The German Paratroopers were great fighters. Fort Eben Emael which was considered impregnable in Belgium was taken in about 30 hours by only 85 paratroopers (some sources say only 38 to 80) led by a Seargant. They rehearsed it the operation over and over and over on a replica of the fort before they did it.
Their second operation, which this time included parachuting and glider landings, was a month later in the invasion of western europe. They did what paratroopers do best, and captured vital river bridges behind enemy lines which the advancing german armor needed to cross, and a formidable belgian fortress, Eben Emael, which guarded other key bridges.
Eben Emael was manned by about a thousand belgian soldiers and was strongly fortified. It was a set of seven large fortified artillery positions, with 18 artillery guns, surrounded by many machine gun positions, mine fields, barbed wire, a moat, and connected via underground bunkers and tunnels.
On May 10, 1940, at dawn, this fortress was attacked by just 78 Fallschirmjager troops which landed on top of it with 10 gliders. They were equipped with light weapons and with several 100 pound armor piercing explosive charges. Before the raid these 78 paratroopers trained on a full size model of the Eben Emael fortress. They landed precisely on the roof of the large fortress in total surprise, and with their far superior fighting skill over the shocked belgians they were able to quickly take over the roof area and confine the defenders to their fortified bunkers which they cracked one after the other with their special explosive charges. The german losses were just six dead and twenty wounded. A day later, when the paratroopers were joined by german ground forces, the hundreds of remaining belgian defenders inside the fortress surrendered.
The small elite force of just 78 german paratroopers defeated a greatly larger force in a mighty fortress. It was a great success which remains one of the most daring and successful raids in history, a model of what elite soldiers can achieve in properly planned raids.
Kurt Student himself suffered a severe head injury in the fighting in Holland, but survived. A year later he was back on duty and he and Erwin Rommel proposed a large scale airborne operation. http://www.2worldwar2.com/fallschirmjager.htm
P-38 Pilot said:
But when it comes down too power, size, and reliable weapons, the United States had the upperhand in Europe and the Pacific.
Not to take anything away from the US weapons. They had great weapons like the M-1 and so forth but K98 Mauser was a great weapon and so was the Karabiner 43, FG 42, Gewehr 43, MG34, MG42, Panzerfaust, Panzerschreck, and Sturmgewehr 44. Some of these weapons were some of the best of the war. The British aswell had some great excellent weapons that were very reliable.
FG 42
Caliber: 7.92x57mm Mauser
Weight:
Version I - 4.5 kg (9.92 lb)
version II, 4.9 kg (11.2 lb)
Length: 937 mm (I); 1060 mm (II)
Magazine Capacity: 10 or 20 rounds
Cyclic Rate: 900 (I); 600 (II) rounds per minute
Effective Range: roughly 500 meters (550 yards)
Gewehr 43 and
Karabiner 43
Caliber: 7.92 x 57 mm Mauser
Muzzle velocity: 775 m/s (2,328 ft/s)
Action: Gas operated
Overall length: 1130 mm
Barrel length: 546 mm
versions with barrel lengths of 600, 650 and 700 mm existed as well
Weight: 4.1 kg, (9.7 lb) unloaded and without the scope
Rate of fire: 20 to 30 rounds per minute
Magazine capacity: 10 rounds
Sights: One of several scopes, typically 4x or 2.5x, backup "iron sights" as well.
K98 Mauser
Barrel length 600 mm
Ammunition 7.92 x 57 mm Mauser
Magazine 5 rounds internal box
Action
Rate of fire approx 15 rpm
Muzzle velocity 745 m/s
Weight 3.7 - 4.1 kg
Length 1110 mm
Variants
Number built 10 million +
MG34
Caliber: 7.92 mm
Load: continuous belt feed (50 or 200 round strips) or 75 round beltless saddle drum
Action: selective fire, air cooled
Rate of fire: 800 to 900 round/min
Weight: 12.1 kg (26.7 lb)
Weight with tripod: 19.2 kg (42.3 lb)
MG42
Calibre 7.92
Barrel length
Ammunition 7.92 x 57 mm
Magazine belt (50 or 250)
Action recoil, roller locking
Rate of fire 1200
Muzzle velocity
Weight 11.6 kg
Length
Variants none
Number built 400,000
MP40
Cartridge 9 x 19 mm
Action Blowback
Rate of fire 500 rpm
Muzzle velocity ~380 mps
Effective range ~ 100 m
Weight (Unloaded) 3.97 Kg
Length 63 cm (stock folded)
83.3 cm (stock extended)
Barrel 25.1 cm
Magazine capacity 32
Viewing sights Blade front
tangent U-notch
Variants MP36, MP38, MP40, MP40/1, MP41
Number built Over 1 million
Sturmgewehr 44
Cartridge 7.92 x 33 mm
Action Gas-actuated
Rate of fire 500-600
Muzzle velocity 685 m/s
Effective range 300 m
Weight (Unloaded) 5.22 kg
Length 940 mm
Barrel 419 mm
Magazine capacity 30
Viewing sights Blade front
Tangent U-notch rear
Variants ??
Number built 425,977
Needless to say the AK-47 was influenced by the 44.