Monday, September 10, 2018

USA news on Youtube Sep 10 2018

Hello. My Name is Matt.

What's your name?

It's great to see you.

I'm hungry.

Tunes, you scared me.

Matt, are you hungry?

Yes.

Watch this.

Wow!

What do you want to eat?

I want some pizza.

Magic! Cool!

Dream English Kids

pizza

rice

cheese

soup

fish

ice cream

What

do

you

want

to

eat?

Here we go!

What do you want to eat?

What do you want to eat?

I want some pizza.

I want some pizza.

pizza

What do you want to eat?

What do you want to eat?

I want some rice.

I want some rice.

rice

What do you want to eat?

What do you want to eat?

I want some cheese.

I want some cheese.

cheese

Do you want some spider spaghetti?

No, thank you.

Let's sing some more.

A little bit faster.

Here we go!

What do you want to eat?

What do you want to eat?

I want some soup.

I want some soup.

soup

What do you want to eat?

What do you want to eat?

I want some fish.

I want some fish.

fish

What do you want to eat?

What do you want to eat?

I want some ice cream.

I want some ice cream.

ice cream

Do you want some worm cookies?

No, thank you.

Great job!

Please subscribe for more fun videos.

Oh, hi! You're still here!

Let's watch another video.

For more infomation >> What Do You Want To Eat? Song Part 2 for Kids | Food Song | Learn English Kids - Duration: 3:04.

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9/10/18 16:26 (161 Russell St, North Wilkesboro, NC 28659, USA) - Duration: 15:01.

For more infomation >> 9/10/18 16:26 (161 Russell St, North Wilkesboro, NC 28659, USA) - Duration: 15:01.

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9/10/18 16:41 (161 Russell St, North Wilkesboro, NC 28659, USA) - Duration: 4:55.

For more infomation >> 9/10/18 16:41 (161 Russell St, North Wilkesboro, NC 28659, USA) - Duration: 4:55.

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Autoboy Blackbox : Dashcam App - 2018-09-10 19:04:09 I-75, Standish, MI 48658, USA - Duration: 2:19.

For more infomation >> Autoboy Blackbox : Dashcam App - 2018-09-10 19:04:09 I-75, Standish, MI 48658, USA - Duration: 2:19.

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9/10/18 15:06 (5229 Rock Creek Rd, Hays, NC 28635, USA) - Duration: 9:52.

For more infomation >> 9/10/18 15:06 (5229 Rock Creek Rd, Hays, NC 28635, USA) - Duration: 9:52.

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9/10/18 14:10 (168 Stone Brewer Rd, North Wilkesboro, NC 28659, USA) - Duration: 13:55.

For more infomation >> 9/10/18 14:10 (168 Stone Brewer Rd, North Wilkesboro, NC 28659, USA) - Duration: 13:55.

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Roy Keane accused of foul-mouthed Harry Arter rant - EVERY word of leaked WhatsApp audio - Duration: 3:22.

 Keane, Ireland's assistant manager, has been accused of calling Arter a "p****" and a "c***" back in May after the player was injured and unable to train

 It has also been claimed that Keane was involved in an argument with Jon Walters around Ireland's friendlies with France and USA

 A leaked WhatsApp audio of Stephen Ward surfaced on Monday in which the Burnley and Ireland left-back talked about the clashes

 "Apparently he [Arter] was getting treatment in the treatment room and Roy walked in and was like, 'When are you going to train you fucking p****?'" Ward said

 "Harry was like, 'What?', and he was like, 'Any chance of you training?'. "He explained the situation again and Roy was going off going, 'You're a f**king p****, you're a c***, you don't even care, you don't wanna train'

 "Harry was just going, 'Roy, I'm not speaking to you like this. I'm not listening to you

You're not the manager. You can't say anything to me'. "Apparently Roy was going mad getting worse and worse and Harry got up off the treatment bed and was walking back to his room

 "As he was walking back Roy was shouting down the corridor, 'You're a f***ing p****, you're a c***, you have been all your life' and that was really it lads

" Arter, who is on loan at Cardiff from Bournemouth, is understood to have requested not to be called up for international duty because of the spat but Walters featured in last week's 4-1 defeat by Wales in the Nations League

 Ward was not in the Ireland squad in May when the incidents are alleged to have occurred

