We breezed through the Museum of the Army in a couple hours, concentrating on the more recent stuff. Knowing a bit of military history--well, knowing your own country's version or versions--always makes for interesting experiences. I have been looking at war museums here and there for many years, but I think it has been since 1979 that I was at the Musee de l'Armee here in Paris. I was pleased with the coverage, extensiveness, fairness, and willingness to address some of the difficult parts of the story. Here are a few of the scores of pix I took.
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| They lost the Franco-Prussian War largely because they were still wearing silly hats | 
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| 1890s nationalistic board game  | 
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One of the Paris taxis commandeered for the Battle of the Marne; their 
importance in the battle has been exaggerated,the display said | 
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Rifles developed for trench warfare; "over the top" meant something very 
different then | 
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The account of American involvement in WWI was generous, 
I thought | 
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War posters were everywhere and good; propaganda is always 
a big part of the story for me | 
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| Thus | 
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| Then came another war | 
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| And another hero emerged | 
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After France's surrender, the French fleet withdrew to neutral or African ports; 
Churchill  feared it would eventually fall into German hands, and, after due 
warning, ordered it sunk | 
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Axis depiction of Churchill after the above; thousands of 
French were killed and the wounds between allies took some 
time to heal | 
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There is ample attention to the American war effort, in the Pacific as well as 
in Europe; here, a great model of the old carrier Enterprise, c. 1944 (Grumman 
Avenger torpedo bombers and Curtis-Wright Helldiver bombers ready for 
take-off), somewhere in the central Pacific | 
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| Rome, not Tipperary | 
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One of those episodes you hear rather less about sometimes: in 1942, 6,000 
Canadian troops were sent to land and attack the fortified Normandy port of 
Dieppe; the point and purpose of all this is rather shrouded in military and 
political history and intrigue; half the Canadians were killed or captured, the 
other half barely got back to Britain; more unhappiness among the allies; 
Churchill was in Moscow trying desperately to keep Russia in the war | 
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| Two years later, over Normandy | 
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| Liberation of Paris |