• Kidplayer_666@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    I mean, it was in 1944 that for the axis it went from “not going well at all” to “run for your lives”. And I mean, one of the main contributions of the US was A-mostly dealing with Japan, B-supplying half the world (including the soviets). The troops sure were important as hell, but not their main contribution

    • plinky [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      I mean by 1944 germany was done for. It was done for by 1943, but 1944 it was so obvious, i doubt that person (with historic background!) even looked at the eastern front.

      Land lease was important, and people may downplay it a bit more than they should, but war stuff is incomprehensible to me.

        • plinky [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          11 months ago

          On grand scale - when they failed were stopped at stalingrad/reaching oilfields, but like it requires a lot of whatifs and blahblah. By 1943 soviets were advancing 500 km a year, and germany industry couldn’t suddenly double its outputs, so war direction is fairly easy to see.

        • huf [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          11 months ago

          yes, in hindsight they lost in like january of 1942, but because they refused to admit it, it took a few more years to explain it to them.

      • zifnab25 [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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        11 months ago

        I mean by 1944 germany was done for.

        By June of '44, they were proper fucked.

        But the US was officially in the war from '41 and was sending troops into North Africa in '42, which cut into the supply lines of German industry. It isn’t impossible to see the Germans securing a peace deal before their Russian invasion went sideways, and there were certainly no small number of American Fascists who would have liked to see a DC/Berlin alliance.

        Had the US entered the war on the side of the Germans, rather than the British, that definitely would have been it for the Western facing Allies. So, from an entirely Atlantic perspective, the US saved the British from Germany in the aftermath of 1940. And if all you’re talking to are Angloids glued to the History Channel, I guess its fair to say America won the war for Churchill and de Gaulle. The Nazis might still be a thing (at least as far as Fransisco Franco remained a thing) well into the 1970s and 80s, had Americans not backed the English and French up.

        • Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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          11 months ago

          It isn’t impossible to see the Germans securing a peace deal before their Russian invasion went sideways

          i don’t see why the UK would ever accept a unipolar europe while the royal navy & empire were still intact. the germans had no way to threaten the island besides bomber sorties and that campaign was a resounding failure

          • zifnab25 [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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            11 months ago

            i don’t see why the UK would ever accept a unipolar europe while the royal navy & empire were still intact.

            The empire was falling apart in real time as colonial revolts popped off around the globe. Ending the European conflict so they could get a lid back on the rest of the empire would have been a better long term strategy than slugging it out with Berlin for another half-decade.

            the germans had no way to threaten the island besides bomber sorties and that campaign was a resounding failure

            Yemen shut down the entire Red Sea with a few rocket bombs. The Germans could have choked off the UK financially if they’d been more patient and less eager to score smashing blitzkrieg victories in every campaign. At some point, the UK needs steel and fuel, and has relatively limited ways to get it without passing through territory the Germans could threaten.

            By the end of the war, England was in a state of near-starvation. There’s a great YouTube video of a woman who tries to make meals with English foodstock from the year 1946 to 19…90, one day for each year? The first couple meals are bleak and everyone leaves the table still hungry.

            • Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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              11 months ago

              Britain’s Empire was meaningless without a europe to sell the goods and resources to, the losses of all UK financiers’ investments on the continent, and the reestablishment of trade on unequal terms is simply so counter to the UK ruling class interests & pride it’d take a comprehensive and devastating defeat. which it’s doubtful german trade interdiction had any chance of actually forcing, and in any case they didn’t have enough time for. Germans, not the UK who were the ones actually under a blockade, which is why they made the M-R pact and rushed Soviet natural resources in Barbarossa

              By the end of the war everyone was starving. the UK was actually way better off compared to any participants besides americans (the whole continent)

              • zifnab25 [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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                11 months ago

                Britain’s Empire was meaningless without a europe to sell the goods and resources to, the losses of all UK financiers’ investments on the continent, and the reestablishment of trade on unequal terms is simply so counter to the UK ruling class interests & pride it’d take a comprehensive and devastating defeat.

                I mean, what’s the alternative? If the US hadn’t charged in to save them, they’d have shriveled up and died on their island while Germany took over what parts of the British and French empires could not successfully rebel. Their merchant navy couldn’t ply a sea dotted with German submarines and their military couldn’t be everywhere at once.

                Germans, not the UK who were the ones actually under a blockade, which is why they made the M-R pact and rushed Soviet natural resources in Barbarossa

                The Germans could have far more easily and cheaply traded Russia for raw materials. Even had they successfully made it to Moscow, they’d be fighting insurrections across an entire continent. And it isn’t like they were short on natural resources. They had all of France and Central Europe and were functionally in control of North Africa before the Americans showed up. But they were in plunder mode rather than doing economic development, so Russia just looked like a giant loot crate rather than a bear trap.

