darroch -> (7/10/2001 5:47:00 AM)
|
"And now some anecdotes about the dreaded (american) heroism, which is so often described in this message board."
"(american heroism)" ??? - I guessed I missed the pro-american propaganda - on which threads is it "often described"?? I'd love to read some.
Until you started GI bashing it seemed like just another posting about SPWAW trivia...
only on a forum like this could you speak seriously about the correct way to handle WW2 skirt armor from a shot penetration perspective!! And get a serious answer back the same day!!
then you started with the anecdotes...
your point was?
The US Army goes to seed during peacetime? Ohmigod!!! That's NEVER happened!!
The US Army, enjoying 10:1 numerical superiority late in WW2 chose not to forego their advantage and go one-on-one with their Shermans against Tigers??
Shocking - imagine that - soldiers retreating to avoid sure destruction against unbeatable odds, to live to fight another day on better terms...
I can't tell you how glad I am that the German stereotype is to continue attacking senselessly against superior odds without hope of winning - because without that mentality, Kursk, El Alamein, Falaise, and Bastogne would never have been such far-reaching Allied victories and the war would have been much longer and costlier...
Since we're dealing in stereotypes here, try this one:
- Hitler reckoned the US was soft, indulgent, and morally weak - their strength sapped by too many years of the good life of plenty...
- He declared war on the US casually after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor.. Some Japanese (Yammamoto) did not share the notion that Americans are weak-willed and had no illusions as to what they were tangling with.
- Initial US performances (Kasserine Pass) served to strengthen the impression of soft, weak Americans who couldn't stand up to the Wehrmacht...
Quiz time: besides Russia and the Commonwealth, name the combatant with the largest navy, air force, and army on May 9, 1945? For bonus points, whose army was in shreds, whose air force non-existent?
- Hilter would have been better served to have studied a handful of battles where Americans displayed their true combat capabilities:
Ever hear of the Iron Brigade at Gettysburg? Antietam? Belleau Wood? Shiloh? the Argonne Forest? How about Amiens, the day that Ludendorff called the "blackest day" of the Great War?? Yanks did that one.
What Hitler, and the Kaiser did was confuse an aversion to war with softness...they led Germany into war with the US and Germany lost both times...in both cases, American armies defeated German armies on the field of battle
did they do it alone? - no, it took numerous allies and millions of casualties
did they learn the hard lessons of war after initial failures? - yes
In each case, did the US Army develop into a fully capable modern army in a relatively short period time? Yup, both times
It occurs to me that you may have bought into the Great Myth of the Undefeated Wehrmacht?
You know, the one that says the Wehrmacht is the greatest army of all time and has never really been defeated on the field of battle?
According to the myth, the Wehrmacht was never defeated on the field of battle during WW 1 but that the war was lost on the home front to defeatists and bolsheviks...hmm
Hilter capitalized on this self-delusion and led Germany into WW2...after that, to try and save face, Wehrmacht fans claimed that it was Allied numerical superiority which destroyed Germany and that at anything like even odds, the Germans would always win through superior training, weaponry, or warrior courage....
Oh, give it a rest.
No country has a monopoly on courage, sacrifice, or moral strength....
I figure that anyone who starts another war suffering under the notion that Americans are soft and cowardly will find that they should have left well enough alone..
|
|
|
|