nebris: (A Proper General)
"The effective employment of Lend-Lease equipment was compromised by the persistent objection of the Soviet side to allowing Western personnel access to help with training and repair or to supply information on how the aid was being utilized. By 1943 large stockpiles of material had accumulated in the Soviet Union but it was impossible to check why this was or to limit further deliveries without Soviet co-operation. Soviet secretiveness made it difficult at the time to counteract the regular criticism of combat failures, while despite promises Soviet officials released little information on the development of Soviet tanks and aircraft, apart from the one T-34 tank sent to the United States in 1942. ‘We still meet their requests to the limit of our ability,’ complained the head of the American military mission in Moscow, John Deane, to General Marshall, ‘and they meet ours to the minimum that will keep us sweet.’[116] Growing suspicion that Soviet requests for Lend-Lease supplies, which reached a peak in 1944 and 1945, included goods intended for Soviet post-war reconstruction led to political pressure in Washington to place limits on Soviet assistance. In August 1945, following the Japanese surrender, President Truman announced the immediate end of all Lend-Lease shipments without consulting either of the main recipients.

Tensions in the Lend-Lease relationship were inevitable given the nature of the geographical scope involved and the contending requirements for urgent supply, but in the end vast resources, chiefly from the American productive surplus, were shared between the Allies. Was this record, in the words of Edward Stettinius, the Lend-Lease administrator, a ‘weapon for victory’? The answer is more complicated than it seems. For years after the war the official Soviet line was to downplay or to ignore altogether the role of Lend-Lease in the Soviet war effort. This was a deliberate act of historical distortion. Shortly after the end of the war, informal guidelines were issued (which no sensible author could ignore under Stalin) that Lend-Lease ‘did not play a somewhat noticeable part in Russian victory’. The official line until the 1980s was to insist that Lend-Lease goods came late, were often of poor quality, and comprised only 4 per cent of the weapons produced by the Soviet Union’s own efforts. During the war, however, Soviet leaders privately admitted how important all the forms of aid were. In the taped interviews for his memoirs, Khrushchev revealed the importance Stalin attached to the aid, but the following passage was only published in the 1990s: ‘Several times I heard Stalin acknowledge [Lend-Lease] in the small circle of people around him. He said that . . . if we had had to deal with Germany one-to-one we would not have been able to cope.’ Marshal Zhukov, victor in Berlin, toed the Party line in his memoirs published in 1969, but in a bugged conversation six years earlier he was overheard to say that without foreign aid the Soviet Union ‘could not have continued the war’. The 4 per cent figure for Allied supplies as a percentage of Soviet output is not wrong, but it entirely masks what Lend-Lease actually achieved. In the early stages of the war, Lend-Lease tanks and aircraft supplied a higher percentage of Soviet equipment because of the exceptional losses in the first months of combat. As the war progressed, Soviet output revived, and Lend-Lease military equipment became correspondingly less significant. Up to the Battle of Stalingrad Lend-Lease tanks amounted to 19 per cent of Soviet production. But by the Battle of Kursk six months later, one of the largest tank engagements of the war, there were 3,495 Soviet-built tanks and only 396 Lend-Lease, around 11 per cent. Tanks, aircraft and weapons, however, were not the decisive factor in Allied deliveries. Of much greater significance was the transformation of the Soviet communications system, support for the strained railway network, and large supplies of raw materials, fuel and explosives without which the overall Soviet war effort and military campaigns would have been less than adequate for the defeat of the great bulk of the German army. One of the major deficiencies in conducting air and tank combat in the early years of the war was the lack of electronic equipment; it was also a major problem for commanders trying to manage a vast battlefield with poor or little communication. Under Lend-Lease the Western Allies together supplied 35,000 army radio sets, 389,000 field telephones and over 1.5 million kilometres of telephone cable. By early 1943 the Red Air Force was at last able to operate centralized control of air combat units, while the simple device of installing radios in tanks proved a force multiplier. Radio also came to play a part in the Red Army’s very effective use of deception and disinformation, which on numerous occasions left the German army unable to guess the size, the whereabouts or the intentions of enemy forces.

The supply position of the Red Army was above all transformed by the trucks and jeeps provided under Lend-Lease, which in the end amounted to more than 400,000, against domestic Soviet production of 205,000. By January 1945 one-third of Red Army vehicles were supplied by Lend-Lease. American aid also broadened the range of vehicles serving the Soviet war effort: scout cars, armoured personnel carriers, half-tracks, the Ford amphibians and 48,956 jeeps, also fitted with radios so that Red Army commanders could control their forces with greater efficiency. Shifting men and equipment by railway was also underpinned by the American provision of 1,900 locomotives (against Soviet output of just 92) and 56 per cent of all the rails used during the war. By late 1942 the Soviet rail system was able to supply front-line forces at Stalingrad with fifteen trains a day where German supply averaged twelve. Finally, Allied aid provided almost 58 per cent of all aviation fuel, 53 per cent of all explosives and half the requirements of aluminium, copper and synthetic rubber tyres. Allied supply on this scale was decisive. Soviet industry could concentrate on the mass production of weapons, leaving the supply of much else in the war economy to Allied assistance."

