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![]() "Thom Stewart" wrote If you want to consider that '41 campaign a Allied Victory so be it? You said "a victory" not a "campaign victory." Under that assumption, you can't call D-Day a "victory" either -- the Axis was still in control of all but a very small strip of France, all the Low Countries, etc. Most people would still consider D-Day a victory, IMO. A major Russian city under siege, German occupation of most of European Russia, the Romanian Oil industry in German control; I don't call that a Victory. Moscow wasn't under siege by Dec. 7th. The German High Command had been trying to get Hitler to agree to give up the attempt for about a month. But I guess you don't call Gettysburg a victory either, right? They're identical in scope -- both the "high tide" of the respective invasions. I guess you can keep score your way but the Bismarck was sunk alright but tell that to the died on the "Hood" I guess you don't consider Midway a victory either then. Maybe you can tell that to the people who died on the Yorktown someday. Your right about the I-ties in North Africa but the Axis ( Rommel) controlled North Africa not the Allies, the Allies didn't control North Africa until Patton and Montgomery drove them out. So there's at least one victory you acknowledge. Montgomery and El Alamein was more responsible than Patton in North Africa later, of course. I'm had my say. The Allies, in my mind weren't winners until the Yanks took command in Europe and Asia/Pacific. In the Pacific War, that's probably true. The worst thing the Japanese could do was attack the US -- they lost the moment the first torpedo was dropped at Pearl. In Europe, it's because you're centered on Western Europe and ignore what the USSR did to Germany before the first "Yank" stepped out of a landing craft on Italy -- or even met the Afrika Korps at Kasserine Pass. Like Gettysburg finished any real hopes for the Confederacy, Stalingrad and the USSR had finished the Third Reich. It took quite a while for both wars to end after the turning point but that turning point in Europe and eventual victory had more to do with the Merchant Marine and Murmansk convoys than Ike or Patton. |
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