 Ireland manager Martin O'Neill confirmed that on Monday in his pre-match press conference ahead of tonight's friendly with Poland

 O'Neill also said that Ward's version of events did not match what he was told how the incidents played out as he appeared to confirm that it was the Burnley defender's voice on the leaked audio

 He said: "First of all, Stephen wasn't there, he's just picking up on things, something that we talked about at the beginning of the week

 "I think differences of what was said. a confrontation with Jon and a confrontation with Harry

Jon is fine, absolutely fine. Harry perhaps not so fine. "If you're asking about Roy's criticism of players, this is my responsibility

I will take full responsibility of anything that goes on. "These two confrontations took place months ago, they happen all the time, I will be astonished if there isn't one between now and November

" Ward has returned to his club yesterday and will not feature in the friendly because of a foot injury

For more infomation >> Roy Keane accused of foul-mouthed Harry Arter rant - EVERY word of leaked WhatsApp audio - Duration: 3:22.

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A gun for hire or the private war of Rafał Gan-Ganowicz - Duration: 52:47.

Polish Television, Committee of Cinematography; Agency of Film production 'MARTA TV & Film'

Presents

A gun for hire

That is:

The private war

Of Rafał Gan-Ganowicz

Mao Tse Tung said

That a million pins can even kill an elephant

I took that to heart

And spent my whole life on sticking the Soviet elephant with my own private needle

That elephant bites dust

The stench from its festering carcass wafts around many European countries

People, be wary of the corpse's venom

I was seven when the war broke out

We lived around Wawer, just out of Warsaw

During the German offensive on Warsaw I lost my mother to a stray German bullet

So I lost my mother then, my father took care of me

My father left me in a cellar with the women and children who were hiding there

He told me to wait for him and went to fight in the Uprising

But he never came back

I was twelve years old

My father was a very important figure to me, I was closer with him than with my mother

Besides my father guided me threw life a few years more than my mother who died earlier

And the loss of my father came as a terrible blow to me

Especially since I had no family, no one to turn to

I didn't know what to do with myself, I was totally lost

Wondering in the outskirts of Warsaw I often met Russian troops

This was for me a strong clash with another form of civilisation, completely incomprehensible

It was imbued with some wildness, barbarism...

An excerpt from Gan-Ganowicz's memoir 'The Condottieres':

Who witnessed the passage of the Red Army at the end of the War, will never forget Soviet vandalism

What the Soviet could not steal, he destroyed

Why did they vandalise so?

Were they motivated by envy at the fact that someone could have lived in conditions that they, citizens of a superpower, knew only from cinema?

Or maybe that's the very nature of the Homo Sovieticus, fuelled with vodka

I do not know, but Soviet barbarism I remember

It was very strange to me

Later when I was in so called 'savage' countries

I compared the behaviour of authentic savages in the jungle

with that mob of the Soviet soldatesque

And I noticed that among real wildlings the urge to destroy someone else's possession does not exist

While there it was universal

Then started the Communist order in Poland

My fervent anti-communism that messed up all of my life, because I spent all of it fighting communism

Was not learned at home as of course I never talked with my parents about politics before the war

No one taught me, but communists themselves

This I want to strongly underline

That my anti-communism that consumed, possessed me all my life

Was born from them, it was communists that taught me anti-communism

I hated them.

For the prosecution of patriots, for the murder of AK members, for the 'pathetic reactionary midget'

I had a friend a bit older than me, he walked on crutches. Wounded in the Uprising, decorated.

When, as an orphan and invalid, he reported to the correct institution for support,

The red bureaucrat threw him down the stairs calling him, amongst other things, a bandit

Him, a cripple and a hero.

So... It transpired later, that is around the year 48'

A chance appeared, at least for me it was a great chance... Someone postulated and someone recruited another...

And thus groups formed, small and meagre at first, of snot nosed youth like myself

Engaging in what during the War was called 'small sabotage'

That is putting up some posters, painting slogans and fighting communism with mockery and humour

This seems carefree today, especially since it crossed the boundaries of decency and now hooligans smear over all the walls

...sometimes they pay a steep fine, but then we were shot at. I can affirm that the UB actually opened fire for such activities.

Rafał, the organisation has been compromised, they are looking for you

These few words from an accomplice on the Saturday of the 24th of June 1950, brought about one of the greatest turning points of my life

I had to disappear from where I was known. At first I thought I'd pose as a repatriates from the East somewhere in Wrocław

I had such an option, a contact...

