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#41
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![]() Figures dont't really agree, you know. France sent 8,410,000 soldiers to the front. Out of them, 1,357,800 were killed and 3,595,000 wounded. The only country that suffered higher losses in this war was Russia. There must have been close to a million slave laborers (guest workers, if you prefer) sent to Germany. I've seen newsreels of them returning, still in their 1940 uniforms. all the best -- Dan Ford email: www.danford.net/letters.htm#9 see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
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On Wed, 22 Oct 2003 02:42:58 +0100, "John Mullen" wrote:
"Mikhail Medved" wrote in message . com... (snip) OTOH they alsoguaranteed a fight with the UK, then still (just!) the world's leading military power. Any proof to that opinion? The "leading military power" was removed from the continent in a few weeks of actual fighting. The biggest battle was the battle of Alamein, in which they fiught a small German corps. That battle was actually on the continent of Africa. The real biggest land battle didn't come until 1944 when we teamed up with the US to invade German-occupied France. Meantime we were fighting in the air, at sea, and in the minor theatres like N Africa. Would have become important had we lost though, doubt it not. North Africa was hardly a minor theatre, in that given a German win, the loss of mid-east oil & Suez would have been critical to the war effort. The Navy was strong, of course, but so far no-one won a war on continent with only the Navy. We did not badly to win the air and sea battles with Nazi Germany. Neither was easy and both had costs attached. Of course we couldn't have won overall without the support of the USA and the USSR, both of which in their own ways hedged their bets until the decision to enter the war was forced upon them. Of the two, that of the USSR was IMO the less honourable. Of course, if that makes you feel beeter... Having a fairly balanced view about history, and exchanging ideas with people about it, both definitely make me feel better. John |
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#44
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Cub Driver wrote:
The book title, by the way, is Flyboys: A True Story of Courage, by James Bradley. After initially being put off by the moral equivalence (oh sure, the Japanese murdered, cooked, and ate bits of seven American fliers off Chichi Jima, but hey! Americans behaved badly at the Battle of Wounded Knee!), I've decided it's worth the read. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/AS...f=nosim/annals Thanks, Dan. I just ordered a copy myself at $14.00 plus shipping. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN http://www.mortimerschnerd.com |
#45
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In article , John
Mullen wrote: The RN may have been arguably the strongest although the USN was surely equal or better. The RAF was able to hold its own on the defensive (just) but it was in no shape to launch any real attacks on the nemey and the army was pitifully small in comparison to that of Germany and was for the most part less well equipped and led. 1) RN was still (slightly) stronger than the USN (see 3 below). RAF was, as you say, able (just) to do its job in defending the UK. The army was not nearly as pitifully small as in WW1 and could count on massive reinforcement in logistics from the colonies, which the aforementioned RN and RAF would guarantee would (mostly) get through. No the RAF was more than capable of holding out against the Luftwaffe. The germans had the wrong aircraft the wrong tactics and well, just about everything. -Even had they worked out what the strange looking towers round the south coast were for and demolished them, enabling them to knock out the RAF's frontline airfields, all the RAF would have had to do was to pull their fighters back to the North of London (out of the limited range of the german bombers) and continue sniping away. -The RAF ended the Battle of Britain materially stronger than when it started. -Of course they enjoyed the advantage of being able to recover their downed pilots, and a large proportion of even the most badly damaged aircraft, but they also enjoyed the most sophisticated command and control system in existance at the time, together with professional leadership, and an operational ethos which did not glorify the few aces at the expense of the majority of canon fodder. I could go on but I would recommend instead that you read "The Most Dangerous Enemy" by Stephen Bungay. Favourite quote from a German pilot, assured that the RAF was on it's last legs sometime in September 1940 "Oh look, here come the last 50 Spitfires ..... again" |
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On Wed, 22 Oct 2003 05:58:19 +0200, "Christophe Chazot"
wrote: "John Mullen" a écrit dans le message news: ... "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... (snip) The French were involved rather heavily in WW1 you'll find For sure, but not (with all respect) in the second. They were invaded, defeated, surrendered, collaborated or resisted according to taste, and then liberated themselves with the help of a third of a million US and UK troops. For most of the war, most of the time, most of them weren't involved. Figures dont't really agree, you know. France sent 8,410,000 soldiers to the front. Out of them, 1,357,800 were killed and 3,595,000 wounded. The only country that suffered higher losses in this war was Russia. That number is WWI French deaths, not casualties. Germany lost 1,900,000 appoximately, probably somewhat more than Russian (haven't seen figures I trusted for Russia) Austria-Hungarian losses were about equal to the French. Peter Skelton |
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"raymond o'hara" wrote in message .net...
