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InvisibleDeath
04-13-16, 12:00 PM
I have been watching UBoat historic documentaries and they raise this question which I'm raising as a discussion point here.

So in 1940 Norway was invaded and was protected by UBoats. The British Navy responded and entered the area of operations. It could have been a huge win for the German UBoat forces as they were easy pickings. However, not a single British ship was damaged because every single torpedo fired was a dud.

Now: in the beginning of the war, Karl Donitz (sorry, I have no Umlaut) requested two things: 300 uboats and a buttload of engineering work to make torpedos reliable. It was not until the late part of the war the Hitler realized his mistake in giving Donitz lip service. So what if Hitler had give Donitz what he wanted? What if he had 300 subs and reliable torpedoes?

For one, by the time the Norway invasion had occurred a year after attack on Poland, the Brittish could have experience a major loss for the British Navy which could have had a significant impact on the war, had the engineers resolved the trigger mechanism issues and there were few duds. A huge number of ships would have given the Germans a good attack force against the British simply by attacking war ships in large wolf packs.

So what do you chaps think the impacts would have been? Obviously it was inevitable that the Americans would enter the war. So what do you think would have been the effect on the war?

GT182
04-13-16, 07:52 PM
If Donitz had gotten what he wanted, we might be speaking German today on the East Coast. And maybe Japanese on the West Coast. Thank God he didn't get those "reliable" torpedoes and 300 U-boats.

LG
04-14-16, 04:11 AM
So hard to tell (though speculation is always interesting) because the war was never determined by one single factor. It could have contributed to a change of course but I would hesitate to say that it could have meant a decisive change.

Torplexed
04-14-16, 05:25 AM
I think with any historical speculation you have to realize that nothing happens in a vacuum. If British intelligence ( some of the best, if not the best in the world ) picks ups that German shipyards are putting all their eggs in the U-Boat building basket, that means that Britain simply begins building more ASW escorts sooner. British shipbuilding capacity was always superior to German's and Germany only had so many specialized labor and shipyards for building U-Boats. As for the torpedo issue, the German (like the Americans) were already convinced they had the best engineered torpedo available at the start of hostilities. Sometimes it takes the strain of actual war to reveal the defects in any weapon system.

Besides, the beginning of the war would have been far to late to initiate such a program. Realistically you would have had to start sometime in the mid-1930s to gear up production and expand the crew training program to even have a shot at 300 U-Boats. And all this at the expense of the surface fleet which would have been difficult to do, since Admiral Raeder was running the navy then, not Admiral Doenitz.

Sailor Steve
04-14-16, 09:56 AM
If Donitz had gotten what he wanted, we might be speaking German today on the East Coast. And maybe Japanese on the West Coast. Thank God he didn't get those "reliable" torpedoes and 300 U-boats.
I've been hearing that one my whole life (which goes back to 1950). Even if Britain had fallen, there was no way the Germans could invade the US from 3,000 miles away, especially since US shipbuilding far outstripped anyone else's and we had the resources to put together a far larger army.

As for Japan, their goal at Pearl Harbor was to warn us to keep our noses out of their business in Asia. They wanted China, India and everything else in the region, including Australia. It's highly doubtful they ever seriously considered invading the United States. Even if they did, they would face the same problems Germany would.

The western hemisphere might end up isolated, but we would still be speaking the same languages we do now.

Aktungbby
04-14-16, 01:17 PM
Post one's surmise is moot: WWII was the 'wizard war' The Manhattan Project began modestly in 1939, but grew to employ more than 130,000 people and cost nearly US$2 billion (about $26 billion in 2016 dollars). Over 90% of the cost was for building factories and producing thefissile materials (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_fission), with less than 10% for development and production of the weapons The US had the best wizard who wrote FDR the letter to start the projecthttps://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/8/86/Einstein_tongue.jpg/220px-Einstein_tongue.jpg (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Einstein_tongue.jpg) (in addition to his work on faulty American torpedo triggers) https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/bf/Einstein-Roosevelt-letter.png/350px-Einstein-Roosevelt-letter.png (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Einstein-Roosevelt-letter.png)=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/8d/Trinity_shot_color.jpg/300px-Trinity_shot_color.jpg (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Trinity_shot_color.jpg) "money is the sinews of war" and we simply got more 'bang for the buck'... :rock: "numbers have a cachet of their own": Throw in FDR's successor, Truman: Just Two of these put paid to the Japanese Empire and kept the Cold War, arising out of 'Uncle Joe Stalins WWII 'Iron Curtain' land aggrandizement essentially in-check for half a century.

Sjizzle
04-14-16, 03:00 PM
Japan had some plan to attack US but was an epic fail with fire balloons

here (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_balloon)

wind change they direction and some of them exploded back in Japan

InvisibleDeath
04-17-16, 03:01 PM
Aktungbby I have read stories that the last group of UBoats that were taken out and scuttled by the crews contained a number of torpedoes that appeared to be nuclear explosives. But it was at the end of the war when defeat was imminent and none were ever used. :D

Torplexed
04-17-16, 03:30 PM
I believe there was an attempt to deliver some uranium oxide to Japan in the closing days of the war. That was probably as close as any U-Boat got to carrying nuclear weapons.

