5 Answers
If he really wanted to boost morale, he could have taken a cargo plane with military personal headed over to do yet another tour of duty. Ride like the fighting men and women do. Not first class all cozy and well fed.
Colleen
| 14 years ago. Rating: 0 | |
Well a senator is neither a King nor a Winston Churchill. We can afford to lose one or 2 I think ;)
Top contributors in Politics category
Unanswered Questions
Thu mua phế liệu Phúc Đạt
Answers: 0
Views: 5
Rating: 0
Sunwin
Answers: 0
Views: 6
Rating: 0
xocdiaonlineclick
Answers: 0
Views: 2
Rating: 0
Spino io
Answers: 0
Views: 8
Rating: 0
78win - Trang Chủ Chính Thức | Không Bị Chặn
Answers: 0
Views: 5
Rating: 0
Qq88zacom
Answers: 0
Views: 6
Rating: 0
QH88
Answers: 0
Views: 5
Rating: 0
kk4betnet
> More questions...
Answers: 0
Views: 7
Rating: 0
1967
nlnnet
Colleen
dad59
suliz
King George V1 and Winston Churchill both announced their intention to travel with the troops on D day.
The king told Churchill he was vital as our military leader and couldn't go as he might get killed.
Churchill told the king, who did spend the whole war, including the Blitz, in London, morale would suffer if he was killed.
Neither would give in so neither was allowed to go.