| BELSEN | Nazi KL near Celle in Germany, liberated by the British army (6) |
| BUCHENWALD | Nazi KL near Weimar - one of the largest KLs within Germany (10) |
| SISLEY | Born in Paris of expatriate British parents, the Impressionist noted for rural landscapes such as Avenue of Chestnut Trees near La Celle-Saint-Cloud, Among the Vines Louveciennes, Regatta at Molesey a |
| AVENUE | - of Chestnut Trees at La Celle-SaintCloud; a painting by Alfred Sisley (6) |
| IRAQIS | People supposed to have been liberated by Bush's coalition of the willing |
| TOBRUK | Small port in NE Libya taken from the Italians by the British in January 1941 (6) |
| BOGOTA | City liberated by BolA-var, 1819 |
| TUNIS | It was a Roman city on the north coast of Africa, near the site of ancient Carthage. It was occupied by the Germans in 1942 and liberated by Allied troops in 1943. In The Tempest (act 2, scene 1), Seb |
| SAMUELADAMS | Author of the 1768 Massachusetts Circular Letter that resulted in the occupation of Boston by the British Army (6,5) |
| ASIANS | KL-ites, for example |
| NANCY | French city liberated by the US Third Army in September 1944 (5) |
| PENANG | Malaysian state founded by the British East India Company in 1786 (6) |
| GASMAN | The _ Cometh, popular verse-and- chorus song by the British comedy duo Flanders and Swann (6) |
| VIENNA | Signature song by the British new wave band Ultravox released in 1981 (6) |
| PUNJAB | Region of north-west India annexed by the British East India Company in 1849 (6) |
| MONS | Belgian city, site of the first battle fought by the British Army in World War I (4) |
| BROWNBESS | Nickname for the flintlock musket once used by the British Army (5,4) |
| DEKKO | Hindi-derived slang for a quick look, originally used by the British army in India (5) |
| ARABIA | A large peninsular region that was mainly under Ottoman control until a revolt, assisted by the British and French governments, during the First World War (6) |
| CAEN | French port liberated by the Allies in 1944 |