The 1,200 lbs. of uranium disappeared after the sub was surrendered to the US Navy. Most likely it ended up at the Manhattan Project's Oak Ridge plant.

Aktungbby
04-17-16, 04:52 PM
Aktungbby I have read stories that the last group of UBoats that were taken out and scuttled by the crews contained a number of torpedoes that appeared to be nuclear explosives. But it was at the end of the war when defeat was imminent and none were ever used. :D Well of course!:O: We should have an illuminating discussion thread of the subject...I've no doubt though that something awful got tested on Reugen Isle or in Thuringia: http://www.henrymakow.com/hitler-tested-nuclear-bombs.html (http://www.henrymakow.com/hitler-tested-nuclear-bombs.html) & http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/the-third-reich-how-close-was-hitler-to-the-a-bomb-a-346293.html (http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/the-third-reich-how-close-was-hitler-to-the-a-bomb-a-346293.html) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erich_Schumann (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erich_Schumann) I'm highly skeptical but keeping an open mind....:O: and we need a wacko new thread! http://www.pravdareport.com/history/10-05-2011/117849-atomic_bomb-0/ (http://www.pravdareport.com/history/10-05-2011/117849-atomic_bomb-0/)

blackswan40
04-17-16, 08:08 PM
Time frame late June 1940 Germany at War with England & at peace with their natural enemy the Russians also at this time the Germans as well as the British regarded German Surface ships the Greater threat to the British
Shipping Lanes & Trade Routes & Adolf wanted to Invade Russia in the Fall of 1940 His generals told him its impossible we will need 20 Panzer Divisions not just the same 10 Panzer Divisions that Conquered France that Summer
The Germans thought the British would come to a Gentleman's Agreement you can keep your Empire just as long as you give us a free hand in Europe
The Opportunity was lost the German Army should have Crushed the BEF in 1940 then England may have sued for peace on what ever terms Germany
would have put on the Table those dark days of 1940 Winston Churchill Fought some of his own Cabinet who thought Peace at Any Price was a better Option than BLOOD TOIL SWEAT & TEARS
In June 1940 the situation looked bleak only 650 Spitfires & Hurricanes
against 2500 German Aircraft & the only fully equipped Division was a Canadian one that had only just arrived only 3 artillery pieces in the coastal invasion area the cubored was bare so to speak

German Invasion Plans were not serious when the allies invaded France in June 1944 they had 6000 ships putting 160,000 men ashore is one thing keeping them supplied with food fuel reinforcements you have got to do that quicker than your enemy or your pushed back into the see
the Ships of the Kriegsmarine had been given a bloody nose in the Norwigian Campaign Heavy Cruiser Blucher Sunk light Cruiser Koln also sunk & 10 Destroyers but the biggest loss was one of the German Battle Cruisers was Torpedoed by a British Submarine & was out action for nine months so the protection the Kriegsmarine could give the invasion Force would have been minimal
even with Command of the air in the Channel the Royal Navy sends down 5 battle ships 2 battle cruisers 8 heavy cruisers they would have wrecked the German invasion Barges

150-200 Type VIIB's & IXB'S BY JUNE 1940

then the German Naval Z-Plan would need a rethink
build no ships bigger than Light Cruisers so no pocket battle ships no Hipper Scarnhorst no Gniesenau no Bismark/Tirpitz & allocate all that steel for uboat building in 1933/1935 to give the Uboat absolute priority in the German Rearmament Plan then maybe Britain would have been starved &
Surrendered by June 1941

but its all what if what if there was no depression in Germany & fewer Political Parties & at an Election theres an out right winner no hotch potch coalition no Chaos
no fear on the streets
when everyones got work & the economy is booming everyone would take no notice of a ranting idiot but once the idiots in power & your called up & your regiment brigade division is stood at attention on the parade ground
& you have to repeat that blind oath of elegance I will do my Fuhrers biding what ever that maybe I cannot disobey this oath & my Fuhrer & Germany
The German state of Adolf Hitler 1933-1945 was all powerful even almighty in a situation like that standing on the tail of the poisonous snake the head will just turn around & bite you

Jimbuna
04-18-16, 06:12 AM
Japan had some plan to attack US but was an epic fail with fire balloons

here (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_balloon)

wind change they direction and some of them exploded back in Japan

Poetic justice.

Aktungbby
04-18-16, 01:07 PM
wind change they direction and some of them exploded back in Japan
:doh: A less than Divine Wind perhaps? :03:

Vince82
05-01-16, 05:22 AM
even with Command of the air in the Channel the Royal Navy sends down 5 battle ships 2 battle cruisers 8 heavy cruisers they would have wrecked the German invasion Barges

I agree, because the Luftwaffe had some serious limitations, they just couldnt sink ships. Obviously part of that taskforce would have fallen victim to u boats and mines.

High Command failed to commit to a strategic bombing campaign that targeted the British military capabilities enough. That's the reason why they never gained much command of the air and never managed to defeat the RAF.