bumper234 wrote: » So much fail i wouldn't know where to start.
realweirdo wrote: » Ah yeh, typical anti american response. To be fair if it wasn't for America, you'd be hailing the Nazis, cheering the Kaiser or probably in some Soviet Gulag somewhere. Learn your history.
.jacksparrow. wrote: » To do as he pleases? What's that, fight back against a rebel army who are causing havoc in his country?
Tony EH wrote: » Actually, if you leaned a bit of history yourself, you'd find that it was Russia who did the lion's share of fighting against the Germans in WWII.
realweirdo wrote: » With a hell of a lot of support from the Brits and US in terms of materials, materials which unquestionably helped turned the tide and turned the Russian army from one that went to battle on foot and horseback to one that had tens of thousands of American made trucks ferrying them around.
Tony EH wrote: » Lend Lease was a fraction of what the Russians produced themselves, about 15% all told (and that's being generous
alastair wrote: » Depends what you count. 70% of the soviet motor pool (primarily trucks) were lend-lease sourced.
Tony EH wrote: » In 1944. The war was effectively over for the Germans by then. Besides, it's not as if the Russians couldn't, or didn't produce trucks. Lend Lease helped free up a situation whereby they could make tanks instead, but when one considers that even without Lend Lease, the Russians would have outstripped the Germans in tanks many times over, even that help wasn't essential to their victory. No matter how it's cut, Lend Lease, while it was helpful, was not a decisive factor in the Russian victory over the Germans.
Speaking about our readiness for war from the point of view of the economy and economics, one cannot be silent about such a factor as the subsequent help from the Allies. First of all, certainly, from the American side, because in that respect the English helped us minimally. In an analysis of all facets of the war, one must not leave this out of one's reckoning. We would have been in a serious condition without American gunpowder, and could not have turned out the quantity of ammunition which we needed. Without American Studebekkers, we could have dragged our artillery nowhere. Yes, in general, to a considerable degree they provided our front transport. The output of special steel, necessary for the most diverse necessities of war, were also connected to a series of American deliveries." It is now said that the Allies never helped us . . . However, one cannot deny that the Americans gave us so much material, without which we could not have formed our reserves and could not have continued the war . . . we had no explosives and powder. There was none to equip rifle bullets. The Americans actually came to our assistance with powder and explosives. And how much sheet steel did they give us. We really could not have quickly put right our production of tanks if the Americans had not helped with steel. And today it seems as though we had all this ourselves in abundance."
Tony EH wrote: » I've seen that quote before. But it doesn't change anything.
Tony EH wrote: » Russia won their war against Germany with their own blood and laregly with their own equipment.
It's a pretty convincing case made by someone central to the Soviet campaign. Does he confirm that lend-lease "unquestionably helped turned the tide" - well, yes, he does.
alastair wrote: » It's a pretty convincing case made by someone central to the Soviet campaign. Does he confirm that lend-lease "unquestionably helped turned the tide" - well, yes, he does.
esteve wrote: » You could also question that if the US had not been supplying the Nazis, then perhaps the Soviets would not have needed further supplies. It doesnt really matter, to try and play down the role that the Soviets played in defeating the Nazis is absurd and disrespectful. They were on the eastern front for years in some of the bloodiest, most gruesome battles with huge losses of life. Supplies are all well and good, you need people to use them
alastair wrote: » You'd need to take this up with Zhukov - I assume he knew only too well the sacrifice Russians made in fighting that war - and yet he's not afraid to give credit to the impact of lend-lease.
Tony EH wrote: » Like it or not, the vast majority of the ME don't want America adding its colours (or colors) into the mix. The vast majority of Middle Eastern nations don't view America with any kind of trust.
Tony EH wrote: » I better start writing that history book, then, because everybody from Basil Liddel Hart to David Glanz has been woefully wrong all this time! :pac:
renegademaster wrote: » http://rt.com/news/chemical-weapons-rebels-captives-632/ Chemical attack was rebel provocation, former captives say Published time: September 10, 2013 03:24 Edited time: September 10, 2013 08:33 Get short URL
realweirdo wrote: » You do realise you are quoting from Kremlin mouthpiece RT?? Once I saw your source, I stopped reading as RT is not an independent CREDIBLE source.
Gringo180 wrote: » And the BBC and Sky are?