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The never ending 'Post Mortem" (Read 2320 times)
Dec 29th, 2003 at 10:21am

Professor Brensec   Offline
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OK. WWII time!!  Grin Wink

There have been a million (or so) post mortems and examinations of all the 'what ifs' and the 'maybes' regarding what Hitler did and did not do. Most people agree that one mistake or another led to his inevitable downfall.

I don't know, and I don't believe any of us ever will, whether the Reich could have lasted any significant period longer than it did, even if Hitler had not made the 'glaring' errors and misjudgements that he did.

However, I feel, apart from the fact that he may well have defeated the RAF if he had not turned to bombing citiies when he did. Apart from whether the Japanese had stayed away long enough for England to be brought down before the US became involved. There is one aspect that may have made a significant difference, at least to the length of the Reich's exisistence.  ???

I'm talking about the hypothetical success of the Invasion of Russia.
What would have been the Reichs position, strategically and politically, if they had attacked earlier (or later) and actually swept across 'Russia proper', before the winter set in, and of course, if they had had a reasonable 'supply' line option organised??  Grin Wink
A situation where the Reich would not have had the 'Second' and very 'resource draining" front. Instead just a need for a reasonable sized occupaton force (and the inevitable SS and Gestapo operations).  ???
 

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Reply #1 - Dec 29th, 2003 at 10:25am

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I always had the feeling that if the war had not been conducted on 2 fronts the German invasion of the Soviet Union had a fair chance of succeeding. In that case I suggest that the world would be very different to what it is now.
 

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Reply #2 - Dec 29th, 2003 at 2:13pm

Professor Brensec   Offline
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It's hard to say. The Germans certainly came very close, to all three major objectives.
I think a couple more weeks of good weather and maybe.................. Grin Wink

But then, the Russians had a fantastic resilience. They also had huge numbers, even compared to the Germans. So they may well still have been able to recover, even after the loss of Stalingrad, Moscow, Leningrad and the Caucus's. The germans still had that huge supply line and one railway track!!  Shocked
I think the fuel in the Caucus's would have been a major factor on both fronts, had it 'changed hands'.  Grin Wink
 

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Reply #3 - Dec 29th, 2003 at 4:13pm

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The Barbarossa offensive was launched two months later than first planned. I strongle believe that given the extra two months and the German army would have succeeded in capturing all its goals. However, I also believe that the Russians would have regrouped beyond the Urals and counter attacked. The overall out come would have been no different.
 

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Reply #4 - Dec 29th, 2003 at 4:24pm

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And personally, I think the idea of not properly outfitting your troops when it becomes obvious the goal will take longer than expected for fear of damaging morale was insane.  I think more troops died from exposure to the Russian winter than the Russians themselves. 

Air - Geko.

Hmmm time to listen to WKSU and get my NPR fix....
 
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Reply #5 - Dec 29th, 2003 at 6:37pm

Smoke2much   Offline
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The war in the East was lost with logistics, nothing more.  The German high command did not plan properly and accepted ridiculously low estimates for the supplies needed.  Also the Germans relied on a huge number of vehicles that did not share spares.  One Corps could have 450 vehicles of 300 differant types.  This led to a supply nightmare of massive proportions.

In addition Hitler and his High command did not continue to modernise the army or airforce after 1941 instead placing too much reliance on upgrading existing designs.  One order from Hitler specifically forbade the development of new tanks.

Numbers were also against the Germans from the start.  Despite the massive losses that the Soviets suffered in 1941 by January 1943 the Germans were outnumbered 2.5:1 in Men, 3:1 in tanks and about 5:1 in guns.

When German advances in armoured technology did reach the front line they were poorly tested and thus failed to have the impact that they should have had.
For example at Kursk the new Panthers that arrived had not had their engines run in and suffered a massive breakdown rate (80% I think)

It was in my opinion, and as history shows, simply a matter of time...

Will.

*Note.  I am at work and the figures quoted cannot be guarenteed as 100% accurate as I do not have access to my books.  Sorry.
 

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Reply #6 - Dec 29th, 2003 at 6:53pm

Hagar   Offline
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This reminds me of a story a friend told me some years ago. He became friendly with a German family while on holiday. They got chatting one evening & the German told him he was on the Russian front in WWII. When winter came the German troops were very poorly equipped. mostly in summer gear. They had no greatcoats or decent boots for a start & to make matters worse, the cold affected their weapons. The high quality rifles would not fire due to the extreme cold. The only solution was to kill a Russian soldier & take his greatcoat, boots & rifle.