The station was packed full with police and agents, who checked people around the ticket office and everywhere

In hid in the crowd and slipped onto the platforms

And I noticed next to the train for Wrocław a train that, according to schedule, was due to leave for Berlin in an hour

In under a minute I decided I will try to escape Poland altogether, which up till them was not at all my intention

I started to look for a place to hide in the coach

I didn't find any so I went out between the tracks on the other side of the train

And I started to look under the coach

I noticed that between the floor of the compartment and the suspension cart there was enough space for a slim boy to squeeze into

It was the last cart of a compartment

I hid so that I had my legs towards the movement, my head... back, and I wait

All of my fate, my future endeavours and paths of destiny stemmed from that moment

The rocking floor of the compartment touched my chest

I had to close my eyes

And so I sped threw the dark, spattered with gravel and dumbfounded by the roar

I was afraid

In the duration of this crazed journey I started to ponder my possible detection under the coach

I had a Walther with me

I had a Walther with me and I decided that under no circumstances will I be captured alive, because I knew all too well how they could torture a man in UB prisons

I was not afraid of death, I saw so many corpses during the Warsaw Uprising that I got used to it and was not afraid

But after all I was terrified of torture, I'm no hero

I was also afraid that under torture I could potentially betray someone

A man never knows himself enough to say that he will be an hero to the very end

And so I decided I will not hand myself over alive

That I will not die first, that I will defend myself, but certainly I will keep the last bullet for myself

We arrived at Poznań. In Poznań this train stayed for very long

Stayed for a very, very long time

And at some point I hear footsteps and the clangs of a hammer on metal

Threw a crack I see a pair of legs in railway uniform

Just the legs and shoes approaching me

So I with my Walther in hand had a crisis moment, but I decided that in no case will I shoot a railwayman

Because that's not the enemy

And I am 100% sure that the wheeltapper saw me

I saw his surprised face up close

And I noticed he didn't check the rest of the carriages but hurried away towards the station

I had a hard time, since I was sure that, since he stopped tapping, he must have went to denounce me

And then the train started moving, then I could be absolutely sure that the good old railway worker did not betray a compatriot

If it were during the war with Hitler, it would be normal. A Pole would not betray a Pole. But those were times when Poles betrayed each other more. Much more.

The journey lasted 24 hours

I found myself in Western Berlin, which was then reduced to ruin

I started walking in no general direction, I had no clue where to find the western sectors

I decided to pick a direction and stick to it until I find myself in a western sector or retreat and go in the opposite direction if I don't

At some point I noticed a small shop in a side-street, with baskets of oranges displayed in front of it

I saw oranges for the first time since 1939

And so I though that this might already be western Berlin

It was a Sunday, the police station was empty, there were only three German policemen I pointed at myself and said that I am 'Polnish'

And nothing more

So they, also with gestures while squawking in German, communicated to me that I should empty my pockets

They probably wanted some papers

Which I did not have as I tore them up under the train

But when I produced a pencil, some handkerchief or whatnot...

I remembered that underneath my jacket, tucked under my trouser-belt I had a gun

So, an amusing story, I quite innocently pull out my gun from the jacket

But the Germans jumped to their holsters and started to open them frantically as they were afraid it was some kind of an attack

When I gently handed them the gun like so they calmed down, took it away and locked it in a drawer

They put me in a car and drove me threw the city, I was interested so I looked left and right they took me to a big brick building with small, barred windows

It didn't look like a hotel, rather like a prison. I later learned that that was the famous 'Moabit' where so many people suffered during Hitler's times

And night fell, so the first night of freedom I spent in prison

I had to sign a protocol that all my things had been returned

I reminded them that I handed in a Walther at the police station so I told them I will not sign anything as I don't have the gun

And I had a gun

The American who interviewed me was very surprised and said: "You sir are now in a normal country, you don't have the right to bear arms...

so you should not demand any returned", so I in turn told him that to the best of my knowledge that gun served in the Polish Resistance

And I will not leave it to Germans because I have a sentiment to that gun and that if he insists I can give it to him personally

And I was so stubborn that he actually phoned the police station and the gun got delivered, he pocketed it and I suppose he still keeps it as a souvenir

