MIflyer
Captain
Found this on a Youtube Video, although it has nothing to do with the subject being discussed.
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There has been a series of videos on Youtube about the German POW experience in the USA. All it took was a trip across the Atlantic on a Liberty Ship where they were served much better and more food, followed by a train ride in Pullman cars rather than 40and8 boxcars, in which they viewed everything lit up to an unheard degree, as well as huge factories with the parking lots filled with cars owned by the workers - and then the POW camps themselves. And they started thinking, "We thought we were ready! We thought we were strong! THIS is being ready and strong!"If anything, that chart backs up the idea that if one wishes to go to war, one should have the means to do it beforehand.
| month | BC | 8th | 15th | 205 Gp | Total | BC | 8th | 15th | GE+AU |
Jan-44 | 20,639.36 | 12,397 | 11,051 | 797.4 | 44,884.76 | 91.39 | 70.96 | 4.14 | 28,116.73 |
Feb-44 | 13,500.48 | 19,146 | 6,747 | 866.1 | 40,259.58 | 97.82 | 71.24 | 27.38 | 28,693.11 |
Mar-44 | 31,021.76 | 21,346 | 10,376 | 1460.5 | 64,204.26 | 71.16 | 69.56 | 12.99 | 38,271.20 |
Apr-44 | 37,515.52 | 27,576 | 21,256 | 1815.1 | 88,162.62 | 41.84 | 61.27 | 17.53 | 36,318.49 |
May-44 | 41,722.24 | 38,029 | 30,355 | 2209.4 | 112,315.64 | 22.94 | 55.21 | 15.75 | 35,347.81 |
Jun-44 | 64,139.04 | 59,625 | 24,466 | 2231.2 | 150,461.24 | 8.56 | 22.52 | 21.35 | 24,141.34 |
Jul-44 | 64,528.80 | 46,605 | 32,183 | 2233.6 | 145,550.40 | 22.95 | 66.00 | 27.89 | 54,544.50 |
Aug-44 | 73,757.60 | 49,305 | 27,839 | 2625.2 | 153,526.80 | 21.93 | 49.18 | 21.00 | 46,269.43 |
Sep-44 | 58,897.44 | 42,162 | 20,856 | 3466.5 | 125,381.94 | 40.02 | 86.30 | 17.24 | 63,552.14 |
Oct-44 | 68,548.48 | 45,087 | 16,257 | 1812.1 | 131,704.58 | 84.2 | 99.96 | 49.89 | 110,897.40 |
Nov-44 | 59,384.64 | 41,818 | 17,297 | 2558.8 | 121,058.44 | 99.7 | 93.43 | 66.25 | 109,736.31 |
Dec-44 | 54,924.80 | 43,069 | 18,757 | 1228.1 | 117,978.90 | 95.13 | 99.68 | 66.89 | 107,727.70 |
It was not in their plans because they did not push to do it. Patton wanted to close the gap at Falaise but was told not to. He was pissed at that. As it was, in order for the US Forces rushing to close the gap with the Free Polish forces they actually had to bisect an escaping German column in the middle of the night. The German traffic cop stopped his column and let the Americans cross at a 90 degree angle; probably a very good decision on his part, personally, in terms of his survival.What wasn't in Allied plans, and really couldn't have been planned for, was the massive collapse of the German forces in the West following the Battle of Falaise Pocket between 12th & 21st Aug 1944.
First Army created the break out as part of Operation Cobra on 25 July, Patton was not in command of any combat troops, he became an advisor on 27 of July and commander of troops in combat when 3rd Army was activated at noon on 1st August. The breakout was underway when Patton came onto the scene, he turned it into a potentially devastating pursuit by being prepared to take risks like being cut off and only having one open bridge.The USAAF was trying to win the war through strategic bombing of industrial targets. The RAF was trying to win the war through de-housing of the Germans. By the time Patton made his breakout those objectives made no sense.
Who is they? Where did the supplies go to and what did the supplied units do as a result? Where inertia initially ruled was post breakout where the objectives remained the pre invasion capture of Brittany ports.They shut off Patton's supplies because he was not following the agreed to plan of a "Dress Right Dress" march across France, all the Allied forces finally arriving at the border with Germany in JUNE 1945. Inertia Rules!
Why were the Luftwaffe building numerous airfields able to take aircraft bigger than what most of the Luftwaffe operated? And keeping them serviceable under the allied bombing?There were numerous former Luftwaffe airfields in France that could have handled B-17's and B-24's
Why was 3rd Amy much better placed for large German airfields?Airlift to airfields in France would have helped that situation a great deal, at least relative to Patton's 3rd Army.
Correct, there was a high chance of failure and he would be taking the supplies and troops that were being used to obtain bridgeheads over the Seine and capture other key objectives before the Germans could put defences in place. The Germans lost Falaise numbers of equipment and troops trying to get across the Seine before the allies arrived.Patton wanted to close the gap at Falaise but was told not to. He was pissed at that.
Yes. Not enough data points. The data should at least be monthly to get a decent idea of what was happening. It seems a fair bet that the bombing figures remained high on beyond June of '44, while German fighter production dropped off rapidly after that, and suddenly fell to zero in, what, mid-April '45? Or were there still new fighters on the assembly line on May 6?The use of yearly figures is a poor way of presenting data unless things are stable year to year, consider the 1944 figures are for 12 months, the 1945 for 3 or 4 months, so you need to multiply the 1945 figures by 3 or 4 to create comparable figures.
Aircraft were still being produced until the guns fell silent.Or were there still new fighters on the assembly line on May 6?