The only problem with this was that the Russian rifles had a distinctive sound, very different to the German ones. Apparently there were many instances of blue on blue when German troops clothed in Russian greatcoats & firing Russian rifles were naturally mistaken for Russians. It got so bad that an order was issued to the effect that any German soldier found wearing Russian clothing or possessing a Russian rifle would be shot on the spot. A classic Catch 22. Die of the cold or be shot anyway.

This particular soldier deserted & made his way back home. He finally arrived when the war was over. He was one of the lucky ones.
 

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Reply #7 - Dec 29th, 2003 at 7:07pm

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This was the tradgedy of the Russian Front.  The leadership on both sides seemed intent of causing mor damage to themselves than the enemy.

Take Stalingrad.  It held little strategic importance yet because of its name Hitler was determined to wipe it from the planet and Stalin was determined to hold it at all costs.  The Verdun of WW2 claimed an entire German army and countless Russians.

In less than a week Paulas had more men shot for cowardice than Haig shot between '14 and '18.  This was at the height of the seige.

The Russian front exemplifies mans inhumanity to his fellow man and was disgusting.
 

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Reply #8 - Dec 29th, 2003 at 7:28pm

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Stalingrad did have huge stratigic importance. If stalingrad fell then the Germans would be able to cross the Volga which was the last natural obstical between them and Asia. The russian oil fields would have been in german hands and so it would have been a huge blow to the russians. Not to mention the blow to moral that would have come from the fall of the city bearing stalins name.
 

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Reply #9 - Dec 29th, 2003 at 7:33pm

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But the strategy of Blitzkrieg demands that you bypass such cities and create pockets which then surrender. Hitler demanded that the city be leveled, which is where the mistake lay.  The area and crossing of the Volga was, as you state, important.  The city was not.

Will
 

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Reply #10 - Dec 29th, 2003 at 7:39pm

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Quote:
But the strategy of Blitzkrieg demands that you bypass such cities and create pockets which then surrender. Hitler demanded that the city be leveled, which is where the mistake lay.  The area and crossing of the Volga was, as you state, important.  The city was not.

Will

I'm sure the Germans had learnt from Leningrad that a surrounded city was not going to surrender. Stalingrad was an industrial city and could have lasted a long time in a seige. The stratiegic importance of such a city is massive. If the germans didn't capture it then they could have gone no further on that part of the front. And there were huge supplies of grain and other things to have in the city. Also factories and many other items of stratiegic importance.
 

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Reply #11 - Dec 29th, 2003 at 7:47pm

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Leningrad is a differant case entirely.  The Whermact were never able to completly surround it and it received supplies by sea.  Had it been landlocked it would have fallen like so many other cities before it.  I feel that the strategic significance of Stalingrad is clouded by the fact that it was so fiercly fought over for so long that it became important by virtue of the struggle that took place.

Will
 

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Reply #12 - Dec 29th, 2003 at 7:59pm

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I believe that Stalin would not have let Stalingrad surrender if it was surrounded. It was the only strongpoint on that part of the front and if it fell then the whole of southern russia and asia would be open to the germans. Blitzkrieg did settle for the bypassing of strongpoints however these were just things like bunker complexes etc and not entire citys. And when the city controls the stretch of front then you have no choice but to take it. Crossing the Volga would have been next to impossible if there was a Russian army sitting in stalingrad. Therefore the capture of the city was vital to the advance on teh eastern front.
 

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Reply #13 - Dec 29th, 2003 at 8:10pm

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I shall have to get to my books to carry this one on Woody....  I can't remember enough off the top of my head to contest what you have written.  I'll get back to you on it later mate.


I still disagree though Tongue

Will
 

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Reply #14 - Dec 29th, 2003 at 8:16pm

Woodlouse2002   Offline
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Right oh. I'm not at my best at the moment. It is one in the morning after all. And its been two years since I read Stalingrad. Tongue
 

Woodlouse2002 PITA and BAR!!!!!!!!&&&&Our Sovereign Lord the King chargeth and commandeth all persons, being assembled, immediately to disperse themselves, and peaceably to depart to their habitations, or to their lawful business, upon the pains contained in the Act made in the first year of King George the First for preventing tumults and riotous assemblies. God Save the King.&&&&Viva la revolution!
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Reply #15 - Dec 30th, 2003 at 3:03am

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Quote:
I believe that Stalin would not have let Stalingrad surrender if it was surrounded.


Hitler wouldn't let Paulas and the 6th Army surrender, but they did.  Given time a lost cause will always lose.  The operation to relieve the pocket got within 30Km of the city, if the roles had been reversed then the russian forces would have had as much choice as their German counterparts.

