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The true identity of the secret letter found in the bullet

The true identity of the secret letter found in the bullet

Italy in 1944. This was the code hidden in a bullet by a soldier in southern Tuscany during a life-and-death struggle between the powerful allies in Normandy and the Germans. By 2015, zealots had found and cracked it.

There are enthusiasts in Europe looking for wreckage in World War I and World War II. Archaeologists and former soldiers are not very good, and there are countries that have broken the law, but whenever they are free, enthusiasts take metal detectors to collect metal sheets, helmets, machine guns, tanks, airplanes and top-secret Nazi research facilities from soldiers' name plates. There are both collectors with hobbies and people who want to get rich overnight.

Hidden password

This time, it was the metal detector enthusiasts in Italy who found this. I discovered it with a few little babies. For example, this is the badge of the 372nd Infantry Regiment of the 83rd Infantry Division. This is an army that has never fought in Italy, but D.M. The soldier with the acronym took it with him for some reason.

Um, however, there is no special element, it is an ordinary treasure. So he went back to the same place a few days later and found it here.

Shell casings are bullets that face up first. Um... What is it? Thinking about opening it at home, I found such a piece of paper inside.

弾丸から見つかった秘密の手紙の正体

What a secret message!

Carrying passwords hidden in bullets like this has been widely used since World War I.

What I care about is on the inside, but this is interpreted by people on another forum.

Unexpectedly, the German soldier was Manouk.

Yeah. In other words, someone threw it over without pulling out the grenade, so it means to pull the pin back. Right? Anyway, is there anyone who throws it without pulling out that awkwardness? If you think of it this way, you will have it. Italy has a grenade and two pins!

But if they were Italian soldiers, they would take them both off and throw them away. There is only one script that is considered to be like this. It must have been German soldiers who threw it.

It was also at this time in World War II that Italian soldiers hardly ever fought. On September 3, 1943, Vitttorio Emmanuel III and Prime Minister Pietro Bardorio signed an unconditional surrender in Casibil, Sicily. Rome fell on June 4, 1944 and Florence fell in August 1944. There were also Italian soldiers loyal to Mussolini and fighting the allies, but all Nazi Italian armaments were confiscated, as were grenades.

Because it was a grenade, I suddenly got it, so I didn't know there were two pins thrown out, and the next moment I would go back to myself.

Jesus Diaz-Sploid-Gizmodo SPLOID [original]

(Satomi)