Polish Airborne
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Polish Airborne sectionThe Polish Airborne Brigade was famously parachuted into the terrible fighting at Arnhem during Operation Market Garden in 1944 in a desperate attempt to hold on the to shrinking British bridgehead. They fought a hard battle but were battered into defeat and submission after...
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Polish Airborne light mortar teamsAfter the first World War, most nations learned the valuable lesson of how effective close mortar support is, as a result most infantry sections now have at least one mortar assigned to it. The lightest mortar weighing less than 11lbs, this offered effective results...
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Polish Airborne medium mortar teamThe classic infantry support weapon. As with most armies of the period, the Poles adopted the 81mm medium mortar. Capable of laying down a rain of shells in short time, this is the weapon you want to either smother the foe with firepower or...
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Polish Airborne flamethrower and sniper teamsTwo teams for two different situations. For the close, gritty combat, no weapon fares better than the flamethrower, ready to turn your opponent to cinders. Whilst the sniper patiently waits upon a hill, finding the enemy NCO or Lieutenant and ready to create havoc...
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Polish Airborne PIAT anti-tank teamsThe PIAT was the British equivalent to the American bazooka. It had the same role as the main hand-held anti-tank weapon amongst infantry formations. The PIAT (Projector Infantry Anti-Tank) was developed from a spigot mortar design and fire a shaped charge missile with an...
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Polish Airborne MMG teamA .303 Vickers water-cooled machine gun offered fire support to infantry units. This was another weapon of World War I vintage that soldiered on through World War II and beyond, proving extremely effective at laying down continuous fire over range. With the Polish Airborne...
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Polish Airborne Polsten GunThe Polsten cannon was a development for the Orelikon. It appeared in 1944 and was much lighter and significantly cheaper to produce than the earlier weapon, but its main principle use was by the Navy and Air Force. Its only significant use by land...
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Polish Airborne 6-pdr anti-tank gunThis particular 6-pdr has a cutdown shield, folding trails, tie down points and other minor mods to enable it to be dropped on the battlefield. Having the flexibility to deploy a reliable anti-tank weapon really gives the Polish Airborne much needed punch against armoured...
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Polish Airborne 75mm pack howitzerThe venerable 75mm Gun was exported to Poland who used it with its old spoked wheels rather than the more modern pneumatic wheels on the French gun. Lightweight and durable, the 75mm pack howitzer became the go-to weapon for any airborne force within the...
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Polish Airborne Welbike ridersWelbikes were small, relatively lightweight motorcycles designed by the British to be used by airborne troops to rapidly relocate after a drop. Given to the Polish airborne, these bikes will provide a tactical advantage to the Polish, one the Germans won't expect. Models supplied...
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