"We drunk medical alcohol

Night conversations of people from an abnormal state, soldiers of the victorious camp in a camp overseen by the conquered

I was the youngest

From them I learned knowledge about Poland and the World that no school could have given me

It was a school of bitterness and a stifled yearning for revenge"

Maybe 99% of Polish refugees in Berlin chose the same path, that is enrolled for guard duty with the American Army

I spent a good few years in this formation

I joined those detachments with young naivety, I thought these were the beginnings of new Dombrowski's legions, that the Americans are forming a Polish army abroad

That this is under the authority of general Anders

That they will teach us how to chase the commies out of Poland again

But this was just half-civilian guard service, night watch

That was my first disappointment

The other was with that alcoholic hooligan element, demoralised partially by war

So I did not feel good, especially since this was in Germany, at that time I still had a great grudge against Germans

So within this guard formation I applied for a transfer to France

In affect of a deal between gen. Anders and the Fourth French Republic

Trusted Polish officers would have the opportunity to be trained

So that in the event of warfare they would know western codes and tactics and the emerging Polish partisans could establish communications with western HQ's

in this case, the French one

These internships were of course top secret

It took a few years, but I began to doubt whether I would ever be of use

I started doubting that there ever will be a war

Although the Cold War manifested itself, sometimes it did not, I doubted

I was was not counting on returning to Poland

For two reasons: firstly way back in a refugee camp in Berlin an American intelligence officer informed me I had a death sentence on me as they found weapons in my flat after I escaped

That was one reason why I could not even consider returning to Poland under the communist system

The second reason was that I stopped believing that that system will come crashing down any day now

I took my status as a political asylum seeker very seriously

I wanted to be always conscious that I am a political refugee and not an economic one

That I am not in the West to build myself some existence but to be of use in the fight

I won't say poetically: the fight for the fatherland, but the fight against the Red

Because as I already mentioned, the hatred for the Red, for Communism, burned in me all these years

And so I started to look for a way to fight the Red in absence of armed conflict

"If a mercenary is to a soldier what a prostitute is to a lover, I don't think there were any real mercenaries

These soldiers did not sell themselves to anyone who paid, and not even to the one who paid most

It was part of my instinct then"

After a few years such a chance appeared, when the French media informed about the participation of mercenaries in the war in Congo

Where the Congolese government was fighting a rebellion inspired partially by Soviet Russia and in part by China

When I learnt that they were fighting the Commune there, I decided to join

"Were my colleagues reminiscing about Vietnam or the Algerian war, I did not know

Dogs of war? Definitely

War was their element, their drug

I felt that these veterans of forgotten wars were linked together by something not yet accessible to me

I was jealous of them

Immediately I boarded a train to Brussels where I reported to the Congolese embassy where I met many like myself

And where I was accepted

Were the ones in the bar like-minded?

They were anti-communists for sure

But they sought something else in war

Something the taste of which I felt only later

Faithful male friendship, adventure, and above all the constant exposure to challenge

I later learned what paradise life seems when one ventures threw the flame of hell

What thirst of life has he who brushes against death, how tastes a glass of whiskey washing down the taste of sweat or blood

The drug of war"

I was quite insecure whether I would prove worthy, whether I would be an officer

Because it is not rocket science to obtain the rank and the verification

The art is not to mess up later

And until a man does something he can never be sure of himself

I was most afraid that I would be frightened

I was afraid... of being scared

I was afraid that since I had never been on the front-line, I didn't know how I would behave once bullets start whistling about

I decided to do my best, but one cannot know himself

My second problem was that I volunteered to fight the Red, but did not know what forms would that struggle take

The specifics of the war in the Congo I knew only from papers

And as we know journalists write colourfully, but with little substance

So I didn't know my fate

Before I arrived at Stanleyville, terrible things happened there, as is known

The communist revolution in the Congo, started by Lumumba and his collaborators

Was inspired by the Soviets

In the sense that they picked up the slogan of the October Revolution: 'Steal what was stolen'

They disseminated this slogan among the black populace adding a second: 'go murder'

Why murder? This was not a slogan of the Revolution, although they did murder during the October Revolution

But here the slogan 'kill the whites' was used so that the white man would never return

They provoked a real slaughter in and around Stanleyville

All whites were murdered, without distinction

Or rather, with a strange distinction

The better a white was, more popular, the more respected by people the faster they would get eliminated

