Of course yeah, who could forget Midway of all places. The important info about Midway is that the Jap fleet was heavily damaged. You can see how America prevails on the high seas also, which illustrates some more versatility. The Pacific War is pretty interesting to think about because I always viewed it as an unconventional War. Though we put the bulk of our Army in Europe, because we had adopted a Europe first policy, we still managed to be effective in the South Pacific. You can be that efficient if you take care of your people and have officers in command who know what they are doing. I think it was a really tough fight, and the Japs did the best they could to make up for what they lacked, when compared to US capabilities. It was just a different fight all together from Europe. Germany had better equipment and understanding of modern war, the Japanese on the other hand were tenaciously mean, for that was their biggest strength. I have heard people say that the Japanese fought to the death, where the Germans did not, but that isn't necessarily true. Depending on the unit, Germany had divisions that fought to almost destruction, or to the point where they were rendered combat ineffective.
The environment in that part of the world is horrible though, particularly in places like New Guinea and Southern Philippines. All of the smaller islands to the East that were hot as hell with Japs dug into just about every piece of high ground. So you have the brutal mentality of your opponent, god awful heat coupled with ecosystems that preyed upon human health. Yeah, not very fun at all.
I believe that it was a very important campaign, the South Pacific. This region of the world is so screwed up, with the exception of Australia. How many countries down there have even adopted Freedom yet? Look at Indonesia and how Islamic it is, unless of course you're in to that sort of thing. I really look at the Pacific War as chapter 1, in a book that has at least 3 chapters. Each War fought in the Orient was based on one all encompassing goal.
That's some awfully racially charged language there, chief.
What red elk was trying to say, and what apparently went over your head, is that random, remote geography that doesn't seem to mean anything on its own can take on incredible importance in a war. The Battle of Midway was the turning point of the entire war in the Pacific and it happened next to a tiny atoll with very little value to anybody in the middle of the ocean. The two largest navies in the world tore each other to pieces around Guadalcanal for a year despite that island being a sideshow according to both Washington and Tokyo. It took on a new kind of importance once it was fought over.
So yeah, Stalingrad was not an incredibly important location before 1942 and few people would've pinpointed it as the site of one of the most desperate and bloody battles in human history. There were some intrinsic reasons to fight over it, like the industrial zone or its position at a Volga River crossing, but nothing that would've suggested the apocalyptic struggle that actually happened. And even the German plans for BLAU didn't designate Stalingrad as the focus of the campaign. It's just that the way the battle developed made Stalingrad what it eventually became.
But none of the men fighting there, for either the Axis or the USSR, would've been there if it wasn't part of the Nazi effort to seize a decisive advantage in the war on what Hitler believed was Germany's most critical front. There were no Stalingrads in the West. Clearly, the Nazis assigned a great deal of meaning to their Eastern Front.
"arguably started" indeed. The British, Russian, and Ottoman Empires were not among the original belligerents. I cannot justify pointing the finger at any of them.
Golly, that's a very old post.
And, if you look at the context, it was clearly meant as a joke. Hence the smiley when talking about the "real" prize being the dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire in Asia.
The joke was meant to have a great deal of truth to it (because that always makes the funniest jokes...even if
I don't necessarily make the funniest jokes). I certainly did believe then, and still believe now, that one of the prime factors behind the outbreak of war in 1914 was the tsarist government's imperialist objectives, along with the willingness of the British and French governments to endorse or tolerate them in order to keep their Russian alliance. Owen and Mannerheim did a good job of talking about more proximate causes, as well, like the early Russian mobilization.
In the context of the immediate discussion at the time, I felt it was worth pointing out the large overseas commitment that the British Empire's military undertook in the First World War, which was relevant to their combat effectiveness. Mannerheim made a joke about how armies in Iraq weren't really worth the same as armies on the Somme, because that's where the war would be decided. That's undoubtedly true. Victory in Western Europe was what enabled the Entente powers to win the war. But the First World War was a global war, and the global commitments of the British and imperial armies
were important, and Britain
did have important imperial objectives in the Middle East.
And also I like tweaking Mannerheim, because that's what we do to each other.
ETA: rather fitting that my 14,000th post is a shot-from-the-hip WWI jump-in that will almost certainly be met with a Dachs wall of text. Eh, c'est la prix PC+1
have some self-confidence, man, I've been gone for years and you're still afraid of my shadow for no good reason
So now you are comparing the world of Native Americans with that of Europe. That's real good. You do realize that Natives still have a substantial amount of territory that was allocated to them by the government, right? And by the way, don't pretend like you actually care anyway, especially if you are Russian.
Why shouldn't people compare the mass deaths suffered by the indigenous population of the Americas to the mass deaths suffered by the population of Europe? The Nazis certainly did. Hitler explicitly connected them in speeches: he wanted to slaughter the population of Eastern Europe to make it open for Germans to settle, just as white Europeans were able to settle most of the Americas. While the genocide of indigenous Americans wasn't nearly as explicit, intentional, and state-sanctioned as the Holocaust was, the two campaigns had the same fundamental goal.