                By the end of the war everyone was starving.

                All the more reason to take your winnings and get off the table back in '41. Maybe consider doing another mindless intercontinental slaughter in another five or six years, when you’ve replenished your reserves.

                the UK was actually way better off compared to any participants besides americans

                The UK hadn’t been ground under like Poland or France. And it hadn’t half-exhausted itself in a war time economy like Germany or Russia. But it wasn’t in a good position after Sealion. They were just in a proven unassailable position. That got them back to where they started in 1347. But without American aid (which wasn’t a complete given in the midst of a recessionary relapse under FDR), it wasn’t a winning position without access to oil and steel from the colonies.

                Between German land-conquest and rebellions in Africa and India and Japan gobbling up territory in the South Pacific, what did the UK have to rebuild with?

                Absent America and pissing off the Russians, the Germans had time on their side and the British didn’t.

                • Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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                  11 months ago

                  your argument is predicated on two things that did not happen, and did not show any sign of happening.

                  a) a u-boat blockade of the UK preventing them from getting resources from their colonies. this did not materialize in 1940 or 1941, why it must’ve in 42 or later is a mystery to me

                  b) some huge colonial uprising against british rule that could also cut them off from resources. in actuality there was what, Iraq, who got curbstomped? there wasn’t as universal opposition to the war from communist/socialist groups because of anti-fascism, and some liberal independence parties wanted to leverage support for the war for independence afterward.

                  further, a completely twisted vision of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact where the Germans could afford to keep it going in perpetuity, when it was only going to go as long as Soviet leadership felt they needed for a full mobilization and rearmament, to then turn on the nazis. a delayed Barbarossa meant a stronger Red Army.

                  The UK hadn’t been ground under like Poland or France. And it hadn’t half-exhausted itself in a war time economy like Germany or Russia. But it wasn’t in a good position after Sealion. They were just in a proven unassailable position. That got them back to where they started in 1347. But without American aid (which wasn’t a complete given in the midst of a recessionary relapse under FDR), it wasn’t a winning position without access to oil and steel from the colonies

                  the UK was mobilized, several major industrial centres in the south were damaged, their shipping industry was damaged. i don’t know what kind of point this is that somehow the UK having higher standards of living post-war, but also not as much of an economic disruption, means something was wrong with their capacity to prosecute the war? no idea what you’re saying about sealion either

                  • zifnab25 [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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                    11 months ago

                    a) a u-boat blockade of the UK preventing them from getting resources from their colonies. this did not materialize in 1940 or 1941, why it must’ve in 42 or later is a mystery to me

                    German U-boats sank over 2400 British merchant ships during the Battle of the Atlantic which lasted from '39 to '45. Less than the 3500 destroyed by the Allies, but hardly insignificant. The US strategy to beat the Germans was to produce ships faster than the Germans could sink them, and US-made Liberty Ships (over 2700 produced after 1941) were ultimately what kept the UK supplied.

                    Again, without the US, the UK could not have successfully maintained enough supplies to maintain their existing fleet.

                    further, a completely twisted vision of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact where the Germans could afford to keep it going in perpetuity, when it was only going to go as long as Soviet leadership felt they needed for a full mobilization and rearmament, to then turn on the nazis. a delayed Barbarossa meant a stronger Red Army.

                    That’s predicated on the assumption that the Soviets were eager for a renewed conflict, when Stalin’s “Communism in one country” model suggested they were perfectly content to play espionage games over the border without returning to the WW1/Russian Civil War era slaughter. Delaying Barbosa would give the Soviets time to fortify. But there’s little to suggest they were eager to invade occupied German territory.

                    i don’t know what kind of point this is that somehow the UK having higher standards of living post-war, but also not as much of an economic disruption, means something was wrong with their capacity to prosecute the war?

                    The UK had a starkly lower standard of living at the end of the war than at the start, to the point of malnutrition. And even that standard was enormously predicated on US support. If the US hadn’t remained loyal to the British, they could not have maintained fuel for their navy or food for their people. The UK owes its existence to the US.

      • Kidplayer_666@lemm.ee
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        11 months ago

        I mean, even the western front was not going well by 1943. Africa had been dealt with by the end of it, and the Allies had successfully sent some huskys to Palermo

    • GarbageShoot [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      B-supplying half the world (including the soviets).

      This phrasing makes it sound like Russia was running entirely or even mostly on what America supplied it when that is not the case.

      • Kidplayer_666@lemm.ee
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        11 months ago

        Of course not, but America did supply a lot of food and industrial equipment which was probably crucial for the war effort (of course the british were a lot more dependent on Lend Lease than the soviets, but the point remains)