has long been a sub-genre focusing on the Christmas truce.

Now, at the centenary of that event, which has generated its own cottage industry, with several books, the media has gone in whole-hog.

There are countless press stories of the events of alleged events of Christmas 1914, despite there being considerable doubt about what actually transpired.

Christmas Truce 1914 photoA lack of much evidence notwithstanding, it seems clear that at several places on the Western Front, which in the weeks leading up to Christmas had settled into static warfare — a far cry from the mobile bloodbath of August through November — British and German troops, violating orders against fraternization with the enemy, met in no-man’s land and exchanged drinks, some food, and may have even played a bit of football.

It’s obvious why officers would omit such revelry from unit diaries, since this was a clear violation of standing orders.

That said, while some fraternization did occur between British and German troops on December 25, 1914, evidence for it is highly anecdotal.

Moreover, the French were in no mood to drink and be merry with the Germans, who were occupying a good chunk of French soil, not to mention that in the five months leading up to Christmas, 300,000 French soldiers died trying to keep even more of their country from falling into German hands.

Fraternization incidents between French and Germans were very much the exception that first war Christmas.

Despite this, European footballers have commemorated the Christmas Truce in their own way, while the British and German military have even held a centenary football match to celebrate the much-mythologized event.

British German troops World War I TruceThe Christmas Truce has always been a particularly British affectation, the football match being an indication of the fair-play and good-sporting values of the British generation that waged — and, as few seem to remember, won — the Great War.

In a similar fashion, the 36th (Ulster) Division went “over the top” on the first day of the great Somme offensive, July 1, 1916, led by a football kicked out by a lead battalion, only to be mowed down, counting among the 57,000 British troops who fell dead or wounded that terrible day.

The Christmas Truce idea is beloved by many, beyond football fans, for its hint that, beneath the horror, British and Germans were just ordinary men cast into the maelstrom of unprecedented bloodshed. From there it’s easy to reach notions that, but for nasty generals, all might have ended with “average men” coming together to end the madness.

In the background, a very furry John and Yoko are encouraging “Hair Peace, Bed Peace.” The appeal of this, a hundred years on, when Britain and Germany are together in the European Union, is humane and understandable. However, we must not get carried away by the power of pleasant myth-making.

Not only was such amity on Christmas Day 1914 the exception, there was a lot of unpleasantness too. While across the Western Front most units took it easy and laid low, having no desire to kill the enemy or be killed that day, the one-off incidents of fraternization should not be taken as normal.

By the end of 1914, attitudes had hardened to the point that lots of average soldiers seethed with hatred for the enemy, while virtually all of them understood that the only way to get home, other than in a box, was through victory. It is significant that there were really no fraternizations on Christmas after 1914 on the Western Front, or anywhere.

We ought not overstate things. The Great War was not the next war, which saw truly unimaginable horrors perpetrated against soldiers and civilians alike. That said, the 1914-1918 maelstrom was plenty brutal enough.

In the trenches, snipers taking out enemy soldiers who popped their heads up, unwisely, to take a peek was considered less than sporting by some in 1914, but all sides did it.

Moreover, while prisoners were generally taken, particularly if they were in large numbers — whole companies or even battalions of soldiers giving themselves up, as sometimes happened — it was an unspoken rule that soldiers who resisted too long or too hard had given up any right to quarter.

When a rifle company spent a couple hours taking an enemy machine gun position, losing half of its hundred men in the process, the defenders would be killed in the end, perhaps finished off with bayonets, and everybody at the front understood this.

There is scant evidence for Christmas Truce events beyond a few isolated incidents on the Western Front. On the far larger Eastern Front, it seems to have hardly happened at all. Hatred of the enemy ran deeper in the East than in the West, where atrocities were more commonplace.

There were incidents of Christmas fraternization — chatting and trading booze and food (and doubtless sharing stories about women) — at Przemyśl, a fortress deep behind Russian lines where over 120,000 Austro-Hungarian troops were trapped.

There, both sides were exhausted and morale was low, and along the static siege lines the enemies called it off for a bit as officers averted eyes.

Friedrich Austria Przemysl 1915Yet that was very much the exception. A bit to the south of Przemyśl, in the frozen Carpathians, where a million Austro-Hungarian troops were vying for control of vital mountain passes against a million Russians, taking enormous losses in the process, there was no Christmas truce.

In fact, in many places the Russians intentionally shelled Austro-Hungarian positions on December 25th to disrupt any seasonal revelry. A couple weeks later, for Orthodox Christmas (which falls in early January), Austro-Hungarian gunners returned the favor, shelling enemy positions “to disturb their Christmas as they disturbed ours,” as one unit diary of the Austro-Hungarian 3rd Army noted. No love was lost there.

It is all well and good to note that, at least in the early phases of the Great War, some soldiers were still willing to let their humanity show on Christmas.

Yet this obscures the reality that, already by late 1914, all belligerents were stuck in a war that was supposed to have ended soon, according to optimists across Europe, but inconveniently had not, leaving the armies jammed in a conflict that generals and politicians could see no easy way out of.

Therefore the slaughter continued for four more years, destroying European civilization and unleashing the nightmares of Bolshevism and Fascism — which would, a generation later, lead to an even bloodier war.

world war one WWI WW1 trench trenchesReading the diaries of Great War soldiers, as I have done for decades, you realize that, despite the claims of Lennon or Lenin, quite a few soldiers actually enjoyed the war and wanted to defeat an enemy they increasingly hated.

This was by far the most exciting thing to ever happen in the lives of millions of average working men, nearly all of whom in all the armies felt their cause was just.

