RGARDINR wrote: » Well if they have Leningrad, Stalingrad and Moscow from using it and possibly millions more Russians dead and having saved countless German soldiers I don't think it would of mattered. Pushed the red army further east bombed them from the air with aerial gas bombs. I think would of ended the Russian threat in the east in the end. Problem the Germans had were the Americans coming into the war, maybe had an agreement with the Japanese to not attack America but to attack other countries in the far East like British territories which they did but to not attack America or where American troops etc were. Deal with them after other enemies dealt with if Japan does go to war with America in 1941 don't you declare war on them and have Italy do the same. It might just save you from going to war with America while you deal with soviet Union and Britain.
beauf wrote: » 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.
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.
riffmongous wrote: » 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.
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.
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.
Azza wrote: » The Germans did trade with the Soviet Union for oil right up till they attacked them. Wasn't enough though.
Deleted User wrote: » 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.
[Deleted User] wrote: » 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.
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.
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 ...
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.
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.
Azza wrote: » Believe it was just the He-111 that could drop torpedos.
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.
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.
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.