Priests and nuns were horribly tortured, women were raped and killed; everything was pillaged

Pillaging had the same purpose as during the October Revolution: so that the thief will fear the return of the policeman

So that once he steals his fill he will defend himself from the return of the previous owner lest his loot be taken back

They were completely peaceful Negros from Stanleyville who had stolen something and were afraid because the white man had returned and could hang them

Rumours about us were terrible, that we were here to take revenge and that a slaughter of the blacks was impending

There was panic, nearly all of the black population fled to the jungle where they became the recruiting base for revolutionary units controlled by the Red

Our role was to quench the communist rebellion using the Katangese army

Tshombé's approach to pacification, which was reflected in our orders,

Was to round up as much of that dislocated, disorientated and terrified black population as possible

Take them out of the forest and settle them back into the abandoned villages

Get the health service up and running, make the hospitals and clinics operational

To reopen the schools, to normalise the situation

I used the word pacification, but it was more of a normalisation, a word I would have used had Jaruzelski not befouled it

My God, how that role suited me. I have a knack for community service

I also have a knack for army service, but I there I had the occasion to combine the two

I was simultaneously a soldier and a person bringing back functionality to a society that had suffered great misery

"The enemy's fire was weakening

I heard tam-tam's, repeated by the jungle without end

Time passed slowly

I remembered I had a bottle of whiskey in my internal pocket

Leaning on a trench I took a draft

Someone's eyes staring at me got my attention, I don't know what got over me, but I sprung up, sprinted across the road and jumped into the other ditch, to the surprise of three Italians

I took another small swig from the bottle

And passed it over to Alfred."

I had another problem, the problem of discipline

Discipline in such cases is based exclusively on personal authority

You can't punish a soldier because during the first ambush his friends can shoot you in the back

That means the commander must earn authority and only personal authority: no stars count, only the man counts

My battalion looked... miserable, the others had it all

They had Kalashnikovs, Degtyaryovs, they had Czech weapons, Soviet and Chinease anti-tank equipment, their arsenal was great

While fighting small detachments we captured large cashes of weaponry, nearly every time

In total I captured 42 tonnes of weapons

42 tonnes of weapons, while throughout the conflict I dispersed units totalling in number maybe some 2000 people

"Mulele mai! Mulele mai! Waves of frenzied Negroes walked, run, fell and rose up again. Bellowing and shooting blindly they dangerously approached

The jeep-mounted machine-gun shuddered in my hands with short bursts, sweat streamed down my face and only with terrible, almost inhuman will I suppressed the panic overwhelming me

I was afraid of that terrifying crowd approaching me. howling, almost invisible, maddened, roused by its own cries; inhuman

Not to overheat the barrel... save ammo... rationally... efficiently

More crowds came from the bush, urged on by the tam-tams

Mulele mai! Mulele mai! The black wave is coming, it will engulf us soon

Half a tape. The enemy is near. I have to make a wider arch with the muzzle. The tape is ending. Death?"

They also made use of the local population, but local as in from the jungle

Tribe wizards were afraid of the teacher and the priest

Every white man was a doctor, a sage, a person who knew everything

My Red Devils, who were the best Negro troops, also had it so,

When they were sent to attack alone, they would retreat upon being fired at

When there was a white man with them they followed him bravely because they were convinced whitey knew what he was doing

This system made whites indispensable,

Not only to instruct the army but to lead by example

That's why during the 4 years of fighting in the Congo 500 died

Which shows that the casualties among whites were 25% a year, much greater than for example the American losses in Vietnam

The shamans made use not only of their backwards authority

But also hashish, this they used to confound the dancing warriors, to induce a state of complete oblivion of any danger

These people were so intoxicated with drugs that they were unaware of bodies falling left and right of them, they pressed on, unto certain death

Fighting them was perhaps less dangerous than with the trained rebels, but harder because one was conscious that he is shooting at innocent people

At hazed innocent people

We were forced to do so, but their deaths, even by my hand, incriminates the ones who forced them

The shamans were quite diverse

One of my detachments once captured a small camp in the jungle

And there they caught a terribly painted, lipsticked savage

Dressed in monkey skins, with some amulets, animal fangs, a crocodile skin pouch with herbs in it... a complete half-naked savage.

