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What are you going to strategically bomb? The Russian army is spread out in three fronts all over eastern Europe. You can bomb their supply lines all right but don't forget the Russians have an air force consisting of tens of thousands of fighters and ground attack aircraft and they are combat proven. Air superiority to strategic bomb is nowhere near a given and would might well prove extremely costly with little real effect. |
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the real problem was the number of communists in the roosevelt administration. the russians had superiority in numbers and the quality of armor. and much more practical combat experience. but the western allies would have achieved air superiority over the battlefield in a matter of weeks. the B-29 had the combat range to make it to moscow from england. barely. soviet air defense would have made it very difficult. |
the 17th SS "GvB" had ceased to exist 3 months before that pulling out of France. So already their "entirely factual" recount has a HUGE hole in it.
But interesting nonetheless. However, some of the 17th's survivors did form up with some 6th SS survivors and a cadet school from nearby Bad Tolz, and did end up in that general area at the very end of the war as a "reformed" division called the 38th SS "Nibelungen". However they pretty much just got their ass kicked for their entire existence as they had virtually no supply, were mostly replaced with Hitler Youth children, and most of the veterans were just trying to survive. That division at least existed at the time of this story and surrendered 8 May, 20 miles Northeast of that castle. Since they were the only SS Division in the area of which I know, and were 20 miles away busily getting their asses handed to them by other American divisions (in Bavarian hills and mountains, and on foot), I kinda have to call bull**** on this one. Fun story, though. Either they have the name of the attacking SS Division wrong, or, like most heroic war stories, are full of **** and exaggerations. A group of zealot SS-men, or more likely Waffen-SS unfortunates that were rounded up by some local Allgemeine-SS f-tards because they knew who was in the castle and wanted them terminated? Maybe. A divison? No way. |
At the end of the war I could see how they would have turned against the S.S.
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I don't think we would have lost, but pay dearly for the win and it would been drawn out with lots of lives lost. Now, the better question, who would be on our side and how much more will they want their country torn up by pushing them back. Would the Canadian and the Australian be there with us? And what benefit will they have over the win?
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And the logistics part of it. We could strike their manufacturing cores, they did not have that capability. We controlled the sea lanes. |
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Thanks for posting. You're absolutely right - I've never heard of this story before, and was a history major with a focus on WW2
What I think is really shocking is a documented story of Frenchmen actually picking a weapon up and fighting;) |
Cool thread about ww2.
An opinion piece on cracked.com about operation unthinkable: http://www.cracked.com/article_18722_5-unfought-wars-that-would-have-changed-everything_p2.html Operation Unthinkable As World War II started to wind down in Europe, it became clear that the U.S. and USSR would emerge as the two dominant superpowers of Earth. This did not bode well with various Allied leaders on account of Joseph Stalin being just as big an ******* as Hitler, but seriously... what could these guys do? The Soviets had already taken the biggest beating in history and emerged stronger than the Incredible Hulk. They possessed half of Europe, some of the best generals that ever lived and a military that now numbered something north of 10 million; the largest army in history, ever, and perhaps the most experienced one to boot. Seriously, who would want to mess with these guys, especially after winning World War II thanks enormously to their help? Churchill's fear of a Soviet invasion of Western Europe led to the British Chiefs of Staff Committee forming Operation Unthinkable on May 22, 1945. Although Churchill insisted that the operation was purely "hypothetical," it is worth noting that the plan's "overall or political object is to impose upon Russia the will of the United States and British Empire." In short, it was a contingency plan for a Soviet invasion that the Brits knew would never be coming because it was actually Churchill's plan for a preemptive war with the Soviet Union. Operation Unthinkable called for "the date for the opening of hostilities" on July 1, 1945, a declaration of World War III while World War II was still winding down. And it didn't help that Churchill was fully aware of America's successful nuclear tests. In his mind, the United States and the United Kingdom would United Ass Kick the USSR if the Soviets kept up their aggressive posturing in Europe. What Stopped It: Numbers. Sheer numbers. Ten million commies ain't nothin' but a thang. As blood drunk as Churchill was, his Chiefs of Staff were sober enough to recognize that the Soviet land forces outnumbered the Allies two to one. And that's after the British planned to rearm 100,000 captured German soldiers to invade the Soviet Union. Bear in mind, this would be the second time the Germans invaded the USSR. The success of Operation Unthinkable would depend on the Americans, who weren't interested in jumping back into war while they were still fighting in the Pacific. Or, at all. Truman wasn't interested in fighting the Soviets. Ultimately, the whole thing was dropped before it got off the ground. And then Churchill was given the sack. If The War Had Happened... If there is one thing that should be taken out of the entire chronicle of military history, it is that Russia is really freaking hard to conquer. Hell, we're not even talking about Moscow here; Stalin was prepared all the way back to the Ural Mountains during WWII. Russia had winters, it had rivers, it had more mud than roads, it had the army that killed the most of the Germans during World War II. The only way we could have come even close to winning this war would be if the U.S. dropped the A-bomb. Since the U.S. had only two of them in its arsenal and it took exactly two to win the war in Japan, we would have pretty much started this war by stalling the one in the Pacific. Most likely scenario: the Soviets would have kicked the ever-loving **** out of England and marched all the way to the Channel, while Truman told Churchill "I told you so." For more baffling plans of war, check out Nuke the Moon: 5 Certifiably Insane Cold War Projects. Or learn about some conflicts that were just plain stupid, in The 5 Most Retarded Wars Ever Fought. |
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Now, strategic bombing has NOTHING to do with the location of the operation groups as much as it does with two critical areas, manufacturing base and lines of communication. Remember, amateurs talk tactics, professionals focus on Logistics. |
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Despite their personal enmities and long-held political grudges, when it came to a fight the French VIPs finally put aside their political differences and picked up weapons to join in the fight against the attacking SS troops.
Wonder how long it took for them to drop and surrender? |
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Hmm. A google search turned up a archive of "Hellcat News" - 12th Armored Division
Excerpts from divisional newspaper printed in Germany shortly after V-E Day. Lone Sentry: "Hellcat News" - 12th Armored Division WWII Newspaper, May 1945, Germany Half way down, on the right side: Quote:
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Wow, how did you managed to fine that? Of all things, in the Hellcat news. What did you goggle?
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