/ausnz/

waiting for Chalmers edition

give me a bf named chalmers

ok, it seems like I have to make a new thread as soon I can from now on because these fucking Y*nks think they own the place

This isn't the fucking middle east, we don't have oil so you can leave us alone.

Pls don't lewd the Chalmers too much.

but I want him

>be mutt
>be fat ugly and dumb
>still be arrogant and imperialistic
We can only hope Isreal nukes them once the US has run out of its usefulness.

Why would
Why would you want that?
No u
No um no I'm not
Lazybones, why didn't you make a thread earlier

why would I not want a chalmers bf, he seems to be a good person

fuck off you attention seeking whore

Give my a bf in general God damn

new business idea: filter the mutt flag

Because I made the mistake of thinking that Y*anks had an ounce of respect.
It was my mistake, but it won't be made again
too many degenerates have deluded themselves into thinking they belong

Pls actually direct that at a poster

Fuck it's hard to make decent posts with the rain falling on my phone

He's not, trust me
Stop calling the kettle black Mr pot

stop posting anime grills

@Dunedin

I want to give him a chance, I think he deserves it.

I love it when Y*nks talk about gun control.
I actually support republicans on this issue because as far as I'm aware the more mutts that get murdered the better.

I'll consider it
He really doesn't

Don't like my posts Y*nk?
now you know how I feel about every post you make
now do use both a favor and make like a tree and leaf

I want chalmers!

You're supposed to say "make like a tree and get out of here"
I wouldn't get your hopes up

rare legs pic

>I wouldn't get your hopes up
why not?

Going to my drivers test now. If I fail I’ll post lewds desu.

but that's too predictable at this point

...

That's pretty thicc

Delete this!
Oh fuck I still need to do that instead of just driving around without a licence
Good point

where is chalmers?

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>Delete this!
no

...

I thought you said you deleted those

why are there cuts on that leg?

tfw no bf to discuss Yank perfidy with
I can't tell whose it is :

...

I thought I did
Apparently not as they are still in my /balt/ folder

He likes to cut himself, that little masochist

>I can't tell whose it is
A certain highschooler desu

>tfw chalmers isn't your bf

why is life so cruel?

>upside down
>wont fall off the earth

reprehensible

...

...

...

The multi-national military attachés and observers who took part in the Russo-Japanese War were expressly engaged in collecting data and analyzing the interplay between tactics, strategy, and technical advances in weapons and machines of modern warfare. For example, reports evaluating the stationary battle at Port Arthur and the maneuver battle at Mukden demonstrate the lethality of modern warfare and foreshadow the combined effects of hand grenades, mortars, machine guns, and field artillery in World War I.[2]
Japanese Minister of the Navy Admiral Yamamoto visiting the captured city of Dalny, just north of Port Arthur, in December 1904. Accompanying the Minister were several Western observers, including Italian naval attaché Ernesto Burzagli, who photographed the inspection tour.

Military and civilian observers from every major power closely followed the course of the war. Most were able to report on events from a perspective somewhat like what is now termed "embedded" positions within the land and naval forces of both Russia and Japan. These military attachés, naval attachés and other observers prepared voluminous first-hand accounts of the war and analytical papers. In-depth observer narratives of the war and more narrowly focused professional journal articles were written soon after the war; and these post-war reports conclusively illustrated the battlefield destructiveness of this conflict. This was the first time the tactics of entrenched positions for infantry defended with machine guns and artillery became vitally important, and both were factors which came to dominate in World War I.[2]

...

Stop spamming lame images dumbshit

wtf I don't remember taking that one
Oh..

From a 21st-century perspective, it is now apparent that tactical lessons which were available to the observer nations were disregarded or not used in the preparations for war in Europe and during the course of World War I.[2]

In 1904-1905, Sir Ian Hamilton was the military attaché of the Indian Army serving with the Japanese army in Manchuria. As the attaché to arrive earliest in Japan,[3] he was recognized as the dean of the group. Also amongst the Western attachés observing the conflict were the future Lord Nicholson, Chief of the Imperial General Staff; John J. Pershing, later General of the Armies and head of the American Expeditionary Force in the First World War; Douglas MacArthur, later a United States General of the Army; and Enrico Caviglia, later Marshal of Italy.

