parsifal
Colonel
You still are avoiding answering the question. How would you propose to control the seas around Europe without carriers. In the case of Malta, how would you stop the Germans from steamrolling the whole of North Africa and the Middle East if their logistics networkr is not challenged??? And if you concede that it is going to be challenged, how do you propose to do it without carriers?????
I put it to you and Sys that it cannot be done, at least with the tools available in 1939-43. The role of Carriers in Europe, in my opinion is even more crucial than it is in the Pacific.
Without carriers in the Pacific, what is the worst that can happen....say the US loses at Midway.....Japanese shipping is in such short supply that they simply cannot advance any further than they did. An invasion of Australia would never happen...they dont have the 20 divisions and the 2 million tons of shipping needed to do it. They might be able to rough up Hawaii a little, but their losses over the island will be as catastrophic as they were over Guadacanal. They would consolidate their positions in the Solomons, and might advance as far as Fiji and or Noumea, but I cant see them doing much more than that. The Japanese simply dont have the where withall to progress much further, the major constraint is the availability of shipping.
To defeat Japan, you need carriers, lots of them, and lots of planes on those carriers...unquestionably. To contain Japan, you need virtually nothing, because they could go only a little further than they actually did
Ineurope the equation is fundamentally different. If you leave the European axis alone, and you have tiger that is going to eat you, and by eat you I include North America. And the only way you can contain them in 1939-43 is to maintain your blockade of Europe, and the only way you can do that is to commit your carrier forces to the job
You guys must think the Royal Navy to be an absolute bunch of idiots to have lost so many carriers for no reason, if you believe that the European waters can be controlled without carriers in 1939-43. I am just in utter disbelief at the stance you guys have taken on this.
I put it to you and Sys that it cannot be done, at least with the tools available in 1939-43. The role of Carriers in Europe, in my opinion is even more crucial than it is in the Pacific.
Without carriers in the Pacific, what is the worst that can happen....say the US loses at Midway.....Japanese shipping is in such short supply that they simply cannot advance any further than they did. An invasion of Australia would never happen...they dont have the 20 divisions and the 2 million tons of shipping needed to do it. They might be able to rough up Hawaii a little, but their losses over the island will be as catastrophic as they were over Guadacanal. They would consolidate their positions in the Solomons, and might advance as far as Fiji and or Noumea, but I cant see them doing much more than that. The Japanese simply dont have the where withall to progress much further, the major constraint is the availability of shipping.
To defeat Japan, you need carriers, lots of them, and lots of planes on those carriers...unquestionably. To contain Japan, you need virtually nothing, because they could go only a little further than they actually did
Ineurope the equation is fundamentally different. If you leave the European axis alone, and you have tiger that is going to eat you, and by eat you I include North America. And the only way you can contain them in 1939-43 is to maintain your blockade of Europe, and the only way you can do that is to commit your carrier forces to the job
You guys must think the Royal Navy to be an absolute bunch of idiots to have lost so many carriers for no reason, if you believe that the European waters can be controlled without carriers in 1939-43. I am just in utter disbelief at the stance you guys have taken on this.