Gawdzilla Sama
TImeToSweepTheLeg
9/11 likes to group people into easily-labeled categories.
Less thinking needed.
9/11 likes to group people into easily-labeled categories.
Let's hope so. The WWII U-boat campaign offers a couple of good examples of Germany's (more specifically, Hitler's) military stupidity. Diverting U-boats from the Atlantic campaign to the Mediterranean? Stupid.
He had no choice. He was let down by the Regia Marina, they completely abdicated their presence in the Med to the Royal Navy. U-Boats were the only practical way that the Germans could send any kind of surface vessels to support them having started the war far earlier than the Kreigsmarine building plan expected.
NOT invading was a choice.
You could also say, using the same logic, that France and Britain had no other choice than to invade Germany in response to Germany's invasion of Poland. Except that you KNOW they had a choice, because they stupidly DIDN'T invade, when they had a golden opportunity.
Britain had no plans to invade Norway. There were plans to mine Norwegian waters to deny them to German ships. It was the Mining flotilla that ran into the German invasion force on it's way to Norway.
Well, the French did invade, with the Saar offensive.
9/11 likes to group people into easily-labeled categories.
Yeah, the French.![]()
Maybe the Czechslovakia invasion was their attempt to take the long way around to East Prussia.
p.208 - Chamberlain was to be the first British Prime Minister to set foot in Germany for 60 years.
p.210 - Chamberlain was the hero of Munich who had been cheered by throngs of Germans on his trip to Berchtesgaden, Godesberg, and Munich, for the Germans, too, wanted peace and believed http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~wwtwopics/1_11chamberlin.jpghe had come to preserve it.
p.211 - 6 months after Munich, the remnant of Czecho-Slovakia... was occupied by Hitler. What persuaded Britain to break up Czechoslovakia to appease Hitler?
p.215 - Neither Chamberlain nor his Cabinet was willing to go to war to deny Sudeten Germans the right to self-determination or keep them under an alien Czech rule.
p.219 - Why did Chamberlain not reject Hitler's demands? Why did Britain not elect to fight, rather than abandon the Czechs... As he had written to his sister, Chamberlain "did not care 2 hoots whether the Sudetens were in the Reich, or out it"... Many British believed justice was on the German side... Under Wilson's principle of self-determination, they should have been left under Vienna.
p.221 - What also made the prospect of a war for Czechoslovakia repellent to Chamberlain was that he believed that, as a people, Czechs were "not out of the top-drawer".
p.223 - Churchill was also wrong in his wild exagerration of the martial spirit and fighting prowess of the Czech army... After Munich, when Britain and France told the Czechs to let the Sudetenland go, the Czechoslovakian army folded without firing a shot. Herr Benes fled.
p.235 - When Hitler said the Sudetenland was his last territorial demand, did Chamberlain think he had given up Danzig and Memel?
p.245 - So matters stood in March 1939, when the rump state of Czechoslovakia suddenly began to collapse and fall apart, as Hitler had warned Chamberlain at Berchtesgaden it would.
p.246 - On March 14, Slovakia declared independence. "Ruthenia quickly followed and this action dissolved what was left of the Czech state."
p.248 - On March 15, Hitler entered Prague... Thus the Munich agreement, altarpiece of Chamberlain's career, pillar of hist European policy, lay in ruin. "It was the final shipwrreck of my mission to Berlin," wrote Henderson. "Hitler had crossed the Rubivon."
p.249 - Historians mark Hitler's march into Prague as the crossroads where he started down the path of conquest by imposing German rule on a non-Germanic people... Here is Taylor's take, half a century ago:...
Bohemia had always been a part of the Holy Roman Empire; it had been part of the German Confederation between 1815 and 1866; then it had been linked to German Austria until 1918. Independence, not subordination, was the novelty in Czech history...
p.251 - Whatever triggered the crisis or motivated Hitler, it was a blunder of historic magnitude and utterly unnecessary. Having lost the Sudetenland, and now facing a hostile breakaway Slovakia to the east and Germans to the north, west and south, Prague was already a vasal state. Why send in an army and humiliate a British prime minister who had shown himself willing to accomodate Hitler's demands for the return of German territories and peoples, if Hitler would only proceed peacefully For little gain, Hitler had burned his bridges to the political leaders of a British Empire he had sought to befriend and who were prepared to work with him for redress of grievances from Versailles. Hitler now had the Skoda arms works. But he had also made a bitter enemy of Great Britain.
You could probably drop the word "Europeans" from that last sentence.And Bohemia had a long history of problems with German Domination.
I get the impression the Nein 11 feels that Germans have a natural right to rule over "inferior" Europeans races.
And Bohemia had a long history of problems with German Domination.
I get the impression the Nein 11 feels that Germans have a natural right to rule over "inferior" Europeans races.
Damn decent of you, old chap.I have no problem whatsoever with an independent Czech and a Slovak republic.
And this is exactly what Suvorov and meanwhile many others are now saying, that the USSR was preparing for a war against Germany in July, 1941.
He had no choice. He was let down by the Regia Marina, they completely abdicated their presence in the Med to the Royal Navy. U-Boats were the only practical way that the Germans could send any kind of surface vessels to support them having started the war far earlier than the Kreigsmarine building plan expected.
Uh, Russia was preparing for war against Germany a month after Germany had invaded Russia?