This film is an Australian film, and the warring parties are the North Vietnam and the ANZ Allied Forces, so the content is basically a one-sided eulogy to the Australian Army, and it will not be objective and fair. The background is that on August 18, 1966, an ANZ task force composed of 105 Australian troops and 3 New Zealand leaders encountered a large number of North Vietnamese troops in the rubber tree garden. In the ensuing confrontation, 108 Australian troops fought fiercely with 2500 Vietnamese troops. Facing a 1:25 manpower disadvantage, the Australians retreated on the spot defensively. With the support of rear firepower, 18 people were killed and 24 people were injured. The exchange ratio was 5 times. The whole film reflects the level of the third-rate ANZ coalition forces. Soldiers are lazy, soldiers can disobey at will, and the chief’s logic is chaotic. When Westerners reflected on the Vietnamese troops in Vietnam War films, it seemed that Vietnam could only use human tactics. The North Vietnamese troops were portrayed as barbaric ancient fools who only understood "Long Live Charge" and did not have tactics. They were all human beings. There is absolutely no threat to go up, except for the number of people, there is no advantage. In fact, Vietnam learned a lot from Chinese masters back then, and North Vietnam is not a vegetarian. If Vietnam had just two things, it would have been dealt with by the United States. In 1979, when the masters were apprentices, they would not have done so hard for the masters... All The most impressive part of the film is definitely the artillery unit of the Australian Army. The muscle lines are easy to see bursting, and they are very strong. If this battle is not supported by artillery, it will basically be over. The play starts from 20 minutes to the end. The scene is okay, but there is no sense of urgency. There are no tactics. Only sudden shots, about 7 points!
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