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View Poll Results: Best Air Force 1939 to 1941?

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  • United States Army Air Corps

    1 1.92%
  • Royal Air Force

    8 15.38%
  • Luftwaffe

    37 71.15%
  • Imperial Japanese Air Force

    4 7.69%
  • Armée de l'Air (French Air Force)

    0 0%
  • Regia Aeronautica (Italian Air Force)

    0 0%
  • VVS (Soviet Air Force)

    0 0%
  • Other

    2 3.85%
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Best Air Force 1939-1941

Polls Discuss Best Air Force 1939-1941 in the World War II - Aviation forums; IIRC, the UK received approx 25% of its war materiel from Lend Lease. Whilst that's a considerable proportion, its removal ...

  1. #121
    Senior Member buffnut453's Avatar
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    IIRC, the UK received approx 25% of its war materiel from Lend Lease. Whilst that's a considerable proportion, its removal would not have resulted in automatically in the UK having to surrender. Lend Lease was a purely pragmatic decision by Roosevelt. By mid-1940, the only democratic nations of substance outside the US were the UK and the English-speaking nations of the Commonwealth. If the UK ceased fighting, America would have been surrounded by expansionist dictatorships with little chance for the US alone to overcome them (launching D-Day from Greenland, anyone?). The probably result (assuming Barbarossa followed a similar path to the way things panned out in reality) would be a Soviet-dominated Europe, or at least a long, bloody fight between the USSR and Nazi Germany, with Japan having effectively a free hand in the mainland battles of the Far East - no Burma Campaign, which was one of the main drains on IJA strength, and little need for the Pearl Harbor attack.


  2. #122
    Banned Lighthunmust's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by parsifal View Post
    ......With regard to doing Roosevelt a favour, well in a sense they did. Massive amounts of British money was used to prepare US industry for war prior to 1941, and Britain made a significant contribution to US naval defences by trasnferring large numbers of ASW escorts to the USN, and teaching the US some ASW tactics. Lend lease was actually a mutualk assistance package. The nett overall benefit was in Britains favour, but the sum of the parts was greater as a result of the mutual co-operation than if each part had operated separately

    This is in stark contrast to the economic relationship between Germany and Italy. This was a nasty little relationship if ever ther was one.
    The U.K. did the U.S.A. just as big a favor as received. For one they held the wolf at bay long enough for America to gather strength. Anyone with a knowledge of the prewar size, organization, and sophistication of the U.S. Military knows that America benefited enormously from the example set and shepherding it received from the U.K. military. Just two things among many demonstrate this. The British showed great patience and acumen in dealing with the bigotry toward the British displayed by USN CinC Ernest King. A bigotry so strong that it prevented him from accepting obvious facts and techniques of modern naval warfare in 1941-42 that led to the loss of many merchant ships and death of many merchant seamen. These were facts and techniques he was later forced to acknowledge and adopt. The British also provided significant aid to America's Signals Intelligence capability. The U.S. had some capability but the example and support from GCHQ greatly expanded it. We can debate all we want to about who had the best planes and pilots, but more Allied soldiers were saved and more battles won because of an almost total monopoly on good SIGINT from the U.K. and U.S.A. SIGINT was the single most significant weapon of the war, not the Atomic Bomb which became the most significant weapon of the postwar, and certainly not any fighter or bomber during the war.

  3. #123
    Banned ctrian's Avatar
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    This site is amazing, i learned that the Brits were doing Roosevelt a favor by accepting lend lease and that they were so rich they could built and buy anything they wanted ... I need an aspirin.Better yet get the whiskey.

  4. #124
    Senior Member parsifal's Avatar
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    Well a whiskey may improve your judgement and your temperament, but with regard to your other comment, thats not what anyone has said. What has been said is that there were mutual benefits arising from the relationship. Thats been said by a number of people. whats also been said is that with or without LL, the british could continue to produce and continue to prosecute the war effectively. This was in response to your rather inane comment that the brits without US charity would not be able to fight.

    You should refrain from trying to skew the argument away from what people have said, and try and cover the tracks that lead to your own unsustainable positions when doing so. People like me will always point out the silliness of your position if you do.