Press coverage of the war was affected by restrictions on the movement of reporters and strict censorship. In all military conflicts which followed this 1904-1905 war, close attention to more managed reporting was considered essential by the Japanese.[4] These concerns were considered inessential by the Russian command. The Russian press frequently revealed information deemed crucial by the opposing commanders; and the Japanese profited from the lack of military censorship on the Russian side. Information gathered from Russian newspapers was telegraphed by the Japanese military attaché in the Japanese embassy in Berlin; and it was received by the Japanese armies in Manchuria within six days.[5]

why does chalmers not love me

Why are memes being being spammed with no accompanying text content?

>am i kawaii /ausnz/chan
>uguu

>amerishartposts

Because Y*nks are brainlets who can't help but try and ruin a thread they don't even belong to
Typical mutt behaviour

You were drunk. Think its the same time you told dunners your address desu

Fine. If I can't get chalmers, who else is there?

Dunedin can go fuck himself


The Russian war artist Vasili Vereshchagin was invited by Admiral Stepan Makarov to observe the war aboard Makarov's flagship Petropavlovsk. On April 13, 1904, the warship hit mines near Port Arthur; and nearly all aboard were killed. Vereshchagin's last work was recovered. The salvaged canvas depicted a council of war presided over by Admiral Makarov.[6]
Selected military attachés serving with Russian forces
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
Russian Imperial Army

American observers

Capt. Sydney Cloman, U.S.[7]
Capt. William V. Judson, U.S.[8] Captain William Judson arrived in St. Petersburg in early 1904. He was eventually attached to the Russian Army in Manchuria and was captured by the Japanese at the Battle of Mukden on March 10, 1905. He was returned to the United States by the Japanese.[9]

Judson’s initial prediction about the Russians’ chances was positive. In a letter to the U.S. Ambassador dated July 26, 1904, he explained that the Russians were doing better than expected and believed within a few weeks they would have no reason to fear the Japanese any longer. He did cite that the war was not popular among Russian troops, but he felt their attitudes would change when the army went on the offensive.[10] Upon moving to Manchuria, Judson’s opinion of the situation began to change. In a letter to the U.S. ambassador dated October 25, 1904, he described the tactical situation as a stalemate and was not certain as to which side would be victorious.[11]

Judson was shocked at the carnage produced by modern warfare. He said in his official report, “I saw one battle in which the Russian slain outnumbered the Union dead on twelve of the greatest battlefields of the Civil War.”[12]

Col. Valery Havard U.S. - Colonel Valery Havard, an Assistant Surgeon General in the United States Army, arrived in St. Petersburg as a military attaché on December 7, 1904. He arrived at the front in Manchuria on February 8, 1905.[14] After being embedded with Russian forces just over a month, Havard was captured by Japanese forces at the Battle of Mukden. Upon reaching Tokyo he was sent back to the United States.[15]

The purpose of Colonel Havard’s observations was to ascertain important information about the changing battlefield and how to apply it to the Army Medical Corps. In his official report, Havard compiled a list of lessons learned from the Russo-Japanese experience. He noted the lack of frontal assaults that were the result of improved weaponry, particularly the machine gun. Flanking movements became more necessary to avoid the machine gun, which necessitated increased frequency and distance of forced marches. In previous wars, soldiers were able to rest at night and armies saw little action during winter months. Both practices had become antiquated. Attacks were often ordered at night and the waging of war never ceased, even in sub-zero temperatures. According to Havard, the result of these trends was soldiers experiencing an increased amount of battle fatigue, as well as resurgence in the usefulness of the bayonet in night assaults.[16] The Japanese claimed seven percent of their casualties resulted from bayonet wounds.[17]

>Y*nks are Lithuanians but with corrupted nigger genes
haha yes
I knew it all along

...

Can you be my bf? please..

