sven
Posts: 10293
Joined: 3/28/2000 From: brickyard Status: offline
|
quote:
Originally posted by Elvis:
<<< Yep I am sure the Italian, French, Polish, Soviet, Hungarian, Norweigian, Danish, and Belgian armies were all superior to the US Army. >>>
Now here is a pearl of wisdom...
I'd love to hear you prove a claim like this one. Please do, in detail.
<<< I suppose that the US Army should have not used IT'S (USAF was born in '47)inherent advantages to seem more manly. >>>
Yet another pearl. I suppose that it would have been more "sporting" to forgo the use of tactical air power, even though it was an "inherent advantage."
Every standing army from 1939-45 had inherent strengths and weaknesses. The factors involved are many; quality of equipment, quantity of equipment, quality of training, elan, pride, tactics, ability to adapt, etc. etc. ad nauseum. Basing an opinion on any one of these factors without taking the others into account renders any "rating" argument invalid.
On a tactical level, I'm sure every army had its share of stunning victories, and each had its share of catastrophic defeats. What does this prove? Nothing - until you take a look at the overall picture. It does a great injustice to the fighting men of all countries involved in the War to make generalizations based on 50 years of hindsight, especially from those of us who were not there...
Ahh Elvis I am guessing you did not Scan my sarcasm directed at Drake in that post. I do however think the French were overrated. Simply put- they folded without half the pressure that the Poles were under and I do not care how great the shock of the Meuse was they should have been able to rally.
The French made some very grave mistakes in their choice of a commander, style of doctrine, structure of command and control, and utilization of assets. I am not casting aspersions on the fighting mettle of any soldier, I am quite willing however to cast aspersions on the leadership of those same fighting men. It is not the individual French infantryman's fault that when Churchill asked, "where is your strategic reserve?" the French high command shrugged and said, "there is none."
I am glad the US used whatever it could to win. It seems to me that each of the major powers utilized what advantages they had to the best of their leadership's ability. That is where the Frances, Denmarks, et. al (including Soviet Union imho) came up short. France had several very large advantages during the Battle of France(more correctly named the Skirmish of France)
here are some figures I dug up.
forces in NW Europe(divisions)
Allied
british total 16
Armored 1
motorized 15
belgian total 23
Infantry 21
Cavalry 2
Dutch total 9
motorized 1
infantry 8
Polish total 2
infantry 2
French total 102
armored 6
motorized 7
infantry 84
Cavalry 5
Allied Total 152
armored 7
motorized 23
infantry 115
Cavalry 7
German Totals 136
armored 10
motorized 7
infantry 118
cavalry 1
These numbers do not convey a few facts though.
1) Allied C+C was greatly hampered by the multinational nature of the alliance.
2)The Belgians refused to allow the French to shore up their defense until it was too late.
3)the germans did indeed have air superiority but were 800 tanks short and had only one quarter of the total number of motor vehicles for their infantry.
I would say that 1940 was not France's finest minute.... let alone hour. The French were a tired people who had watched their young manhood go off to die in the Somme, so do I begrudge them their defeatist attitude? No, but will I mention it and laugh at them when they claimed to be the dominant European military? Absolutely.
regards,
sven 11h
------------------
Give all you can all you can give....
_____________________________
|