famous US and British military divisions

The famed US Army was Patton's 3rd Army, but that was not so much the unit as it was its brilliant commander.
 
@ knight-dragon, nod interesting history with tibet in particular.
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In 1788 Tibet turned to China for support when faced with an invasion of the Ghurka Army in a dispute of trade and boundaries. Following a period of stalemate the Tibetans and Ghurkas made a peace pact in 1792 and Chinese influence began to expand.

By the mid 19th Century Manchu power was waning and in 1856 when faced with another Ghurka invasion the Chinese did not respond. The Nepalese exacted an annual tax on Tibet. A period followed of intense rivalry between the British Raj in India and the Russians. The British fearing that the Russians wanted to control Tibet as a gateway to India.
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Ellie
 
Originally posted by ellie
@ knight-dragon, nod interesting history with tibet in particular.
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In 1788 Tibet turned to China for support when faced with an invasion of the Ghurka Army in a dispute of trade and boundaries. Following a period of stalemate the Tibetans and Ghurkas made a peace pact in 1792 and Chinese influence began to expand.
Prior, Tibet had been placed under the Manchu emperors' personal protection (willingly or not). Reason was to forestall the Dzungars fr controlling the religious authority of the Lamas and exerting unity over all Mongol tribes, incl those in the Mongol Banners (Dzungars were a Western Mongol tribe warring with the Manchus; Mongols were converted to Lamaism).

I remember reading specifically that the Manchus sent an army to help deal with the Gurkha situation 'cause it was so unusual.

By the mid 19th Century Manchu power was waning and in 1856 when faced with another Ghurka invasion the Chinese did not respond. The Nepalese exacted an annual tax on Tibet. A period followed of intense rivalry between the British Raj in India and the Russians. The British fearing that the Russians wanted to control Tibet as a gateway to India.
Strange. Remembered that the last Nepalese tribute mission to the Manchu court was in 1908 or 1909, right before the Chinese Revolution of 1911. Anyways, all China was in turmoil, due to the Taipings, fr 1850s onward.

The Great Game, the second part.
 
hehe military history an interest for you too?
Or just that region?

Ellie
 
Originally posted by Michael York
The famed US Army was Patton's 3rd Army, but that was not so much the unit as it was its brilliant commander.

I think the brave men who gave their lives for Patton's victories deserve a teeny bit of credit...;)
 
Originally posted by ellie
hehe military history an interest for you too?
Or just that region?

Ellie
I'm generally interested in history. If you've been posting in the History forum awhile, you can probably find a good many of my posts... :)

Esp interested in Chinese history, since I'm Chinese. ;)
 
Absolutely, but that is true of the 1st army too. Patton was a tremendous general who inspite of inferior tanks (Grants & Shermans), still managed to motivate his troops to being the best in our army and lead them like no other American general.

Sorry for my tone, I guess I unintentionally down played our soldiers' bravery. (I won't get into US drafting policies & such for while accurate, its best left in a class room rather than brought out to insult our brave men to whom I owe an unrepayable debt)
 
Nod michael i know what you mean about unpayable debt, it made me feel very humble when i read of the battle of britain for instance.



Ellie
 
75th Ranger Regiment and 82nd Airborne Division I served in both :)
 
@wtiberon

A few people have mentioned the 82nd airborne.

I assume they are paratroopers like our paras?
 
Someone had mentioned the Coldstream Guards.
My Grandfather served in them, both in pre-war palestine, then in WW2 North Africa.
 
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Unit History and Information
 
The SBS are considered the more 'elite' due to the fact that they only recruit from the Royal Marines and use the SAS course as a beginner's course.

The SAS is open to entry from any branch of the service, you can be a logistics clerk one day, SAS the next.
 
nod ozscott think i mentioned that but ive never heard the s.a.s selection described as a begineers course before :-)

Ellie
 
Originally posted by ozscott75
The SBS are considered the more 'elite' due to the fact that they only recruit from the Royal Marines and use the SAS course as a beginner's course.

The SAS is open to entry from any branch of the service, you can be a logistics clerk one day, SAS the next.

Oz,
I think you are being frivilous. ;)

The SAS is drawn from the paras, and has an extremely tough training and discipline regime.

This results in the damn hardest soldiers in NATO.

As many a dead guerilla and terrorist will testify...Well they would, except they're dead, see?
 
Calm down guys

Its true that you can enter the S.A.S as long as you have served the army for 3 years. And s.b.s are from royal marines (they share a cap badge).

But the s.a.s selection is still one of the worlds toughest. Why do you think the americans copied us ;p. Pass rate is incredibly low and they have seen action all over the world.

I think its silly to argue which of the 2 is best, they both have different roles. They are both amongst the best.
 

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Just relating what I've been told. By an ex-SBS shooter
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Hehe then im not surprised, theres a similar rivalry between the royals and the paras. They both consider themselves better than the other ;p

Ellie
 
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