Historical
Richard Sorge, King of Spies (2)
Sorge is in China After Sorge became a Soviet spy, he was mainly responsible for collecting intelligence and was sent to different countries to carry out missions, and set up a foreign spy network. After a series of successful missions, the Soviet spy chiefs of the time decided to send Sorge on a special mission to the East, to China.
By morrissey pepin3 years ago in FYI
Richard Sorge, the king of spies
He collected intelligence for the Soviet Union successively in European countries, China and Japan, and accomplished numerous outstanding tasks. The intelligence that "Japan will declare war on the United States" he obtained in Japan played a crucial role in saving the Soviet Union and even reversing the situation of World War II.
By morrissey pepin3 years ago in FYI
"Ghost Troops" in World War II
On June 6, 1944, Allied forces landed in Normandy, France, opening the second world war. A few days later, two Frenchmen riding bicycles through the cordon of Special Unit 23 of the United States Army Command were shocked to see four American soldiers lifting a Sherman tank weighing about 40 tons. "The French were kind of dumbfounded, obviously waiting for our side of the story," said Arthur Hillston, one of the American soldiers. "I told him, 'The American army is strong.'"
By morrissey pepin3 years ago in FYI
Mystery of the Woodman
Minnesota Iceman In 1967, a curious incident occurred in the United States, a body believed to be a possible "ape-man" was put on public display, immediately attracting countless people to watch and debate. Some people were amazed, some thought it was incredible, and some didn't believe the body was real.
By perla estrada3 years ago in FYI
Devil's Triangle: Sea of Death (2)
Such hurricanes may have been the most feared of sailors in the days of sailing ships. They could topple a sailboat or break a mast in a single blow, but sailors who have sailed around the Devil's Triangle remember the horror as very different from the devastation wrought by hurricanes. At that time, many sailboats were sailing on the sea. There was often no wind at all, so the sailboats could not move at all. They had to wait lonely on the sea surface. At the same time, their sailboat was in a huge whirlpool, and the dreaded sargassum was floating around the boat.
By urias shore3 years ago in FYI
The most Beautiful Nude
As soon as Cotillard set foot in England, she attracted the attention of the British from the nobility to the common people. People flocked to her motorcade's route, hoping to catch a glimpse. Cotillard's magnificent carriage was heavily covered with curtains. The Londoners had a way. They stood up in the air, they found the most famous painter, and when the wind lifted the curtains, they saw Cotillard's face, and the painter painted her.
By morrissey pepin3 years ago in FYI
Atomic Bomb Live
The two atomic bombs dropped by the United States on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan announced the dawn of the era of nuclear deterrence, but due to the immense power of nuclear weapons, mankind did not use them again for the next 60 years. Historical information can give us a detailed understanding of what kind of deterrence nuclear deterrence is, otherwise people only have boundless imagination.
By Elham Nazri3 years ago in FYI











