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I'm off to sleep. Good night everyone!
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Again, these discussions and the race for Berlin and Eisenhower decided against it etc is well documented. One document I just read recently said that it simply wasn't worth the effort to take Berlin ahead of the Russians because we'd be fighting for land that would later have to be turned over to Russia anyway. There's a lot on the web about this, by all means go read it. It's really quite fascinating, to me anyway. |
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Just wait until they do one of these fancy pantsy parades and cluster bombs away!
lights out |
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Yes...indeed. We have transport capability that cannot begin to be matched by any other country on the earth...and pre-positioned supply bases...around much of the world. Some routes are just somewhat easier than others but whatever route is needed it will be taken...one way or another. The U.S. can reach out and touch anyone...anywhere...at anytime. |
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It's funny how Americans think we sailed in and saved the day. Russia was invaded by Germany in 1941. D-Day didn't go down until 1944. Germany surrendered in 1945. Do the math. The Russians pushed back the Nazis all the way from Moscow back to Berlin. We basically fought a one year rear guard action. Russia lost twenty-four million people during WWII. The US lost 400k, which includes what we lost in the Pacific fighting Japan. Staggering difference. |
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What's scary today is not how to maneuver & position, but the types of people we are engaged with. People that only know war. Generations of fighters that do not know what giving up even means. |
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And your right, btw. We were still fighting in Italy when Germany called it quits. We were the Elbe river in Germany when Russia had captured Berlin. A year after D-Day and we had barely crossed France and only half way into Germany, while Russia fought the Nazis through 1/3 of Russia (huge distance) and through Poland. |
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As for "Korea", well, just keep in mind we already have tens of thousands of troops there and god only knows how much equipment we have stored there - not to mention Japan isn't too far away, and I know the US has a huge military presence there including the third largest concentration of US Marines.... Might make watching the news a bit more interesting.... |
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These may be poorly equipped soldiers but they are brainwashed fanatics that makes Al Qaeda fanatics look like Sunday school children. During the cold war the US strategy were to be able to fight two different wars at the same time you are during that now. Beside the 30K soldiers and the Pacific fleet how many more men do you think the US could put in Korea within 1-2 weeks? You need a hell of a lot of air strikes to take out 1 million soldiers. Quote:
Russia had troops behind the canon fodder with orders to shoot anyone that hesitated or did not follow orders to attack. NKs are fanatics thinking their great leader is God. See the differences? |
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Seen this documentary some time ago, well worth a watch in regards to brainwashing, propaganda, fear and suppression. Some footage in here that shows North Korea's true colors. It's 5 parts, this is 1/5
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Actually bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki have nothing common with the war against Japan. It was a sign/warning/menace to the USSR. Poor civilian Japanese people have burned in nuclear hell just because the US government wanted to say: "Hey Russians, do you see what we have? It's going to be used against YOU!" 2baddog: Sorry man. May be you are real wikipedia ninja, but you still can't understand the simple thing. The there was not enough US forces in Europe to take over Berlin. This is a historical fact. And BTW: a) Berlin was a one big stronghold, so the defenders always will have much less losses than attackers; a) the German forces were much better trained (remember, they were fighting during the years in real battles); b) the German forces were fighting for their motherland and their capital, so it was knowingly the last battle for many of them... Once again, there was not enough the US forces in Europe to go on Berlin. And the only reason why Soviet Army didn't move to that small western part of Europe (after it defeated Hitler in his own home) was American A-Bomb. PERIOD. |
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Currently I'm going back to college part time to get a degree in history, focused on WWII. |
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When I first started studying WWII when I was (much) younger, I honestly believed in what we were taught in high school - You know, D Day, Omaha Beach, and how the Americans sliced through Europe and saved the world from the Nazis. But the more I read about WWII, the more I discovered Americans had no clue of what really happened there. For the US, WWII started with Hawaii and we accept this now as a direct attack on the US. But in 1941 everyone said "Oh my god, Hawaii was attacked. Where the fuck is Hawaii?". We accept Hawaii as a US state, but in 1941 it was little known US outpost in the Pacific along the lines of Guam or Midway. Americans are taught and tend to believe that American sailed in and saved the day with Europe. The truth is we were fighting the war in the Pacific single handedly without much assistance from anyone. For the first two or three years of the war in the Pacific the US only helped out with material and money. The US was busy trying to rebuild the Pacific fleet to take on Japan, and building Liberty ships so we could send supplies to the UK. In the mean time, it's a little known fact the Germans in their submarines owned the east coast sinking American ships at will. Americans have no clue of what really happened during WWII. |