As to my earlier comments about the strategic importance of Stalingrad.....  Had the German Army had the mobile forces at its disposal that it had in 1941 they would have enveloped it and moved on but they did not.  Therefore the Volga had to be blocked using traditional methods and thus Stalingrad had to be taken.

The oilfields were well to the southeast of this area and apparently were not the reason but but rather the prevention of the use of the Volga as a supply line.

In a sense we are both correct, it held meaning because both sides contested it so heavily, if they Germans had bypassed it they would have crossed the Volga on either side and gained access to the oil.  They couldn't and didn't.  Had the city still been called Tsaritsyn I doubt that Stalin would have chosen it as the place to make his stand.

Will
 

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Reply #16 - Dec 30th, 2003 at 4:36pm

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So a draw then. I can live with that. Grin
 

Woodlouse2002 PITA and BAR!!!!!!!!&&&&Our Sovereign Lord the King chargeth and commandeth all persons, being assembled, immediately to disperse themselves, and peaceably to depart to their habitations, or to their lawful business, upon the pains contained in the Act made in the first year of King George the First for preventing tumults and riotous assemblies. God Save the King.&&&&Viva la revolution!
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Reply #17 - Dec 30th, 2003 at 7:14pm

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Me too Grin
 

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Reply #18 - Jan 1st, 2004 at 2:33pm

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Nice discussion, guys.

The World at War TV series devoted an entire hour episode to Stalingrad.  It was one of the best in the series. I have it on tape and if you ever get the chance to see it I strongly urge you to watch and tape it.
 
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Reply #19 - Jan 1st, 2004 at 5:05pm

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Quote:
Nice discussion, guys.

The World at War TV series devoted an entire hour episode to Stalingrad.  It was one of the best in the series. I have it on tape and if you ever get the chance to see it I strongly urge you to watch and tape it.

The entire World at War series was a good one. I don't think i've seen the one on Stalingrad but i've read enough about it. I'll have to wait intill they show World at War again. Its on about every year so I shouldn't have long to wait...
 

Woodlouse2002 PITA and BAR!!!!!!!!&&&&Our Sovereign Lord the King chargeth and commandeth all persons, being assembled, immediately to disperse themselves, and peaceably to depart to their habitations, or to their lawful business, upon the pains contained in the Act made in the first year of King George the First for preventing tumults and riotous assemblies. God Save the King.&&&&Viva la revolution!
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Reply #20 - Jan 2nd, 2004 at 12:29pm

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I don't know, and I don't believe any of us ever will, whether the Reich could have lasted any significant period longer than it did, even if Hitler had not made the 'glaring' errors and misjudgements that he did.



I saw a program this morning on THC (History Channel) about all the "super weapons" programs that the Nazi's had going....it covered of course the V1 and V2, the jet fighters and the 163 rocket interceptor, long-range bombers (conceivably to hit the U.S.), helicopter development, remotely piloted flying bombs, etc. Probably the biggest danger was their eventual development of  the atom bomb; something that the maniacal Hitler would surely have used to wreak even more devastation on the world.

All that said, I think any malevalent regime that is bent on world conquest is doomed to fail. Germany just didn't have the numbers to do it; they didn't have the manpower or any overwhelming technological advantage for global domination. In those European countries they did conquer, they were always going to be dealing with resentful and hostile populations and resistance....if they'd ever managed to defeat the Russian army, they never could have really secured such a huge country. As for the U.S. and our industrial might.....well, world conquest just wasn't going to happen for the Axis powers.....they just weren't that powerful!
 
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Reply #21 - Jan 2nd, 2004 at 4:17pm

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I think what was being referred to was not the Reich being defeated but a total collapse of the regime that kept the war going. A dictatorship that runs on confusion and squabbles between the lower echelons is doomed to fail before long.
 

Woodlouse2002 PITA and BAR!!!!!!!!&&&&Our Sovereign Lord the King chargeth and commandeth all persons, being assembled, immediately to disperse themselves, and peaceably to depart to their habitations, or to their lawful business, upon the pains contained in the Act made in the first year of King George the First for preventing tumults and riotous assemblies. God Save the King.&&&&Viva la revolution!
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Reply #22 - Jan 2nd, 2004 at 5:51pm

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I think what was being referred to was not the Reich being defeated but a total collapse of the regime that kept the war going. A dictatorship that runs on confusion and squabbles between the lower echelons is doomed to fail before long.


Huh? ???

I'm not sure I get the distinction you're making between "the Reich" and the "regime"......I think they're pretty much synonymous. I do know that, ultimately, "The Reich", including the Nazi government (dictatorship) and the military that it controlled only collapsed because of Allied military force!
 
