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How could Hitler have won WW2?

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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,949 ✭✭✭RGARDINR


    Hitler was Hitler not some imaginary dictator who never existed so I am basing my hypothetical timeline on the real man and his ideological beliefs and goals to try and plausibly imagine a scenario that could have led to victory.

    Of course the 1st problem they had was Hitler.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,108 ✭✭✭paul71


    Hitler was Hitler not some imaginary dictator who never existed so I am basing my hypothetical timeline on the real man and his ideological beliefs and goals to try and plausibly imagine a scenario that could have led to victory.

    I have 1 plausible scenario. It involves not going to war with the west at all. If they had destabilized France in the mid 1930s by secretly funding and arming the communist party there causing a French civil war (a real possibility in France at that time) and then rolled in with help from Italy and the UK to rescue France from communism. Thus binding the UK and France not in an alliance but co-operation, they would have had a free hand in the east with secure oil imports from the Atlantic.

    I can see no other way that Germany, Italy, Hungary, Bulgaria and Romania could prevail against France, UK, USA and USSR.

    I still suspect they would have needed some British and French troops fighting with them in the USSR to be certain of victory.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,949 ✭✭✭RGARDINR


    The Nazis could of let the soviet Union invade Poland 1st, so the Germans hold off tell the Soviets they will invade on same date but dont, SOVIET UNION invade on 17th September 1939. Germans go to Britain and France and say they would happily declare war on soviet Union with them as both France and Great Britain have treaty to go Poland's defence. These 3 declare war on soviet Union. Afterwards Germany can go to war with them, once they deal with the Soviet Union. Just a matter of tricking Soviets into invading Poland 1st.


  • Moderators Posts: 5,554 ✭✭✭Azza


    paul71 wrote: »
    Submarines operated mostly with their deck guns and 8 to 12 torpedos. They had 1 deck gun and could sink multiple ships in a convoy with them and that was with extremely limited storage space.

    Cruisers had space to carry multplies of hundreds of times what a submarine could, they were designed to help capital ships engage enemy capital ships and carried more than enough ammuntion for sinking hundreds of unarmoured merchant ships. They carried 300 rounds per gun. So I have thought about what I was saying. Yes the main British battlefleet was in Scarpa flow. There was also the channel fleet, smaller but still much larger then the German navy which was bottled in the Baltic by the Scarpa flow fleet.

    I specifically said it would require a tiny portion of the royal navy fleet to stop an invasion. There would been no requirement for the main battle fleet from Scarpa flow, unless the entire German and Italian plus the Vichey French Navy (sunk at anchor by the British) by some magical feat managed to converge on western France, then the main battle fleet would have been required.

    Am aware cruisers have considerable more firepower than U-Boats but I haven't heard of any naval engagement where any ship has ever sunk 100's of anything,

    Do you really think with the very survival of Britain on the line the British where just going to send a small part of their available navy to deal with it. From what I've read from historians and military experts seem to agree that the British would of sent the bulk of its capital ships to deal with the invasion.
    I'm pretty certain its on record that's what the British intended.

    Anyway why would take they take the risk, the Germans still had some military ships, at least 2 cruisers and 4 destroyers, likely dozens of U-Boats and a very big air-force to offer protection as well as protection via mines. Its also not like the British would of known exactly how big the invasion force was or how many naval escorts it had. No I don't think Sea Lion had a prayer of succeeding but I think the German's could of landed some troops, the crossing wasn't that far, could of been started at night and the British naval forces directly opposing them while capable of doing considerable damage was probably not strong enough to halt the invasion in its entirety though its absolutely not beyond the realms of impossibility they could of done enough damage to call the force the Germans to call it off, however there is absolutely no way you could know for certain that those naval forces would of definitely been capable of stopping it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,108 ✭✭✭paul71


    Azza wrote: »
    Am aware cruisers have considerable more firepower than U-Boats but I haven't heard of any naval engagement where any ship has ever sunk 100's of anything,

    Do you really think with the very survival of Britain on the line the British where just going to send a small part of their available navy to deal with it. From what I've read from historians and military experts seem to agree that the British would of sent the bulk of its capital ships to deal with the invasion.
    I'm pretty certain its on record that's what the British intended.