"The Black Monk" wrote in message om... "John Mullen" wrote in message ... Yep, there still wasnt any oil in Siberia and that was the limiting factor for Japan. Accepted. I still think it's an interesting thought experiment to imagine what happens if Germany and Japan get their act together and do some proper joint planning either before or even during the war. The Panama Canal comes to mind. John I think that Germany would only have had a chance if it had done what Spengler envisioned it should do - become the leader of Europe. Had Germany attacked the USSR with the motive of liberating its captive peoples - through establishing friendly semi-puppet republics as was done following Russia's collapse during World War I - it is likely that Moscow would have fallen. And if I recall correctly, Stalin would have been ready to offer terms had Moscow been taken. Intelligent, not fanatic, leadership would have accepted such terms, which would have meant the gain of the Baltics, Ukraine, and probably the Caucuses. Had the Germans been statesmen they would not have had to contend with resistence in eastern Europe, indeed they would probably have had several 100,000 more allied troops. It is likely that even within Russia some friendly troops cpuld be had. Not Vlasov's sullen war criminals, but free cossacks from the Don, Terek or Kuban fighting willingly against their oppresors. If the Germans had wanted to make the war into a crusade for Europe (naturally at the expense of a few unfortunates - the French and Poles) they would have stood a chance of winning. Instead, of course, Hitler's war was a crusade only for his grotesque and evil ideology, as bad as if not worse than the Bolshevism he fought. In this world, the British would not have held onto the middle east with its oil, and the world would have been a much different place for the past fifty years. This alternative strategy is not as far-fetched as it seems. Elements in the Wehrmacht were outraged at the Nazi mistreatment of Eastern Europeans, and even within the Nazi party there was for example Rosenberg, an ethnic German from Estonia, who envisioned an allied puppet Ukraine stretching from "Lviv to Saratov" (there as an interesting article about this in the Ukrainian Weekly a year or so ago). Unfortunately, rather than statesmen Germany was led by madmen. Hitler's racial theories prevented him from making Germany a leader of Europe in the manner that America would later be. As Spengler predicted in 1936, Hitler's sick reich didn't last 10 years. BM this has been said a thousand times before in a hundred books . the truth is if they were reasonable thoughtful men they wouldn't have been nazies . Of course! BM |
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kirill wrote in message ...
The Black Monk wrote: Instead, of course, Hitler's war was a crusade only for his grotesque and evil ideology, as bad as if not worse than the Bolshevism he fought. There is simply no comparison between the explicit genocide promulgated by the Nazi ideology and the de facto repressive implementation of "communism" in the USSR. Well, the Nazis were at least honest about their brutality. For the millions who were sacrificed for the purpose of building the worker's paradise it is small consolation that some of their murderers thought that they were building a better world rather than just destroying subhumans. All this talk about "famine holocausts" is nothing but revisionist and Nazi apologist drivel especially considering that it originates from areas that never suffered through any Soviet famine and which actively supported Hitler during WWII. I dispute the latter statements. OF course talk of the famine was greatest in areas not under soviet control, where news was suppressed. My grandfather and a few others - a small minority of people from "velyka ukrainia" within the diaspora lived through the Famine, had family that died during it. While obviously the post-Stalin USSR could not be compared to Nazi Germany (though it was still worse than, for example, Franco's Spain), Stalinism, and Pol Pot's communism were not much different. respectfully, BM |
#50
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