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How could Hitler have won WW2?

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  • Registered Users Posts: 23,716 ✭✭✭✭Larbre34


    He could've maybe fought it to a standstill and divvied up a treaty for expanded borders with the Soviets, but he would've had to listen to his strategists more than he actually did.

    He should've halted at the soviet border, albeit threateningly, then focussed on the invasion of Britain. As we know, they were a hairs breath away from prevailing in the Battle of Britain and could certainly have undertaken a successful amphibious assault.

    In the end though, perhaps after a new conflict following an armistice, the sheer force of numbers and resources of their enemies would've beaten the Third Reich. What won World War 2 was American factories and steel and oil and the ability to keep endlessly deploying new tanks and planes and ships into the fight.

    Its likely a long term Third Reich occupation of central Europe AND an occupation of Great Britain would've been completely unmanageable anyway, too much land and population to supervise, it would never have been without resistance and external probing by America.

    Also, had it been necessary, the Atom bomb would've been dropped on German cities until they got around to Berlin and decapitated the Reich. Even something as unbalancing as a Nazi-Soviet alliance or continued non-aggression pact wouldn't have withstood an atomic assault.

    And thats the key point, the tactics and weapons that defeated the Axis would've done so eventually, maybe in a different order, on a different timetable, with different long term consequences - but, so long as nobody could lay a glove on the continental USA, the Axis could not have won I believe.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,586 ✭✭✭victor8600


    As many have pointed out, even in this thread, Hitler might have had a chance to win WW2 if he was not Hitler.

    For example, the scenario Stalin had feared was a united imperialist front against the Soviet Union. Could have that happened? Sure, imagine Hitler declaring peace with Britain and France (subject to France paying "reparations") after France's collapse in 1940 and announcing a crusade against Bolshevism. No submarine warfare against British shipping, and active appeasement of those sections of the US society who were most against USSR. Then Hitler could have coordinated with Japanese to crush the Soviet Union; without the Lend Lease and facing a war from West and East, the USSR would probably fall. After digesting the USSR, the Reich then could have "liberated" India and the arab world from the clutches of British and French imperialists.


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


    Larbre34 wrote: »
    ...As we know, they were a hairs breath away from prevailing in the Battle of Britain and could certainly have undertaken a successful amphibious assault. ...

    I don't think that entirely true. Even if they had destroyed the RAF bases in the south they could have simply moved to the midlands, and as many airbases were Grass they could have been rebuilt easily. UK kept a lot of strength in reserve in the midlands and in the north. They ended the battle stronger than when they started.
    ...Fighter Command ended the battle stronger than when it began, with about 40% more operational pilots, and more aircraft. The Luftwaffe meanwhile emerged battered and depleted, having lost 30% of its operational strength....

    Even if Germany had defeated the RAF they didn't have the resources to cross the channel, by sea or by air. That said the battle had big impact other than the numbers. It shifted American opinion. Raised the stiffening the moral and resolve to fight one, and others to join their fight.


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


    victor8600 wrote: »
    As many have pointed out, even in this thread, Hitler might have had a chance to win WW2 if he was not Hitler. ...

    Very true. But being Hitler is what got him so far. But it also sealed his defeat.


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


    Then theres the battle of the atlantic.

    https://uboat.net/fates/losses/


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,435 ✭✭✭Scoundrel


    I firmly believe Germany could have won in the east had it utilised the millions or indeed tens of millions of willing collaborators it had in Poland Latvia Estonia Lithuania Belarus Ukraine etc etc promised them freedom under a German sphere of influence once war was over etc rather than treating them as slaves and subhumans. Thankfully of course they did not do this and the glorious red army was able to smash the beast once and for all.


