Blind groper wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:If our contribution was so minimal, why wasn't Monte the Supreme Allied Commander, or some other Brit? Why not a Russian?
I suspect that Stalin considered himself the Supreme Allied Commander, and I could present a damn good case to support that. He was, after all, commander in charge of 90% of the forces opposing Hitler. Montgomerie was not the super commander because it was not politically astute to make him so.
You suspect? Oh, goodie. Eisenhower held the title, and did the job. The title has continued to be used since the War under NATO auspices.
The point was - if the US contribution was so paltry, why would an American be in that position? Why was the US practically begged to get into the war? What did you need us for? If you asked Americans in 1939 or 1940 whether it was our business to get involved in another stupid European bloodbath, I guarantee you the resounding answer would be "fuck no."
Blind groper wrote:
America's contribution to the war in Europe was not minimal, except compared to that of the Soviets. Compared to them, the US was a small player - assisting a bunch of other nations to fight one tenth of Hitler's forces, with the Soviets fighting the other nine tenths.
You're saying 9/10 of Hitler's forces were dedicated to the fight against the Soviets?
Now, it's a bit myopic to claim that the Soviet death toll means they did the most. One must view the war as a whole, IMO, and remember that from May, 1939 to the beginning of Operation Barbarossa in June, 1941 -- i.e. more than 2 full years -- the Soviets supplied the Germans with oil, grain,steel and other materials which they used to feed the German war machine. Thanks a lot, Soviets! Russia was only kept in the war in 1942 by substantial aid in terms of strategic raw materials and tanks, warplanes,trucks and so on from the US and GB. Much of the military equipment used by the Russians in the initial defense of Stalingrad came from the US and GB, and had that not come through, Germany would have wiped its ass with the Soviets. Much of the reason so many Russians died in Operation Barbarossa is because the Soviet defense was inept.
Blind groper wrote:
The reason I am saying this is not to denigrate the USA, but to attack the emetic arrogance of a few posters who would try to tell us that the USA came charging into Europe like the white knight to save everyone. That is simply not true. Victory in Europe was mostly owed to the Soviets, and the USA was just one, albeit important, player among a host of others, in dealing with the one tenth effort that took place outside the Soviet sphere.
Victory in Europe was not mostly owned by the Soviets. If anyone made the biggest contribution to the war it was the British. They fought non-stop from the invasion of Poland in 1939 through the end of the war, six years later. The US fought for four years, and before the US formally entered the war, they were supplying Britain. And, they were also supplying Russia once Operation Barbarossa started.
Focusing on Russian attrition is not evidence of Russian dominance in the war effort. They held on for dear life, relying on US and Brit help. Sure, they fought hard, but their contribution to the overall war effort was, essentially, not losing, so they could occupy German forces in the east. This gave the US time to ramp up, and start chipping away (with GB) at the edges of the German expansion. Africa --- the boot of Italy -- and then D-Day in June 1944.
Even in June 1944, victory was not assured, not by a long shot. Nobody knew D-Day would succeed and the plan only did succeed because the Allies managed to dupe Hitler into thinking we were going to land somewhere else. Had Hitler found out about the Normandy invasion ahead of time, we would have been cut to ribbons and would most likely never have been able to land.