fcooke
Posts: 1156
Joined: 6/18/2002 From: Boston, London, Hoboken, now Warwick, NY Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: mind_messing quote:
ORIGINAL: warspite1 quote:
ORIGINAL: mind_messing You may want to look at the contribution of Axis naval assets to the Black Sea campaign. Sevastopol and operations around the Kuban are of particular interest. warspite1 I've read a bit on this subject - not as much as the Baltic - but enough to make your questioning of my question unsatisfactory as an answer. What are the Germans getting out of Black Sea operations from Turkey such that the Germans would be: - willing to attack Turkey but not defeat her with all that means in terms of losses, in terms of time lost, in terms of political reaction (and the very real possibility that Soviet oil and resource under the NS Pact is switched off) - willing to risk disruption of Turkish resources (Chromium being the main one) from Turkey to Germany - willing to leave Ploesti vulnerable to attack from Turkish airbases - willing to drain manpower resources for Barbarossa and weaken concentration of force (which was weak for the south in any case) by having a whole army group in Turkey This grand plan doesn't seem coherent. And remember too that, depending on Hitler's decision over Vichy that you believe he would be willing to make, Germany could now have enemies from Turkey, through Syria and down to Egypt. So far from this 'Blitz through Spain and Turkey' assisting the German cause, it appears to be rapidly making things worse for no good reason.... The advantage is that the Axis have unfettered access to the Black Sea, can embark on much more ambitious naval operations and can take full advantage of the Soviet Black Sea ports. quote:
ORIGINAL: fcooke Mostly small unit stuff. The larger Soviet units were mostly taken out by airpower. The largest Axis unit in the Black Sea was a DD. It is not really a theater I know a lot about, but I still don't see what opening up the straights would allow. Italian units constrained by limited supply of oil, Germany really doesn't have many large units, and the ones they do have are likely best used as Atlantic commerce raiders rather than coastal bombardment units in the Black Sea, especially early war when Germany had nearly complete command of the air. So please expand on what you think controlling the straights would allow? I am curious. thanks. Battleships get much of the attention, but sometimes the coastal (and even riverine!) operations have their role too. It's not about the size of the units commitment, but the geography that matters. A larger Axis naval commitment to the Black Sea likely means a quicker surrender in the Crimea, and massively simplifies the logistical situation for units along the coast. The importance of the Axis being able to use riverine traffic on the Dnieper and Don is diminished by the fact that they'll inevitably freeze in winter, but for the critical summer months that's a key transportation route in a very low infrastructure area. Again I ask - what units? Small ships and river craft were shipped to the Black Sea by rail/road. Don't need the straights to get those there. Not sure where the larger naval commit is coming from.....
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