Belz...
Fiend God
1. Austria
2. Germany
Wow. If someone had said that earlier we might've been spared 23 pages of 9/11 Investigator.
1. Austria
2. Germany
No problem. After we've solved this, here's your list so far:
RAF
Mönchengladbach May 11./12. 1940.
Germans
Wieluń September 1st 1939.
Again, the exercise here is not to free the Germans of all possible blame, but rather to follow Buchanan and destroy the myth of the Good War. We are interested in the big picture, like that the Germans dropped on Britain only a 5% of what the Anglos dropped on Germany.
Well then they should have thought twice before they bombed British Cities.
What did they think? we would just let them get on with it? Why is it the fault of the ALlies that th Germans couldn't build enough bombs?
You are missing the point. In the German-British conflict it was the British who declared war and started bombing (as soon as Churchill came to power).
Conveniently forgetting that Poland was Britain's ally.
Only a miserable character from rainy pest hole Hull-England can come up with these tactics of hitting under the belt in this way. But we all know how they are, either:
a) throw as many bombs as possible on children from 10 km altitude.
The case for area bombing was confirmed by the findings of D.M. Butt, a civilian member of the War Cabinet staff whose report on Bomber Command's operations, presented in August 1941, became a seminal document in the evolution of bombing strategy. Examining aerial photographs triggered by bomb releases on the hundred-odd raids mounted between 2 June and 25 July, Butt concluded that on average no more than one sortie in five bombed within five miles of the correct target, while over the Ruhr on dark or cloudy nights perhaps only one bomber in ten got within five miles of the objective. Industrial haze — smog — was the major culprit in the Ruhr's especially disheartening statistics. Not yet a true conurbation, the major cities in the valley were nevertheless close to each other and they shared several confusing characteristics. Belching forth smoke and well protected by Flak, all were railway towns bordering rivers or canals. Given any combination of cloud, darkness, fatigue, fear, and navigation error, as well as the understandable inclination of bomber crews to believe they were where they were supposed to be, one city could easily be mistaken for another.
The annexatation was a disaster for Germany. Bismarck was right in having very grave doubts about it. It ensured that relations between France and Germany would be poisoned.
We are interested in the big picture, like that the Germans dropped on Britain only a 5% of what the Anglos dropped on Germany.
Germany never had the problems with Alsace-Lorraine that Russia had with the Poles or the Ukrainains or that Austria-Hungary had with the Czechs, Italians, Croats, etc within their boundaries. There were minor incidents but nothing along the lines of the near open rebellion in Eastern Europe.
Has NEI yet explained why the Germans felt France couldn't be defeated directly in 1914 instead of by wheeling through a neutral country their own princely ancestors had co-guaranteed? How about any cites establishing Bethmann-Hollweg's "surprise" at the strong British response to the violation of Belgium's neutrality?
What was Britain supposed to do try and move the British army to Poland? How was Britain to come to the direct aid of Poland until it had mobilised? What would you have done if you were the British C in C to directly give military aid to Poland?Interesting enough Britain was an ally already on september 1, 1939, but did nothing to protect Poland accept declaring (a toothless Phoney) war.
??after giving Poland a blanc cheque that they could do what they wanted
The Irony is ,of course, that the Russians proved to be much more incompetent then the Germans were expecting, and the French and British much tougher. They was no panic after the initial German Breakthrough at the border the way their had been in 1870.
Yes, because Germany never developed a long-range heavy bomber force. It's a little hard to do strategic bombing if you don't develop a four-engined heavy bomber to do the job and then build enough of them to carry it out.
Given this, it should hardly be surprising to anyone that the Allies delievered far more tonnage of bombs onto Germany than Germany did onto Britain. The Allies had the means to do so and used them; Germany lacked the means and thus could not. The result lies entirely at the feet of the German leadership.
What was Britain supposed to do try and move the British army to Poland? How was Britain to come to the direct aid of Poland until it had mobilised? What would you have done if you were the British C in C to directly give military aid to Poland?
??
What does this even mean? a blank cheque to do what exactly? Get invaded?
As for Patton being Murdered after he 'started to write to his wife about these 'semitic policies''
Where did you get that bit of lunacy? I thought the conspiracy of choice was the OSS had him killed because he was going to expose Eisenhower as ordering him not to close the 'Falaise Gap;' and deliberately let the encircled Germans to escape. Others claim it was the Russians who killed him because he wason Stalins 'death list'.
All equaly barking mad of course.
What was Britain supposed to do try and move the British army to Poland? How was Britain to come to the direct aid of Poland until it had mobilised? What would you have done if you were the British C in C to directly give military aid to Poland?
??
What does this even mean? a blank cheque to do what exactly? Get invaded?
As for Patton being Murdered after he 'started to write to his wife about these 'semitic policies''
Where did you get that bit of lunacy? I thought the conspiracy of choice was the OSS had him killed because he was going to expose Eisenhower as ordering him not to close the 'Falaise Gap;' and deliberately let the encircled Germans to escape. Others claim it was the Russians who killed him because he wason Stalins 'death list'.
All equaly barking mad of course.
I am shocked!
I thought that these Germans liked killing and what better means of safely killing other people is there than heavy bombers?
Are you saying that in reality it were the allies specialized in mass killing
Oh, and BTW—it was the British who had begun the deliberate bombardment and mass murder of civilians, not the Germans, with at least five air attacks on Berlin before Hitler responded reluctantly with the first German air attack on any Allied civilians with the attack on London on September 7, 1940.