American views of the British effort in D-Day and WW2 in general.

Actually, they essentially created militant Islamism in Afghanistan during the 80s. There wouldn't be a Taliban without the USSR's unprovoked attempt to annex Afghanistan.

Militant Islam gained support due to its part in the resistance against Soviet invasion, but its formation can be attributed to one Sayid Qutb and his travels in America - he was an Egyptian who returned home disgusted by American sins and started a philosophy that only Islamic theocracy based on the laws of the Qu'ran could cure those sins. Finally, Ayman Al-zawahri picked up on it, took it to a whole other level (killing women and civilians is okay to achieve these aims). Then Osama showed up and was like "Hey guz, here is teh monies, so lolz!" and the extremists said "Thanx Osama, now go do some stuff and we won't care cuz we just wantz ur moneyz!" and Osama said "sure doods!".

Summary of Islamic extremist movement...check. :goodjob:

Sourced to some video about the idea of a grand Islamic conspiracy to take down the West and a unified threat against freedom against American and her allies being a myth propagated by the neocons in order to unify America, until the neocons themselves started believing it from the BBC. It had the phrase Nightmares in it, so search that. It was a pretty crappy movie, to be honest, and the soundtrack blew, so I wouldn't recommend it. It was humorous in some parts, but in a sad way.
 
:lol: yea right when the Pacific war was over

IIRC the Japanses Army in China was still 1.5 Million strong. The main problem was the very poor outclassed armour and lack of anti tank weapons meant that the soviets once they smashed the outer defences pretty much had free a run. The flat plains and wide open areas were ideal tank country.

They only had trouble at some of the major fortifications and Japanese HQ.

:yup:
About 1.2 millions of men and several thousand of tanks, artillery and aircraft. Not even worth mentioning.
 
Several thousand outdated tanks. Japan was never up to par with the rest of the World War 2 powers when it came to tanks. By the end of the war Japan was making stuff to combat shermans, not IS-2s and T-34-85s.
 
Thank's for your opinion about country where I was born and grew up. You forgot to add something about evil empire and human-eating monsters.
Am I allowed to say this when somebody criticizes America?
 
Am I allowed to say this when somebody criticizes America?

If somebody call your country "dispicable blight on the history of the human race", yes. And I will perfectly understand this, despite I'm not a biggest fan of America.
 
Don't be an idiot, if we were to make a film based upon WW2 and left out your countries contribution or criticised it, you'd no doubt be angry.

I wouldn't care. I didn't fight in that war and even I did it's nothing personal.

Talk as much trash as you want about America (I do it all the time!), I won't get offended. I'll probably agree with you a lot of stuff. I don't assume collective responsibility or pride for a landmass whose existence is defined by solely arbitrary lines on map.
 
I don't assume collective responsibility or pride for a landmass whose existence is defined by solely arbitrary lines on map.

I am sure that most Canadians would share that view. I certainly do.:mischief:
 
The US is so good at it, they never had to. I've got to say this might be one area where American exceptionalism rings true, the US invented and perfected neocolonialim long before traditional colonialism ran its course.
There's nothing new about neocolonialism. Credit where it's due.
Militant Islam gained support due to its part in the resistance against Soviet invasion, but its formation can be attributed to one Sayid Qutb and his travels in America - he was an Egyptian who returned home disgusted by American sins and started a philosophy that only Islamic theocracy based on the laws of the Qu'ran could cure those sins. Finally, Ayman Al-zawahri picked up on it, took it to a whole other level (killing women and civilians is okay to achieve these aims). Then Osama showed up and was like "Hey guz, here is teh monies, so lolz!" and the extremists said "Thanx Osama, now go do some stuff and we won't care cuz we just wantz ur moneyz!" and Osama said "sure doods!".
Sayyid Qutb was just one cog in the larger scheme of things. There are a lot more reasons for the salafis and their less palatable semiassociates' existence than just one man, or even one United States of America.
 
This thread made my eyes bleed and the derailment is just making it worse, I think the main issue with regards to americans view of themselves is when they say something like "We saved your asses twice and without us you would all be speaking german", which generally speaking is extremly ignorent and annoying. I've yet to meet someone who has studied WW2 indepth say something like that, yes the USA was very important, no I doubt Britian could have won on its own, I consider that the Soviets would have beaten the Germans in the end, quite a bit slower but they would have managed it without aid (the Main German offensive thrusts were all but dead when Lend lease first started reaching the Soviets).

I mean I thought this thread might have been about Americans perceptions of montgomery, or similar, but its become the usual pissing match of misconceptions :(
 
The primarly reasom Lenningrad did not fall was because it was surrounded by swamps and a very defendable river just south of it. Even this would not have stopped the Germans had Hitler not specifically stopped the northern advance in order for the logistics units to catch up (which allowed that river to be fortified). The Germans had not expected the Estonians and Lithuanians to revolt so effectively, thus hadn't planned on their forward units to advance so quickly.

