Battle of the Bulge Anniversary USA commemorating it's own failure?
#1
Posted 17 December 2004 - 06:30 AM
However, Hitler believed (and rightly so) that the Americans were the 'weakest link' and knew that they would crumble under fire, his hopes were that he could divide the Allied forces, both tactically and 'morale-wise'.
The Americans did crumble, a lot of them dropped their guns and ran (the exception to this was at Bastonge), and it took British General Montgomery to temporarily assume command of the American 1st and 9th Armies to 'stop the rot'.
A dubious battle to celebrate, but if Hollywood makes a movie about it, the USA will certainly be 'the heroes', saving the world singlehandedly.
#2
Posted 17 December 2004 - 08:16 AM
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Plenty of people have made that mistake. Admiral Yamamoto made a far better assessment than the Japanese and the Germans who believed that America was a decadent and weak culture.
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Yes, his hope was that he could persuade the British and the Americans to ally with him against the Soviets. He remained delusionally hopeful about this until the day of his death. Hitler's final years are marked by increasing insanity, paranoia, delusion and probably increasing schizophrenia, along with increased physical frailty and drug addiction. I wouldn't put too much stock into anything he said or believed after 1942.
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This is not true. The Wehrmacht waited for overcast weather to keep the vastly superior Allied air forces on the ground before starting their assault. The sheer surprise of their attack got them quite far, except at Bastogne where, as you noted, the 101st Airborne Division put up a dogged resistance. However, their fuel and ammunition soon became too low to keep up the pace, and when the weather cleared Allied air power halted the advance altogether. Then Patton, who had disengaged in the Saar shortly before and quickly moved to the Ardennes, flung his army into battle and pushed the Germans back again.
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Well, the historical fact remains that WWII was unwinnable without the USA. It is also probable that even if Hitler had knocked Britain and the USSR out of the war, the USA would still have been able to defeat Germany and Japan in the end.
#3
Posted 17 December 2004 - 02:06 PM
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#4
Posted 17 December 2004 - 02:25 PM
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I think that even if it had been, it would have been unproductive for the Axis to do so. Consider the vast numbers of aircraft and aircrew lost in the bombing of Germany. German anti-air defences were inferior to those of the Allies, and unlike the Allies, the Germans did not have virtually limitless supplies of aircraft and personnel to send over enemy territory every night.
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Toynbee's World in March 1939 puts the relative industrial war potential of the USA at 41.7%, Germany at 14.4%, the USSR at 14.0%, the UK at 10.2%, France at 4.2%, Japan at 3.5% and Italy at 2.5%. In their ability to produce war materiel and trained personnel the USA alone was far greater than all Axis powers combined. You could even add the strength of the USSR and France to them and they still could not match the USA. WWII was a war of production.
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Hitler could not launch Sealion. Every time he attempted to mass invasion barges, RAF Bomber Command would appear over the ports in question and bomb them to pieces. Even if he could have achieved air superiority, the Royal Navy would have sunk the invasion fleet in the Channel (air power being largely ineffective in naval warfare in 1940, and the Kriegsmarine being no match for the Royal Navy in quality or quantity).
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I don't believe that would have been the case. Had Britain been invaded, the Royal Navy would have either fought to the last, scuttled the fleet or just set sail for New England. In any case, given the achievements of the USA in naval production it would not have made any difference.
The fact as I see it is that the script for WWII was written before the first shot was fired. The Axis was doomed to lose, and whichever side the USA picked would be the winning side - and it was a foregone conclusion which side it would pick.
#5
Posted 17 December 2004 - 09:21 PM
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Germany's production only peaked in 1944, even though it had the snot bombed out of it. Japan's production capabilities vastly increased with the taking of the East Indies and South East Asia.
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I suppose, Hugo, you are mostly right, for there were too many mistakes made by the Axis, and a whole series of 'ifs' were the only things that could have made a difference. "If Germany had allowed women to work in factories (Like the US and Russia), if they had declared 'total war' to gear military production even higher, If Hitler had not made a few key tactical blunders....if he would have fired Goering the morphine addict early on....
As to the 'trained personel' of the US, I think only Italy fielded a more incompetent military.
#6
Posted 18 December 2004 - 11:54 AM
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Exactly. The USA had plenty of idle factories and thousands of unemployed workers who could be harnessed for production of war materiel and soldiers. The German economy was already overheating by 1939, as evidenced by the drop in standards of living experienced under Hitler and so forth.
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German production was borne up in large part by slave labour and by gold confiscated from the treasuries of occupied countries. This gold alone gave Germany a massive advantage over the Allies, who only had their own gold reserves (although Roosevelt had already confiscated all privately-owned American gold), but they still could not come close to American production.
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Because the production capabilites of the East Indies and South East Asia were considerable compared to Japan, this is true. However, because the production capabilities of all three were miniscule compared to the USA, it did not make a difference.
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Germany had a serious shortage of trained pilots. The men in German fighter planes were grossly incompetent compared to Allied pilots. This alone seriously compromised their air defences. Unskilled men are only useful if you have millions of them, as Stalin did, but Hitler did not. Furthermore, German radar technology lagged well behind Allied radar throughout the war (in 1940, the Germans still did not have any radar capability) which meant that their air defences were far more inflexible and incapable of rapid response and accurate threat assessment.