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Reply #23 - Jan 2nd, 2004 at 6:03pm

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The reich was essentially Germany after hitler had expanded it a bit to encompas all german speaking people. The regime is the Nazi party. Wink
 

Woodlouse2002 PITA and BAR!!!!!!!!&&&&Our Sovereign Lord the King chargeth and commandeth all persons, being assembled, immediately to disperse themselves, and peaceably to depart to their habitations, or to their lawful business, upon the pains contained in the Act made in the first year of King George the First for preventing tumults and riotous assemblies. God Save the King.&&&&Viva la revolution!
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Reply #24 - Jan 2nd, 2004 at 6:13pm

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Hmmmmmmmmm........... Roll Eyes Grin

OK Woodlouse, thanks for the explanation!! Wink
 
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Reply #25 - Jan 2nd, 2004 at 7:05pm

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Interesting debate  Smiley

Russian Front: http://www.user.dccnet.com/russianfront/

The World At War TV series ws also put in paperback format. It was written by Mark Arnold-Foster and has the same name as the TV series. I don't think it's available anymore, but you might find it at some bookshops.

Has anybody ever read 'The Rise And Fall Of The Third Reich' by William L. Shirer?

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Reply #26 - Jan 3rd, 2004 at 2:26am

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Yes, I read the "Rise and Fall" about 20 years ago. It was very 'heavy reading'. It was also extremely detailed from a 'political' point.

Still on the Russian Front, and more specifically, Stalingrad. I saw the History Channel Doco recently and also have seen "The World at War" series. Both very good Docos, and very much the same. I think because the reasons, at least those generally understood to be the 'primary' reasons for 'the first german defeat', are very much agreed upon by most people who have studied the battle and the logistical and tactical aspects that pertain thereto.

Firstly, there is the late timetable. Definitely the 'primary' undoing of the Germans, which ultimately resulted in the other aspects that have been mentioned. These being:

Firstly, the lack of proper clothing for the German troops and their perishing due to the cold.

Secondly, this time German 'precision' did not help them, as the extremely close tolerance of their equipment, from vehicles to guns, tanks and even the 'small arms' just refused to work. They relied on the close tolerances that they were designed to, and the extreme cold just completely stuffed that.

Thirdly, as I mentioned much earlier, the Germans were always going to be in trouble with their suplly line. Hundreds of miles, with much of their equipment (guns, fuel, food ammo etc) still carted by horses, who couldn't stand up to the winter any better than the Germans, (who ended up eating them, more often than not), much less travel the roads that had be 'quagmires'.

That, coupled with the single railroad that had to carry everything as all the roads became impassable.
On top of that, Goerings promise that he could supply the 800 odd tonnes of supplies required by the 6th army by air. He ended up, on his best day, getting 90 tonnes on the ground. After the first few days of the Luftwaffes pawltry effort, the Germans watched the Russians over-run what pitiful amounts of the supplies that did make it through the Russian AAA, because they lost two of the 3 airfields they held a week before and risked airdrops.

All in all, they really didn't have a chance in hell.

But as I said, but for a few weeks (as in the case of the French and Swedish before them), they were defeated by the Russian winter. (Not taking anything away from the valiant efforts and horrendous losses of the Russians).

Even as late as early January, Paulus could have gotten the majority of the surviving 6th army (some 250.00) to relative safety, through a weak line between them and Guderians forces (only miles away), but Paulus at that stage wasn't ready to defy Hitler.  Grin Wink He'd just been made a 'Field Marshall' (Where would they find a 'Baton'??...........lol)

Seriously though, both sides suffered terribly, in what was surely the 'dirtiest', most attritious fighting of the entire War.
To answer a previous question, more Germans did die from cold, disease and particularly starvation (and suicide, many actually!), than were killed by the enemy.  Sad
 

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Reply #27 - Jan 3rd, 2004 at 10:17am

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Another problem with the Russian offensive was the western European "Bilizkrieg" tactic didn't work.  In France, Belgium, etc. the Germans encircled huge numbers of troops and cut off their supplies.  In Russia the troops could fall back indefinitely and could never been encircled.
 
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Reply #28 - Jan 3rd, 2004 at 11:59am

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Actually the blitzkrieg tactic worked wonderfully at the start of Barbarossa with well over a million russian soldiers surrounded and captured. But of course, that was before stalin let them retreat...
 

Woodlouse2002 PITA and BAR!!!!!!!!&&&&Our Sovereign Lord the King chargeth and commandeth all persons, being assembled, immediately to disperse themselves, and peaceably to depart to their habitations, or to their lawful business, upon the pains contained in the Act made in the first year of King George the First for preventing tumults and riotous assemblies. God Save the King.&&&&Viva la revolution!
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Reply #29 - Jan 3rd, 2004 at 9:05pm

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Quote:
Actually the blitzkrieg tactic worked wonderfully at the start of Barbarossa with well over a million russian soldiers surrounded and captured. But of course, that was before stalin let them retreat...