Oh, not a good night
Yeah it's probably for the best, you should forget about him

Judson believed future wars would prove so costly that even victors would not be able to justify waging them. He viewed the Russo-Japanese War as conflict without a clear winner. According to Judson, both combatants were anxious to seek peace and had little to show for their efforts. He concluded that in order for the U.S. to promote peace, it must exercise diligence in preparing for war and be prepared for an international call for disarmament.[13]

According to Havard, casualty trends were changing with the employment of modern weaponry. Hard-jacketed rifle bullets were deadly at greater ranges. Despite this fact, the number of soldiers killed in action by the rifle diminished due to the increased effectiveness of artillery. The advancements in field artillery technology made it necessary for battle lines to be farther apart, resulting in rifles being outside of their effective ranges. The increased accuracy of modern artillery pieces led to increased ratios of artillery casualties. In some battles during the war, fifty percent of casualties were the result of artillery fire. Havard claimed that during Russo- Japanese War, both belligerents experienced higher levels of casualties than had been noted in earlier wars, with a great ratio of killed to wounded. According to Havard, one out of every four soldiers wounded during the conflict died from their wounds.[18]

Because you did your boogaloo all wrong, man

...

The posters of /ausnz/ are not for lewding, so no one really

Because of his observations in Manchuria, Havard recommended changes to the U.S. Army’s Medical Corps. He suggested the war department devise a plan to train and mobilize large numbers of medical personnel for war and to promote the development of civilian organizations like the Red Cross. Because of the increased number of casualties resulting from modern weaponry, Havard stressed the significance of training enlisted soldiers in assisting medical officers in field hospitals. He also spoke to the importance of devising an adequate evacuation system from the battlefield to military hospitals. He explained that railroads were of important in this process. Havard also advocated the implementation of telephone technology in order for hospital staff to have quick access to information from the battle.[19]

How is the missus Zvejnieks?
Also I just want to let you know that I love you and all my Y*nk hate is directed at the obvious recipients and not you.

b-but how will I get a bf? time to cry myself to sleep again...

But I'm Chalmers silly

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British observers

Gen. Montagu Gerard, Indian Army[20]
Maj. J. M. Horne, UK.[21]
Col. W. H. W. Waters, Indian Army[22]

Other observers

Capt. Nils Edlund, Sweden[23]
Capt. Carl von Hoffman, Germany.[24]
Capt. Oskar Nyqvist, Norway[23]

Russian Imperial Navy

Somerset Arthur Gough-Calthorpe, UK (1904–1905).[25]
Lieutenant Dimitur Dobrev, Bulgaria, present at Tsushima[26]

Selected military attachés serving with Japanese forces
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
Japanese Imperial Army
Japanese General Kuroki Tamemoto and his staff were photographed with Western military attachés and war correspondent observers after the Battle of Shaho (1904). The most senior of the military attachés, Gen. Sir Ian Hamilton, center, stands with left hand in a coat pocket and a stick tucked under his right arm.

American observers

1Lt. Granville Roland Fortescue, US Army[27]
Maj. Joseph Kuhn, US Army[28][29]
MG. Arthur MacArthur, Jr., U.S.A[30]
1Lt. Douglas MacArthur, US Army
Capt. Peyton C. March, US Army[28][31]
Anita Newcomb McGee[32]
Capt. John J. Pershing, US Army[33] Captain John Pershing arrived in Tokyo as an attaché to the Japanese Army on March 5, 1905. At that time he claimed the outcome of the war was uncertain, as both sides were bogged down after months of indecisive fighting. During his first days in the country, the Japanese achieved a pivotal victory at the Battle of Mukden. According to his memoirs, the way the Japanese celebrated led him to believe they had actually expected defeat at the hands of the Russians.[34] Pershing’s observations as an attaché were significant because they provided a first-hand account from the perspective of a company grade officer who had previously seen combat during the Indian Wars and the Spanish–American War.

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Dislike shitposting tbqh

you want to talk somewhere else?

get a trip so I can filter you thanks

I just filtered Y*ank posts
Thread improved 10x over

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According to Captain Pershing, the military attachés assigned to the Japanese were treated like royalty when possible. When not in the field, servants were provided and they were given the best provisions available. When they were embedded with the army, the Japanese exercised due diligence in ensuring their safety from battlefield dangers. Eventually Pershing complained of the overprotective measures employed by his hosts. When he attempted to write to his Army superiors about his dissatisfaction, the Japanese intercepted his correspondence and responded by allowing him more freedom to move about with Japanese troops. On occasion Pershing was present with Japanese cavalry reconnaissance patrols during minor skirmishes with Russian forces.[35]