    Anyway why would take they take the risk, the Germans still had some military ships, at least 2 cruisers and 4 destroyers, likely dozens of U-Boats and a very big air-force to offer protection as well as protection via mines. Its also not like the British would of known exactly how big the invasion force was or how many naval escorts it had. No I don't think Sea Lion had a prayer of succeeding but I think the German's could of landed some troops, the crossing wasn't that far, could of been started at night and the British naval forces directly opposing them while capable of doing considerable damage was probably not strong enough to halt the invasion in its entirety though its absolutely not beyond the realms of impossibility they could of done enough damage to call the force the Germans to call it off, however there is absolutely no way you could know for certain that those naval forces would of definitely been capable of stopping it.


    There is a very good reason you never heard of it, because no-one was ever stupid enough to try put hundreds of of unescorted troop transports up against cruisers. The scenarios you have read about all put the German Capital ships with the transports. I have always had a problem with that, how do German capital ships get to France?

    They tried with the bismark and graf spee and they were sunk.

    This is the scenario on land. German army tries to send 100 soft top opel trucks with soldiers in them over open ground with a small squad of t34s. No escorts or anti-tank, the distance required takes 12 hours. The t34s have seen the assembly of the trucks for days with recognizance.

    Except each t34 can carry about 500 rounds of ammunition and is 3 times faster than the opel trucks.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 3,108 ✭✭✭paul71


    More immediately available were ten destroyers at the south coast ports of Dover and Portsmouth, a cruiser and three destroyers at Sheerness on the River Thames, three cruisers and seven destroyers at the Humber, nine destroyers at Harwich, and two cruisers at Rosyth.

    Sorry that is a copy from wiki, its the disposition of the royal navy in the channel in July 1940.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,651 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    The channel was a battleground for MGB and MTB and EBoats, costal convoys. It was crisscrossed by rescue launches.

    The start of the Battle of Britain was attacking the costal convoys.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Britain#Channel_battles

    Later in the war, EBoats attacked US Landing craft practising for D-Day.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exercise_Tiger


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,651 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    The Germans, did have semi and full armour piercing bombs. They could and did pierce armour decks.
    The armour piercing bomb shown was prefixed SD (Sprengbombe Dickwandig). They came is various sizes from 50, 250, 500 to 1,700kg and due to their penetration qualities were used primarily against ships and concrete emplacements. The PC (Panzerbombe Cylindrich) armour piercing bomb had a thicker nose and shell with only 20% of the total weight being explosive; these were used against ships and fortifications.

    https://www.armouredcarriers.com/illustrious-malta-operation-excess-january-10-1941


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,651 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    Azza wrote: »
    Believe it was just the He-111 that could drop torpedos.

    There was ju88 A4/ Tor variant also.

    https://en.topwar.ru/164863-boevye-samolety-junkers-ju-88-universalnyj-ubijca.html

    I don't know much about them tbh.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,428 ✭✭✭Markcheese


    Not really about winning the war ,but winning in russia , better logistics.
    If the Germans had planned to rebuild/ reuse the Russian rail system at lightning speed ,they wouldn't have been as dependant on trucks (which were in short supply and had complicated logistics because of using german/ french / czech / austrian machines ) and that would have freed up fuel for the panzers too.
    I don't think the soviet union would of just collapsed had the Germans taken moscow , but the moral blow as well as loosing such a huge rail hub and population /industry centre would have been significant ,
    The Russians were pulling back industry behind the urals but in truth that's well beyond the Russian heart land....
    Also the japanese not attacking in the east allowed resources be used in the west ...

    Slava ukraini 🇺🇦



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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 610 ✭✭✭Samsonsmasher


    Markcheese wrote: »
    Not really about winning the war ,but winning in russia , better logistics.
    If the Germans had planned to rebuild/ reuse the Russian rail system at lightning speed ,they wouldn't have been as dependant on trucks (which were in short supply and had complicated logistics because of using german/ french / czech / austrian machines ) and that would have freed up fuel for the panzers too.
    I don't think the soviet union would of just collapsed had the Germans taken moscow , but the moral blow as well as loosing such a huge rail hub and population /industry centre would have been significant ,
    The Russians were pulling back industry behind the urals but in truth that's well beyond the Russian heart land....
    Also the japanese not attacking in the east allowed resources be used in the west ...

    Stalin and his gang fleeing or committing suicide or being captured in or around Moscow would have brought down the Soviet Union in 1941. No question about it.
    It was a very real prospect - Stalin fell into a funk just like Hitler would in 1945 - just before the Germans were forced to retreat.


  • Moderators Posts: 5,554 ✭✭✭Azza


    paul71 wrote: »
    There is a very good reason you never heard of it, because no-one was ever stupid enough to try put hundreds of of unescorted troop transports up against cruisers. The scenarios you have read about all put the German Capital ships with the transports. I have always had a problem with that, how do German capital ships get to France?

