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.....I never stated that the BPF was as big as the U.S Pacific Fleet; I recognise that it was a fraction of the size. I was making it clear to your blind mind that the British had a presence in the Pacific and aided the U.S there. As much as you might not appreciate it, I'm sure a lot of American soldiers and sailors appreciated a British presence in the Pacific.
A European war without the U.S would have seen Britain in Italy and the Soviet Union on the Rhine (most likely scenario). If that was the case Western Europe would be hoping that the Soviet Union didn't continue; like the Western Allies did in real life.
I'm sure everyone is aware what would have happened if the Soviet Union had continued in 1945 and smashed their way through Western lines; no one was going to stop it in a hurry. And personally I believe that Stalin would have stopped at Germany - the war had a large effect on him and the nation.
On the industrial point, stop comparing the British Commonwealth in 1944 to the U.S in 1944 - that's a mute point. It would be British Commonwealth after gearing up against Germany, which would have the largest industry?
You seem to be completely lacking of any clue; there's no side-shows in war. All points are pressure for the enemies resources and forces, in a war of attrition these "side-shows" are important to whittle away at the enemy. If these areas were unimportant then the Allies would not have made attempts on them, nor would the Axis.
You're boring, and the fact that you stated a loss of 275,000 men had no affect on the German war effort says it all ... do you know how many were lost at Stalingrad, sys, that turning point in the war? 300,000, a simple 25,000 more, did that not have an effect on the German war effort?
....All of those soldiers fighting in the CBI and other locations in the Pacific were holding up Japanese troops that Japan could have used in other locations against the US.....
....All of those soldiers fighting in the CBI and other locations in the Pacific were holding up Japanese troops that Japan could have used in other locations against the US.....
And just where were those soldiers going to go, and how were they going to be supplied when the IJN could barely supply what was already there?
And how are those troops going to be supplied when the USAF/USN cuts the lines of supply?
And then what value will they have when they have been bypassed and are thousands of miles from the front?
Dont give the Japanese too much credit for their logistical capabilities, because it was poor from the start.
Again syscom dont dishonor or discredit those millions that gave there lives fighting for the same cause...
I also believe that the US could not have done it without her Allies
The allies won the war because of extensive US military support. We couldnt have done it without our allies in Europe, but ultimatly as things panned out in the Pacific, we won it single handidly.
syscom3 said:Once the USN began its steamroller across the Pacific in Nov 1943, Anything done in NG and Rabaul was irrelevant.
And nothing the Brits did in CBI changed the equation one iota.
He knows what we are saying Chris he just refuses to admit it or that he made a mistake. Really have we ever heard Syscom admit he made a mistake or say sorry for something? Then does that mean Syscom is perfect? Hell no to both! He is being a @sshole and he knows it but his pride will not let him say sorry or back off.
I have plenty of times.
I've admitted the Lancaster was the better bomber of WW2 compared to the B17 and B24.
I've admitted that the German Army was generally better than the allies.
I've pulled or edited posts that were incorrect.
How about you?
Well speaking from an Australian perspective, Japan would have untimately devoured Australia. After the war Australia lent towards the US and away from Britain for a big friend in a hostile world. We honoured the Anzus treaty by actively participating in any war that the US got itself into.
The actual wording of that treaty says that we will come to the aid of each other if attacked, but that was stretched by us to include any conflict, as a way of showing Australia's gratitude for the help we received from America that we owed our very existance to.
Nobody on this side of the pond forgets Aussie support in Korea and Viet Nam nor do the historically minded forget what the Aussies did in New Zealand in the Owen Stanley's to help secure New Guinea before the long push back..
But you haven't admitted it here. You are saying the US could of won the war by itself in Europe and in the Far East.
Essential what you are saying is my Great Uncle (who was KIA in Burma during the war) died for nothing - you trying saying that to my grandmother bet you wouldn't have the balls. The war was a group effort all over the world by all of the Allies.
The US provided the manufacturing power, the Russians the man power and the British and the Commonwealth the bases from which to strike from and much of the technical know how. I would like to of seen the US take on the Japanese, the Italians and the Germans without the Russian manpower and the British and Commonwealth bases from which to strike from -
The US needed its Allies almost as much as we needed the US.