Despite his low chances of surviving the war without death or injury, the average frontline soldier of the Great War was, as we might say today, in it to win it.

Having seen countless comrades fall, victory was the only acceptable outcome, even by late 1914.

That soldiers of all the armies kept fighting in the horrible trenches, often with a vigor that post-moderns find incomprehensible and more than a little distressing, says something about the human animal that needs discussion.

But for now: Merry Christmas 2014!

SEE ALSO: Why we shouldn't romanticize the Christmas Truce of 1914

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5 Momentous Military Events That Took Place On Christmas Day

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Washington_Crossing_the_Delaware_by_Emanuel_Leutze,_MMA NYC,_1851

Christmas is one of the most celebrated holidays on earth. But that doesn't mean that conflicts simply freeze every December 25th. 

Here's a look at some of the major military events that have fallen on Christmas, a date with a surprisingly rich history.

1776 — George Washington Crosses The Delaware River

Important events in both of America's most formative wars — the Revolutionary War and the Civil War — took place on Christmas.

Washington led his troops across a 300-yard stretch of the Delaware River in the dead of night between December 25 and 26, 1776. The surprise move would put Washington's men a 19-mile march away from a garrison of Hessians (German mercenaries hired by the British to help them in their effort to retain a hold on the rebelling colonies) that the Continental Army took completely by surprise.

The Hessians' quick surrender at the Battle of Trenton would be the first of two rebel victories in New Jersey (the other being the Battle of Princeton a week later) as the Continental Army regained control of the colony. This effectively reversed the British drive that had pushed the rebels across New Jersey in the previous months. The daring crossing of the Delaware ended up being one of the turning points of the war.

1868 — US President Andrew Johnson pardons former Confederate soldiers

Nearly a century later, on Christmas Day of 1868, US president Andrew Johnson extended a full pardon and amnesty"to all and to every person who, directly or indirectly, participated in the late insurrection or rebellion".

The internecine war had ended more than three years earlier, taking more American lives than any other conflict in history. But Union general Ulysses S. Grant's scorched earth tactics late in the war left much of the south in ruins, and the country emerged from the war in a state of deep division.

President Andrew JohnsonJohnson had been a Tennessee congressman, senator, and governor before joining Lincoln's presidential ticket.  He was tipped in part to attract southern votes. Yet at war's end he seemed bent on imposing harsh conditions on the defeated half of the country.

The day after being sworn in as the nation's president, he asserted that "treason must be made infamous, and traitors must be impoverished."

But according to the History Department at North Carolina State University, Attorney General James Speed tempered Johnson's punitive intentions: "Mercy must be largely extended. Some of the great leaders and offenders only must be made to feel the extreme rigor of the law," Speed advised.

Southerners enjoyed only conditional and limited pardoning (depending on their station during the war) — at least until this blanket amnesty on "the 25th day of December, A. D. 1868."

1914 — German, British, and French soldiers make temporary peace to celebrate Christmas together

On Christmas Day in 1914, the first Christmas of World War I, soldiers left their trenches to observe the holiday in peace.

In the midst of war, soldiers laid down their arms to sing Christmas carols, play soccer, and barter with the cigarettes and sweets they'd received in care packages from the nations they served.

Christmas Truce 1914 photo

In some places, the truce was limited to an occasion for each side to bury their dead strewn in no man's land, the stretch of earth between opposing trenches that too often served as a killing field. In others, the skirmishing continued.

But some made the Christmas Truce of 1914 what it was: An odd yet heartening case study in how people react to the pressures of war.

1941 — Japan seizes control of Hong Kong at the expense of the United Kingdom.

Japanese Soldiers Hong Kong 1941 World War II

Japan's aggression during World War II began well before the attack on Pearl Harbor. In 1931, Imperial Japan invaded Manchuria, a vast coastal region in northeast China. In 1937, it made advances on the rest of the country as well.

But it wasn't until 1941 that Tokyo confronted the West with its imperial ambitions.

And though American involvement started with the Pearl Harbor attack, the surprise assault was immediately followed by Japan's invasion of Hong Kong, a British holding, in late 1941.

Hong Kong British Prisoners Japan World War IIHundreds died in the eighteen-day battle for Hong Kong, and more were wounded or incarcerated in POW camps. Some would never return.

Japan announced the surrender of the colony by radio broadcast on Christmas Day, 1941.

1941 — Admiral Émile Muselier captures Saint Pierre and Miquelon, an archipelago near Canada, for the Free French Forces

World War II Free French Saint Pierre Islands Admiral MuselierThe North American continent does not feature as a hot spot in the events of World War II.

But soon after France's fall to the Nazis, the colonial governor of a few small islands off the coast of Newfoundland started working with the resistance.

Writing back to the Vichy government — the Nazi's puppet regime in France — Baron Gilbert de Bournat wrote of "British pressure to rally to the British or de Gaullist causes."

That pressure would have found sympathizers on the islands. Its population was originally mobilized, in 1939, to help defend France's mainland, and some ship-owners docked there refused to return to Vichy France.

On Christmas Eve, 1941, a small task force under Admiral Émile Muselier stormed the island under the cover of night. They met no resistance and the island's administrative centers were taken within an hour, eliminating what otherwise could have served as a Nazi outpost deep among Allied nations while giving the Free French cause legitimacy.

"By five minutes past midnight on December 25 the story of the invasion was telegraphed to Canadian and American newspapers,"according to Douglas Anglin's "Free French Invasion: The St. Pierre and Miquelon Affaire of 1941".

SEE ALSO: US troops have been at war on Christmas since the nation's founding

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