    They tried with the bismark and graf spee and they were sunk.

    This is the scenario on land. German army tries to send 100 soft top opel trucks with soldiers in them over open ground with a small squad of t34s. No escorts or anti-tank, the distance required takes 12 hours. The t34s have seen the assembly of the trucks for days with recognizance.

    Except each t34 can carry about 500 rounds of ammunition and is 3 times faster than the opel trucks.

    They where never going to be unescorted. As I already said the German would of layed mines along the flanks of the invasion force, they would have a limited number of destroyers, possibly some cruisers as well, U-Boats and a large amount of plane providing air cover.

    This scenario specifically did not factor in German capital ships, as it was acknowledge these where not in an operational state at the likely time of a German invasion.

    Also I take your point on Bismark and Graff Spree, but on paper the Channel Dash had no chance of succeeding either but they caught the British with there pants down on that one.

    I take the point you trying to make but your land analogy isn't a good one. You're picking the tank with one of the worst visibility capabilities meaning there pretty awful at reconnaissance, but even if they do find out where the enemy Opel's are and start advancing towards them at least a third of tanks break down or collide with each other. Then when they finally get there since they lack radio, they all start targeting the same vehicles as the squad leader because of this, they are also missing a whole lot due to lack of training. They are also not as fast the Opel trucks either. Actually the most likely scenario is the infantry would of just got out of the trucks and dealt with the the handful of tanks but there isn't an equivalent to that on water.


  • Moderators Posts: 5,554 ✭✭✭Azza


    paul71 wrote: »
    More immediately available were ten destroyers at the south coast ports of Dover and Portsmouth, a cruiser and three destroyers at Sheerness on the River Thames, three cruisers and seven destroyers at the Humber, nine destroyers at Harwich, and two cruisers at Rosyth.

    Sorry that is a copy from wiki, its the disposition of the royal navy in the channel in July 1940.

    Only the destroyers at Dover and Portsmouth are available to quickly engage the invasion fleet the rest are several hours away from at best and could of been delayed further by mines. Assuming the German's start at night they would likely be a good part of the way across the channel before being detected.

    I don't think 10 destroyers is an over whelming force when your facing off against possibly dozen of U-Boats which are targeting those destroyers, the U-Boats might be able to torpedo some of them and if the destroyers are forced to go after the U-Boats well that takes time away from intercepting the invasion force. They couldn't just ignore the U-Boats and let them have free shots at them. The German's would likely have its handful of destroyers present as well, not to mention 100's of aircraft targeting these destroyers, again even if don't do much actual damage they would likely disrupt the destroyers ability to interfere in the landings.

    I completely agree that a successful Operation Sea Lion is a total fantasy but I don't think its plausible that the German's where not capable of at least landing some troops a shore if they tried.


  • Moderators Posts: 5,554 ✭✭✭Azza


    Markcheese wrote: »
    Not really about winning the war ,but winning in russia , better logistics.
    If the Germans had planned to rebuild/ reuse the Russian rail system at lightning speed ,they wouldn't have been as dependant on trucks (which were in short supply and had complicated logistics because of using german/ french / czech / austrian machines ) and that would have freed up fuel for the panzers too.
    I don't think the soviet union would of just collapsed had the Germans taken moscow , but the moral blow as well as loosing such a huge rail hub and population /industry centre would have been significant ,
    The Russians were pulling back industry behind the urals but in truth that's well beyond the Russian heart land....
    Also the japanese not attacking in the east allowed resources be used in the west ...

    From my understanding the German's did rebuild and use the Russian rail system as quickly as they could, it simply wasn't capable of providing the capacity for supplies needed and as Russia is so fast simply didn't go to all the locations the German's would have needed it to go.

    Only 3 of the 18 divisions freed up for the Moscow counter attack came from Siberia when Richard Sorge the Soviet Spy Tokyo advised Japan would not attack "unless the Soviet Union redeployed significant forces in the east of the Soviet Union to the west".


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,108 ✭✭✭paul71


    Azza wrote: »
    They where never going to be unescorted. As I already said the German would of layed mines along the flanks of the invasion force, they would have a limited number of destroyers, possibly some cruisers as well, U-Boats and a large amount of plane providing air cover.

    This scenario specifically did not factor in German capital ships, as it was acknowledge these where not in an operational state at the likely time of a German invasion.

