Could the Allies defeat Germany only with air power? (4 Viewers)

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Jenisch

Staff Sergeant
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Oct 31, 2011
In an alternative history scenario were Germany does not fight with the Soviets and the Anglo-Americans were forced to fight the Germans alone, their air power would be enough to pave the way for a sucessfull invasion of Europe?

I think this is an interesting subject to discuss because many historians seems to not give much consideration to the air power in WWII, and therefore say that in this specific case only the full strenght of the German Army would render a landing operation unlikely to succeed.

ps: the tittle of the topic is wrong, desconsiderate. If possible, moderation can correct it.
 
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ACM Harris believed bombing could bring Germany to it's knees and win the war and he was wrong!
It takes a concerted effort by all the different arms to bring Victory in a war.
 
just to clarify...are you asking if the soviets were not involved could the western allies with their air forces have beaten the reich? Or are you asking if the western allies just using their air power alone...no ground forces could have beaten the reich?
 
Something like 80% of the German war effort fought on the Russian front. Without the German-Russian war the Luftwaffe would be mostly deployed in the west and they would have a lot more aircraft without the need to maintain 150+ divisions in eastern front combat. The so called "Battle of Britain" would continue for the entire duration of the war with ever increasing numbers of German aircraft. Meanwhile RAF Bomber Command would bomb Europe for the entire duration of the war just as happened historically.

So who gets bombed to rubble first?
 
After you read Mein Kampf this scenario doesn't seem very plausible.
The whole purpose of this venture was eastward expansion for Lebensraum.
 
The allies had the bombers and the armaments but, without a weapon like like the A bomb its hard to image Nazi Germany being defeated by area bombing alone.
The bomber crew losses were appalling as it was without the entire LW to contend with.
John
 
in this senario does the us still get bombed by japan? if NO, then it would remain to be seen how long the US would sit on its hands before getting involved. if yes then...yes the german industrial machine could have cranked out more ac but i doubt they still wouldnt have been able to match the output of the us aircraft factories. also IF the soviets werent an ally where does that place finland? the western allies never courted the fins because they were afraid of upsetting uncle joe...since he obviously had designs there. without that...the west could have negotiated and possibly pulled finland into their union...if so they would then have bases where long range bombers could strike just about any area of the reich....it still would have been a problem until long range escorts were made available. the fins would have been a good ally to have! there are a lot of IFs in this line of questioning. but if the intent was to see if solely airpower alone could win a war... i would have to say no. sooner or later you have to plant ground troops to really secure a win.
 
What are the Soviets doing in this scenario?
Prior to Barbarossa, the Soviets invaded, warred with, or annexed Japan, Poland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania (annexed Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina), Finland.
 
just to clarify...are you asking if the soviets were not involved could the western allies with their air forces have beaten the reich? Or are you asking if the western allies just using their air power alone...no ground forces could have beaten the reich?

I wrote the tittle wrong. It would be US and Britain figthing against Germany by themselfs. The question is if would be plausible for them to invade Europe using the air power to achive this objective.

davebender said:
Something like 80% of the German war effort fought on the Russian front. Without the German-Russian war the Luftwaffe would be mostly deployed in the west and they would have a lot more aircraft without the need to maintain 150+ divisions in eastern front combat. The so called "Battle of Britain" would continue for the entire duration of the war with ever increasing numbers of German aircraft. Meanwhile RAF Bomber Command would bomb Europe for the entire duration of the war just as happened historically.

Regarding the Battle of Britain, the RAF succesfully repeled the German air strikes, with the LW suffering. Further raids would meet resistance from the USAAF as well.

One of the reasons for my creation of this topic was this:

"4.06 times as many aircraft were lost in combat in the West than were lost in the East, a ratio reasonably close to Groehler's 3.41 for all "losses". The most chilling statistic for the JG 26 pilots appears in the sortie data. An airplane flying a combat mission in the West was 7.66 times more likely to be destroyed than one on a similar mission in the East. It is clear that the burden of sacrifice was borne by the Luftwaffe aircrew on the Western Front and over the Reich, not on the Eastern Front. "

Source with additional details: http://don-caldwell.we.bs/jg26/thtrlosses.htm

In 41-42 most of the LW was in the East. But even so the margin in which the Western Allies managed to destroy the Luftwaffe was very spaced. So I considerate this valid. Specially because the Allies send 18,700 aircraft to the Soviets by the Lend Lease program, and this, as well as the other resources send to them, all would be turned against Germany. The British particulary send large amounts of equipment in 1941 to the USSR. I belive this equipment being send to Africa could have sealed the gap the Eastern Front created there historically. And also because the German and Italian navies could not ship much material and men to there. Other consideration is that the US would likely change it's priorities in the Pacific. And even more of their GDP would be employed in the war.

gjs238 said:
After you read Mein Kampf this scenario doesn't seem very plausible.
The whole purpose of this venture was eastward expansion for Lebensraum.

Whatever political reasons. I want to try know here if the Western Allies were really so unlikely capable of defeat Hitler alone as often heard.

What are the Soviets doing in this scenario?

Imaginate the Soviets in a neutrality, even if not so realistic. They keep providing the Germans with a median supply quantity. Enough for their needs to maintein the war. But not for create larger reserves.

bobbysocks said:
in this senario does the us still get bombed by japan? if NO, then it would remain to be seen how long the US would sit on its hands before getting involved.

I will put that no. Japan is usually desconsiderated by people who mentioned the USSR could have won the war alone, who only considerate Germant. Since I'm trying to know if the Western Allies also could, will desconsiderate a Japanese participation as well. Gonna set that the Americans enter in the war towards the end of 1941. Do not want to discuss much politics involved here. More industrial and military capability.
 
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With Russia not at war, I doubt Japan would have attacked the US.

Germany invaded Norway fairly early in the war, I doubt we would be able to use Finland as any kind of base even if they did become a ally.

I just don't see any way the Allies could have won without the Russians, and it would have been over before we could have developed any atomic capability.
 
Germany reacted quickly with overwhelming force to thwart Operation Wilfred and the complementary Operation R4. They would react even more quickly to thwart a British occupation of Finland.

Operation Wilfred.
Mine Norwegian coastal waters beginning April 5, 1940.

Operation R4.
Occupy Narvik, Trondheim, Bergen and Stavenger with British and French troops on April 5, 1940. Anglo-French bickering delayed Operation R4 until April 8, 1940 providing Germany with an opportunity to land troops first.
 
".. I just don't see any way the Allies could have won without the Russians, and it would have been over before we could have developed any atomic capability."

I agree. Germany had a head start of 6 years - 1933 -39. Those first years of WW2 were a close thing.

MM
 
I just don't see any way the Allies could have won without the Russians, and it would have been over before we could have developed any atomic capability.

Well, I think it would depend on the situation. There are a LOT if factors to considerate IMHO. And one of the major ones would be the presence of the USN with strength in Europe. The US would likely be capable of launch an invasion of Europe much quicker than historically.
 
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i think the one of the first allied campaigns would have been the invasion of norway. if they were able to secure that then a treaty with the fins is more possible.

i think the war would have been possible to win with out russia....the cost though would have been staggering in both men and materials
 
i think the war would have been possible to win with out russia....the cost though would have been staggering in both men and materials
Imo the only way the west would have won without the Russians would have been played out the same way as the war in the pacific... with a nuclear waepon. OR perhaps more resources to fight the war in Europe would have taken from the Pacific. The US was a manufacturing megamachine back then.. but there are limits.
 

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