Plus - the Russians could "afford" to lose that manpower, and still manage to counterattack with fresh divisions from the Siberian front.  Since Japan never opened a second front, that freed the Siberian troops.
 

Felix/FFDS...
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Reply #30 - Jan 8th, 2004 at 8:39pm

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I've been recently watching a new History Channel series about WWII called 'The War of the Century'.  8)

It goes into quite some detail about many aspects. The latest installment dealt with the Russian campaign and more specifically the battle for and seige of Moscow.

The official figure quoted in the series regarding how close the Germans came was 40 kilometres (about 25 miles). Very close indeed!  Shocked

They gave some figures and info dealing with Russian POW's that I wasn't aware of.
Apparently Hitler decided, after something like 1.5 million Russians were captured during the first few weeks, that they would 'do away with them' by a kind of 'systematic neglect'. This included starvation, disease and freezing etc.

They quoted a figure of 4 million Russian POW's dying in German captivity. I don't recall if that was for the entire war, or just up till Moscow! Sad Shocked

There were interviews from veterans of both sides. Stories of terrible barbarism on both sides and also very touching tales of individual acts of kindness among enemies.
One German was under orders to 'summarily' shoot all Russian 'commisars'. he came across one and rather than 'murder him' (as he put it), he directed him back to his own troops, as he knew if he took him in, someone would shoot him and he would probably in trouble anyway.

Anyway, the amount of Russian prisoners taken by the Germans was absolutely staggering. Blitzkreig definitely worked very well in the oonset. I think it was more the winter that affected the Blitzkreig tactic more than the Russians retreating.
The reasons why Blitzkreig worked in surrounding 'pockets' of thousands, was that they couldn't retret fast enough to get away from the fast advancing armour and 'aerial' artillery.

After having seen this series, I still believe that had the Germans had only 3 or 4 weeks more of decent weather, the result in the East would have been very different.
I think the numbers and manufacturing capacity of tyhe Russians, against the supply problems and manufacturing limitations of the Germans would still have seen a Russian victory, but it would have taken much longer (I don't dare hazard a guess at how long - I don't know how people can calculate how muich loger these thing could have lasted, had one thing or another happened).  Shocked

Also I still believe that the story in the West would have been quite different for a while, had the Germans captured and held onto the oil fields in the Caucus'.  Grin Cheesy
 

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Reply #31 - Jan 9th, 2004 at 8:17pm

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I must say that although we talk about the barbarity of the eastern front, nothing is ever said about the barbarity of the pacific theatre. And i'm not talking about japanise treatment of allied prisoners. I'm talking american treatment of the Japs. Some American units were proud of the fact that they had taken no prisoners. Japanise trying to surrender were simply gunned down. And when they were dead, the americans plundered the corpses for gold teeth and jewelery. They even went as far as sending back skulls and other parts of dead japanise soldiers as souvineers and gifts back home. It's just disgusting. There were even reports of American tanks parading around with heads of japaninse soldiers stuck on to them.
 

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Reply #32 - Jan 9th, 2004 at 8:35pm

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Quote:
I must say that although we talk about the barbarity of the eastern front, nothing is ever said about the barbarity of the pacific theatre. And i'm not talking about japanise treatment of allied prisoners. I'm talking american treatment of the Japs. Some American units were proud of the fact that they had taken no prisoners. Japanise trying to surrender were simply gunned down. And when they were dead, the americans plundered the corpses for gold teeth and jewelery. They even went as far as sending back skulls and other parts of dead japanise soldiers as souvineers and gifts back home. It's just disgusting. There were even reports of American tanks parading around with heads of japaninse soldiers stuck on to them.


Somewhat astray from the original topic, but where did you come by this information, pray tell?
 
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Reply #33 - Jan 9th, 2004 at 9:10pm

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I, too, would like to see your sources on this.  As an American I am appalled that anyone would even suggest such activity.  I have seen film of American soldiers shooting flamethrowers into Japanese holes but I assumed, as the narrators have told me, that it was a last resort after the inhabitants refused to surrender.
 
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Reply #34 - Jan 10th, 2004 at 11:19am

Hagar   Offline
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Quote:
where did you come by this information, pray tell?

Quote:
I, too, would like to see your sources on this.  As an American I am appalled that anyone would even suggest such activity. 

Read this. http://observer.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,500631,00.html

Please remember that war itself is the atrocity. It can & does de-humanise ordinary decent people of all nations.
 

