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It's a good question MM, I dont actually know. Either because of the Finns were strong or the Russians just sucked. The soviets achieved their objectives but the kill ratio was humaliating for them, indeed.
It was shamefull because it was an unprovoced attack on a de-facto neutral country.
Dont think that would work with Nazi Germany. Fanatical regime fought till the last man was out of ammo as you know from history.
For how long you were going to "blockade" them? .
Explain to me how the Soviets could humiliate Japan in the summer of '39 and be humiliated by the Finns, by Xmas?
MM
Dont think that would work with Nazi Germany. Fanatical regime fought till the last man was out of ammo as you know from history.
For how long you were going to "blockade" them? For 10? 20 years? In a few years they would've built ICBMs and nukes, you wouldnt have place on Earth to hide.
But this thread is getting waaaaay off topic, it's about leadership, remember?
They ran out of fuel because Soviets took Romanian oil fields 5 month earlier.
The soviets made multiple attempts to convince Great Britain and France to sign Collective Security pact against possible agression on Poland from Germany, instead France and UK signed Munich Treaty in 1938 giving Hitler a green light to go Ost.
I get what your saying, and the western allies were tired, but if there ever was a time to defeat the Soviets it was in 1945. They barely took Berlin and the casualties that occured were extreme. After such a horrific war, maybe the west didn't have the heart as much as they had the ability to save Eastern Europe from bondage. One can't blame the leaders though. Nobody wanted to keep fighting.Still I think FDR didn't "sell" Eastern Europe. It was the only sensible thing to do. A war against Russia would have ended in many more years of conflict in a war-tired world. One thatmight not have necessary been won by the Western Allies. We Europeans might all have spoken Russian by now.
Respond to my remarks about the air force leadership.
Your opinions?
As for best AF leader, I would nominate three individuals.
Hap Arnold who over saw the transformation of the prewar air force that was 3rd rate, into the preeminent AF that no other country could match. Part of his "greatness" was his ability to pick great subordinates for both staff and command. Nearly all of them were kept around for the post war USAF and help build that up.
Gen. Kenney who commanded the 5th (and later the FEAF) AF for doing the most with the least.
Gen LeMay for being a brilliant bomber tactician and after the war commanded the SAC.
To be honest, I don't know enough about Kenney LeMay to make a final choice, what "outstanding" actions did they take in WWII?
The soviets made multiple attempts to convince Great Britain and France to sign Collective Security pact against possible agression on Poland from Germany, instead France and UK signed Munich Treaty in 1938 giving Hitler a green light to go Ost.
Waynos "...it is a shame to ruin someones carefully thought out thread so we'll leave it there."Thanks and it is wobbling a bit but a very interesting thread.
MM
"Winter War is a shamefull page of Russia's history anyways.." WHY Stasoid, because it wasn't moral, or because they had the crap kicked out of them ... gained enough territory "to bury their dead".
Explain to me how the Soviets could humiliate Japan in the summer of '39 and be humiliated by the Finns, by Xmas?
MM
I don't consider Eisenhower as one of the greatest leaders. He was unable to suppress the ego's of his subordinates like Patton and Montgomery eniough. This led to many extra casualties and disasters like Market Garden. He was a military diplomat. Not outspoken enough, so all parties would accept him.
Precisely my point, Marcel. Imagine how fractious the allied high command would have been without a moderating voice on all the personalities involved. So if you are going to assign one person to lead the combined allied armies, who would it be? Marshall is out-Roosevelt would never give him up as chief-of-staff. I know of nobody else who had the diplomatic skill to unify that command.
While you are undoubtedly correct that disasters like Market-Garden might have played out decidedly different, if at all, what about allied achievements that were possible because of allied harmony? Would Overlord been possible w/out it? I don't believe it.
I've heard it argued persuasively that Ike had the fault of lacking the necessary combat command experience to be a theater commander, but this is the first time that I've ever heard it argued that his diplomacy was a liability.
Just my two cents....