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R988 said:I think we know your grandfather was captured at Stalingrad, you have mentioned it just a couple of posts above
I assume that he made it out alive and wasn't one of those who 'disappeared' in the gulags after the war?
By coincidence I watched "The World at War" concerning Barbarossa last night. when bogged down outside Moscow much of the German equipment didnt work because of lack of low temperature oils/lubricants and design like tank track width. In this case quality and complication were frequently mixed. It is only when a tank works that you can start comparing its properties to the opposition.The overweaning desire to try and win the war by quality is understandable, but insisting on top shelf technology when second or third tier was often sufficient greatly increased the unit costs of certain items. Case in point being the cost of a tiger tank in 1942….roughly 20 times that of anequivalent soviet product.
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1) The Germans lost the war at sea.
2) The Germans never developed the capability to impede their enemy's ability to produce war equipment or establish general air superiority by using strategic bombing. For example, T-34 tanks were built beyond the range that the Luftwaffe could bomb the factories, and they could not grind down the Red Air Force by forcing the Soviets to defend Soviet air space against strategic bombing the way the Western Allies did to the Luftwaffe in the west.
The idea that the Germans soldiered on with obsolete equipment doesn't hold up to scrutiny, in my opinion. A late model FW-190A, also the Dora, was more or less as capable as a late model Spitfire. An ME-262 was probably a better jet than its contemporary rival jets. A Type XXI U-boat was a revolutionary advance in submarine design. A Tirpitz was at least as good and probably better a battleship than a KGV. A Panther was a far more capable tank than a Sherman and more or less as a good as a T-34. A FuMO26 radar was a better fire control radar than a Type 284M and as capable as a Mk8. I could go on, but Germany lost the war based mostly on numerical inferiority rather than overall weapons quality/obsolesces, and also to a lesser extent, but related, to the incompetence of its bureaucrats.
It goes without saying that the Nazis should never have got themselves involved in a war against multiple opponents on multiple fronts. Nonetheless, if we look at each decisive campaign or battle such as El Alamein, Stalingrad, Kursk, Normandy, the Bulge… the Allies had a lot more of everything. The Allies had more ships, more tanks, more trucks, more men, more airplanes, more guns, more gasoline, more diesel fuel, more fuel oil, more ammunition, more spare parts, more food, more clothing, more medical supplies…..
This numerical advantage for the Allies in just about every case boils down to two things:
1) The Germans lost the war at sea.
2) The Germans never developed the capability to impede their enemy's ability to produce war equipment or establish general air superiority by using strategic bombing. For example, T-34 tanks were built beyond the range that the Luftwaffe could bomb the factories, and they could not grind down the Red Air Force by forcing the Soviets to defend Soviet air space against strategic bombing the way the Western Allies did to the Luftwaffe in the west.
The idea that the Germans soldiered on with obsolete equipment doesn't hold up to scrutiny, in my opinion. A late model FW-190A, also the Dora, was more or less as capable as a late model Spitfire. An ME-262 was probably a better jet than its contemporary rival jets. A Type XXI U-boat was a revolutionary advance in submarine design. A Tirpitz was at least as good and probably better a battleship than a KGV. A Panther was a far more capable tank than a Sherman and more or less as a good as a T-34. A FuMO26 radar was a better fire control radar than a Type 284M and as capable as a Mk8. I could go on, but Germany lost the war based mostly on numerical inferiority rather than overall weapons quality/obsolesces, and also to a lesser extent, but related, to the incompetence of its bureaucrats.
Not only lost, they lost bad. In fact there was never any doubt about the Germans failing to win the war at sea. Some debate continuous about the U-boat war but the German surface Navy had about zero chance of winning anything against Royal Navy.1) The Germans lost the war at sea.
2) The Germans never developed the capability to impede their enemy's ability to produce war equipment or establish general air superiority by using strategic bombing. For example, T-34 tanks were built beyond the range that the Luftwaffe could bomb the factories, and they could not grind down the Red Air Force by forcing the Soviets to defend Soviet air space against strategic bombing the way the Western Allies did to the Luftwaffe in the west.
Stona, I don't dispute that those two failing would have been difficult to rectify, but those were ultimately required to win the war they brought onto themselves.