Poor Sakura Fight 1 You are in a trench and have weapons at your disposal. You find the projectile and pull the trigger. Following this, the cannonade subsides. You look out of the trench and see that there is no one around. Shooter from Gliwice In December 1986, we sent a delegation from Lebanon led by Major Jeffrey Mandlberg, a logistics specialist. His task was to collect information about the situation in the Security Zone. Among other things, I had to check the food supplies and deliver them to the humanitarian aid mission, which was at that time in complete despair. On top of all the troubles on Christmas Eve, we lost contact with our transport, and this further aggravated our troubles. Since we had no contact with the outside world, he was forced to walk around the seven abandoned villages located at the southern tip of the town of Hebron. To get to the mission headquarters, he had to climb a steep and slippery scree. The next day, Mandlberg returned to Gliwice by car, from Intourist. I went with him. Four settlements were chosen for our route - two in the Gulf of Aqaba, one in Gilead, one on the eastern outskirts of Hebron and one more in Sheikh Adi on the Jordan River. Mandlberg was told that we would wait eight hours in Hebron, eight and a half hours in Gilad, and twelve hours in Sheikh Ada. Since we did not return at half past twelve, and then Mandlburg requested help from the headquarters, we contacted Yitzhak - our observer abroad - and realized that something was wrong. Only he could confirm what we saw from the hotel window, and no one else. Mandlalberg dialed a number in Kuwait, where he had left his “alarm suitcase,†and contacted the Center and Intourist. The other end of the line explained that something unforeseen had happened and that Mandlburg should return. We got into the car and drove back. At the exit of Gilad, we ran into two patrol cars, and Major Mandlung barely dodged them. Suddenly, on the other side of the road, we noticed several military vehicles rushing in our direction with flashing beacons turned on. They stopped ten meters from us, and soldiers poured out of them 3e8ec1a487
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