Richard Overy, Blood and Ruins
nebris: (A Proper General)
“This is the nature of war, whose stake is at once the game and the authority and the justification. Seen so, war is the truest form of divination. It is the testing of one's will and the will of another within that larger will which because it binds them is therefore forced to select. War is the ultimate game because war is at last a forcing of the unity of existence. War is god.”

“It makes no difference what men think of war. War endures. As well ask men what they think of stone. War was always here. Before man was, war waited for him. The ultimate trade awaiting its ultimate practitioner. That is the way it was and will be. That way and not some other way.” ~Cormac McCarthy
nebris: (A Proper General)
~My position on the matter: Yes, Israel is the Prussia of The Middle East. And like Prussia it is surrounded by enemies that seek to destroy it. When one's essential survival is at stake, any and all atrocities are justified.

Adolf Hitler is Israel's midwife. He and his many European allies [like the French] taught the Jews in no uncertain terms that they were the Blood Enemies of 'Christendom' and that unless they found themselves a safe place of their own, one day their annihilation would again be imminent.

So, when the smoke of World War Two cleared, they looked to the only real homeland they had ever known; Judea aka The Levant aka Palestine.

The hardened survivors of the Death Camps, of Partisan groups, and of the Armies of the Western Allies, said “NEVER AGAIN!” and swore that upon their millions of dead loved ones.

But what they really said is, “Ok, you goyish bastards, you want an International Jewish Conspiracy? We'll give you one in spades!” And that, my friends, is what Israel became. No quarter given. No quarter asked.

That is why there will never be any resolution that will not level most of the Middle East. The Arabs [and now the Iranians] have totally locked themselves into Jihad and The Jews can never retreat because that means their extermination. One day, it will all come to a head...

...and so it is.
nebris: (A Proper General)
The German thrust against Łódź was assigned to Scheffer’s XXV Reserve Corps. One of its infantry brigades had been assigned elsewhere, and it was now reinforced byLitzmann’s 3rd Guards Infantry Division. The group was to march on Brzeziny, about 12 miles (20km) due east of Łódź. For Litzmann, it was a welcome move, as his division was no longer part of the Guards Reserve Corps; he had not enjoyed the experience of working with Gallwitz as his corps commander. He had served as a young officer in the Guards in his youth, and as his men marched to the front, he felt proud of their attitude:

"Determined to take part in the decisive fighting, we force-marched an average of 50km (30 miles) a day and in doing so crossed the ‘black earth’ country, where the ground was sodden from the rain, guns and other vehicles sinking up to their axles and being laboriously set in motion again by the efforts of the men. From sunrise to sunset we marched on with the utmost exhausting efforts. But the morale of my solders was wonderful! They were advancing again!During these days, my magnificent troops endeared themselves to me forever."

Such comments are almost completely absent from the memoirs of senior officers in the armies of Russia and Austria-Hungary, and say a great deal about the differences in military culture between the various nations on the Eastern Front.

Prit Buttar, 'Collision of Empires'
nebris: (A Proper General)
~My position on the matter: Yes, Israel is the Prussia of The Middle East. And like Prussia it is surrounded by enemies that seek to destroy it. When one's essential survival is at stake, any and all atrocities are justified.

Adolf Hitler is Israel's midwife. He and his many European allies [like the French] taught the Jews in no uncertain terms that they were the Blood Enemies of 'Christendom' and that unless they found themselves a safe place of their own, one day their annihilation would again be imminent.

So, when the smoke of World War Two cleared, they looked to the only real homeland they had ever known; Judea aka The Levant aka Palestine.

The hardened survivors of the Death Camps, of Partisan groups, and of the Armies of the Western Allies, said “NEVER AGAIN!” and swore that upon their millions of dead loved ones.

But what they really said is, “Ok, you goyish bastards, you want an International Jewish Conspiracy? We'll give you one in spades!” And that, my friends, is what Israel became. No quarter given. No quarter asked.

That is why there will never be any resolution that will not level most of the Middle East. The Arabs [and now the Iranians] have totally locked themselves into Jihad and The Jews can never retreat because that means their extermination. One day, it will all come to a head...

...and so it is.

Nebs Sez

May. 12th, 2016 10:09 pm
nebris: (A Proper General)
"Obama is visiting Hiroshima and the usual mewling about 'apologizing for using the atomic bomb' has started up again.