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


    In our timeline the Battle of Smolensk which led to the encirclement of another vast Russian army was a loss for Stalin but in fact was a vital delay to the advance on Moscow. In my hypothetical timeline woth a peace agreed with Halifax there would be no more need to fight in the West and in the Mediterranean and North Africa and more combat units would have been available and more time prepare.
    The Red Army of 1941 was a mess led by incompetent Communist yes men and poorly led conscripts whereas after the defeat of the Germans before Moscow officers who had been imprisoned were released while the meritocrscy command structure was restored. The majority of the Soviets who fought hard all the way to Berlin did for the Motherland and to avenge the invasion not for Stalin or Communism.
    In our timeline Stalin fell into a funk and contemplated suicide while his stooges plotted his overthrow.
    Had the Germans had more men and not been delayed by the British that could have been enough to capture Moscow and that would been it for Stalin and the Soviets. The Germans would still have been weak and could have been thrown back by a counterattack even if they captured Moscow but that required leadership and steel nerves which would be gone with the Soviet system decapitated.
    Had this happened a long war would have continued on the Urals frontier while partisans would have fought on for many years threatening Germany supply lines but without a two front war with moral high and no resistance from the Western allies the Germans could have carved out their living space.
    Hitler would have declined from the onset of Parkinson's and died by the 1950s perhaps. His immense mausoleam in the Berlin redesigned by Albert Speer would be a Nazi Mecca.
    A power struggle would have ensued perhaps with the rise of Reinhard Heydrich after the death of Himmler in a mysterious plane crash followed by the liquidation of his Nazi Party SS and Wehrmacht rivals.
    With the Blonde Beast taking the name Hitler aping Augustus who renamed himself Caesar?
    The American right both Democrat and Republican would have pursued detente with this evil empire with Western Europe as their satelite possibly adopting a version of National Socialism themselves including the British French and other Europeans.
    Germany's superiority in rocketry and space science would probably have given them the lead in the space race. Perhaps an Nazi astronaut riding a Saturn 5 designed by Werner Von Braun would have reached the moon by the 1960s?
    Ireland would be part of a pan European alliance with a right wing ultra Catholic hardline Irish Nationalist regime in place supported by a German garrison with SS officers holidaying playing golf and shooting deer on Irish estates with German nuclear missiles and U boats based on our Western shores?


  • Registered Users Posts: 12,363 ✭✭✭✭Del.Monte


    @ Samsonmasher


    If Trump had clung onto power something along the lines of your post could theoretically have occurred but with the Russians occupying Western Europe save for France and the UK who would have been too dangerous to take on. Certainly one could see a scenario where the UK would stay out of a war with Russia if NATO had been let crumble by Putin's puppet in Washington. Interesting stuff for a movie anyway.


  • Registered Users Posts: 736 ✭✭✭Das Reich


    E mac wrote: »
    Didn't Hitler initially think Britain as potential allies? He was sure that they wouldn't intervene when Germany invaded Poland. He saw Britains specifically English people as part of the Aryan Germanic master race...

    No. England and France were doing problems since the Saarland went back to Germany.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,395 ✭✭✭Harika


    The war was lost when the door was kicked in and the whole rotten soviet union didn't came down. Even if Germany would have been quicker at Moscow, this would have been no quick win, and winter comes guaranteed. Supply lines are over stretched. Moscow's sacking might even shorten the war in favour of Russia.
    Even if Moscow would have been captured, short lived victory as the government was ready to relocate.
    To win, get UK, US or Russia on your side.


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


    Del.Monte wrote: »
    @ Samsonmasher


    If Trump had clung onto power something along the lines of your post could theoretically have occurred but with the Russians occupying Western Europe save for France and the UK who would have been too dangerous to take on. Certainly one could see a scenario where the UK would stay out of a war with Russia if NATO had been let crumble by Putin's puppet in Washington. Interesting stuff for a movie anyway.

    That's for another thread lol. I am solely interested in possible outcomes from that famous showdown between Halifax and Churchill.
    Being a WW2 nerd in the extreme I think that is the moment when History changed.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,332 ✭✭✭V8 Interceptor


    A militaristic dictator who was not antisemitic who might have seized power in an alternative timeline would of course have used Jewish scientists who were enthusiatically German nationalists prior to Hitler's rise to power.

    If they were why did the Nazis hate them?


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,529 ✭✭✭dubrov


    If they were why did the Nazis hate them?

    Tensions were bubbling long before Hitler. I can't see German Jews being msssive nationalists given the hate from the rest of the local population


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,699 ✭✭✭saabsaab


    dubrov wrote: »
    Tensions were bubbling long before Hitler. I can't see German Jews being msssive nationalists given the hate from the rest of the local population


    Some were. Didn't one win get awarded an Iron Cross?


  • Registered Users Posts: 142 ✭✭dmn22


    If they were why did the Nazis hate them?

    Could be wrong here but was it not because they were seen as wealthy during a time when the average German did not have a lot of money?

    Hitler then orchestrated an effective messaging campaign blaming them for various things that were going wrong within the country.