    Also I take your point on Bismark and Graff Spree, but on paper the Channel Dash had no chance of succeeding either but they caught the British with there pants down on that one.

    I take the point you trying to make but your land analogy isn't a good one. You're picking the tank with one of the worst visibility capabilities meaning there pretty awful at reconnaissance, but even if they do find out where the enemy Opel's are and start advancing towards them at least a third of tanks break down or collide with each other. Then when they finally get there since they lack radio, they all start targeting the same vehicles as the squad leader because of this, they are also missing a whole lot due to lack of training. They are also not as fast the Opel trucks either. Actually the most likely scenario is the infantry would of just got out of the trucks and dealt with the the handful of tanks but there isn't an equivalent to that on water.

    Thats why I changed the analogy of t34s being 3 times faster than the trucks, destroyers and light cruisers were 3 times faster than merchant ships. Also you are again making a couple of assumptions in your 2nd post about Germany assembling a fleet and going at night, that was not going to happen. Why?

    100k troops, even if you had ships large enough to carry 1,000 troops each that is 100 ships, an attempt to assemble such a group of ships in a French port or ports would have been spotted weeks in advance. The British had complete recognizance of French ports.

    Weather conditions would have dictated when a German fleet could have launched, and the knowledge of those weather conditions and the presence of an assembled fleet and army in a French port would have put the channel fleet on alert. There were a further 50 destoyers in the western approaches and in August 1940 the British moved 3 Battleships to the south coast.

    I said unescorted because the simple fact was that the ships available to the RN were about 10 to 1 in the channel and your point about German submarines must be tempered by the fact that the British submarine fleet actually outnumbered the German ones slightly. The 4 or 5 destroyers available to Germany had no chance of beating off 50 RN submarines.

    The German destroyer fleet had already been effectively wiped out by the RN during the invasion of Norway, where the RN sank 12 german destroyers (in what was essentially German home waters).


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Just seeing this thread...

    Not attacking the Soviet Union (do a deal with the Soviets for oil - you can have all of Poland), but continuing with the Battle of Britain to conclusion instead. And to really throw the cat amongst the pigeons... after Pearl Harbour, declare war on Japan.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 610 ✭✭✭Samsonsmasher


    Just seeing this thread...

    Not attacking the Soviet Union (do a deal with the Soviets for oil - you can have all of Poland), but continuing with the Battle of Britain to conclusion instead. And to really throw the cat amongst the pigeons... after Pearl Harbour, declare war on Japan.

    Again this thread is about plausible scenarios.
    Hitler did not believe in trading with other countries because he believed in the zero sum game when it came to economics.
    If Germany traded with Russia then the Russians would have benefitted and in time the Germans would become dependent on the Soviets weakening National Socialism. The free movement of people would have led to a dilution of the blood of the Volk.
    Instead Hitler believed in wars of aggression and annihiliation. The German Volk would conquer the East or perish in the attempt.
    The Reich needed oil food and land in the East and the Slavs had to make way for the German master race.
    There was always going to be a war against the Soviet Union and the West therefore.
    The Anglo Americans and the French were always going to have to be fought too because in Hitler's view Russia was controlled by Jewish Bolsheviks while the West with its cosmopolitanism especially the United States a melting pot ruled by Jewish capitalists was doomed to degenerate and collapse with the ruins ruled by Jewish Bolsheviks who were parasites feasting on the bodies of failed nations. If the Aryan Germans cleansed themselves of the Jews purified their blood and conquered the lands they were destined to rule they would be masters of the earth.


  • Moderators Posts: 5,554 ✭✭✭Azza


    The German's would not have invaded unless they had air superiority making reconnaissance of French ports much more difficult. I'm assuming the Battle of Britain had been won by the German and the RAF had withdrawn to the North of England. Had this not happened the invasion doesn't go ahead.

    Even if you know the invasion fleet is assembling you still don't know the exact time. True you can put your ships on alert if the weather conditions are suitable for invasion but you still don't know the exact time, routes taken, it still takes time to get those ships to the location needed to intercept even from alert status.

    Same with submarines, how would actually capable of intervening before the German's got across in the first wave.

    As I said I know of no historian or military expert that believe Sea Lion could of worked, but the at the same time I don't know of any of them who categorically ruled out the German's being unable to get across in the first wave.

    Apparently the German plans where for almost 4,000 vessels to be used in the invasion fleet.

    Almost everything outside the channel is not going have the time to intervene so its really a question are the resources the Royal Navy channel enough to stop the invasion on their own. I don't think you can answer the conclusively either way.

