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Old 12-08-06, 10:27 AM   #1
AVGWarhawk
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Default Did you ever think about it?

After watching movies by Stabiz and footage from the real thing, etc. has anyone really thought about what the Germans were doing out there in the oceans? These guys were in a steel tube hundreds of mile from anywhere, including the bottom! There was no GPS or fast rescue boats. They depended on the compass and the stars to get where they were going. Talk about being out there on your own!! Next time you make the trip to the east coast in the game, stop in the middle of the Atlantic, go to outside view on the conning tower and just look at the expanse of water. This is what these guys had seen. Nothing but water and sky, while in a steel tube already over 1/2 sunk! It takes a large set of kahunas to do something like that in my view.
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Old 12-08-06, 11:12 AM   #2
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Yeah it certainly does

I remember standing on the back of a ship some years ago in the bay of Biscay at night
Not a sound apart from the engines and not a light to be seen

Eerie but great all the same

They certainly deserve respect
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Old 12-08-06, 11:16 AM   #3
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Yeah, eerie seems to be the word. Also a feeling of being insignificate in the large scheme of things.
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Old 12-08-06, 11:23 AM   #4
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Take it a step further. Imagine being one of the guys in the engine room who never saw the sun, never got fresh air (except the few and far between times the kaleun let them up on deck) had no idea what was going on in an attack.

And still knowing that you were stranded in that iron coffin, in the middle of the ocean. Man, I would have gone stir crazy. I totally understand why Ghost from Das Boot flipped out.
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Old 12-08-06, 11:35 AM   #5
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'Lonely' is the word that springs to mind with me....and the tight confined/cramped/damp conditions...yuk !!...what an existence
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Old 12-08-06, 11:38 AM   #6
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Standing on a deck and seeing nothing but water all the way to the horizon? Yeah, that can be lonely. Being inside with 50 or 200 or 6000 other sailors? No, lonely isn't the word. "Suffocating"...that's the word.
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Old 12-08-06, 11:44 AM   #7
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No matter what we think of the second world war and Germany I feel we should respect the level of professionalism, endurance and (unfortunatelly) ruthlessness of the U-Boat crews. The achieve a lot with inferior machines and in really difficult conditions.
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Old 12-08-06, 11:45 AM   #8
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The descriptions of the smell is what always gets me. The combined B.O. of 50 guys who haven't bathed in weeks, mixed with diesel oil, saltwater and urine on clothes that haven't been washed in weeks, and moldy food all in humid and stale air...blah. I wonder if you just became immune to it after a while. Turns your stomach!
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Old 12-08-06, 12:15 PM   #9
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Quote:
Originally Posted by melnibonian
No matter what we think of the second world war and Germany I feel we should respect the level of professionalism, endurance and (unfortunatelly) ruthlessness of the U-Boat crews. The achieve a lot with inferior machines and in really difficult conditions.
It is not what we think of Germany, there was less than a handful of radicals. For the most part the German soldiers were much like you and me. Unfortunate that Hollywood always shows the extremely bad side of the Germany back then. If you get out of Hollywood and read accounts by soldiers in the Germany military, most loved, laughed, cared for family and country...not much unlike the Allied troops. Most thrown into a war they did not want.

As far as inferior machines as to what we have today....you bet man, it was sometimes a shoe string operation at best. Hell, the wildcats that flew off carriers had no compass, fly only while the sun is up so they could see their way back. Now that takes a large set of nuts to do that!!!!

A very different world then what we see today, no doubt.
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Old 12-08-06, 12:18 PM   #10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mookiemookie
The descriptions of the smell is what always gets me. The combined B.O. of 50 guys who haven't bathed in weeks, mixed with diesel oil, saltwater and urine on clothes that haven't been washed in weeks, and moldy food all in humid and stale air...blah. I wonder if you just became immune to it after a while. Turns your stomach!
That must have been a living hell!!! I would suspect they did not smell themselves after a while. What I find funny are old movies reels showing the crew coming off the boats, smelly and beards, etc. and the girls kissing and hugging them. It's like honey, I have not brushed my teeth or washed my rearend for over 4 weeks. Man, the stench! Must be very brave women or extremely hard up.
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Old 12-08-06, 12:22 PM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk
It is not what we think of Germany, there was less than a handful of radicals. For the most part the German soldiers were much like you and me. Unfortunate that Hollywood always shows the extremely bad side of the Germany back then. If you get out of Hollywood and read accounts by soldiers in the Germany military, most loved, laughed, cared for family and country...not much unlike the Allied troops. Most thrown into a war they did not want.