    I may be wrong here however and am happy to be corrected my the more knowledgeable people in this thread :D


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,918 ✭✭✭Conall Cernach


    The order to halt the panzers before Dunkirk ensured that the British could evacuate 300,000 odd troops and gain a valuable morale boost just when they were on the ropes. If the Germans had captured those troops the Brits may have sued for some sort of peace settlement meaning that Hitler would not have been distracted by operation Sealion and various other campaigns and could have the full might of his army focused on Barbarossa.


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


    If they were why did the Nazis hate them?

    They wanted a pure Germany with 100% Aryans at the top. I remember reading in Stephen A Ambrose's book "D-Day" that a commando who went ashore that day was a former nember of the Waffen SS. When the Nazis found out after some digging that he and his family were of Jewish descent they all went to the gas chambers. He escaped and fought for the Allies.


  • Registered Users Posts: 403 ✭✭E mac


    Das Reich wrote: »
    No. England and France were doing problems since the Saarland went back to Germany.

    Nazi policy pre 1938 was ideally an alliance with Britain. The Germans aspired to having a "British empire of their own" so propaganda at that time praised the British.


  • Registered Users Posts: 736 ✭✭✭Das Reich


    E mac wrote: »
    Nazi policy pre 1938 was ideally an alliance with Britain. The Germans aspired to having a "British empire of their own" so propaganda at that time praised the British.

    More likely an alliance with Soviet Union, they even sent soldiers there to be trained when Germany couldn't have motorized army (before 1935) and airplanes.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,382 ✭✭✭1874


    That's for another thread lol. I am solely interested in possible outcomes from that famous showdown between Halifax and Churchill.
    Being a WW2 nerd in the extreme I think that is the moment when History changed.


    I was always the opinion that the turning point in the war was around the first military defeats of the Wehrmacht in North Africa, so what led to that essentially led to the overall defeat of Germany.


    The fact that Barbarossa had already started prevented an overall victory in North Africa, and because Hitlers goal was always in the East, before they secured other areas, half hearted and piecemeal efforts made in North Africa that werent followed through or in the BAtlle of Britain where they couldnt follow through were wasted, that always left them vulnerable to being attacked and having to go on the defensive.


    Once as was said the Soviet house of cards didnt collapse, didnt necessarily mean the Soviets werent on the verge of imminent defeat, it was a close run thing and the Soviets themselves suffered manpower shortages, possibly partly becuase they wastefully threw men into the meatgrinder, but only just because they did it more, doesnt mean the Germans werent at it either. By not securing the Mediterranean and North Africa any loss of men and equipment taking ground was a complete waste if they werent going to finish the job.
    It seems ideology and urgency to deal with what was always in Hitlers mind, which was to attack Soviet Russia.
    If the effort and resources expended on the battle of Britain (and certainly Barbarossa) had been focused on North Africa and Malta I think this would have had a more significant effect than facing off with Mainland Britain which could be seen as an all or nothing battle of survival for their existence. The Germans never had the ability to follow it up with a seaborne invasion, but they could have tied up British resources by making attacks on airfields/ports and potentially forcing the RN to operate more defensively.


    Cutting the suez canal and their access to the rest of the Empire and oil in the middle east to Great Britain would have had a greater affect on any war with them without directly making it a war of survival for the British which was put that way to help turn American public opinion.
    While still being involved in agreement with the Soviets, Germany could have gotten more results by supporting and cooperating with the Italians, who had manpower and a large Navy into defeating the RN and British forces in that region.
    This would have staved off the requirement for an urgency to reach the Caucasus for oil in Barbarossa, but still have placed it in easier reach to remove it from Russia prior to any later invasion.
    With Britain out of any war or so weakened and isolated to their mainland, submarine warfare could have reduced any further capacity to fight, assuming they had not already sued for peace.



    So in my opinion, regardless of the British deciding to fight on and Churchill having succeeded in remaining, it could still have been possible to defeat them prior to the US becoming involved and before attacking Soviet Russia.

