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With no Luftwaffe to finance, and the investment was huge, what might Germany had spent that money on?
Battleships, Heavy Cruisers and subs. Plus the focused development of torpedoes, aiming systems and radar, most likely....The US would not have had the Enterprise, Lexington, and others. England would not have had the Ark Royal, Furious, etc. So what would have stood in their place?
Also, without the involvement of aviation, U-boats would have OWNED the Atlantic.
Battleships, Heavy Cruisers and subs. Plus the focused development of torpedoes, aiming systems and radar, most likely.
Same can be said for land-based systems since there's no aviation industry to detract money and development away from armored warfare development.
So, a WW2 without air power would have greatly reduced civilian suffering.
I basically agree with the main thrust of this. Poland would ahve been overwhelmed but it would take longer and this would ahve bought the French time to sort out their defence.No aviation, no Stuka.
No Stuka, no Blitzkrieg.
No Blitzkrieg, no Poland.
No Poland, no France.
No France, no submarine bases on the Atlantic coast.
No submarine bases on the Atlantic coast, no England…
Germans would have starved just as in the First World War.
That an airforce would have been not useful, but essential, to invade G.B. was well known from Napoleon's times.
The British may even have concentrated and built better tanks.
It would, but by how much? Your 'direct deaths' comprise a tiny fraction of total fatalities.
You have to put these numbers into perspective. A few hundred thousand people died as a direct result of the Anglo-American bombing campaigns, maybe as many as 350,000 Germans perished.
Nazi policies of starvation and labour killed millions. In Belorus 2.3 million of a prewar population of 10.1 million died.
German demand for food stuffs caused at least 40,000 Greeks to starve to death in the Athens-Piraeus area alone, within 5 months of the German occupation.
I don't like the numbers game, but I could carry on with this for pages.
Goering, 6th August 1942:
"I have before me reports on what you are supposed to deliver...
It makes no difference to me in this connection if you say that your people will starve. Let them do so, as long as no German collapses from hunger. If you had been present when the Gauleiter spoke here, you would understand my boundless anger over the fact that we conquered such enormous territories through the valour of our troops, and yet our people have almost been forced down to the miserable rations of the First World War....
I am interested only in those people in the occupied regions who work in armaments and food production. They must receive just enough to enable them to continue working."
The Germans caused famine throughout the occupied territories, killing tens of millions, it was state policy. Lets not even mention the millions of 'labourers' who died in Germany itself. There were 8 million of them by the summer of 1944. During the war at least 2.4 million perished (a very conservative estimate), this quite aside from the holocaust. This too was official government policy, these people did not starve by accident, they were starved by the Germans.
Do not take the moral high ground over strategic bombing with me! You must understand all the facts, the enemy that was being confronted, in order to understand why the morals of 1939/40 were steadily eroded throughout the conflict.
I have said this before, and I will repeat it for your benefit, the most immoral thing the Allies could have done would have been to lose the war.
Steve
There were also several battles during the Guadacanal campaign that were devoid of aerial support, too.
As the title says, World War Two without aircraft...
Typically, when the name World War Two is mentioned, one of the first things that come to mind, is the aircraft (one of the reasons we're all here, right?) and it is the only time in human history that Airships, Biplanes, Jets and some of the fastest piston powered aircraft in history all shared the same timeline. Airships attacked U-boats, Jets attacked piston powered bombers, biplanes attacked modern Battleships, entire naval battles were won and lost without the opposing fleets being within sight of each other - almost the stuff of science fiction.
Aircraft played a key role in nearly every battle that was fought during the war and this was in most cases, the contributing factor in how a battle was won or lost.
But let's consider for a moment, how World War Two would have taken it's course if there were no aircraft. Keep in mind, that in World War One, aircraft were a novel idea at the onset of the war. It wasn't for two years that the concept of military aviation actually was taken seriously and by 1917, the rush was on for air superiority.
As the war in Europe drew near, Germany was on the verge of the jet age, but it wasn't taken seriously enough to be made a priority and so the cycle once again replayed itself, the jets becoming a priority once the war was well underway, just like the airplane itself had been considered almost 30 years before.
So this brings me to my question: What if aircraft had not developed to the point where it was considered a military asset by 1935? What if the Armies and Navies held firm to their traditional ideologies and insisted that Battleships or Infantry won wars and stifled the introduction of military aviation.
Would WWII have become a contest of Battleships and Trench Warfare like the Great War and ground everything down into a muddy standstill?
I'd be interested in seeing what everyone thinks about this.
What about Langley, Curtiss, and the horde of Lilienthal disciples in Europe? I think someone else would have come along pretty soon. Maybe even someone who wouldn't have impeded further development in the early years as the Wrights did with their aggressive patent infringement lawsuits. Progress by 1914 might have been even further advanced. And military authorities maybe even more intrigued with it.Not as far fetched as one might think. If Orvile or Wilbur had an accident on the way to Kittyhawk, or one crashed and died in the early glider tests and the other got discouraged and gave up, it might have set back the invention of the airplane by 20 or 30+ years. The butterfly affect.