Chris, Plan_D, Udet, Hunter, Syscom -
I have generally thought of the ultimate victory over the Axis by the Allies include very important milestones in which the flow of momentum in the war was reversed.. among those in my mind include Battle of Britain, Midway, El Alameiin, Guadalcanal and Stalingrad plus the Battle of the Atlantic.
My question earlier was "would Great Britain' defeat the German U-Boat campaign, or blunt it sufficiently to permit the necessary flow of resources to and from the British Isles as required to continue the war and keep pressure on Germany from two sides?
I respect all of your opinions on this subject - to me it currently is the elephant that sits in the corner of the room relative to fate of Europe.
This question is posed on the basis of US staying strictly neutral (i.e FDR does not win in 1940) with no Lend Lease or other support... I suppose it permits Japan to attack Britain and France in Pacific and be smart enough to 'respect' US neutrality..
What are your thoughts?
Regards,
Bill
He died for the British empire, of which the CBI was not a strategic location in the battle for Japan..
But one fact is undebateable, in 1944, the US so completely dominated the fighting in the Pacific, it was a one sided affair.
Not in the Pacific
Hello Dragon.
Just check this losses suffered by the Royal Navy before the entrance of the U.S. into the war -or, better said, before the end of 1941-; a few vessels included on the list were sunk on late December, when the U.S. was officially a combatant nation.
Even if the entrance of the U.S.A. into the war did not occur until December 1941, the U.S. Navy had been involved in convoy escort and U-boat harrassing duties for some months; not in the level and quantity to be observed after the declaration of war for sure.
This vessels were sunk either by U-boats, Luftwaffe bombers and dive bombers, Kriegsmarine surface units, enemy mines and even to italian action:
Battleships:
HMS Royal Oak.
HMS Barham.
Also HMS Malaya was severely damaged by German submarine action spending some months in a drydock; plus HMS Warspite, HMS Ramillies, HMS Nelson, HMS Valiant, HMS Queen Elizabeth, and HMS Prince of Wales, all of which took severe battle damage (all on "disabled list" for some time).
Battlecruiser:
HMS Hood
So if we consider the sinking of HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse -lost to the Japanese- right after Pearl Harbor, before the end of 1941, nearly half of the Royal Navy´s battleships and battlecruisers had been either destroyed or withdrawn from service for some time due to severe battle damage. If we consider the fact HMS Howe and HMS Anson were not commissioned until 1942 -which is beyond the scope of this commentary-, then more than half of the RN´s battleships and battlecruisers had been uglily mistreated.
Carriers -all of them major carriers, and not jeep or escort carriers-:
HMS Glorious
HMS Courageous
HMS Ark Royal
Escort carrier:
HMS Audacity
Cruisers -heavy and light-
Calypso
York
Bonaventure
Gloucester
Fiji
Southampton
Calcutta
Galatea
Neptune
Latona
Destroyers
I do not have the exact number of destroyers lost before the end of 1941 but no less than 50 were lost in action during said period.
To put this into perspective, the U.S. Navy, all in all lost ~70 destroyers during the entire war. The Royal Navy alone had lost more than 50 between Sept 1, 1939 and the end of 1941.
Also several of the Royal Navy´s armed merchant ships had too been destroyed, and a large list of vessels sustained battle damage which too implied spending time in repairs. Last but not least, make mention of losses of merchant shipping due to U-boat action.
If this losses are not plain terrible to continue carrying on with a similar attrition rate then i declare myself bewildered. Yes, in the process they too inflicted high losses to the Kriegsmarine (Battle of Norway), but the price being paid was way too high. Also acknowledge is the Royal Navy´s skill and ability in U-boat hunting procedures.
Of course the presence of the U.S. Navy in the Atlantic implied a great relief to the brutal burden of the Admiralty. Talk about the ~2,700 Liberty Ships plus a number of the Victory Ships -don´t recall production numbers for this type- built at the dockyards of the U.S.A. which proved more than essential to maintain the supply lines between American and Europe.
No Lend-Lease, no U.S. support at all, would perhaps mean no convoys crossing the Atlantic...so the U-boats are not deployed to the U.S. East Coast, Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean theathers. Where do all the wolves of Admiral Dönitz go instead?