WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
NWsider4-3-3 wrote:
i think the fall of france has been dissected - the french had numbers, but their tactics and land doctrinal focuses have nothing to do with why the germans failed against the soviet union and would have likely failed - even if they had captured moscow, in an alternative scenario.
i believe that franz halder was famous for lamenting that the germans would annihilate 8 soviet divisions and then 8 more would replace them. the germans did not have that luxury after they lost a full army in stalingrad.
my analysis would be that the soviets tanks were vastly underrated and the german tanks overrated and over-engineered. the soviets had the reserves, they had lots of wiggle-room to lose soldiers along with equipment and gain experience - at the loss of those soldiers and equipment. by 1943, the germans were fighting a front in italy and the soviet union and also worry about an invasion in france. war over. they desperately needed the japanese to open a 2nd front...something the japanese wisely avoided.
The Japanese did open another front. Unfortunately for the Axis, it was against the United States. Germany's inability to match Soviet numbers was their undoing. Obviously, I do wonder if taking Moscow in 1941 would have changed anything.
Hitler's career shows how much propaganda and perception influence events. He really had no business taking over the country. It was a remarkable accomplishment. And he also played a role in the early victories.
Yet, when you read The German Generals Talk, every loss was due to Hitler and every victory due to their own genius. Hitler has become a bumbling fool who slept in and lost the war. I would say his military sin was underestimating his opponents, and he did not have the numbers or allies to take on Britian, Russia and the United States. After taking Paris, victory fever did him in. When you have nary a setback from being in prison to being the master of Europe it's going to alter your psyche.
Dan Carlin's podcast on the perception of Hitler vs. Alexander the Great is pretty fascinating. And I wonder if the Panzers had arrived in Moscow earlier or if the weather cooperated a bit more if Hitler's legacy is completely different. History turns on muddy roads, and a devastatingly cold winter.
that's not quite the front the germans wanted opened...
as far as schickelgruber - the germans signed an armistice and when there wasn't one allied soldier on german territory. for that, their economy was shackled, they lost their colonies and they were not allowed a military of a nation it's size. their economy collapsed and i can understand the peoples' frustration.
as far as the japanese - the japanese were angered at the hypocrisy of the usa - no oil for japan's moves into china, yet the usa had it's bag of territories (philippines, guam, panama, puerto rico, hawaii)...while the british, french, dutch and portugese had territories in japan's backyard. when the usa embargoed resources, the usa took a clear stance on supporting china. i can understand japan's anger - everyone can have colonies and territories except us.