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Having come from a long line of military myself...I too have studied the Second World War and war in general since I have been old enough to read. I also studied war when I attended University...and spent 12 years on active duty...with my military career being terminated in '92 because of injuries sustained in the '91 Gulf War. |
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The main effort on the United States in the early stages of WWII was fighting in the Pacific. In 1942 only the Russians were really fighting the Germans. The United States had yet to land any forces in Europe. About the same time the battle of Midway took place, which was one of the first times the US beat Japan. 1943 saw the Russians fighting in Stalingrad and Moscow, which was the start of the German defeat. It wasn't until September of 1943 - two years after war was declared on the United States by both Japan and Germany - that the US put a large military force on the ground, which was in Italy. The US was attacked, stunned, and was loosing ground. It was fighting Japan from day one while German submarines had a fucking field day off the US east coast - nearly unopposed by the US Navy. By the time D Day happened, the Russians had beat down the Germans in Stalingrad and Moscow, had pushed them out of Russia, into Poland and Estonia - nearly into Germany and Berlin. In June of 1994, the month of D Day, the Russians (after destroying entire German Divisions in bulk) took on and defeated the German Army Group Centre, which if I recall correctly, was the large military army in modern history. In the mean time the United States was fighting second hand troops in France. The German army has lost, defeated on, and or retreated nearly a thousand miles of Polish and Russian territory before D Day took place. |
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In 1941...Europe had been lost to the Germans...England was on the verge of being lost...Russia was being defeated by the Germans. On September 15, 1941, Germany began the Siege of Leningrad. It would not end until January 1944. It was in October of 1941 that the U.S. began supplying Russia with war materials and the overwhelming majority of its motorized vehicles. Once the U.S. began supplying Russia the Russians slowly began to turn the tide and by July of '44 they had retaken their country. Late in 1943, Stalin met with Roosevelt and Churchill for the first time -- The Teheran Conference. They agreed that the Western Allies would invade France in June 1944 and once the invasion began the Russians would began a push from the East. You say the U.S. did not save the day...but Eurpoe had been lost...England was on the verge of being lost and the Russians were losing but once the U.S. began supplying Europe and the Russians with war materials and once the U.S. entered the war and once A U.S. General was made Supreme allied commander the tide of war turned. Seems pretty much like saving the day to me. Feel free to think as you like...I do...but you cannot rewrite history. |
armchair geopoliticians
:Kissmy |
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Without the assistance of the U.S. in war materials and motorized vehicles and without the entry of the U.S. into the war and engaging German Forces...by land...sea and air...the victories of the Russians over the Germans...may never have took place as they were losing and losing badly prior to these events. The Russians never regained complete control of their country until July of '44 when they took back Minsk...a month after D Day. So it seems to me that the tide of the war changed when the U.S. began supplying materials to Eurpope/Russia and put troops on the ground in North Africa...Sicily...Italy and France...since the Russians did not regain their country until a month after D Day. It is true that the Russians engaged...captured and killed more German troops than the Allied forces did...but they could not have done it without the assistance of the U.S. in war materials/motorized vehicles and U.S/Allied forces engaging...capturing and killing German troops...end of story. Eurpoe had been lost...England was on the verge of being lost...the Russians were being badly defeated...but when the U.S. begin to supply and when they entered the war and when they engaged the German forces...this losing trend began to reverse itself. Once again it pretty much sounds like saving the day to me. |
guys theking watches the History Channel, you will not win. he gets the facts. he has fought in every major war since WW1 and has personally scalped over 1 million people to protect america.
every morning he drinks napalm to wake up. my guess is hes just some fat son of a army guy who has struggled his whole life to meet daddy requirements as a son, but hasnt ever done so, he wacthes history channel to get his facts and pretends he is a war veteran. LOL |
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11,000 sorties later let's take a head count. |
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So in 1942 the Russians were so NOT the only ones fighting the Germans. Quote:
The rest of what you said is largely true, although it does leave out many details. Russia took horrendous losses and even several defeats before doing all the great and wonderful things you described. They needed a massive amount of supplies and munitiions to mount their comeback offensive and the US was vital to that, via the lend-lease program. Frankly I have no idea why Hitler pushed so far East anyway. 1000's of miles of frozen tundra, wooh, I want it! Canada would have been next. He was described as an evil genius but in many ways Hitler was no genius. Far from it in fact. :D |
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