Case
The horror, the horror
Originally posted by Adler17
Monty is the most overestimated General of ww2. His only main victory El Alamain
I take it that you've never heard of Operation Overlord then

...was only a victory because of the lack of German supplies. Therefore he nearly lost the battle before the lack became serious.
Monty never came close to losing El Alamain - while the first few days of the battle went poorly (due to a combination of flawed plans and the poor level of training in much of the 8th Army), Monty was able to reshape his plans and emerge victorious. Incidently, the victory at El Alamain was due to more then just material and numerical superiority (though these were critical) - the elite Australian 9th Division played a critical role by simply outfighting the Germans at the northern end of the battle area.
Also, Rommel's defeat at El Alemain was also due to his foolish decision to try and defend the place, and not one of the more easily defended places to the east. While many blame Hitler for this, in reality, Rommel deserves the blame due to allowing himself to become over-extended after the great Gazala victory.
Incidently, fans of Rommel need to consider his insane plan to defend the Atlantic Wall - a plan which ignored the repeated evidence that German, Italian and Japanese were unable to stop any invasion force from getting ashore due to the Allies overwealming naval support. This leason should have been learned from Scily, Salerno, Tarawa, etc.
Over 1 million own soldiers at Stalingrad
Zhukov wasn't in command at Stalingrad - he was busy conducting Operation Mars near Moscow (which ended in disarster and 500,000 Soviet killed and wounded). Incidently, German losses at Stalingrad were proportionatly worse - 500,000 fatalities seems to be a reasonable estimate (if you include POWs).
1 intact German army would have been able to retake the Berlin, the Oder line, Breslau and perhaps Königsberg until Russian troops copuld have stopped them.

Going all out for Berlin was a sound plan to bring the war to the fastest possible conclusion. The key Soviet mistake was Stalin's decision to encourage the various Fronts to compete for the honour of capturing the city - this, and the resultingly poor liason between the fronts, resulted in unessesary haste and casulties.
Churchill wanted indeed having the German divisions intact for a war with Russia.
...briefly, before his military advisors talked some sence into him. The British cabinet would never have approved such a plan, and if they had the Americans would have vetoed it.
Perhaps if he died in 1944 and the Prussian coupe d´état under Stauffenberg was successfull a democratic Germany and the allies would have also been able to liberate Russia.
In 1944 the Allies wanted to utterly destroy Germany, and not join with it in any kind of alliance. Unconditional surrender was more then a slogan; it really was the Allies rock-solid war aim. The only place where an Anglo-German alliance against the Soviets was taken seriously was in the fevered minds of the Nazis. The Allied governments certainly didn't want to wage war on their Soviet allies, especially not on the side of the hated Germans (remember, the Allied public was fairly well informed on what the Germans were getting up to in the countries they had conqured, especially the Soviet Union).