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Reply #35 - Jan 10th, 2004 at 1:23pm

Redwing   Offline
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Please remember that war itself is the atrocity. It can & does de-humanise ordinary decent people of all nations.


Very true!

I don't doubt for a moment that atrocities were committed by individuals or even groups of American soldiers acting on their own; I'm sure other similar acts were committed on all sides.

I've read several other posts by Woodlouse on other topics....he does seem to have quite an anti-American attitude (I notice he chose to recount only those alleged American acts of brutality). Also, the article itself, written by a British journalist for the "Observer of London", again focuses mainly on acts of barbarity by Americans (Mr. Burke, I've learned, also conducts interviews for the "Liberal Oasis" whose caption is "where the Left is right and the Right is wrong"....no hints of any bias there, eh?!).

Anyway, since Woodlouse offered us his entertaining account of American atrocities in the Pacific as a diversion, I guess I could divert to another war altogether. How about British atrocities in the Boer War, where innocent civilians were imprisoned in Concentration Camps, and where over 26,000 women and children died of starvation, disease, and medical neglect. Wonder what kind of propagandist spin "Woody" cares to put on that? Smiley
 
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Reply #36 - Jan 10th, 2004 at 1:31pm

Hagar   Offline
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I see no benefit in trying to turn this thread into a flame war. This would only serve to get it removed. PDQ

The reason I posted that link instead of many others I could have chosen is that it mentions British troops involved in atrocities. Also that it's about an old documentary (the article is dated 2001) shown on British TV so many people living in the UK will have seen it. I'm not sure it would have been shown in the US. The whole point is that no nation is exempt from this. It would be very naive to believe otherwise.

PS. It's worth remembering that the victors get to write the history books. The truth takes longer to emerge & sometimes never does. One side's hero could easily be the other's war criminal.

PPS. If you want the unbiased American perspective on this subject read this. http://www.skalman.nu/history/books-review-pacificrevisted.htm
Quote:
"The Pacific War and the Fourth Dimension of Strategy" (pp. 41-56, 34 footnotes, four images) is written by Ronald H. Spector, who holds a Ph.D. from Yale University and teaches history at George Washington University. He served with the Marine Corps in Vietnam and is a major in the Marine Corps Reserve, and was an historian at the U.S. Army center of Military History. Among his major books is Eagle Against the Sun (1985) which made use of declassified British and American archival material.

Spector deals with the social and psychological dimensions of America's Pacific war strategy in evaluating the popular perceptions of the Japanese in the post-Pearl Harbor years. The "fourth dimension" of strategy derives from an article written by Sir Michael Howard (1979). After the "sneak attack" and the collapse of diplomatic negotiations, the American public considered themselves betrayed and regarded the Japanese as a treacherous, fanatic, heinous aggressors, and as "inhuman animals" deserving of extermination.

Spector argues persuasively that these stereotyped perceptions of the Japanese, enhanced by propaganda including cartoons, posters, motion picture films, etc., was pervasive in all levels and classes of American society. This, he contends, would lead ultimately to numerous American atrocities in the Pacific Theater of Operations, including the fact that a relatively few Japanese prisoners of war were taken by the Americans--especially the Marines. He also concludes that this perception also contributed to a "high risk" naval strategy in the Pacific and an American impatience to win the war quickly and decisively. After 7 December 1941, the American public was unified and ready to endure real sacrifices in order to defeat-- "punish and destroy"--the common enemy. This "exterminationist" rhetoric--a term borrowed from John Dower (1986)--had an impact on American strategy, since war planners realized that the American public was unlikely to support a lengthy war with Japan. Therefore, a psychological dimension was added to operational, logistical, and technological strategies. Dower (1986) writes more fully about these issues.


The same is true of all nations involved in WWI & WWII & most other conflicts before & since. The enemy soldier is often portrayed as brutal & subhuman in order to give the opposing troops & the general public an incentive to fight.
« Last Edit: Jan 10th, 2004 at 3:47pm by Hagar »  

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Reply #37 - Jan 10th, 2004 at 1:44pm

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Quote:
I've read several other posts by Woodlouse on other topics....he does seem to have quite an anti-American attitude (I notice he chose to recount only those alleged American acts of brutality). Also, the article itself, written by a British journalist for the "Observer of London", again focuses mainly on acts of barbarity by Americans (Mr. Burke, I've learned, also conducts interviews for the "Liberal Oasis" whose caption is "where the Left is right and the Right is wrong"....no hints of any bias there, eh?!).

