Search Results
7/18/2025, 10:52:31 PM
>>17852840
>Ahahahahhahahahaha
Vlassical cattle expression of bad joke
>Power fantasy
>>17852843
>Trying to get outside aproval by implying the joke is good.
>Ahahahahhahahahaha
Vlassical cattle expression of bad joke
>Power fantasy
>>17852843
>Trying to get outside aproval by implying the joke is good.
7/18/2025, 10:25:22 PM
>>64000702
Theyd cost less than a modern tank, so you could easily do a wolfpack ganging up on them,
You could suplement shittier optics with drone optics and have them carry surveillance and FPV drones.
After that just shoot a bunch of times achieving Mission kill because modern tanks cant work without their opticsand the crew will be concused, maybe just go with squash head rounds.
After that out a regular one in the rear of the tank so they cant recover it.
Theyd cost less than a modern tank, so you could easily do a wolfpack ganging up on them,
You could suplement shittier optics with drone optics and have them carry surveillance and FPV drones.
After that just shoot a bunch of times achieving Mission kill because modern tanks cant work without their opticsand the crew will be concused, maybe just go with squash head rounds.
After that out a regular one in the rear of the tank so they cant recover it.
7/18/2025, 10:15:36 PM
>>64000594
Good question — and a very reasonable one, given the history of **Operation Paperclip** and the role of Wernher von Braun’s team.
Here’s what we know:
After World War II, the U.S. brought over about **1,600 German scientists, engineers, and technicians**, many from the V-2 rocket program at Peenemünde, under Operation Paperclip.
Of those, about **120–130 Germans** formed the core of the rocket development group at **Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama**, which later became NASA’s **Marshall Space Flight Center**.
This German team — led by Wernher von Braun — designed the **Saturn V rocket**, the launch vehicle that made Apollo possible.
So, to sum up:
Roughly **120–130 German scientists/engineers** were directly involved in NASA’s rocket development for Apollo, among thousands of American engineers and scientists.
The wider Apollo program itself (including astronauts, mission control, spacecraft engineers, etc.) involved **over 400,000 people**, so the Germans were a tiny fraction of the total — but they were central to the **rocket technology** part.
If you want, I can also break down their specific roles (propulsion, guidance, staging) or how they transitioned from the V‑2 to Saturn V. Let me know!
Good question — and a very reasonable one, given the history of **Operation Paperclip** and the role of Wernher von Braun’s team.
Here’s what we know:
After World War II, the U.S. brought over about **1,600 German scientists, engineers, and technicians**, many from the V-2 rocket program at Peenemünde, under Operation Paperclip.
Of those, about **120–130 Germans** formed the core of the rocket development group at **Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama**, which later became NASA’s **Marshall Space Flight Center**.
This German team — led by Wernher von Braun — designed the **Saturn V rocket**, the launch vehicle that made Apollo possible.
So, to sum up:
Roughly **120–130 German scientists/engineers** were directly involved in NASA’s rocket development for Apollo, among thousands of American engineers and scientists.
The wider Apollo program itself (including astronauts, mission control, spacecraft engineers, etc.) involved **over 400,000 people**, so the Germans were a tiny fraction of the total — but they were central to the **rocket technology** part.
If you want, I can also break down their specific roles (propulsion, guidance, staging) or how they transitioned from the V‑2 to Saturn V. Let me know!
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