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But that is not what the original question asked. It asked what made the Germany army successful at the Beginning of the war. Training, education, communications, transport and a number of other factors made the difference, not ideology or politics. Ideology and politics helped an awful lot with the down fall of the 3rd Reich
I know, but the basic premise...."wht was the German army so successful?" is a wrong premise. A better wording for the question would be "How did the Germans manage to snatch defeat out of certain victory?" The answer does not lie with their tactical handling. It lies in their strategic miscalculations and repeated bungling even during the salad years of victory.
Parsifal's post was in keeping with the theme of the original post. If you feel uncomfortable with what he said, too bad.That was not the question and the intention of the thread!
The thread starter asked explicit after the german military.
As always, if the topic German pop up, you always will foward your agenda of anti german biases, equal of the thread intention, essential anti-german!
Perhaps you should sit in a plane and visit this country, but I bet you don't have the nuts to do it, because your biases and view of the world got crashed!
I think this sums up my views on the topic, an excellent post. The first part sums up their advantages for the first part of the war and the second what went wrong and ultimately cost Germany the warThis is altogether the wrong question. The question that needs to be answered is why, despite having so many overwhelming advantages, they still manged to screw the pooch and lose.
The Germans entered the war with greater economic potential, better trained manpower, a more cohesive and decisive leadership, more friends, better and more numerous equipment levels, better leadership, effective doctrines, higher levels of motorization central positioninterior lines surprise, and many other advantages. They still managed to lose the initiaitve in the west by 1941, upset their friends, isolate themselves, fight too many wars at the same time, waste their strength on unimportant fronts, become sloppy in their security, waste their military leadership, lose their training edges, mismanage their economy and so many other failures. And yet, people across the world belive in the myth of superior german war performance during the war.
Parsifal's post was in keeping with the theme of the original post. If you feel uncomfortable with what he said, too bad.
Personally, who'd want to visit Germany if there's people like you in it...
The German Army...
What was it that made the German Army so successful in the Beginning of WWII, was it their training, education, officer schools etc.?
How did these factors compare between the fighting armies?
What education did the NCO's and higher ranking officers receive?
Was it much of a difference between Army, Navy and Air Force?
Not interested in the 'political education' here, just the pure military one...
My ancestry is rich in German and Prussian lineage and it pains me to see how Germany fell to ruin and then rose from the misery of WWI to become a super power, only to sh!t it away and leave the country broken, devestated and fragmented. But I look at the historical aspect of what happened and don't wear blinders and carry a torch what "could have been" or "should have been".
I hope this does not mean you are not glad that Germany lost the war as Germany's aims and intentions were very negative to say the least.
Because parsifal was putting forth a good summary of the demise of one of the modern age's most powerful armies and in a non-biased light.
He summed it up well and just because it doesn't seem favorable in your eyes, it's what happened.
My ancestry is rich in German and Prussian lineage and it pains me to see how Germany fell to ruin and then rose from the misery of WWI to become a super power, only to sh!t it away and leave the country broken, devestated and fragmented. But I look at the historical aspect of what happened and don't wear blinders and carry a torch what "could have been" or "should have been".
The bottom line is Germany got it's ass kicked because of stupidity all across the board in it's leadership and the burden fell on the shoulders of the landser who performed his task as he was trained and ordered to do. If there was any credit due to anyone, it was the sailors, soldiers and airmen of Germany who had to suffer the folly of those a**holes who led them into the breech.
The German Army...
What was it that made the German Army so successful in the Beginning of WWII, was it their training, education, officer schools etc.?
How did these factors compare between the fighting armies?
What education did the NCO's and higher ranking officers receive?
Was it much of a difference between Army, Navy and Air Force?
Not interested in the 'political education' here, just the pure military one...
An extra handicap was that for a long time, the minds of the people did not catch up with the political situation, so that large pasifist movements still disrupted the rearmament in democratic cou tries.
A submarine fleet of those proportions would have destroyed the British ability to resist, and forced them to th peace table
This last bit is debateable and I'd have to look at the figures. The actual German submarine fleet never came close to sinking enough shipping to cause that, I remember posting the figures a while back, despite Churchill's much quoted view.
As for the rest I pretty much agree.
Cheers
Steve
And simple tonnage swaps paint a very biased view of what was actually possible. A battleship has an awful lot of "stuff" made out of plain steel. But plain steel is NOT the production bottle neck. Armor steel, guns (and mounts) and machinery are.