Anyway, since Woodlouse offered us his entertaining account of American atrocities in the Pacific as a diversion, I guess I could divert to another war altogether. How about British atrocities in the Boer War, where innocent civilians were imprisoned in Concentration Camps, and where over 26,000 women and children died of starvation, disease, and medical neglect. Wonder what kind of propagandist spin "Woody" cares to put on that? Smiley

I won't put any propagandist spin on any atrocities commited by anybody. Just because there is absolutly no excuse for them

The fact you must realise is history is written by the victors. Therefore you must dig pretty deep to get the dirt on those "history" chooses to ignor. I do not doubt that no american has written about atrocities commited by america. You very rarely find anything about British atrocities in the Boer war. If someone loses a war the the victor will always blame it all on them. They will dig up and exaggerate all they did just because they can.

Atrocities happen in all war, there is no denying that. But there is still no jutifying it. All nations try to cover up unfavorable things they have done. For example in Russia, when there was the arms race to get the biggest bomb possible, they had a little accident with an atomic device and blew up over 70 square miles of their country. Killing over 30,000 of their own people. So what did the government do? Nothing. They denyed that anything had happened and blamed the huge expanse of scorched country side to bush fires. This meant that no one knew about it intill the fall of communism.

Anyway, I chose to recount those american acts of brutality because it was extremely widespread and I only knew enough about those ones. Unlike some people around here I always make sure of what i'm saying before I say it. If i'd known more about British, australian or any other nations brutality then I would have gone on about them too.
 

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Reply #38 - Jan 10th, 2004 at 10:03pm

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Hey Woody, how come Britain and America get a captal 'B' and 'A' but australia only gets a small 'a' ???

Eh???    Eh????

I know it's only a typo, mate!  Wink Wink - Someone has to try to inject a little levity into this thread, in our nice new History Forum.  Grin Smiley Wink

With reagrd to the atrocities business. Unfortunately, WWII is often portrayed in light of the terrible atrocities that occured in all theatres both in civilain and military circles.

That's sad, because albeit very true that this conflict was marred by terrible acts on all sides, I'll say for the 100th time, I feel that it was the last War in which their seemed to be a clear moral 'purpose' and justification for the involvemnet of the Allies. At least in terms of popular opinion. People were fighting for the very freedom of the world, both in the Pacific and in Europe.
And there was certainly no doubt as to who were the aggressors.

This is of course, all History now, good and proper, long gone. I don;t doubt that British, American and Australian troops did aweful things to the enemy and sometimes there own.
I recall the film, "Saving Private Ryan", when they reach the top of the hill and there are Germans surrendering, they are summarily shot, and the perpertrators laugh about it (Cpt Miller, the nicest man in the world, looks dissappointed but does nothing about it!).
These men have just gone thru the hell of Omaha. They have seen their friends and countrymen blown literally to peices. They have seen young boys mown down mercilessly, over a stretch of sand. Of course they wabted to kill the 'bastards' who were responsible for starting this whole thing!
On the other hand, the Germans were following orders and defending their country, whether right or wrong, that's all they were doing.
Another GI yells out "Hold your fire! Let 'em burn!" when the Germans jump out of the pillbox on fire.

It's terrible that otherwise normal people are reduced to this sort of inhumanity in war, but it happens and no-one is really immune, if they are pushed to there particular limit.

I saw those two 'scenes' in Private Ryan and I didn't think any less of Americans because of the portrayal, because common sense dictates that they are but a couple of examples of the things many on all sides did.

The real guilty ones are the "How I won the war - by John Wayne" movies that gave the world the original impression of what war was 'supposedly' like for the 'good guys' (not Mr Wayne himself, but the producers and directors etc).



 

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Reply #39 - Jan 10th, 2004 at 10:33pm

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I think you've got it spot on there Brensec.  The point of battle is to prevent the enemy from winning by destroying his ability to fight.  This is most effectively achieved through killing the enemy soldiers.

Half the battle is won if the enemy are terrified before you even fire a shot.  This causing fear is easily done by letting the enemy witness the fate in store for them if they resist.  Weapons like flame throwers and phospherous bombs are not particularly effective in comparison to high velocity lead, but their effects are much more terrifying and thus they are used.

All sides commit atrocities during war time.  Any person who believes that their country has not done so is in my opinion a little naive.

I'll give a few examples of British attrocities as I'm a proud Englishman:

The Boer War.  It's been mentioned already....

Small pox in blankets given to Native Americans

The shooting of Prisoners of War (WW1 and WW2).  I have met several veterans of WW2 who have openly admitted that captured Germans were "disapeared" at times.

The fire bombing of German cities in 1945.  There was no strategic need, it was a punishment for the German people, nothing more.

The introduction of the small caliber high velocity bullet.  It is designed to wound rather than kill and thus remove three men from the combat zone per shot.