    Not to nit pick but I believe the Germans lost 10 destroyers in Norway, am aware the Germans had air cover and where closer to Norway than the British but that doesn't mean it was effectively home waters for the Germans)


  • Moderators Posts: 5,554 ✭✭✭Azza


    Just seeing this thread...

    Not attacking the Soviet Union (do a deal with the Soviets for oil - you can have all of Poland), but continuing with the Battle of Britain to conclusion instead. And to really throw the cat amongst the pigeons... after Pearl Harbour, declare war on Japan.

    The Germans did trade with the Soviet Union for oil right up till they attacked them. Wasn't enough though.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Azza wrote: »
    The Germans did trade with the Soviet Union for oil right up till they attacked them. Wasn't enough though.


    Did they offer them the rest of Poland*?


    Ultimately Hitler (thankfully) was in too much of a hurry. * It would only have been a loan. He could have got back to expanding East... after helping the US defeat the Japanese.


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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Re continuing the battle of Britain instead of attacking the Soviets (no point in claiming Hitler's fate was sealed by his ideology and continue with the thread)... he could have committed all resources on the blitz (he wanted his aircraft for Russia) and either won or at least got the English to agree to a peace deal, probably over Churchill's dead body or ousting.


  • Moderators Posts: 5,554 ✭✭✭Azza


    It doesn't matter if the German's win the Battle of Britain or continue with the Blitz, neither of them knock Britain out of the war. Germany at no point had the means to successfully invade Britain. Increasing the size of the U-Boat fleet to cut off Britian supply lines and knock them out of the war would of taken too long.

    In reality the German's effectively run out of oil in October 1941. Yes a huge chunk of that was consumed during Barbarossa and they could of traded with Russia for oil for longer but even so it was still running out for the Germans even without major military operations. Any delay going into Russia and the oil crisis is even worse and Russia is Hitler's overall objective, if he didn't have that objective there might have been no war in the first place.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Azza wrote: »
    It doesn't matter if the German's win the Battle of Britain or continue with the Blitz, neither of them knock Britain out of the war. Germany at no point had the means to successfully invade Britain. Increasing the size of the U-Boat fleet to cut off Britian supply lines and knock them out of the war would of taken too long.


    I think it would have been possible to get the British to the peace table. Hold off attacking Russia, where then was the need for all the oil? Bide your time to regroup, you've just conquered a good chunk of Western Europe.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,949 ✭✭✭RGARDINR


    Just wondering if the Germans had of parachuted a force of say 100 paratroopers say within 2/3 kms of each airfield that they knew of in Britain that they could reach at night time and their sole objective was to destroy as much aircraft that was on the ground and kill as many airmen at each of these. You could of had them landing while their was a diversion attack on each of these airfields. At the end of the day it wasn't as much a suicide run and you could inform the soldiers taking part that if they were captured they will be released soon as what they are doing is preparing for their main invasion in a few weeks /months time. Their mission was basically kill as many of the airmen on the ground so less in the sky for the luftwaffe to deal with. Takes a long time to train a pilot then make a plane. Just grind the British down, deal with airforce then deal with the navy from the air. Push back the invasion for a year, once you have the RAF out of the question so much easier to deal with the navy, have the u boats lurking just for the royal navy engage them not merchant shipping at same time. Just throw the luftwaffe at the navy then bomb them out of the sea as there wouldn't be many RAF to fight back.


  • Moderators Posts: 5,554 ✭✭✭Azza


    The British know that even if the lose the Battle of Britain they still have a massive superiority at sea and can stop an invasion. The Blitz did not come close to breaking Britain's resolve nor did a much larger bombing campaign by the British and Americans come close to breaking the Germans later on.

    The Soviet Union/Communism/Slavs are Hitlers ideological and racial foes. Britain and France are not, they are merely a force that had to be dealt with to allow Hitler to achieve his true goals of wiping out communism and his racial enemies, achieving living space in the east as stated in Mein Kampf and achieving complete autarky for Germany. Hitler had a rather weird view of economics that resulted in him not wanting Germany dependent on any trade at all, the simplified jist of it being Hitler believed technically superior countries like Germany should not trade with less developed nations as that would eventually allow these countries to gain parity with Germany. The trade Hitler did with the Soviet Union after Germany and the Soviet Union invaded people was only a temporary means to an end for Hitler and he never attended to maintain that trade indefinitely.