I think you misunderstood my point.

I meant if the German army actually tried to enter the city but failed to completely surround it beforehand, it would face a similar, if not worse, debacle as at Stalingrad, because of the risk of large volumes of troops engaged in constant fighting in a city they can't immediately extricate themselves from, whilst having the city itself become flanked and surrounded by enemy troops. The bigger the city, the more dangerous entering it becomes, if the enemy wishes to hold onto it.

As for Moscow it was saved because 1.) the winter was in full gear by the time the German's got there 2.) the German units were shells of their former selves after four months of continuous campaigning and 3.) the Russians just recieved fresh units from the Far East.

That's all true, save for the Eastern reinforcements. In December 1941, they were not present in significant enough numbers to have been decisive in the defense, though they were more active in the counteroffensive that followed.

It should be mentioned, though, that it was the Autumn muddy season that comes with the rains that really bogged the Germans down (and the Russians, too, but they were less motorized than the Germans at the time and were thus less affected by it), not yet the Winter.

The idea that German was somehow incapable or less capable of urban fighting is a myth created in this very thread. The Soviet army was just as much a field army as the Wehrmacht and it was able to take Warsaw and Vienna just fine. Just as the German's were able to take Sevastopol and Karakov.

I didn't say incapable, and no, I knew that long before this thread was created, which I haven't bothered to read too much of. It is, however, true that the German army's greatest strength, its tank units and commanders, were of little use in urban fighting, especially when the city's already half or fully destroyed.

Warsaw was a very costly operation.

Sevastopol took how long for Manstein to take?

Kharkov was largely abandoned. There were nowhere near the numbers in it as in Leningrad, Moscow, or Stalingrad. That refers to every battle in that city.

Yes, definetly one of the strange circumstances of defeat.

The situation was reversed in 1944-45.

Unfortunately that is irrelevant seeing as the Germans had just routed several million Soviet troops in prepared positions. The Russians barely held on as it was, the idea that they would have been able to do so without the effects of the winter and the German's being much stronger and better supplied at the same time is ridiculous.

I'm referring specifically to Operation Typhoon and the Battle of Moscow. The German forces involved in that area only numbered around 1 million; Zhukov organized half that strength from scratch in 3 weeks, to say nothing of the tens of thousands of civilians put to work building extensive defensive works, tank traps, and machine gun nests both in the suburbs and city proper. It was these defenses against which the German army's wave broke; had they given more way, do you doubt that Zhukov could have found the numbers again, if not more?

Everything about Moscow being defended any better than a dozen other major Russian cities rolled over at that time simple because it was "a major Russian city" is pure fantasy on your part.

Not really. The plan all along was for the final defensive positions to be around a ring of large cities: Leningrad, Moscow, Voronezh, Stalingrad, and Rostov. The only part of that that failed was the '42 offensive towards Stalingrad.

Many Russian cities weren't "just rolled over:" Kiev, Smolensk, Sevastopol; these cities were defended heartily, costing the Germans valuable weeks (or months in the case of Sevastopol and the Perekop isthmus). But those positions were ultimately withdrawn from; the Soviets were not going to withdraw from Leningrad or Moscow, they would have fought it like they did Stalingrad, pouring more and more men in, fortifying the city and fighting for every bombed out city block. After all, if those cities fell, the war might as well have been over.

The circumstances or Stalingrad in 42 are not even remotely analogous to that of Moscow in 40. The Soviet army of 42 barely resembled what it was in 40, and that is a good thing.

We're talking about the end of 1941, not 1940.

The situation was the large numbers of troops in a city that the enemy refuses to withdraw from, and with vulnerable flanks.
 
Actually, they essentially created militant Islamism in Afghanistan during the 80s. There wouldn't be a Taliban without the USSR's unprovoked attempt to annex Afghanistan.

Certainly wrong in all respects.

Islamism has been around for hundreds of years. Even in Afghanistan. You know that the British had jihad declared against them in Afghanistan? Twice?

But even if you mean modern Islamism, it originates in the 1920s with Hassan al-Banna and the Muslim Brothers in Egypt. The reaction in Afghanistan was nothing special.

The idea that the Soviets were trying to annex Afghanistan shows your true ignorance of this subject. The Soviets were invited in by the PDPA to help restore order because their army was rapidly deserting to go join tribal warlords making war on the government. The Soviets did that, and fought the rebels for several years, protecting the Socialist Afghan government and their key cities along the "ring road." There was no mind towards annexation, and it certainly wasn't a war against Afghanistan at all.

As for the Taliban, they have very little to do with the Soviets. Their power came from being able to fill a power vaccuum left when the PDPA was ousted by local tribal leaders who began fighting amongst themselves (as Afghans typically do). All this, of course, occurring several years after the Soviet departure from the country.
 
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