    So, if you are done slagging the British war effort from an unsustainable position, are we ready to move on....happy to continue either way
    Fr President Clemenceau’s speech to the AIF 7th July 1918: “ we expected a great deal of (Australians)… We knew that you would fight a real fight, but we did not know that from the beginning you would astonish the whole continent. I shall go back and say to my countrymen “I have seen the Australians, I have looked in their faces …I know that they will fight alongside of us again until the cause for which we are all fighting is safe for us and for our children”.




  5. #125
    Banned ctrian's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by parsifal View Post
    Well a whiskey may improve your judgement and your temperament, but with regard to your other comment, thats not what anyone has said. What has been said is that there were mutual benefits arising from the relationship. Thats been said by a number of people. whats also been said is that with or without LL, the british could continue to produce and continue to prosecute the war effectively. This was in response to your rather inane comment that the brits without US charity would not be able to fight.

    You should refrain from trying to skew the argument away from what people have said, and try and cover the tracks that lead to your own unsustainable positions when doing so. People like me will always point out the silliness of your position if you do.

    So, if you are done slagging the British war effort from an unsustainable position, are we ready to move on....happy to continue either way
    Nope i think i'll get a double dose.

  6. #126
    Senior Member Readie's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by parsifal View Post
    Well a whiskey may improve your judgement and your temperament, but with regard to your other comment, thats not what anyone has said. What has been said is that there were mutual benefits arising from the relationship. Thats been said by a number of people. whats also been said is that with or without LL, the british could continue to produce and continue to prosecute the war effectively. This was in response to your rather inane comment that the brits without US charity would not be able to fight.

    You should refrain from trying to skew the argument away from what people have said, and try and cover the tracks that lead to your own unsustainable positions when doing so. People like me will always point out the silliness of your position if you do.

    So, if you are done slagging the British war effort from an unsustainable position, are we ready to move on....happy to continue either way
    parsifal,
    ctrian is just winding us up.
    We know we are right and so does he.
    Funnily enough I thought the Greeks were on our side.
    Cheers
    John

  7. #127
    Senior Member Readie's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by parsifal View Post
    This is in stark contrast to the economic relationship between Germany and Italy. This was a nasty little relationship if ever ther was one.

    Don't forget the 'neutral' Swiss the people who financed the Third Reich....

  8. #128
    Banned ctrian's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Readie View Post
    parsifal,
    ctrian is just winding us up.
    We know we are right and so does he.
    Funnily enough I thought the Greeks were on our side.
    Cheers
    John
    Actually it's you that are winding me up,but what can i say i'm a weak character and i take the bait

  9. #129
    Senior Member parsifal's Avatar
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    Okay, fair enough. What evidence do you have then to support your claim that Britain was 100% dependant on LL to sustain its war effort. Please include verifiable references so that we can verify whether you are full of it like in other threads.

    If you cannot provide some evidence to support this claim of yours, then you need to modify your position to state that its merely your opinion based on...nothing.
    Fr President Clemenceau’s speech to the AIF 7th July 1918: “ we expected a great deal of (Australians)… We knew that you would fight a real fight, but we did not know that from the beginning you would astonish the whole continent. I shall go back and say to my countrymen “I have seen the Australians, I have looked in their faces …I know that they will fight alongside of us again until the cause for which we are all fighting is safe for us and for our children”.




  10. #130
    Banned Mustang nut's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lighthunmust View Post
    Actually you are quoting me and I was mainly referring to Greece's situation and how somewhat by the grace of good Geopolitical location we don't find ourselves in a similar position. The political talking heads here in the States are already speculating that we may find ourselves in Greece's debt position.