    So you could say sure, Germany should defeat Britain and resume overseas trade temporarily to alleviate the oil crisis the Germans where under to allow for a better chance to conquer Russia.

    The problem this is delays Barbarossa by anything from a year to multiple years. This gives the Soviet Union more time to prepare. They won't be caught redeploying from the interior of the Soviet Union to Poland like they where in Operation Barbarossa, they will have completed that, the Red Army has more time to recover from the purges, they will better trained and better equipped and better prepared around. With Britain out of the war Stalin will almost certainly be less likely to be taken by surprise as a major factor him in being taken by suprise when the Germans invaded is he couldn't believe the German's would attack while still at war with Britain but in this scenario its not longer the case.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,949 ✭✭✭RGARDINR


    I would of also invested heavily in gas for shells etc. I would of used these on the Eastern front. Imagine having these when the Russians countered attacked at the gates of Moscow it more then likely would of stopped their counter attack and you could of shelled Moscow with these. I doubt Stalin would of stayed put in Moscow if these were being fired into Moscow and the panic it would of created. Also with Leningrad surrounded they could of shelled the city with gas shells etc. The city would of fallen thus you release army group north to help with advance to Moscow. Any resistance in cities or towns by red army shell them with gas shells. You would of killed tens of thousands of red army personnel. Sowed panic in Moscow when you shell there. Made Leningrad fall. Probably stopped the Moscow counter attack in its tracks and then you continue your advance into Moscow in the spring from positions that the red army couldn't of pushed you back from that did happen.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 12,629 Mod ✭✭✭✭riffmongous


    RGARDINR wrote: »
    I would of also invested heavily in gas for shells etc. I would of used these on the Eastern front. Imagine having these when the Russians countered attacked at the gates of Moscow it more then likely would of stopped their counter attack and you could of shelled Moscow with these. I doubt Stalin would of stayed put in Moscow if these were being fired into Moscow and the panic it would of created. Also with Leningrad surrounded they could of shelled the city with gas shells etc. The city would of fallen thus you release army group north to help with advance to Moscow. Any resistance in cities or towns by red army shell them with gas shells. You would of killed tens of thousands of red army personnel. Sowed panic in Moscow when you shell there. Made Leningrad fall. Probably stopped the Moscow counter attack in its tracks and then you continue your advance into Moscow in the spring from positions that the red army couldn't of pushed you back from that did happen.

    I just had a quick look and it seems one of the main theories why gas wasn't ever seriously used was the principle of mutual destruction, if the Germans had used gas they would have opened up their own cities up to attack from Allied planes dropping gas bombs.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,949 ✭✭✭RGARDINR


    I just had a quick look and it seems one of the main theories why gas wasn't ever seriously used was the principle of mutual destruction, if the Germans had used gas they would have open their own cities up to attack from Allied planes dropping gas bombs.

    I saw that but don't use it on the West like Britain etc. use it just on the east on the soviet Union and only when you reach Moscow, Leningrad etc. Since wasn't used in the western front until then and used just then again the soviet forces Stalin wouldn't of been expecting it. I say would of caused Moscow to fall and Leningrad to have fallen. It wouldn't of meant Britain would of started to use it on the Germans etc. They would think the Nazis would use it on us then. Use it on sovirt union when Leningrad surrounded and at gates of Moscow. I couldn't see them both not falling then. Your own soldiers would of been prepared with gas masks etc. But since wouldn't of been used by the Nazis by that point of time in battle I don't think red army would of been prepared for it.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Are we saying Hitler was too caring to use gas, even if it meant the destruction of his own cities?

    Also, if Britain lost the Battle of Britain they would have lost air superiority and their stronger navy would have been very vulnerable.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,651 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    RGARDINR wrote: »
    I saw that but don't use it on the West like Britain etc. use it just on the east on the soviet Union and only when you reach Moscow, Leningrad etc. Since wasn't used in the western front until then and used just then again the soviet forces Stalin wouldn't of been expecting it. I say would of caused Moscow to fall and Leningrad to have fallen. It wouldn't of meant Britain would of started to use it on the Germans etc. They would think the Nazis would use it on us then. Use it on sovirt union when Leningrad surrounded and at gates of Moscow. I couldn't see them both not falling then. Your own soldiers would of been prepared with gas masks etc. But since wouldn't of been used by the Nazis by that point of time in battle I don't think red army would of been prepared for it.

    Doing things like bombing civilians in towns and cities and torpedoing neutral shipping really backfired on Germany. Likewise their treatment of Russians. I can only imagine how using gas would have backfired.


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