Japan invaded Manchuria on several occasions. They also invaded Korea when it was under Chinese control many times. It never worked out for them.wat?
And? You did note where I said all things considered, right? Ethiopia did a decent job against Italy too, all things considered.
At least a few Australian analysts were positively orgasmic when Japan invaded China, because they were certain it guaranteed Australian safety. They're probably the closest you can come to an objective analyst in the '30s. Everyone had an agenda at that time, pretty much every major nation was on a racial superiority kick, and Japan was among the worst. But I notice you didn't contradict my point about the Japanese mindset sure as hell not being able to look at the situation with anything even approaching objectivity.Give me a contemporary source which posits this theory. "Any objective analyst"? Like whom? Otherwise, that whole point is pure hogwash.
Awesome? No, and please point out where I said that. I said it was great, because it is. Anything that leads to there not being a large-scale nuclear war is great by me, and MAD does that. Sure, if things get out of hand, were screwed, but they're a lot less likely to get out of hand with MAD than without.It's not great because there's no other feasible one. That's like saying eating poo is great because there's nothing else to eat. "Nothing better" is not a reason for something being awesome.
And that has exactly how much to do with balance of power? You know, that thing that keeps one nation from dominating all the others?Why don't you go and read up the Richardson's Arms Race Model and come back to me? The numbers don't work out and it would inevitably lead to conflict - again.
I already said I can't think of any other way to do it but just because there's no better way doesn't mean it's a good way.
Spain. Said dictator established a constitutional monarchy. But, regardless of that, I've said on these boards many times that succession is the only problem with benevolent dictatorships.Give me a benevolent dictatorship which didn't turn into a hot, steaming mug of Horlicks after the awesome dictator left office.
You can also teach someone to love. Human nature isn't a screw-up, unless you're saying God screwed up worse than anyone.I thought hatred was a 'learned' experience. You can, unfortunately, teach someone to hate. It's probably the cause of gang membership and all kinds of wars.
The most epic screw up in history will be not doing anything to ebb hatred before it's too late.
The population didn't start off hostile to Hitler everywhere. And the "near-Arctic" part wasn't as big a problem as the rasputitsa.
Also, yeah. Those'd be pretty big ones on the list. Napoleon's campaign somewhat less than Hitler's, as mentioned somewhat earlier in the thread.
Human nature can't possibly be history's biggest screw-up, since it's involuntary. It's simply part of who we are. We're born with emotions and other drives we can't control. Now, there's nothing in human nature that says we can't do things rationally and reasonably, so when we don't do this, then we are screwing up. Our nature is not.It goes to human nature. So you might say human nature's history's biggest screw up - the examples listed on this thread all being a case in point, to which might be added the number of species extinct through human action.
Eh? I was just claiming that his invasion, since the only precedent was the basically incomparable Poltava (as well as several successful Polish-Lithuanian expeditions during the Smuta and before), was more excusable in its failure. Von Clausewitz said that it was a reasonable plan as well. Made no judgment as to the palatability of Napoleon to the Russian peasants.I'd say the other way around: Napoleon's army got virtually annihilated on the way back and the "Christian" Russians took no prisoners from "the Antichrist", whereas in WW II it was more a question of which terror regime was the most effective (in several regions the German invader was actually seen as a liberator from the Soviets, but they messed that up big time).
Yeah, Napoleon was pretty unpalatable to everyone outside of France, Italy and Poland. Even many Frenchmen hated him. Funnily enough the British intelligentsia, on average, were probably more fond of him than the French. But he was a much better strategist than Hitler, of that everyone can agree.Eh? I was just claiming that his invasion, since the only precedent was the basically incomparable Poltava (as well as several successful Polish-Lithuanian expeditions during the Smuta and before), was more excusable in its failure. Von Clausewitz said that it was a reasonable plan as well. Made no judgment as to the palatability of Napoleon to the Russian peasants.
I am surprised that nobody mentioned the pre-WW2 policy of appeasement.
The Munich Agreement was surely on of the most idiotic decisions by Western powers in their modern history.
there really was very little they could have done by the time Czechoslovakia was dismembered. Had the French chased the Germans out of the Rhineland however, history might have been so different
I really dont think that was the difference between winning the war or losing it. dont forget, France and UK were weaker than too, and in no state to attack Germany