GregP
Major
Speaking only for myself Parsifal, I was in both the US Army and the US Air Force and participated in military planning in both as both an enlisted man and an officer. Perhaps you presume the people in here aren't militarily knowledgeable, but that may not be enirely the case.
Inventing war games doesn't make someone a military expert. It might make them good model builders. Successful prosecution of a military exercise with specific objectives tends to make good commanders better. A tactician doesn't always have the strategic view, either. You can win the battle and still lose the war.
In WWII the Germans were masters at tactics and absolutely the worst in the world at promoting capable leaders with a good strategy to achieve the objectives outlined by the government. I don't believe Hitler even HAD an objective other than to "win," which doesn't qualify as an objective to start with. The only good choices he made as commander in chief were Galland, Donitz, Udet, Milch, and Rommel, and he lost three in the end. Had Donitz been in charge, things might actually have worked out much more peacefully. At least he was a trained military man, unlike the erstwhile former corporal. Hitler should have stuck to painting.
He executed 84 German Generals. That doesn't do much for inspiring loyalty in the officer corps.
Inventing war games doesn't make someone a military expert. It might make them good model builders. Successful prosecution of a military exercise with specific objectives tends to make good commanders better. A tactician doesn't always have the strategic view, either. You can win the battle and still lose the war.
In WWII the Germans were masters at tactics and absolutely the worst in the world at promoting capable leaders with a good strategy to achieve the objectives outlined by the government. I don't believe Hitler even HAD an objective other than to "win," which doesn't qualify as an objective to start with. The only good choices he made as commander in chief were Galland, Donitz, Udet, Milch, and Rommel, and he lost three in the end. Had Donitz been in charge, things might actually have worked out much more peacefully. At least he was a trained military man, unlike the erstwhile former corporal. Hitler should have stuck to painting.
He executed 84 German Generals. That doesn't do much for inspiring loyalty in the officer corps.
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