He was dragged to my camp where he shouted wildly and thrashed about

When I had his pouch ripped off him I found a very strange document inside

It was a diploma from the medical department of the University of Prague

And so I had yet another piece of evidence, direct evidence

That, firstly, scholarships from so-called socialist countries were used to recruit revolutionaries all over the world

Secondly, that the Red's cunning was to make a certified medic into a shaman

Because a sorcerer generates enthusiasm than a doctor

And here someone who learnt how to cure people

Swore the Hippocratic oath

Came not only to kill, but to force others to kill

That's how events today completely unknown to the broader public transpire

That was the reality of the so-called liberation wars that happened in various third world countries

"It has been almost a year since I returned to Europe from the Congo

It was hard to return among ordinary bread eaters which I held in subconscious disdain and had deep contempt for their mundane and human problems

'It's better to live one day as a lion than a whole life as a hare' I thought

I didn't want to agree to lay down my weapon

For a few months an urge was growing in me, the thirst for sun, for war, for great adventure

Life seemed to me a hellish roundabout of days: work, bed, metro, work, metro, bed and so on

Up until the horizon of a meagre retirement

I begged the god of war for yet another adventure

Upon returning to civilian life, my actions in the Congo turned out to have a net positive balance

Firstly, my dream to fight the Red came true

Secondly I took from the Congo a sense of self worth and a boosted morale

and a great sadness that I cannot return there due to political developments that would take too much time to describe

"The doors of 'Berbant' opened and two men entered the bar. I knew one of them, it was an old colleague of mine from the Congo

When they crossed the bar, tanned and confident, with typical, almost cat-like moves, the usuall bar clients scattered before them

I sprang from my chair to welcome them

I started looking around for another conflict with the Reds in which I could be of use

The only opportunity that was at the time possible was the conflict in Yemen

I found myself in Yemen at the best possible moment, that is when the Soviet advisors divided into two groups...

...one in was based in Sana'a and another in the port city of Hodeida on the Red Sea, where they were preparing a base for the Soviet Navy

Cave entrances masked with camouflage netting and the ominous silhouettes of machine guns reminded that this was not a summer camp

I was again a soldier

Foggy Paris vanished from my memory, only tomorrow counted

My best mate George slept in the grotto; I had a rifle within arms reach

I was happy

This was an excellent chance to face real Soviets and not their puppets as was the case in the Congo

My role in Yemen was variable

At one point I was an advisor to Emir Mohamed, first-in command of the royalist forces

At a certain point I headed the 'Military Academy' as we jokingly called it, I simply taught the Yemeni how to use modern weaponry

Especially armour-piercing

Then again at some point I directed artillery fire, that is the fire of our mortars

It was for me an undeniable source of joy that every piece of advice I gave and every shell fired harmed Soviets directly

"The first ones blew up on the roofs, the next on floors

party-members and people in Soviet uniforms were jumping out of windows

In a little-known country, in a war that few heard about, for the first time in many years a Pole could again stand with weapon in hand, facing the Red Army

My colleagues were surprised that I listened to the howling of the Katyushas with a smile and that my hands trembled while holding the binoculars

"Let him be" said George "he has his own score to settle here"

I "shot into" this avenue and "drove" the mortar over all the buildings

granting shells to the Eastern and Western embassies equally, as I thought the Western embassies were too eager to recognise the Red regime

When I shot into the Soviet embassy I kept up continuous fire for some time, so to be sure that that hive of thieves would be reduced to rabble

When the next day they said on the radio that diplomatic personnel are leaving Sana'a, I was greatly satisfied

"The red pest kills, it kills the body when it cannot kill the soul

We traversed burned villages, the Soviets were already then using genocidal tactics that they would later turn against Afghans and Chechens

Their aircraft attacked without mercy any human gathering

women and children died in villages destroyed by bombs and rockets

meagre crops were burned with napalm, cattle and flocks of sheep died massacred on purpose by Soviet pilots

That war against the weaponless was not a symptom of great sadism or animalisation on the part of the Soviet advisors

These were cold rules for waging war, planned in Moscow

At this time in the UN considerable pressure was put on Saudi Arabia to stop employing foreign mercenaries for the Yemenese conflict

That is, the Soviet Union and a host of third-world countries demanded our withdrawal from this war