    Steve not John
    Sorry Steve

    The point I was making was that Greece has defaulted on its national debt 5 times the UK never has despite 2 world wars and the Napoleonic wars etc etc. That is off topic but in 1939-45 it was taken into account by those that extended credit to the UK and today is taken into account on world money markets.


    originally posted by Parsival
    With regard to doing Roosevelt a favour, well in a sense they did. Massive amounts of British money was used to prepare US industry for war prior to 1941, and Britain made a significant contribution to US naval defences by trasnferring large numbers of ASW escorts to the USN, and teaching the US some ASW tactics. Lend lease was actually a mutualk assistance package. The nett overall benefit was in Britains favour, but the sum of the parts was greater as a result of the mutual co-operation than if each part had operated separately

    Parsival great post

    there was also the transfer of Radar and other technologies. The choice faced by the USA was to help the British or see Britain possibly taken over by the Nazis. I dont know how you can price the difference but there was the possibility of the US facing the British and Japanese fleets armed with ASDIC and RADAR and Russia facing fleets of 4 engined bombers and the full force of the German war machine with no distactions in North Africa and Europe. In that scenario lend lease is a no brainer.

  11. #131
    Senior Member Readie's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ctrian View Post
    Actually it's you that are winding me up,but what can i say i'm a weak character and i take the bait
    An honest answer.
    But, we are right and I'm still not sure what point you are trying to make.
    Cheers
    John

  12. #132
    Banned ctrian's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by parsifal View Post
    Okay, fair enough. What evidence do you have then to support your claim that Britain was 100% dependant on LL to sustain its war effort. Please include verifiable references so that we can verify whether you are full of it like in other threads.

    If you cannot provide some evidence to support this claim of yours, then you need to modify your position to state that its merely your opinion based on...nothing.
    Clear the foam from your mouth.

    ''In December 1940, Churchill warned Roosevelt that the British were no longer able to pay for supplies. On December 17, President Roosevelt proposed a new initiative that would be known as Lend-Lease. The United States would provide Great Britain with the supplies it needed to fight Germany, but would not insist upon being paid immediately.''

    Office of the Historian - Milestones - 1937-1945 - Lend-Lease and Military Aid to...

    There was a british meeting after the fall of France were they had to decide if they would carry on the war and how they were going to pay for it since they had no money left.I don't remember where i read that but i'll try to look around.

  13. #133
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    In 1941, Britain can no longer pay for imports. Its bankcrupt. Without US help in 1941 - Lend Lease - it cannot continue.. cannot pay.. all vital supplies are from USA..

    Perhaps this low position is difficult to accept, but is true. FDR was very smart politician in world politics. He saw the opportunity, the British had no position to argue - so he took everything. Bases, and colonies. British colonies were vital to British trade - in 1941 decisive agreement about "free trade". It sounds nice. But it was death sentence to colonial empire. British had to compete with US industry in equal terms now - no chance.

  14. #134
    Banned ctrian's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tante Ju View Post
    In 1941, Britain can no longer pay for imports. Its bankcrupt. Without US help in 1941 - Lend Lease - it cannot continue.. cannot pay.. all vital supplies are from USA..

    Perhaps this low position is difficult to accept, but is true. FDR was very smart politician in world politics. He saw the opportunity, the British had no position to argue - so he took everything. Bases, and colonies. British colonies were vital to British trade - in 1941 decisive agreement about "free trade". It sounds nice. But it was death sentence to colonial empire. British had to compete with US industry in equal terms now - no chance.
    You're wasting your time with them (so am i ) .Britain could fight on indefinitely producing everything and maybe just maybe if Roosevelt begs them they would allow ''some'' American aid.

  15. #135
    Senior Member buffnut453's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tante Ju View Post
    In 1941, Britain can no longer pay for imports. Its bankcrupt. Without US help in 1941 - Lend Lease - it cannot continue.. cannot pay.. all vital supplies are from USA..
    Per my earlier post, across the entire war (1939-1945), lend-lease accounted for about 25% of military hardware obtained by the UK. The key problem was lack of gold reserves in the UK, not overall bankruptcy of the UK economy (it is possible for someone to remain financially solvent even if they don't have any savings in the bank!).

    I agree that WWII marked the death-knell for the British Empire and the emergence of the US as the world's only industrial and military superpower. That said, I for one am very proud of my nation's sacrifices. The alternatives, per my earlier post, are a Europe dominated either by Nazism or Communism.
    Last edited by buffnut453; 06-23-2011 at 07:34 AM.

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