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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#76 |
Stowaway
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For the Armed Forces of Vanilsistan:
Army Infantry - Foreign Legion with American small arms and German support weapons; Artillery - Commonwealth organization equipped with American guns; Armour - Soviet Combat engineers - German; Construction engineers - American; Combat Service Support - American; Logistics - American; Navy Surface ships - American; Submarines - American; Logistics tail - American; Naval aviation - American; Air Force Ground support - Soviet; Air superiority - American; Transport - American; Training organization - Commonwealth. |
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#77 |
Navy Seal
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Someone with better US Army ETO doctrine chops can chime in (since I read mostly PTO, large battles tended to be rooting guys out of caves, not real, maneuver warfare), but I recall reading that the US divisional artillery model was a thing of beauty, allowing small units to call in fearful artillery in an accurate fashion.
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#78 | |
A long way from the sea
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The Japanese infantry were perpetually undersupplied by USN interdiction during the last half of the war, yet still they fought; still they exacted casualties in return. And as a result of those tenacious defenses, the predicted casualties of Operations Coronet and Downfall topped, by some estimates, one million American dead and wounded. One million. Sure, Japan would have lost the war, maybe even reduced to near-extinction levels (as some in Japanese High Command promised would be the case). One million invader casualties would have been pretty hard to swallow back home. They may not have won the war, but it was not through any lack of tenacity.
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At Fiddler’s Green, where seamen true When here they’ve done their duty The bowl of grog shall still renew And pledge to love and beauty. |
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#79 | |
A long way from the sea
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At Fiddler’s Green, where seamen true When here they’ve done their duty The bowl of grog shall still renew And pledge to love and beauty. |
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#80 | |
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Tenacity they might well have had, but tenacity doesn't compensate for the many other deficiencies of the IJA.
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#81 | |
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Guadalcanal, in fact—a point at the very apex of Japanese success, this was the IJA at its very best—showed how entirely useless they were against quality troops that were well led. What did they do? They walked into artillery and MGs and literally died to the last man for zero gain. Zero. As raptor said above, in a real battle vs a modern army, they always lost, badly. Always. Malaya was a perfect storm for them. Had the UK forces been even competently led (instead of terribly led) they'd have lost, or at least been slowed for months—and that is with utter air superiority assumed for their side. IJA troops are near the bottom of my list, frankly. That doesn't disparage the Marine and Army units that fought them. Their suicidal nature on defense made them fight when any rational force would have surrendered. But the IJA never even managed a pyrrhic victory with their tenacity, merely defeat. Sure, they killed a lot of troops for nothing. So you'd have line infantry that would all die, killing many of the enemy if it was defense (and almost none on attack)—but they'd almost always lose the battle. Hope you have massive reserves as every unit put onto the line entirely dies.
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#82 | |
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Now as R&D goes I feel the Germans were unrivaled at the time, true the Allies had the bomb earlier but I understand the Germans had started earlier developing the weapon and were closer to fielding it but the research wasn't a top priority for the Germans unlike the Allies. The Germans also didn't prioritize the ME 262 or the rocket programs like they should've, and I believe either one of those would've would've changed the outcome of the war if they were ready 6-18 months earlier. Intel is without question goes to the Allies. As far as the Soviets winning the Eastern front single-handedly I'd have to point out 1 important factor that hasn't been mentioned yet- weather. The German army was crippled by the Russian winter. All those magnificent German open field tanks got bogged down in the soft Russian mud and broke down or froze. The much lighter and nimbler T-34 remained mobile and made short work of the heavier german armour and disrupted the German supply lines to the front leaving the troops to starve and freeze. The Germans made the same mistake in Europe, those open field tanks were easy targets once they were trapped in the narrow roads and hills of France. The Germans has a much better tank program than anyone in the war but they were too specialized and proved vulnerable once out of their element. It would be a disservice to the russians to say the weather saved their bacon, but TBH if the winter wasn't as harsh as it was the Germans would've destroyed the Soviets on the eastern front with ease.