    No all out Battle of ideology in attacking Britain where they could show themselves in an underdog light protecting some candle of democracy, which the German forces couldnt follow through on, but rather cutting the British link to their colonies and an attack on their link away from her home territory , that could have been achieved and access to oil by fighting and defeating them in North Africa and the Mediterranean, which would have been easier and risked less than an all out attack on Soviet Russia, but which still provided them with certain materials and resources they needed, ie the Russians were providing the Germans with materiale before Barbarossa, and they could have accessed their oil requirements from the Middle east. Disincentivizing
    The Japanese from attacking the US, which also revolved around an urgency to have unaffected access to oil resources, by encouraging them in securing the Indian Ocean, further breaking the link between Great Britain and Aus/NZ.
    With India left to India and British forces there with no support, as a colony, it would have ended, The Japanese sphere of influence cold have been up to South East Asia, they could have focused on theri war against China, rather than fighting a technologically superior foe, again ideology hamstrung them as much as the Germans.

    A later Barbarossa not focusing on Juggling Army group resources such as tanks and the time wasted in that and as someone said gaining support in both potentially Allied and Conquered territories that were opposed to the Soviets (from Finland, the Baltics and Ukraine), even from withing Russia itself could have finished off The Soviet Union in shorter order, again the option offered to the Defenders was too limited to leave them any option but to fight for their survival.
    The Soviets could have been weakened prior to that by having a potential Japanese threat in the East and German forces near their borders south of the Caucasus's.
    Really having ideology as a primary objective instead of real military and practical considerations in a war undermines the side with those as objectives.
    Its wasteful of resources and divides and diminishes your own forces.


    The order to halt the panzers before Dunkirk ensured that the British could evacuate 300,000 odd troops and gain a valuable morale boost just when they were on the ropes. If the Germans had captured those troops the Brits may have sued for some sort of peace settlement meaning that Hitler would not have been distracted by operation Sealion and various other campaigns and could have the full might of his army focused on Barbarossa.


    I think its likely that a defeat that captured those men, would have put Britain out of any further war, it would have been an over whelming thing for the BEF to be defeated and captured, for the population, rather than just defeated and escaped, the Germans could have operated from a position of authority in peacefully removing the UK and even have them support and feed the German BEF captives, Im not sure if the Germans had the capacity to feed them, its possible they may even have gained many of the ordinary soldiers as Allies (although probably mostly unlikely), because the British didnt treat those same ordinary men from the same classes any better themselves between the Wars back home.

    Das Reich wrote: »
    More likely an alliance with Soviet Union, they even sent soldiers there to be trained when Germany couldn't have motorized army (before 1935) and airplanes.


    I think this was more out of a requirement to train and test equipment in secrecy than any want or need to be allied to them.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 4,395 ✭✭✭Harika


    The underbelly theory, that Germany could have won by focusing more resources on the north Africa campaign, has one problem. Germany had only access to the port in Tobruk and had trouble to sustain it's existing army and often relied on capturing British resources to advance further. Egypt was neutral and to take a detour through turkey would have been far too long.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,382 ✭✭✭1874


    Harika wrote: »
    The underbelly theory, that Germany could have won by focusing more resources on the north Africa campaign, has one problem. Germany had only access to the port in Tobruk and had trouble to sustain it's existing army and often relied on capturing British resources to advance further. Egypt was neutral and to take a detour through turkey would have been far too long.


    With the British out of the Med, the ports available could have been sufficient, until Egypt was taken,

    as for Egypt's neutrality, I dont think bypassing it for anyone was a consideration, the British were already there, previously neutral countries had not concerned any Major players, not the British in Egypt, nor in Norway where they were planning to occupy or elsewhere, (and likewise the Germans elsewhere) Holland, Belgium, Denmark.


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


    Harika wrote: »
    The underbelly theory, that Germany could have won by focusing more resources on the north Africa campaign, has one problem. Germany had only access to the port in Tobruk and had trouble to sustain it's existing army and often relied on capturing British resources to advance further. Egypt was neutral and to take a detour through turkey would have been far too long.

    If Halifax was PM the British would have concluded a peace treaty with Hitler and no war in the Middle East would have broken out. Obviously the British would have to have made humiliating concessions but they would have kept their Empire just as the French did after 1940. Hitler could concentrate on conquering European Russia in 1941 with no distractions.
    Again the Nazis could only have won in 1941 if they captured Moscow decapitating the Soviet system and also capturing the Caucasus oil fields. Without Britain as a springboard to stage a landing in France the Americans could not have been able to intervene in Europe. Also with Britain throwing in the towel Franco's Spain and also Portugal would have agreed to co operate and German bases would probably have been established on their Western shores. Gibraltar and Suez would be in Nazi hands and the British Italian and French fleets would be part of a military alliance with the Reich to blockade the Soviet Union.


