:48:01
How?
:48:03
We escaped.
:48:14
Capt. Lescovar
has his doubts about that.
:48:18
If you escaped, why were
the Germans not pursuing you?
:48:22
We observed you for five miles
before we picked you up.
:48:25
You should've observed that we killed
two Chetniks that were following us.
:48:29
- The men with the bandaged faces.
- Exactly.
:48:33
Hardly a cause for congratulation.
Those two men were Partisans.
:48:38
Comrades of ours whom we had
infiltrated into the Chetnik camp...
:48:41
...so now all links with our agent there
are broken, thanks to you.
:48:49
I'm sorry.
:48:50
The fact remains
that we're Allied officers.
:48:53
There's no reason
we should be treated this way.
:48:56
I'm in command of Force 10.
I insist that we be allowed...
:48:59
...to contact the Allied mission.
I'm sure London informed you.
:49:02
We are informed
of many things by London...
:49:06
...very few of them
ever seem to materialize.
:49:09
However, you are right.
:49:11
I was informed of your mission.
:49:14
Personally, I doubt if it was
ever a practical one...
:49:17
...but now that you are here without
equipment, the question is academic.
:49:22
And you, major, you came here
as an observer, perhaps?
:49:28
No, sir.
:49:29
I was charged with a mission
of my own.
:49:32
It's confidential.
:49:35
Confidential!
:49:38
Sometimes I get the impression...
:49:40
...that London looks
on this theatre of operations...
:49:43
...as a convenient place for conducting
what they call "war games. "
:49:47
- May I speak to you personally?
- You are speaking to me personally.
:49:51
- I mean alone.
- No.
:49:55
The People's Army does not conduct
military business in secret.
:49:59
Very well, sir.