PanzerKampfwagen -> RE: Franco's Alliance v2.4 is here (7/7/2006 2:56:39 AM)
|
Many thanks, Polonthi, for replying. However, I made a mistake in asking my first question, because I actually meant to say Hungary, not Bulgaria. [:-] quote:
In the newer patches, the population point in Bulgaria was eliminated. In the Franco's Alliance version 2.4 readme, it says that a new factory was put in Bulgaria. Can this factory never produce anything but supplies and research? Or does the mod undo the population point change and set it back to the way it was? In this question, I actually meant to say Hungary instead of Bulgaria, because in the newer patches, Hungary's population point was eliminated. quote:
Can you attack the Dutch East Indies, Burma, etc. ( In other words any country in the Pacific owned by a European power except maybe Australia ) without bringing the U.S. into the war? quote:
You can't and you may be right for the Dutch East Indies but Burma was British and the US might have done more than screaming there. If the U.S. didn't do anything when Britain itself was about to be conquered, what makes you think they would have screamed louder about Burma? I don't think they would have done anything, even if the Japanese had invaded Australia, had it not been for Pearl Harbor. It just wouldn't have been politically possible for Roosevelt to declare war before either the Japanese or the Germans committed an act of aggression directly against the U.S. quote:
Don't you have to conquer 3 out of 4 of those regions, ( Northern Italy, Southern Italy, Tripoli, and Sicily) to trigger the Italian surrender? No, I looked it up in the patch documentation, and it's only two. Thus you can force the Italians to surrender just by taking Sicily and Tripoli. [:@] quote:
Now I don't agree with your statement of Italian troops being a bunch of demoralized militia. I think the Italian soldiers is not considered at his just value most of the time. They were good soldiers but they were under equipped and with obsolete guns, planes and tanks then their officers were, at least on the high command, a joke. I'd agree that the officers were a joke and that the training and equipment were terrible, but the mark of a good soldier is one who can fight even if he isn't being told what to do, even if he hasn't been well trained, and even if he hasn't got any weapon more dangerous than an old, obsolete rifle. remember what the Russians did? There commanders were also a joke, they also had terrible training, and although they had good weaponry, they often didn't know how to use it. And yet, despite all this, they put up a good fight anyway and blasted the Germans time and again. quote:
look at the Italian tanks, and you must be incredibly brave to go fight British tanks with those. Sure, but the Russians commonly charged Tigers and Panthers at long range with T-34's, T-70's, and other tanks that were often almost useless against the German panzers, especially at the long ranges common on the Russian front. The T-34's were just wrecked in heaps more often than not, and yet the Russians just kept on coming anyway. In this respect, I think that the Italians were indeed demoralized, because otherwise they would have fought on hard anyway despite their lack of weapons, training, and leadership. I know that some people might argue that they were demoralized because they were being forced to fight in a war that most of them hadn't wanted in the first place, and that there was no hope for them. However, the same thing can be said for many Germans, and many of them just kept on fighting anyway ( except right at the end, where some of them did start to surrender ), whereas the Italians just gave up en masse and surrendered as soon as things started to look bad for them. A good soldier is one who just keeps on fighting until there is no hope left, no matter what the odds. When the Germans invaded Belgium in 1914, even though the Belgians were hopelessly outnumbered, did they just throw down their weapons and run away, begging for mercy? No, of course not. Along with the British Expeditionary Force, the fought the Germans all the way through Belgium and seriously delayed them, allowing the French the time they needed to throw together an army to stop the Germans before they just rolled over all of France. I never remember the Italians doing anything like that. In the end, I think we must conclude that the Italians were born to be the world's greatest artists, not necessarily the world's greatest warriors. The vast majority of Italians just don't have a warlike nature, and they tend to prefer peace a lot more ( which is also good in many ways ). [;)]
|
|
|
|