xj900uk
Posts: 1340
Joined: 3/22/2007 Status: offline
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Hmmm, interesting comments... Germany could have won the war by Dec ’41 if it had concentrated on U-Boat production from day 1 and blockaded Britain into starvation during 40-41 (as Doenitz so desperately wanted). You have to remember that in those days Britain was just about self-sufficient in food, but had to import most of its raw materials for the war effort (especially aluminium and rubber, which it had no home-grown resources), and, perhaps most important of all, all of its aviation fuel and oil. A determined U-boat blockade could have strangled British industry in 40-41 and completely negated its ability to wage war, a negotiated peace favourable to Germany would have been the inevitable outcome no matter what Churchill thought. Contrary to popular belief, the Battle of Britain was not the decisive battle, although it is true if the RAF had been destroyed, there would have been no need for an invasion and German bombers could have roamed wild and free until Britain negotiated a peace, but this was far, far harder for Germnay to accomplish (particularly with Herman Goering in charge of the German effort). The U-boat menace was far more telling and, crucially, hurt Britain far harder than nearly all of the German bombing raids (London docks and Coventry being a few exceptions). That was why, when, faced with an imminent launching of Operation Sealion, Churchill commented ‘they won’t invade’ and sent all of Britains remaining reserves of armour (not much after Dunkirk) to the North African desert. In his history of WWII, Churchill himself wrote ‘the only thing that really scared me was the U-boat peril’. Regarding Japan, that’s a toughie. IMO (and I know this is controversial) the only way they could have ‘won’ was fighting a war of very limited objectives and concentrating in the DEI and CBI theatres. The ‘unprovoked’ and ‘unanounced’ attack on PH was what united the US people behind Roosevelt. Even if Port Morseby had fallen, or Guadalcanal, or the IJN had won the battle of Midway, or even if teh IJ had succeeded in invading Hawaii and taking PH (as the US feared at the end of ’41) , the war would have continued and the US would have been just as determined. True, it would have taken a hell of a lot longer, but the result would have been teh same. And I doubt the US would ever have been in the mood to negotiate an early cease-fire. If, however, the IJ had concentrated in the DEI and CBI theatres, then I doubt even if Guam and the PI had been attacked, Roosevelt would had got anything like the same level of both political and public backing to simply prop up and sustain fading European colonial interest in S E Asia.... The ‘America First’ movement would also have still continued to enjoy a lot of support and encourage isolationist policies. No doubt the US would have fought some kind of campaign, looked to rap the IJ over the knuckles and then negotiate some kind of peace which would guarantee their own possessions and probably little more...
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