In his memoirs, Pershing noted that most American observers were surprised at the tactical success experienced by the Japanese during the war. He explained that the world military minds held the Russian Army in high regard ever since its defeat of Napoleon’s Grande Army almost a century earlier. Though he praised the Japanese for their achievements, he felt they were not as significant as future history books might claim. In his estimation, the Japanese had defeated one of the poorest armies in Europe. The Russians lacked the proper equipment and organization to achieve victory against a modern power. He believed these shortfalls were compounded by the lack of motivation in the Russian ranks, caused by internal domestic strife. The war ended with both the Japanese and the Russians eager to seek peace. Pershing felt that if the war had continued, the Russians may have gained an upper hand as resupply of Japanese troops in Manchuria had become more difficult at the end of hostilities.[36]

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She's alright, getting ready to head off to work, you understand. Don't you worry your little head about a thing, baby, I know you're in a good frame of mind.

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Louis Seaman wrote a book entitled The Real Triumph of Japan describing the Imperial Japanese Army Medical Department’s success in preventing infectious diseases, especially in relation to casualties sustained. Seaman later wrote, "The supreme test of an army's medical organization comes, of course, in time of battle. The severer the clash of arms, the greater is the strain made upon the medical organization. In no great battle in history has the medical organization proven adequate to the demands made upon it; but the best record ever made in that direction, embodying as it did an approach to perfection, was that of the Japanese in the war with Russia." Seaman’s praise, intended to push reforms of the U.S. Army Medical Department, overlooked the reasons for the apparent success by the Japanese Medical Department. Seaman noted that although wartime soldiers throughout the nineteenth century were generally more likely to die from disease rather than from combat trauma, eight percent of the Japanese army died from enemy fire while less than two percent died from disease. However, he attributed the success to Japanese efficiency and did not consider other factors that may have affected the statistics.[37]

You were a wee bit silly ye.
Step 1: b cute
Step2: don't be not cute
Shitposting aside this is not a good place to look

what's a better Sup Forums general then?

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British observers

Richard Bannatine-Allason, UK.[38]
Capt. Alexander Bannerman, UK[39]
Maj. Aylmer Haldane, UK
LTG. Ian Standish Monteith Hamilton, Indian Army.[20]
Capt. Arthur Henry Seton Hart-Synnot, UK[40]
Col. John Hoad, Australia.[41]
Col. C. V. Hume, UK[20]
Capt. James Bruce Jardine, UK[42]
LTG. William Nicholson, 1st Baron Nicholson, UK
Capt. Herbert Cyril Thacker, Canada.[43]
Col. John Walter Graham Tulloch, Indian Army.[44]
Capt. Berkeley Vincent, UK[45]

French observers

Charles Pierre René Victoire Corvisart, France.[28]
François de Négrier, France.[46]
Charles-Émile Bertin, France.[47]

German observers

Gunther von Etzel, Germany.[48]
Max Hoffmann, Germany.[28]

Austro-Hungarian observers

Adalbert Dani von Gyarmata und Magyar-Cséke [49]
Erwin Franz [50]

Italian observers

Enrico Caviglia, Italy.[28]

Ottoman observers

Colonel Pertev Bey, Ottoman Empire[51]

Swedish observers

Peter Hegardt, Sweden [23]
Josef Hammar, Sweden

Japanese Imperial Navy
Italian naval attaché Ernesto Burzagli aboard a Japanese naval vessel at Yokohama en route to Port Arthur during the Russo-Japanese War (1904).

Ernesto Burzagli, Italy.[52]
William Pakenham, UK[53]
Ernest Charles Thomas Troubridge, UK[54]

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I refuse to post in a Y*nk thread
new

It's not even good shitposting, what do they even want?

When lithweeb did this he wanted us out if /balt/
When I did my lithweeb impersonation I wanted yanks out of /ausnz/
But these guys have there own general
I dunno, I'm not really looking for a bf,