  • Registered Users Posts: 11,035 ✭✭✭✭J Mysterio


    E mac wrote: »
    How much of an asset were Italy to Germany? Again I think Hitler put too much faith in an Italian army which was low on modern mechanisation and still relied on the humble horse. Fair enough Italy took control in Greece /Mediterranean but it was fleeting. Japan was too far away to be of any help to Germany in Europe if say geographically Japan was an island in Europe then god help us...

    Italy didn't take control in Greece though, and the Germans had to come in and do the job for them. The Italians were a liability to Hitler. They couldn't take Greece with superior manpower - a complete failure really.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greco-Italian_War


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,366 ✭✭✭jackboy


    Capturing the brits at Dunkirk could have knocked them out of the war. If that didn’t work the Germans could have quickly captured Gibraltar, which would have probably left the brits unable to hold on in North Africa.

    Russia was just too big. Maintaining a strong defence and using politics, that regime would have imploded eventually. Just needed patience that Hitler was not capable of.

    Declaring war on the US. Someone should have just put a bullet in his head when he came out with that idea.

    The truth is, even if someone sent Hitler back a history book from the future, he would have messed things up. Extreme overwhelming aggression was his go to tactic every time which is a massive waste of resources.


  • Registered Users Posts: 338 ✭✭McHardcore


    Isn't there an argument that if Hitler had not hated the Jews, he'd have had the Bomb first because multiple Jewish physicists wouldn't have fled?

    Yes, losing the physicists was a big loss to Germany. Germany also had a head-start on the research as Otto Hahn, Lise Meitner and Fritz Strassman first discovered nuclear fission in 1938. Werner Heisenberg calculated that a bomb could be possible by 1939. Also, the cost of the development wasn't beyond the possibility of what Germany could do, as they spent more on the V2 project than the Allies spent on the Manhattan Nuclear bomb project.

    There are a few things that would have been very difficult for Germany to overcome. One was that nearly all the world's sources of uranium 235 were in the Belgian Congo and lesser quality sources in Canada and the US. These were all under the Allies control. Secondly, they would require fields of enrichment plants that would be easy targets for allies bombs.

    Lastly, as others here have pointed out, the leaders never really tried to develop it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,395 ✭✭✭Harika


    Some other options:
    Germany waited until 1943 to fully move their economy to wartime economy. UK did this 1941 already.
    The blitz wasted hundreds of the best German pilots. Either killed or if shutdown over UK then out of the war.
    UK had not this problem, even had penicillin to cure quicker.
    The saying goes that WW2 was won by russian blood, US steel and UK intelligence.
    Even with UK out of the war, Barbarossa was doomed to fail. Let's assume Germany encircling Moscow, definitely not a rollover with hundreds of thousands of Russian soldiers defending, German supply lines extended beyond sustainable and with the Japanese attack on pearl harbor, millions of Russian soldiers in winter gear available from the east ready to smash the encirclement.
    Could the Japanese attack wait? They thought it's their only way to keep the US long enough out of the war. Their blockade of oil hurt them


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,699 ✭✭✭saabsaab


    Russian spies found out that Japan did not intend to attack the USSR unless Moscow fell first. This allowed the Russians to divert troops to the defense of Moscow from further east. Also if the British were not in the fight then no convoys to the USSR with essential materials this would have led to Russian defeat. As it was it was close enough.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,943 ✭✭✭tabbey


    Harika wrote: »
    The saying goes that WW2 was won by russian blood, US steel and UK intelligence.

    This is it in a nutshell.

    Germany could have defeated Russia and acquired living space in eastern Europe. Alternatively Germany could have honoured Hitler's deal with Stalin and retained control of France and neighbouring countries.

    They could not win on three fronts.

    By invading western Europe, and antagonising Britain, meant sooner or later, America would enter the war, and no matter how long it took, Germany would be defeated by the combination of American equipment and supplies, and russian lives.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 80 ✭✭Duke of Schomberg


    saabsaab wrote: »
    Also if the British were not in the fight then no convoys to the USSR with essential materials this would have led to Russian defeat. As it was it was close enough.

    Well its a good job we were up for the fight - unlike DeValera, fueling U-boats and directing German bombers to Belfast. That Fenian was a disgrace to those Free Staters that did take up arms against evil.


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