The Japanese Empire launched two brutal wars of aggression, China and the Pacific. They killed millions of Chinese, including raping tens of thousands of women and murdered hundreds of thousands of civilians in Nanjing in a two week orgy of violence. They starved, tortured and executed their POW's. They forced thousands of young women and girls into sex slavery. They conducted biological warfare experiments on civilians and POW's. And the Japanese people were all happy and supportive, willingly believing they were a 'master race'.

So no apologies and no sympathy. When you sow the wind, you reap the whirlwind..."
nebris: (A Proper General)
1: Every single man who voluntarily served in either the Confederate military or government should have had his US Citizenship permanently revoked, taking them out of the ranks of voters forever.

2: Every single man who served at Confederate Flag Rank [Generals and Admirals] and in equivalent Confederate Civil Government positions should have been put to death, military shot and civilians hanged.

3: Every single man who served at Confederate Senior Rank [Colonels and Majors, etc] and in equivalent Confederate Civil Government positions should have been sentenced to twenty years in prison at hard labor.

4: Every single man who served at Confederate Field Rank [Captains and Lieutenants, etc] and in equivalent Confederate Civil Government positions should have been sentenced to ten years in prison at hard labor.

5: Every single man who served at Confederate NCO Rank [Sergeants and Corporals, etc] and in equivalent Confederate Civil Government positions should have been sentenced to seven years in prison at hard labor.

6: Every single man who served at Confederate Enlisted Rank [Privates, etc] and in equivalent Confederate Civil Government positions should have been sentenced to five years in prison at hard labor.

7: Said hard labor should have been Federally supervised and used to rebuild the physical infrastructure of The South.

Nebs Sez

Aug. 25th, 2014 02:35 pm
nebris: (A Proper General)
"As an example of how much of a clusterfuck global politics is at the moment, while the US and Russia are working on a new Cold War regarding Ukraine, American and Russian pilots, along with their Iranian counterparts, are flying missions over Iraq against the Islamic State in support of Iraqi and Kurdish ground forces, which are also being supported by Iranian armor.

Even if one does not know the history of the region, that's pretty bizarre. If one does know said history, it is downright mind boggling...and yet not."
nebris: (A Proper General)
~Two items first...

One: It seems that all the political leaders in Ukraine are kleptocrats of one type or another. And that Yanukovich, the leader who was most willing play ball with Putin, is also the most thuggish of the lot. Now that he has thoroughly screwed the pooch, Putin has to make the best of a pretty bad situation.

Two: Putin may be a son of a bitch, but he is neither stupid nor crazy, so forget all the Hitler analogies. The man is an ex-KGB colonel, meaning he is a ruthless pragmatist.

Okay, now for the 'mind reading'....

As the HQ of The Russian Black Sea Fleet, the Crimea is utterly non-negotiable for Russia. Now that it is back in Russian hands, they are not going to let it go. Hopefully the new leadership in Kyiv understands and is willing to swallow that shit sandwich. I'm not hopeful of that outcome, but one never knows.

Eastern Ukraine is a much dicier proposition. Putin probably hopes that they will except a few extra 'privileges' as ethnic Russians within Ukraine and not try for separation. These are the 'events on the ground' I have spoken of in the past few days.

If the majority Russian eastern provinces go for succession, then Putin is faced with two equally bad choices: A, let them hang out to dry and see how things turn out in a Ukrainian civil war or B, go in and help them, thereby becoming embroiled in said civil war.

The former would very bad for Putin domestically, abandoning fellow Russians to the 'fascist wolves'.

But the latter has the potential to become a suppurating nightmare.

Ethnic Ukrainians hate Hate HATE the Russians and so do the nations of Eastern Europe. Poland, which hates the Russians as much as the Ukrainians, shares a long border with Ukraine. I have little doubt that 'volunteers' and arms of all types would flood over said border if Russia intervened in a Ukrainian civil war. In all likelihood, they'll flow anyway. And there's lots of old Warsaw Pact gear floating around, so who could say where it came from.

I have said that such would be 'Yugoslavia writ large'. Think easily ten times as large, with ethnic cleansing and militia atrocities on a massive scale. I would not be surprised if the death toll reached over a million.

In addition, the gas lines to Europe would definitely be cut, both by accident and on purpose, and the EU's economy is rather shaky at the moment. A Ukrainian civil war would almost certainly cause another global economic meltdown and who knows where that would lead.

I'm fairly certain that Putin understands all of these factors and will do his best to tamp down passions in the eastern provinces. But these are The Bloodlands and history has shown us that in those lands the Worst Case is usually the most likely scenario.

Another Charming Thought: a Ukrainian civil war could destabilize Belarus.

EDIT: some maps to help visualize the situation.

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/02/27/world/europe/ukraine-divisions-crimea.html

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