As far as inferior machines as to what we have today....you bet man, it was sometimes a shoe string operation at best. Hell, the wildcats that flew off carriers had no compass, fly only while the sun is up so they could see their way back. Now that takes a large set of nuts to do that!!!!

A very different world then what we see today, no doubt.
Oh I do agree in everything you say. All of the operations during WWII look dated by modern standards, especially U-Boat operations. Still the german crews did the best they could (soe ties even more) given the circumstances. I feel they did more than enough for their country in a messy, bloody and horrible war.
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Old 12-08-06, 12:24 PM   #12
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Yes, the one mans vision(Hilter) was not the vision of all. Didn't the U-boat arm claim to be no part of Nazi Gemany?
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Old 12-08-06, 12:32 PM   #13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk
Didn't the U-boat arm claim to be no part of Nazi Gemany?
In the Iron Coffins and a few other books of the period they do claim that U-Boat crews had nothing to do with the Nazis. That's of course not true. They had as much to do with the Nazi party as any other part of the German Army or the German people (with the exeption of the SS obviously). Some of them (like Luth) were die-hard Nazis were others did not support them. In general though they did tolerate them and up to a point agreed with them. Obviously after Germany entered the war all this became accademic. Their country was at war so there was no question about not doing their bst for the final victory or fight until the bitter end. Thet of course doesn't make them criminals but they share the same level of responsibility like the rest of the German people for what happen in 1939-1945.
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Old 12-08-06, 12:36 PM   #14
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk
Yes, the one mans vision(Hilter) was not the vision of all. Didn't the U-boat arm claim to be no part of Nazi Gemany?
IIRC that they made a special effort to keep the Kriegsmarine, or at least the U-bootwaffe as one of the least politicized arms of the the German armed forces. I know Doenitz never joined the Nazi party. Don't know much about Raeder, though.

Quote:
Originally Posted by melnibonian
In the Iron Coffins and a few other books of the period they do claim that U-Boat crews had nothing to do with the Nazis. That's of course not true. They had as much to do with the Nazi party as any other part of the German Army or the German people (with the exeption of the SS obviously). Some of them (like Luth) were die-hard Nazis were others did not support them. In general though they did tolerate them and up to a point agreed with them. Obviously after Germany entered the war all this became accademic. Their country was at war so there was no question about not doing their bst for the final victory or fight until the bitter end. Thet of course doesn't make them criminals but they share the same level of responsibility like the rest of the German people for what happen in 1939-1945.
True. I would imagine that any branch of the German armed forces at the time had a percentage of true Nazi's in it that mirrored the overall percentage of true Nazis in the German population as a whole. But I think the point of it is that the Nazi doctrine was not ingrained as an integral part of the command structure of the Kriegsmarine. At least not to the degree of other branches of the German military, anyways.

Not trying to make excuses for them, of course.
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Old 12-08-06, 12:46 PM   #15
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mookiemookie
True. I would imagine that any branch of the German armed forces at the time had a percentage of true Nazi's in it that mirrored the overall percentage of true Nazis in the German population as a whole. But I think the point of it is that the Nazi doctrine was not ingrained as an integral part of the command structure of the Kriegsmarine.

Not trying to make excuses for them, of course.
No one is trying to make excuses for Germany, Japan, England, USA and all other countries that took part in this horrible war. They all have their fair share of crimes and responsibility for it (some more than others obviously). All I was saying is that since the country was at war there was no question of Nazi or not. They were professional soldiers and they did all they could to reach the final victory. To be fair the nature of war they were involved in allowed them to be distanced from crimes involved in the Russian Front or with mass deportations etc. hence it was simpler for them as they were fighting a lonely kind of war not to be so stict about Nazi ideology as the Panzer Divisions for example that were fighting in close proximity with the SS.
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