War correspondents

Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett, The Times (London),[4] Daily Telegraph.[55]
Maurice Baring, The Morning Post (London).[56]
Richard Barry,[57] Eastern Illustrated War News.[58]
Luigi Barzini, Sr., Corriere della Sera (Milan).[59]
John Poster Bass, Chicago Daily News.[60]
Stephen Bonsal, New York Herald.[55]
Eugen Binder-Kriegelstein, Berliner Lokal-Anzeiger (Berlin Local Advertiser).[61]
W. H. Brill, Associated Press and Reuter's Telegraph Agency.[58]
_____ Brindle, Daily Mail (London).[62]
Francis Brinkley, The Times.[63]
Bennet Burleigh, Daily Telegraph (London).[55]
Robert Moore Collins, Reuters.[64]
Franklin Clarkin, New York Post.[58]
J. M. Cockran, Leslie's Weekly.[58]
Oscar King Davis, New York Herald.[60]
Richard Harding Davis, Collier's.[55]
Georges de la Salle, Agence Havas (Paris).[65]
George Denny, Associated Press (New York).[66]
William Dinwiddie, New York Herald.[55]
William Henry Donald, New York Herald.[67]
Martin Henry Donohoe, Daily Chronicle (London).[60]
James H. Dunn, New York Globe.[4]
Edwin Emerson.[4]

I could send you pics...

Idk m80 but here is probably not the place to do it. Try some of the other generals

Lewis Etzel, Daily Telegraph (London).[55]
John Fox, Jr., Scribner's Magazine.[58]
David Stewart Fraser, The Times.[39]
_____ Froissart.[68]
Lord Brooke, Reuters (London).[69]
_____ Hamilton, Manchester Guardian.[69]
Charles E. Hands, Daily Mail.[66]
J. H. Hare, Colliers Weekly[58]
Lionel James, The Times.; reported from aboard the SS Haimun[39]
_____Jensen, Berlingske Tidende (Copenhagen).[70]
Franz von Jessen.[71]
George Kennan, The Outlook.[58]
Edward Frederick Knight, Morning Post.[55]
_____ Konishi, Asahi shimbun (Osaka).[72]
Wilmott Harsant Lewis,[55] a/k/a William Lewis (war correspondent), New York Herald.[58]
Richard H. Little, Chicago Daily News.[61]
Jack London, Collier's, New York Herald, Harper's Magazine,San Francisco Examiner, Hearst Press,[4] New York Journal.[55]
Robert Joseph MacHugh, Daily Telegraph.[60]
William Maxwell, The Standard (London).[55]
Frederick McCormick, Associate Press.[55]
John T. McCucheon, Chicago Tribune.[55]
Francis McCullagh, New York Herald;[73] Manchester Guardian.[59]
Frederick Arthur McKenzie, Daily Mail.[74]
Henry Middleton, Associated Press.[55]
Thomas Franklin Fairfax Millard, New York Herald.[55]
W. G. Morgan, New York Tribune.[58]
Ludovic Naudeau, Le Journal (Paris).[61]
_____ Ota, Jiji Shimpo (Tokyo).[72]
Frederick Palmer, New York Globe.[4]
Percival Philips, Daily Express (London).[55]
Herbert G. Ponting, Harper's Weekly.[58]
Melton Prior, Illustrated London News.[55]
Charles à Court Repington, The Times.[75]
James Ricalton,[76] Travel Magazine.[58]
_____ Roucouli, Le Temps (Paris).[77]
_____ Saito, Nippon Shimbun.[72]
G. H. Scull, Commercial Advertiser.[58]
Richmond Smith, Associated Press.[58]
Willard Straight, Reuters.[4]

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Hanang District
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hanang District
District
Mount Hanang
Mount Hanang
Hanang District's location within Manyara Region.
Hanang District's location within Manyara Region.
Country Tanzania
Region Manyara Region
Population (2012)
• Total 275,990

Hanang District is one of the six districts of the Manyara Region of Tanzania. It is bordered to the North by the Mbulu District and Babati Rural District, to the Southeast by the Dodoma Region and to the Southwest by the Singida Region. Mount Hanang is located within the boundaries of the district.

According to the 2002 Tanzania National Census, the population of the Hanang District was 205,133.[1] According to the 2012 Tanzania National Census, the population of Hanang District was 275,990.[1]

The District Commissioner of the Hanang District is Moses B. Sanga.[2]

Contents

1 Transport
2 Administrative subdivisions
2.1 Wards
3 References
4 Sources

Transport

Paved trunk road T14 from Singida to Babati town passes through the district.[2]

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I can find plenty of pics with a quick search online, I'm really not interested in other people

Could we be friends at least?

Sorry, I don't think I'd make a good friend

you're not that bad Chalmers

Drama fags are HECKS