panzers -> RE: OT: question: US military size, prewar (4/18/2008 10:02:21 AM)
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ORIGINAL: niceguy2005 I know mlees, and probably no one else is asking my opinion, but since the forum is slow these days I'll give it anyway. [:'(] quote:
1) Did the small size of the US Army cause the aggressive Axis powers to underestimate the US's ability to fight and win a war? As far as axis Germany goes: After the joke that was the treaty of versailles, There was no one that was going to stop Germany from starting WWII(in europe). And, on top of that, if there was no Hitler, it would have been someone else. If the truth be known, France's stubborn will to completely make a proud Germany nothing but a third world country just out of spite, despite the strong arguments against it by The USA and The British, is the single biggest reason why WWII happened. In effect, the traty of versailles is the reason for WWII. I know people will debate that, but all you have to do is check out the history on that and it will clearly show that World war I and the treaty of versailles was the culprit, NOT HITLER! In the end, what we have here is two proud and ethnically superior nations, one completely in control of the other. Never a good recipe. Quoted from panzers Almost certainly yes...but at least in the case of Japan it wasn't just the size of the military which led to the perceived weakness. Japan (the political military establishment) also considered Japanese people to be superior to pretty much everyone. It was the arrogance, as much as anything, that led to the war. quote:
1a) Would a much larger US military (Army, Air Force, and Navy) in 1939 have restrained the aggressiveness of Germany or Japan? NO. See the comment above. When ultra-national pride is the dominant thought process reason and judgment go out the window. quote:
2) Did the large US Navy actually aggravate the situation vis a vis Japan? No, the large Navy in and of itself did not aggravate the problem with Japan, if by aggravate you mean take aggressive action. However, the threat by the US and UK to blockade Japan, combined with the deployment of fleets to the Pacific did aggravate the situation. Had the US taken a more restrained posture it seems certain Japan would have been content to continue its war with China first. quote:
3) Would a smaller military have worked, but only if the USA had remained completely isolationist from events in Asia and Europe? (Remember, the oil embargo and Lend Lease acts could be seen by the Axis powers as provocative.) There was a small group advocating for maintaining a small military. They were isolationists. Would having a small military have discouraged FDR from threatening a blockade on Japan...possibly. Would this have prevented a preemptive strike by Japan, possibly. Would that ultimately have prevented a war? That's almost impossible to predict IMO, but personally I doubt it. Japan almost certainly would have attacked forces in the SRA. quote:
Thanks again for the interesting view points. I had not considered that the large USN might have been seen by Japan, as a dagger aimed at her. I always viewed the move of the Pacific Fleet to Hawaii as a failed deterent, as Japan attacked anyway. I did not think much deeper than that. But then again, Japan had been training with the US in mind as the most likely enemy since the mid-20's... kind of a self fullfilling prophecy. Well, certainly that was true after the embargo and the threatened blockade. The failure at Hawaii, IMO, was a failure to adequately assess the threat of carriers. I never saw the Hawaii move foremost as a deterrent. I believe it was a real step toward an actual blockade....apparently so did Japan. I just wanted to add something to my own 2 cents on the subject. Where I feel the treaty of versailles is what created Hitler, there is another factor that is quite the twist of irony: in a very strange way, the best thing that could have ever happened to this world was that the fact that it was Hitler that was the result of the treaty. As I'm sure most of you know, his competition was squashed, and I'm not talking about the jews or the SA here. I'm talking about the communists. Now say what you will about East Germany after the war with the advent of nuclear technology, but can you imagine what this world would be like today if Hitler didn't purge every communist in Germany? That would have been 1000 times more dangerous than eastern Germany. The chances of this world being a communist world would have been far more likely than anyone could even think of compared to the world of the 5000 year reich. I then would have to say that the fact that Stalin in that case would have been the leader of a communist world would have been quite frightning indeed. So say what you will, but the madness that was Hitler was very much a blessing in disguise based on the mere fact that the treaty inevedively was GOING to create a monster of some kind out of Germany.
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