privatehudson
The Ultimate Badass
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2003
- Messages
- 4,821
The Germans however succeeded in their original plan by the damages they did on the British ships, especially the battlecruiser. The status quo ante was achieved after the battle. But it was no consequence of the battle that the British had the better position.
Wrong. Elements of the German HSF had to spend 3-4 months repairing the damage inflicted on them in the battle, the GF still had pleanty in reserve left to continue operations at the same scale straight away. Jutland did not inflict enough damage on the GF to make either breaking the blockade possible or significantly reducing the numerical advantage the RN enjoyed. Given these were two principle ideals of the HSF it seems rather pointless to suggest that the Germans achieved anything from Jutland strategically.
Also as I mentioned, the only type of ship the Germans actually came close to superiority of numbers in was the Battlecruiser. Given that the BC was coming to be seen as a flawed design for most operations, and given that the GF still outnumbered the HSF in every single other aspect, the losses at Jutland fade into insignificance.
Given that and the facts the Brits abandoned their questionable plan to invade Pommerania in the Baltic with the poor Large Light Cruiser and the nearly total decrease of British war ship action in the North Sea out of the British waters, making Jutland a strategic draw with very slightly German advantages.
Interestingly enough it's unlikely any of this had any significant affect on the war when compared to the problems the germans suffered for not being able to break the stranglehold the RN had on her simply by still existing as a fleet. I'd suggest therefore that these issues represent nothing more than clutching at straws in order to avoid the fact that the Germans did not achieve anything concrete at Jutland that they could use to alter the naval problems they had.