Beautifull Chile Female Soldier (1 Viewer)

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Foxriver

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Apr 26, 2009
Several pics about Chile female soldiers.
 

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I think it is interesting that Chile uses a version of German WWII helmets.
 
I am not kidding, if there is one good looking woman must be living outside the country, I been travelling Chile from south to North since 1993 and I couldnt find any.
 
I think it is interesting that Chile uses a version of German WWII helmets.

Actually a lot of countries do. Even the US Army and Marines use a helmet that is influenced by the German helmets.

There is no a single good looking woman in that entire country, believe me I been there several times.

Must be a heavy photoshop.

:rolleyes:

Sorry but you country does not have the monopoly on hot women. Every county has its fair share of good looking ones and bad looking ones. Even your beloved Argentina has its fair share of bad looking ones.

Take off the biased glasses and come down now...
 
Actually a lot of countries do. Even the US Army and Marines use a helmet that is influenced by the German helmets.

Very true, when they rolled those out in the 80's that was my first thought. And Grau is right, I'm sure the South American military's were very influenced by relocating Germans at the end of the war.
 
... I'm sure the South American military's were very influenced by relocating Germans at the end of the war.

It actually has nothing to do with relocating Germans. In the 1880's the Chileans decided to modernize their armed forces. Having just destroyed the Danes, Austrians and French, the German 'Prussian' model seemed like a no-brainer. German military advisors remained in Chile until World War I and Germany sold Chile most of their arms and equipment. The 'goose step,' pickelhaube, tapered helmet, etc. etc. all pre-date Nazi Germany and were used by the Chilean military long before Hitler. Today, they are simply CHILEAN military traditions, and their persistence 20 years after the restoration of democracy is proof that they are not associated in most people's minds with fascism or Pinochet.
 
It actually has nothing to do with relocating Germans. In the 1880's the Chileans decided to modernize their armed forces. Having just destroyed the Danes, Austrians and French, the German 'Prussian' model seemed like a no-brainer. German military advisors remained in Chile until World War I and Germany sold Chile most of their arms and equipment. The 'goose step,' pickelhaube, tapered helmet, etc. etc. all pre-date Nazi Germany and were used by the Chilean military long before Hitler. Today, they are simply CHILEAN military traditions, and their persistence 20 years after the restoration of democracy is proof that they are not associated in most people's minds with fascism or Pinochet.
Well, yes and no.

There was a number of reasons that many South American countries adopted the Prussian martial disclipline and the equipment of the European armies, but I look back through the thread and try and see where Hitler and the Nazis were mentioned...and I'll be danged if I can see it.

Chile remained neutral during WWII, but did declare war on the Axis in the final months of the war. That doesn't mean that thier modern (this means post WWI) equipment wasn't influenced by the WWII German military equipment.
 

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My Uncle,on his way to Berlin at the end of WW2, was excited by the news that some of the Russian soldiers they would encounter were women. When he got there and saw them his gentlemanly assesment was that "they looked rather tough."
Some of those Chilean ladies do not appear tough at all!
Steve
 
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