renrich
Chief Master Sergeant
Kris, the US Marines had been planning and practising amphibious doctrine for quite some time prior to WW2. To my knowledge, the Germans had not. To compare an amphibious attack in mass on a well defended shore to tank warfare is I believe not relevant. I remember having read on numerous occasions that a mass amphibious landing is the most difficult military evolution of all. The Repulse and Prince of Wales were not sunk by bombing principally. They were hit by 1 bomb and 5 torpedoes and 1 bomb and 6 torpedoes respectfully. No, I don't believe that the LW ever attained the level of lethality that the Japanese had with their torpedo a/c in the early days of the Pacific war. Another opinion about Sealion. From the West Point Atlas of American Wars, Vol. 2, " A plan was developed-and changed several times-amidst constant bickering between the Army and Navy; but it was never destined to be implemented, because the vital requirement for air superiority could not be met." To think that a Sealion would have a better chance of success in the summer of 1942 than it would have in 1940 seems ludicrous to me. To argue about the relative merits of fighter a/c seems beside the point. The LW could not meet the requirement for air superiority in 1942 anymore than they could have in 1940. If memory serves the RAF began a series of offensive fighter sweeps after the BOB called Ramrods. They had higher pilot losses then than in the BOB but it shows how aggresive they were and never overlook that the British were never reluctant to sacrifise blood and bone in either World War. Another point, to dismiss the possible influence of the forces in Torch does not seem realistic to me. Torch began on Nov. 8, 1942 with landings from the Atlantic and the Med. Torch did not spring full grown suddenly into action. It took months of planning and accumulation of weapons and supplies as well as training to bring it off just as a Sealion II would have. The Allies would have known that the Wehrmacht was massing for an invasion against England. Can there be any doubt that Torch would have been canceled and some of the naval and army assets intended for Torch diverted to England. One last point and I don't mean to disparage German military prowess by this observation. The Wehrmacht infantry and armor in WW2 were some of the finest in all of history. There infantry historically probably only equalled in ability and fortitude by the infantry of the Southern Confederacy. The LW as a tactical air force at their peak were superb. But Germany was not a maritime nation. Great Britain and Japan were. I doubt that had positions been reversed Germany would have ever been able to pull off an evacuation of 338,000 men from the beaches as Britain did at Dunkirk. They simply had not the experience, background and heritage. That certainly played a role in the cancellation of Sealion I. If they had been able to invade England at that time then the war is over and they could deal with thr Soviets at their leisure. They could not do it then and to accomplish a Sealion against a much stronger and better organised and equipped Britain with the US alongside and with the stakes that invasion would have represented doesn't seem like a remote possibility to me.