"The MIG turned to face us. George started to shoot, I passed tape after tape

The pilot clearly wanted to waste us

If the enemy had good intel, the pilot could have recognised by our vehicle type that he was dealing with European advisors

Just as we, by the masterful piloting of the MIG knew, that we were dealing with a Soviet pilot

Under Yemenese sky, a Frenchman a Belgian and a Pole on one side, and a Soviet pilot on the other, waged war

This had its symbolic meaning"

After shooting down that MIG we learned that it's pilot was colonel Kozlov, head of the Soviet air force in Yemen

And he had with him a list of all Soviet personnel in Yemen, at least the officer part of that personnel

These documents, passed on to Saudi Arabia proved to the UN that the other side was not Yemeni, but Soviet

These documents caused the whole affair to be hushed up, and allowed us to stay in Yemen a bit longer

This war also ended unfavourably for the Reds, the Soviets never established a base in Hodeida and had to leave the premises

This is for me, a member of a nation that in one way or another was the looser of all wars, a certain success

The Yemeni episode concluded my career as an officer on the front line of the fight against the Red

It was not because I wanted to

Because I had the will and there were multiple occasions, but after my divorce I had to take care of my adolescent daughter

And so for family reasons I left the mercenary circulation

My colleagues fought on, I envied them terribly

Even though some of them lost their lives

They were good boys

Regarding mercenaries you would think, because that's what the word implies, that it was all about money

In this profession where you risk your life every day the wages were not high, so what pushed those people to put their lives on the line for a few coppers?

Some knew only the military life and sought to continue it

The motive of living a life of adventure, an unusual, non-banal life was strong

The financial motive played almost no part

Political motives dominated all other considerations

Moreover this was the case on both sides of the front-line

On the revolutionary side there were also mercenaries, but no one calls them that

The most famous Red mercenary was a certain Che Guevara

Cuba paid him to make revolutions in other countries and he was very good at it

No one slandered him to be a foul mercenary

Cuba approached me and my colleagues, we declined, although the wages were higher

To the average European the word 'war' is associated with a nightmare, this is also my opinion

The last World Wars, millions of dead, burnt cities, slaughtered women and children: this is a nightmare. I am not a proponent of war, I don't like war.

I don't like wars in which civilians die apart from the ones who wage it

What makes war abhorrent is the death of people who are not conducting it

A soldier we may accept is to die on the front-line, but not his wife or daughter

'My' wars, that is the ones in Congo and Yemen, almost were not violate the civilian populace

Our fight was exclusively against armed enemies

In both cases the enemy was better equipped than we were

So when we won it was due to brain warfare, it was a victory or tactics and strategy

You would win with IQ, not weapons

And such a war has a totally different aspect, it can be compared to a game of stalking, a great adventure

This is a war that is on one hand more humanitarian and on another much more picturesque

And such a war can attract it's 'postcard children'*

Around 1985 I started working for Radio Free Europe

RWE did not want me to use my real name so not to give gen. Kiszczak a chance to shout that a mercenary is working for Free Europe

So I worked for many years under the pseudonym Jerzy Rawicz

This did not stop gen. Pożoga from pointing me out in an article slandering the whole Paris immigration

singling me out, with name and address, as a bandit and murderer, although I never earned such epithets

But to him I owe a certain pleasure

In France a political asylum seeker cannot own a firearm, while I, out of sentiment, rather like to

So to gen. Pożoga I owe that the French authorities offered me a gun permit

From that time I have this little gun, which I really like

And so if gen. Pożoga will hear me, thank you, general

In Free Europe I worked honestly and eagerly

The atmosphere began to deteriorate around the time of the Round Table Talks

My political options stopped being liked and I stopped liking the options of Free Europe

So although I was paid regularly per month my presence on the ether became sporadic and in the end they actually paid me not to say anything

All in all, today, although I lost a lot of health and a few years on my wars, if one had to return to these years, I would return to them

I would again tread the same paths

That's it. I will not say anything more. I have nothing to tell.

Rafał Gan-Ganowicz, born 1932 in Warsaw, of Tartar roots, Rawicz coat of arms.

His father was in the Foreign Legion and later went to Argentina where he made a fortune, returned to Poland very rich during the Second Republic; his family lacked nothing.

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Fragments from 'The Condottieres' by Rafał Gan-Ganowicz read by:

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