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What Soviet Airforce would this have been? The first few days of Barbarossa saw the Soviets being dealt an absolute hay-maker, most of their aircraft being caught on the ground.It would have been an IJAAF fighting the Soviet AF, not the IJN.
Furthermore, Japan lacked the industrial capability to churn out the necessary long-range bombers and transports necessary to inflict serious damge on the Russian a/c factories
...The first few days of Barbarossa saw the Soviets being dealt an absolute hay-maker, most of their aircraft being caught on the ground.
With no US involvement, who's supplying them with Lend-Lease aircraft?
...the Germans could fully exploit their mastery of Soviet airspace, ground-attack, strategic bombing, reconnaissance and anti-shipping - near totally unopposed; the Soviets would be paralysed.
Moving assets from east to west and the vast terrain poses the same problems for the Soviets as it does for the invaders, they've still got to get it from A to B, with Axis aircraft marauding more or less at will, good luck with that.
Sorry Glider but you are terribly mistaken.
The IJN would be attacking just as-well as the IJA, and the Zeros would've swepped any resistance from the VVS aside with ease. There's also no doubt that a lot of Zeros would simply be given duty with the army airforce.
If the Japanese are not applying pressure then they are not a threat. If they are applying pressure they are wide open.The Japanese army also would not have to go through all of the USSR to have an effect. They simply needed to tie up the Soviets on a second front to take off pressure from the German's back. And seeing that the Soviets were already pushed to the limit by the Germans and could've been defeated by them alone had it not been for some stupid mistakes made by the German high command, then if the Japanese attacked in force in the east it would've quickly been all over for the Soviets.
This is a major assumption with very little to back it up. The only technology that I can think off that was used by the Japanese was the DB601 which the Japanese didn't do well with and were better sticking to what they knew Radials, and the 20mm MG151 which was used on some versions of the Ki61. The Jet information was much too little, much too late and not used by the Japanese and a similar statement goes with the Me163.Also please recognize that the reason that the Germans Japanese didn't share more technology in WW2 than they did was simply because of the fact that they didn't enter any land based operations together, heck not even any aerial ones. Had that happened the Germans would without a doubt have handed over a lot of technology to the Japanese. They did afterall ship information a very long way over regarding jet technology.
This factor is what largely underpins my argument...I don't think an issue is whether Japan can defeat the Soviets but whether the Japanese can cause the Soviets to divert enough men and equipment to that front so that the Germans can prevail on the other front...
If the Germans treated the Russians humanely then there could have been much more available manpower. The morale was not that great in the Red Army until the Soviets were winning. At Stalingrad much of the German Army was made up of Russians. There would always have been communist partisans in China and the Soviet Union, but in the USSR a counter-revolution could have been started if the people on the collectives were treated better then they were under the Stalinist goverment. Its hard to say.To add a little spice to the discussion, what if the Germans had treated the people in the occupied area of the Soviet Union humanely and the Japanese had done likewise in China. This scenario is starting to look scary.
I do not believe that Zero's would have been made available. The IJN and IJAF didn't co-operate on anything, they didn't even share the same rifles, machine guns or 20mm cannons. Why on earth would they share aircraft, it would be a serious loss of face to the Air Force and nothing would allow that. There is also the point that in the Spring of 1942 not all IJN units had been equipped with the Zero and I am confident that the IJN would put them first.
Glider said:If the Japanese are not applying pressure then they are not a threat. If they are applying pressure they are wide open.
Glider said:This is a major assumption with very little to back it up. The only technology that I can think off that was used by the Japanese was the DB601 which the Japanese didn't do well with and were better sticking to what they knew Radials, and the 20mm MG151 which was used on some versions of the Ki61. The Jet information was much too little, much too late and not used by the Japanese and a similar statement goes with the Me163.
In your replies you have not commented on the basic weakness of the structure of the Japanese Army units, the equipment they were issued with or the lack of transport. With these problems they stand no chance.