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May fortune favor the foolish ![]() Last edited by MaddogK; 03-04-11 at 11:54 AM. |
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#83 | |||
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I say that German R&D was in fact negative, not positive. The wasted resources experimenting instead of producing. Engineering is not just building stuff, it's building stuff efficiently, and in a cost-effective way. Having limited industrial capacity, then sending it running in 100 different directions is just dumb. In addition, like their tank, their jets, etc, were not ready for operational prime time in terms of keeping them flying (not to mention having fuel to fly them). The Germans in fact had large numbers of Me262s constructed, but they never managed to fly more than a small number of sorties per day—a tiny fraction of the number of planes theoretically available. Quote:
In addition, they won at great cost. Even in victory their K/D vs the Germans was not good. The sheer death toll on the part of the CCCP is often used to show they did the heavy lifting, but instead to me it shows that they won in spite of being a bad force that cared nothing for their own troops. They fought more germans in the East, but they lost more for each German they killed/captured by a wide margin than the US and UK did in the west. Lend-lease was not the majority of Russian arms, but it played a critical role that cannot be ignored. Note also that in the absence of US aid to the CCCP, they might have been forced to move even more troops from the far east. This, combined with increased German victory (many early battles where the CCCP held back or slowed down German advances were very near-run things, after all) might have encouraged the Japanese to move (they were held back due to fear of another drubbing at the hands of the Soviets).
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#84 | ||
Silent Hunter
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#85 | |
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By the time there were any large numbers of 262's Germany had lost the pilots to fly them, thus too late to be of any use.
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#86 |
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They were not even pointing in the right direction in 1942.
Had we not gotten the german scientists, of course, many of them would not have been used for a german a-bomb, but exterminated, instead.
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"Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil; in its worst state, an intolerable one." — Thomas Paine |
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#87 |
Lucky Jack
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The fact that Hitler delayed the 262 project to make it a fighter-bomber didn't help either. Neither did his love of BIG and ultimately useless tanks, like the Maus.
In my eyes the strengths and weaknesses of the forces in WWII are: British: Strengths: Attitude, Tenacity, Ingenuity Weaknesses: Equipment, leadership, slow to adapt to new ideas Americans: Strengths: Strong industrial base, Attitude, leadership Weaknesses: Equipment, slow to adapt to new ideas, sometimes does not listen to allies Russians: Strengths: Manpower, climate, rugged equipment Weaknesses: Leadership, low technology, attitude Germans: Strengths: Mentality (Prussian), technology Weaknesses: Leadership, manpower, industrial base (post US entry) Japanese: Strengths: Fanatical Attitude, Infiltration Weaknesses: Leadership, manpower, Fanatical Attitude, industrial base It is by no means a complete list, feel free to add to it, oh, and before a flame is started, the 'not listening to allies' bit refers to the sometimes difficult co-operation between the US and British forces, not just in Normandy and Africa, but also during Drumbeat when we warned the US to organise convoys and darkened shipping and ports when the US entered the war but it took them some months to actually implement it, thus helping the Second Happy Times. |
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#88 | |
Undetectable
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If you take the Japanese line infantry you also have to take their rifles, rations, boots, etc. ![]() They did well on small islands where they had months to dig in and prepare. Put them on offense and it was a bit like mowing down zombies. ![]() |
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#89 |
Wayfaring Stranger
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You also have to take into account their total inflexibility in battle. No matter how much the situation might change they would follow their original battle plan to the letter.
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#90 |
A long way from the sea
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My mistake for misunderstanding; I thought we were combining attributes of all the nations that fought. So, you know, fanatical, dedicated IJA infantry supported by Soviet artillery, German armor, the US Navy, logistics, and aircraft, and mostly US/UK S1 through S5.
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At Fiddler’s Green, where seamen true When here they’ve done their duty The bowl of grog shall still renew And pledge to love and beauty. |
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