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It depends on who you are talking about, soldiers or generals. When discussing soldiers, it's all about training. A German soldier who had spent his childhood hiking and firing rifles in the Hitler Youth and seen action in the Spanish Civil War or some other theater was a better soldier than a US soldier who had spent several weeks in boot camp, who in turn was a better soldier than a Russian infantryman drafted from his field, issued a rifle and told which direction to run in.
But in the end, training and skill did not matter in WWII. It was an industrial-age war fought with industrial methods. He who could field the most men and the most tanks and planes would win, and the skill of the men did not matter so much. This is why Germany was never going to win. Although the German fighting man was highly skilled and brave, German industry could not back him up and German logistics could not keep him supplied.
It is possible to envisage a scenario in which Germany could have won, but this can only involve a human factor, i.e. genius on the part of the German leadership (which all too often embodied stupidity instead) and stupidity on the part of the Allies.
#7
Posted 18 December 2004 - 03:56 PM
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It is NOT a fact. That is your viewpoint and a lot of Americans.
#8
Posted 18 December 2004 - 04:01 PM
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#9
Posted 20 December 2004 - 07:12 AM
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No, it is a fact. I'd offer a better argument, but I notice that you didn't make any argument at all, so why should I waste my time on you?
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Add von Ribbentrop, Sperrle, Himmler and so forth to your list. The problem in the Nazi regime was that the competent men were all lower down in the command chain, whereas the blunderers and yes-men were in prime positions.
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At the start of the war the Germans had many veterans of the Spanish Civil War. However, within a short period of time these veterans had all been killed and German training programmes were very sub-standard compared to Allied programmes. Germany had such a manpower shortage that pilots were sent into the air with only a few hours of flying time when Allied rookies had been training for months.
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Even winning the Battle of Britain would not have guaranteed success to Sealion due to the power of the Royal Navy.
#10
Posted 21 December 2004 - 07:01 AM
caesar, on Dec 18 2004, 06:58 PM, said:
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It is NOT a fact. That is your viewpoint and a lot of Americans.
Actually, it is arguable that he's right, but only inasmuch as the Americans contributed HUGE amounts of arms to both Britain and Russia via the Lend-Lease act.
Without those arms, Britain may indeed have fallen.
As for the rest, there are a huge nember of war historians who disagree, and who say that Germany would still have lost without American intervention.
Japan is another story altogether.
#12
Posted 22 December 2004 - 09:19 AM
Even allowing for German mistakes, Britain would not have been able to hang on without American shipments of war materiel and food. And even with those shipments, Britain still stood no chance of invading Europe without direct American military intervention. Without an invasion of Europe, Britain would have merely waited until Hitler consolidated his gains in the East and then have been beaten down by the resources of the entirety of continental Europe.
The Soviets came extraordinarily close to defeat. Were it not for American aid they probably would have been defeated by Germany, and if Hitler had launched Barbarossa six weeks earlier their fate would have been sealed.
#13
Posted 22 December 2004 - 01:29 PM
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You are right, probably the biggest blunder (apart from trying to eradicate the Jews, for Germany may have developed the Nuke way earlier) was Hitler postponing Barbarossa, and then diverting much needed forces from Moscow to try to take Stalingrad based on it's name alone.
#14
Posted 22 December 2004 - 01:51 PM
The Nazis did not lose in 1941, they lost in 1942 by not taking Stalingrad. I believe by 1942 too, Russian tank production exceeded German production.
Following Hitler's blitzkrieg style, Moscow was the goal in 1941.
In 1942, the goal was more pragmatic. The purpose of aiming for Stalingrad was to control the oil resources of the Caucasus.
The encirclement of von Paulus was the decisive event in the war and that occurred in January 1943 although the Russian advances in the winter of 1941/42 were also very important.
In Europe at least, WWII was a visceral battle between Germany and Russia.
I happen to think that if Moscow had fallen, or even if Stalingrad had fallen, I still don't think the Germans would have won.
Lastly, after some thought, I came to the conclusion that no single soldier won the battle (although some soldiers achieved more than others). Which straw breaks the camel's back? The last one placed or all the others before?
Hence, it is wrong to say that Russia defeated Germany.
#15
Posted 22 December 2004 - 04:31 PM
Lend Lease for example, most of the Lend Lease tanks sent to the Soviet Union in the crucial year of 1942 were not American but rather British and Canadian. American tanks didn't start arriving in large numbers until 1943 and 1944 when the Soviets were taking the offensive and none of the tanks supplied to the Soviets from America were heavy tanks, they were no match for the German tanks that the Soviet Union had to face.
As for overall war production, let's compare tank production in the major powers. In 1944 the height of the war, Germany produced 17,800 tanks, America produced 17,500, Britain produced 5,000, and the Soviet Union produced 29,000 tanks. Furthermore almost all of the tanks produced by America were light and medium tanks while the Soviet Union built thousands of far larger and more powerful heavy tanks such as the IS-2s. The Soviet Union's tank production was effectively twice that of America's.
It's no doubt that American contributed greatly to winning World War II but they did nowhere near as much as the Soviet Union to defeat Germany.

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