Originally posted by Deen
Excuses for why a country lost a war/battle are not really a valid argument. We are all on the same planet, and all countries had to work with the situation they were in at the time.
Thats absolutely preposterous. Have you studied history at all?
I could write for hours on why this is wrong but consider:
- population
- social policy
- politics
- economics
- science
- focus of interest
- organization
- land size
- internal and external pressures (treaties, national politics)
The list goes on and on. All of these have elements of why a country won or lost. The belief that France just laid down their arms the moment a Panzer tank rolled across the border is ignorance. I'm not arguing this because I'm french (I'm not), I'm not arguing it because I have some sort of agenda, I'm arguing it because statements here are absolutely historically false and illconcieved in the very least.
I've read innumerable source documents from the period (I've had to write essays on this stuff) mostly pertaining to the efforts of the BEF and the RAF during this time (my interest area) but that also covers significant elements of why France lost, what factors were involved, and what the timeline was.
Lets move from the Battle of France to the Battle of Britain. Did the Luftwaffe and the RAF have the same situation because they were on the same planet? Heck no! The RAF was on its home front, it had fewer than 32 fighter squadrons when the battle began, the Luftwaffe outnumbered them in planes by three to one. But what were the crucial differences?
1) Britain is an island. Invasion by conventional means is impossible, it has to be a naval operation at some point. Germany in the 1940's could not hope to compete with the Royal Navy.
2) Britain had developed and excellent defensive method using radar, command and control, and airfield dispersals to attack the enemy.
3) People like Lord Beaverbrook were able to rally the British industries to build fighters, repair fighters, take two damaged fighters and make one good one. By the end of September 1940 Britain was capable of sustaining its losses in terms of planes (not pilots) while the Luftwaffe was totally unable to replace its planes (Germany did not even reach full production capacity until 1944!!).
Etc, etc, etc.