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German Sturmgeschutz III AUSF, G--Eastern Front, 1943--RETIRED--LAST TWO!!
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Forces of Valor

Item Number: 85097

German Sturmgeschutz III AUSF, G--Eastern Front, 1943

The Sturmgeschütz III (StuG III) assault gun was Germany's most produced armoured fighting vehicle during WW II.  It was built on the chassis of the proven Panzer III tank.  Initially intended as a mobile, armoured light gun for infantry support, the StuG was continually modified and was widely employed as a tank destroyer.
 
The Sturmgeschütz III originated from German experiences in WW I when it was discovered that during the offensives on the western front the infantry lacked the means to effectively engage fortifications.  The artillery of the time was heavy and not mobile enough to keep up with the advancing infantry to destroy bunkers, pillboxes, and other minor obstacles with direct-fire.  On June 15, 1936, Daimler-Benz AG received an order to develop an armoured infantry support vehicle capable of mounting a 75 mm (2.95 in) artillery piece.  The gun mounts fixed, fully integrated casemate superstructure was to allow a limited traverse of a minimum of 25° and provided overhead protection for the crew.  The height of the vehicle was not to exceed that of the average man.

While the StuG III was considered self-propelled artillery ,it was not initially clear which arm of the Wehrmacht would handle the new weapon.  The Panzer arm, the natural user of tracked fighting vehicles, had no resources to spare for the formation of StuG units, and neither did the infantry branch.  It was agreed, after a discussion, it would best be employed as part of the artillery arm.

The Forces of Valor ® replica is of a StuG III produced in die cast metal and plastic.  The turret turns and the barrel elevates.  Tracks roll on the suspension mounted road wheels.  The StuG III replicated was deployed on the Eastern Front during 1943.

RETIRED.

LAST TWO!!