HansMustermann
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2009
- Messages
- 23,741
@Henri McPhee
Unfortunately, much as those opinions may sound disrespectful to the many people who died in those battles, those were really foregone conclusions before they even started.
E.g., Alamein was where Rommel's logistics chain reached its hard maximum limit. He couldn't get any further no matter what.
E.g., the Battle Of Britain was really lost from the start, because Germany grossly underestimated (A) how many planes the British had, and (B) how many more they're able to produce per month. The numeric superiority of the Brits in the air was actually steadily going UP throughout the BOB, and the only one who wasn't catching onto it was Göring.
And actually by the time Göring switched to bombing London, the British numbers superiority was just starting to go up faster. See, by then the Brits were starting to avoid being baited into fighting the German fighters. The RAF had recently gotten orders to avoid German fighters entirely, if they're not escorting bombers. Otherwise, just let them fly around until they run out of fuel and go home, which didn't take all that long with a BF-109's fuel capacity.
So the Brits were losing less planes, and producing more.
Of course Göring took the lack of opposition as a sign that the RAF is running out of fighters. Yay, they're defeated! Nope, he was just an idiot.
So, yes, much as it is right to honour the dead, we have to accept that Germany got into those fights without any realistic hope to win them. That's not minimizing their sacrifice, since they DID stop Germany, but BECAUSE of those brave men being there, Germany didn't have a snowflake's chance in hell in the first place.
Unfortunately, much as those opinions may sound disrespectful to the many people who died in those battles, those were really foregone conclusions before they even started.
E.g., Alamein was where Rommel's logistics chain reached its hard maximum limit. He couldn't get any further no matter what.
E.g., the Battle Of Britain was really lost from the start, because Germany grossly underestimated (A) how many planes the British had, and (B) how many more they're able to produce per month. The numeric superiority of the Brits in the air was actually steadily going UP throughout the BOB, and the only one who wasn't catching onto it was Göring.
And actually by the time Göring switched to bombing London, the British numbers superiority was just starting to go up faster. See, by then the Brits were starting to avoid being baited into fighting the German fighters. The RAF had recently gotten orders to avoid German fighters entirely, if they're not escorting bombers. Otherwise, just let them fly around until they run out of fuel and go home, which didn't take all that long with a BF-109's fuel capacity.
So the Brits were losing less planes, and producing more.
Of course Göring took the lack of opposition as a sign that the RAF is running out of fighters. Yay, they're defeated! Nope, he was just an idiot.
So, yes, much as it is right to honour the dead, we have to accept that Germany got into those fights without any realistic hope to win them. That's not minimizing their sacrifice, since they DID stop Germany, but BECAUSE of those brave men being there, Germany didn't have a snowflake's chance in hell in the first place.