You can hear "shooter's down", several times, just a few seconds after Trump is rushed to the ground.
I think it's what I heard.
So they already got the guy?
Thanks my friend.
I think they will keep the old ones in storage or sell them to some African country.
You can buy the new model, it even comes in black.
It's quite inconspicuous if you remove the remotely operated machine gun and grenade launchers from the roof.
I believe each unit costs...
Over 35,000 police officers will be deployed in and around Paris for the Olympics.
18,000 soldiers and some 2,500 foreign police officers on top of that.
Looks like every police agency in France is getting new armored cars before the games.
The RAID (a bit like the FBI HRT) got those low...
That's a popular feature!
Our national police have that on their water cannons.
They also have some armored front-end-loaders ...
Those are from the 1980s but they have been recently repainted to look pretty on TV for the Olympics.
You would be surprised to learn how many French people are armed.
In my area, quite rural, where most people have a hunting (or shooting) licence, you never see any riots. Ever.
I believe it's the same thing in the States. All the rioting is always in the suburbs.
Never in redneck country...
Our anti-riot Gendarmerie units just got some new vehicles recently.
I already got to see them in action.
They will be deployed all over Paris during the elections and during the Olympics.
Old models of armored water cannons are still in use.
We have German cemeteries in Normandy, and all across France (both from WW1 and WW2).
They hold ceremonies at their cemeteries, and German officials are invited to all the events at Allied cemeteries.
Some German vets show up but they are very discreet.
They are not allowed to wear any uniform...
I'm glad he came back! :patriot:
So many of them never made it to the shore ... or died in the next few hours, days, after the landing.
You can be proud of his service and our country is forever grateful.
The city was occupied by German troops during the war.
Back then it was already a touristic site but French citizens were not allowed to visit anymore.
Only German officers came here.
Now they have a ceremony each year with US troops.
They do parachute jumps around the place.
It's a fortified medieval city island (13 centuries old) with a church on top, not a castle.
It's surrounded by sand, or the sea, depending on the time of the day.
Less than 30 people live there. It's the most visited place in France outside Paris with over 3 million visitors each year.
The...