Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
I'm not sure what you mean by that one...
I am kinda wondering: If the USA had stayed out of the war, (maybe with Japan) and the Russians decided to invade Britain in say 1945-1946, would they have had more success than the Germans?
If Russia had tried to attack in a "Battle of Britain" style in 1940 instead of the Germans, would they have had any luck? Again, no US military to help.
I guess it's hard to say. I would be leaning towards the language being Russian today, instead of German. But of course, that may just hold for mainland Europe, not Britain.
I meant with only 500,000 soldiers throughout WWII Finland held off Germany plus Germany.
I'm not sure what you mean by this, but Finland was allied with Germany. There were German divisions in Finland. After peacemaking in 1944 Russians demanded that we start a war against German troops which were retreating to Norway. So war between Finland and Germany was a mere skirmish. Finns were very reluctant to fight former brothers in arms.
Sounds like, long and short, none of the parties involved had the power to put a knockout punch on the others. Without the US intervetion, the war in Europe drags on. Britian has no continetal force, Russians and Germans go at it hammer and tongs until....what?
The thread has morphed from "Did the US save Europe?" to "What does the European War look like without American involvement?". That is a far more interesting question.
No Lend Lease, everybody fights with what they have.
I think we'd have to think along the lines of:
"Who has the best industrial base",
"Who has the largest manpower pool to draw from?",
"Who is going to adapt fast enough to take advantage of what they have?"
In truth, this is a hell of a difficult question. US involvement transformed the war in Europe. Taking it away, especially Lend Lease, makes what we know as history unrecognizable.
In truth, I really don't know where to start. Uboat War? Eastern Front? Africa? Night Bomber Offensive?
I think I have to agree with u on all 5 points...It still boils down to this:
1) The UK (which I include its commonwealth countries) could not have been invaded by Germany OR Russia
2) Germany might have defeated Russia without being distracted by US material and forces.
3) Germany might have been defeated by Russia simply by attrition.
4) Either way, the UK speaks English and all of the rest of Europe speaks German or Russian.
5) The UK and its forces from around the world could not have defeated Germany through an invasion.
Sounds like, long and short, none of the parties involved had the power to put a knockout punch on the others. Without the US intervetion, the war in Europe drags on. Britian has no continetal force, Russians and Germans go at it hammer and tongs until....what?
The thread has morphed from "Did the US save Europe?" to "What does the European War look like without American involvement?". That is a far more interesting question.
It still boils down to this:
1) The UK (which I include its commonwealth countries) could not have been invaded by Germany OR Russia
2) Germany might have defeated Russia without being distracted by US material and forces.
3) Germany might have been defeated by Russia simply by attrition.
4) Either way, the UK speaks English and all of the rest of Europe speaks German or Russian.
5) The UK and its forces from around the world could not have defeated Germany through an invasion.
EMAC, I think a war between Japan and Russia would end up in a Japanese defeat, with little change in the situation in the east
The IJA was strictly light infantry. And its tanks and artillery found to be "wanting" in many ascpects.
languages don't change whether your occupied by another country or not. russia takes over large part of europe for decades and poland still speaks polish, Germans still speak German, and so on...