Lokasenna
Posts: 9297
Joined: 3/3/2012 From: Iowan in MD/DC Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Canoerebel The premise is certainly as plausible as Harry Turtledove's Guns of the South. Meaning: impossibility offered solely for lighthearted entertainment purposes. P.S. I have no idea what The Man in the High Castle is. I've never heard of it. So my opinion is based solely upon your brief description. :) Right, I'm OK with that (bold part) in principle. I think it's just the degree of familiarity that I have with WW2 thanks to this game, this forum, and all the video and other material I've absorbed. The German A-bomb point I hadn't thought of. I suppose in that instance, anything's possible (assuming no A-bomb for USA). Better to surrender and save your people, regardless of the conditions. quote:
ORIGINAL: Jorge_Stanbury Well, GB is too far... and invading Cuba or any other Caribbean island would be as difficult as invading the US... because the USN would not remain idle while this invasion is taking place That said, I saw some Nicaraguan/ Cuban communist guerrillas invading Florida in that 1985's classic; "Invasion USA" but thanks god Chuck Norris wouldn't allow it OK, but what does invading Florida get them? So far as I know, that area wasn't exactly strategically important. Most of the wartime industry was elsewhere, and an invasion would've been repulsed eventually. quote:
ORIGINAL: wdolson quote:
ORIGINAL: Yaab Technically, the US forces just had to cross the English Channel in amphibious mode in order to invade France. I guess the Germans would have had to use Cuba as a staging area for their invaion of Florida then. The US and UK were just barely able to invade France in 1944, but to do so they had to do the following: 1) Make sure the bulk of the German army was bogged down thousands of miles away. Most people don't know Operation Bagration was timed to come right after the Normandy invasion to make sure the Germans didn't transfer any units to the west. 2) Completely control the Atlantic. Subs won't do it, a blue water navy was needed. Subs can deny control of a body of water to someone else, but they can't control a body of water themselves. Germany would have had to build a blue water navy at least as big as the navies the US and UK were committing to the Atlantic. This was beyond their industrial capacity. 3) Build a large fleet of amphibious vehicles and other specialize landing ships for the invasion. 4) Support the invasion with a huge supply train from the home country. Any move from Germany to ally with Cuba along with the slightest interest from Cuba would have likely triggered an American invasion of Cuba. One of the things that brought the US into WW I was Germany making alliance offers to Mexico with promises that Mexico could keep large swaths of the US after they defeat the US. Mexico wisely declined. The US is the only country to ever win a full scale war on two fronts at once. Between the large population and massive industrial capacity, the US was the toughest opponent in the world in 1940. And then attempting an invasion of the US would have been complete folly without some major advantage nobody had. The entire New World is a natural fortress. The only navy in world history that ever had the lift capacity to pull off an invasion of the US was the USN circa 1945 and even then it would have been tough. Gaining a foothold in the New World is tough. The US has followed the Monroe Doctrine since the 1820s and other powers have not messed with the New World much since then. The Monroe Doctrine says the US will react strongly and quickly to any outside power trying to establish a military presence anywhere in the New World. Even if the isolationists were in power, they would have reacted to any move by Germany in this hemisphere. A beachhead on Cuba would have been throttled in short order by air power and the USN if not a counter invasion of Cuba. Trying to just hold on to a presence in Cuba would have been at least as difficult if not more difficult than it would have been for Japan to hold onto Midway. And subduing the US population if they could have invaded would have been an even tougher task. All but one successful occupation of the 20th century had at least a ratio of 20 soldiers per 1000 population. And that is only after the civilian population has mostly been disarmed. It takes closer to 100 per 1000 when there is an active insurgency. The US had a population of 132 million in 1940. That would have required an occupation army of about 2.6 million troops and an invasion force of about 13 million. The entire German army in 1940 was 6.6 million men. The total who served through the entire war including the Volkstrum was about 18 million. Assuming Germany had conquered all of Europe, they would need millions of garrison troops to control all the conquered territories or see mass uprisings they couldn't subdue. That would have tied down million of troops there. Then they would have had to man a vastly larger navy and merchant marine, which would have tied down millions more, leaving them without enough men for the invasion and occupation force for the US operation. It's just plain impossible. The Man in the High Castle is a Phillip K Dick novel. He tended to use his premises as a launching point for some deeper message or explore some facet of human nature. I haven't been able to bring myself to watch the show, the premise is too far fetched for my tastes, though there is a parallel worlds/time travel series by John Barnes that had a successful invasion of the US scenario that was feasible. The protagonist went to a parallel 1960 where the Allies had been almost completely defeated because Germany was given advanced technology by another group from another parallel world in the late 1930s. It's an entertaining and fast moving story, I've read the series twice and I almost never read books twice. Bill Thanks Bill. This is essentially what I was trying to tell him but given we were speaking over IM, it's hard to have things in such an ordered format. The one trump would be A-bomb capability, really, which I suppose is in the P. K. Dick premise, but again - it's just a bit too far out there for me considering everything that actually happened in history. Changing more than just wartime outcomes, having to go back farther into history beyond the beginning of WW2 in order to change things... and then assuming that WW2 would still happen more or less as it did except sans USA involvement... too much for me to take it seriously, but I hadn't ruled it out as something to watch idly while doing something else.
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