@yekbevs: Emma Stone trying not to laugh 😂💀#EmmaStone #FunnyMoments #CelebrityInterviews #Wholesome #Relatable

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Tuesday 24 March 2026 08:59:56 GMT
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During the final months of the Pacific War, American forces on Okinawa encountered deeply concealed defensive positions in steep, heavily vegetated terrain. Japanese troops used tall grass, brush, and natural embankments to hide fighting positions from advancing Marines. To reduce the danger of sending infantry into hidden strongpoints, Marine armored units brought forward M4A2 Sherman tanks in close support. In the Pacific by 1945, some M4 tanks were adapted to project flame, a method used to ignite vegetation and force concealed defenders to reveal their positions when conventional small arms fire was ineffective. This footage shows a tank projecting fire into dense brush where defenders were believed to be concealed. Moments later, a Japanese soldier emerges from the smoke and surrenders. The scene illustrates how terrain shaped tactics during the Okinawa campaign and how armored support was used to reduce risk to advancing Marines in close quarters fighting. Follow for more historical footage. Sources: Zaloga, Steven J., and Richard Chasemore. US Flamethrower Tanks of World War II. (Oxford: Osprey Publishing, 2013). Estes, Kenneth W., and Romain Cansière. “The U.S. Marine Corps’ Tank Doctrine, 1920 to 1950.” Marine Corps History 6, no. 2. (Quantico, VA: Marine Corps University Press). Courtesy: Films of Marine Corps Activities, 1939–1965, Records of the U.S. Marine Corps, National Archives catalog. Photographer: G. F. Wolfkill. #History #historytok #ww2 #education #fyp
During the final months of the Pacific War, American forces on Okinawa encountered deeply concealed defensive positions in steep, heavily vegetated terrain. Japanese troops used tall grass, brush, and natural embankments to hide fighting positions from advancing Marines. To reduce the danger of sending infantry into hidden strongpoints, Marine armored units brought forward M4A2 Sherman tanks in close support. In the Pacific by 1945, some M4 tanks were adapted to project flame, a method used to ignite vegetation and force concealed defenders to reveal their positions when conventional small arms fire was ineffective. This footage shows a tank projecting fire into dense brush where defenders were believed to be concealed. Moments later, a Japanese soldier emerges from the smoke and surrenders. The scene illustrates how terrain shaped tactics during the Okinawa campaign and how armored support was used to reduce risk to advancing Marines in close quarters fighting. Follow for more historical footage. Sources: Zaloga, Steven J., and Richard Chasemore. US Flamethrower Tanks of World War II. (Oxford: Osprey Publishing, 2013). Estes, Kenneth W., and Romain Cansière. “The U.S. Marine Corps’ Tank Doctrine, 1920 to 1950.” Marine Corps History 6, no. 2. (Quantico, VA: Marine Corps University Press). Courtesy: Films of Marine Corps Activities, 1939–1965, Records of the U.S. Marine Corps, National Archives catalog. Photographer: G. F. Wolfkill. #History #historytok #ww2 #education #fyp

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