The list is endless, a war is the legalised murder of people.  As has been stated before, all war is attrocity regardless of the moral justification. 

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Reply #40 - Jan 10th, 2004 at 11:52pm

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The fact you must realise is history is written by the victors.


What I realize (and it's been for more than a few of my 40+ years now), is that it's more the time and place you're living in that determines the version of history you're exposed to.

Most rational people know that much of history, particularly earlier history, is full of half-truths, quarter-truths, exaggeration, outright fabrication, etc., etc. (without the mass-media that we have today.....who knows what the hell really happened!)....(and not that today's paparazzi always gets it right either, especially much of that tabloid crap!!).

Quote:
The real guilty ones are the "How I won the war - by John Wayne" movies that gave the world the original impression of what war was 'supposedly' like for the 'good guys' (not Mr Wayne himself, but the producers and directors etc).


The John Wayne war movies served as 'healthy propaganda' for Americans during WWII; they've long since been regarded as anachronistic by most Americans (at least above the age of 10 or so). On the subject of 'The Duke', I'll never forget seeing some old WWII doco about the Pacific war....I think it was about Guadalcanal. It featured interviews with surviving veterans of the battle. One old vet recounted how after the battle, John Wayne showed up; apparently just to make a patriotic, morale-boosting type appearance. This old vet said that the troops instantly began to boo and razz him! Even at that time, most of those soldiers had seen his movies, and after experiencing the real hell of war themselves, they regarded Mr. Wayne's movies as pure BS!
« Last Edit: Jan 13th, 2004 at 11:50am by Redwing »  
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Reply #41 - Jan 11th, 2004 at 3:47am

Hagar   Offline
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What I realize (and it's been for more than a few of my 40+ years now), is that it's more the time and place you're living in that determines the version of history you're exposed to.

This is quite true, or more correctly, what the leaders of the place you're living in would have you believe. I've been interested in history, particularly the history of the 2 World Wars, for more than 40 years now. At first I believed all the heroic tales I'd been brought up on. When someone later suggested that some of these were not true but government propaganda I was offended & dismissed them as unpatriotic nonsense. When further evidence emerged, due to the relaxation of security restrictions on official documents, I was forced to admit that not only were they correct, but there were many more similar examples where the ordinary soldiers & the general public had been misinformed - for whatever reason. The more documents that became declassified, the more I became disillusioned. As I said before, it takes time, sometimes many decades, for the truth to emerge.

As an "armchair historian" I have been looking for the truth ever since. That's all I'm interested in & what I think is the purpose of studying history in the first place. I hope that by unearthing the truth, I & others can learn by the mistakes made in the past & not make the same ones again. Unfortunately, not too many politicians & generals seem to do the same.

I'm not interested in apportioning blame or looking for any recriminations. I know only too well the frailties of the average human being. I'm fortunate in not experiencing war at close hand & realise that I might easily do the same things myself in the same circumstances. Who knows what the horrors of close combat can do to someone?

Very often the truth hurts. Although I don't like it when accusations against my own country turn out to be fact I can accept it. I might not like what I find out but I was not there & refuse to apologise for the actions of my countrymen. I would like to think that the great majority did what seemed best & right at the time. Most of them didn't ask to be there, they had to go wherever they were sent. I'm sure all they really wanted was to get it over with as quickly as possible & go home.

War is a terrible thing that can bring out the worst & the best in people. I've seen many accounts of barbaric atrocities carried out by ordinary soldiers of all nationalities. To offset that, I've seen many other examples of extreme kindness & compassion in unexpected situations, often at great personal risk to the people concerned & their own families.

<edit typos>
« Last Edit: Jan 11th, 2004 at 1:16pm by Hagar »  

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Reply #42 - Jan 12th, 2004 at 12:35am

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I agree with hagar and Redwing on both their last posts.

Hopefully, because of the releasing of documents that until quite recently, show the Allies as 'not quite so heroic and wholesome' in certain instances, and of course the likes of Movies like 'Private Ryan, Thin red Line, Pearl harbour (to a lesser degree), people old and young are beginning to see that war is nothing like it has been portrayed for decades by the media (especially television and cinema).

I only hope that this realisation, if it sinks in at all, will affect our future leaders to an extent where they won't be so ready to commit the lives of young men (and sometimes innocent civilians) to solve a problem.

Although i am mindful of the fact, that whilever tghere are the likes of your Hitlers, Mussolinis and I suppose your Bin Ladens and Husseins, there are always going to be times when the only option left is 'force'.
This is the sad part. there are some in this world who love and/or thrive on conflict, power and confrontation in the extreme. Whilst ever they have acces the the powerful positions, there will be these difficult times.  Sad
 

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