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Greatest military blunder of WWII

Polls Discuss Greatest military blunder of WWII in the World War II - Aviation forums; According to me the German mistakes at stalingrad was pivitol in the Europen Theater of operations Hitler had made a ...


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View Poll Results: Greatest military blunder of WWII
German blunder of Dunkirk 7 5.74%
Operation Barbarosa 42 34.43%
Japan's mistakes at Midway 6 4.92%
Stalingrad 11 9.02%
Operation Sea Lion 4 3.28%
Operation Market Garden 6 4.92%
Kamikaze's 0 0%
Raid on Dieppe / Operation Jubilee 6 4.92%
Pearl Harbor 16 13.11%
Raid on Ploesti 0 0%
Battle of the Bulge 0 0%
Convoy PQ17 0 0%
Hitlers Declaration of War on the US 24 19.67%
Voters: 122. You may not vote on this poll

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Old 02-02-2008, 03:17 AM   #286
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According to me the German mistakes at stalingrad was pivitol in the Europen Theater of operations Hitler had made a lot of blunders @ StalingardThe failure of the German Army was nothing short of a disaster. A complete army group was lost at Stalingrad and 91,000 Germans were taken prisoner. With such a massive loss of manpower and equipment, the Germans simply did not have enough manpower to cope with the Russian advance to Germany when it came.

Despite resistance in parts – such as a Kursk – they were in retreat on the Eastern Front from February 1943 another factor that the Hitler and his generals failed to take in to consideration (Due to the blind optimism that
they would have a Quick victory ) the winter for which the Germans were Ill prepared Temperatures dropped to well below zero and food, ammunition and heat were in short supply. added to this Hitlers Adment orders to fight till the last as shown in this communication with von Paulus dated January 24th 1943

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Supreme Commander to 6 Army, January 24, 1943

"Surrender is forbidden. 6 Army will hold their positions to the last man and the last round and by their heroic endurance will make an unforgettable contribution towards the establishment of a defensive front and the salvation of the Western world."
this ment that the German were horrible traped and were doomed to oblivion at stalingrad
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Old 02-02-2008, 09:45 PM   #287
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Some good points, F-14 but Stalingrad would never had happend if Barbarossa had never happened. The major battles were a result of the major decision to invade. Stalingrad, Kursk, Leningrad just proved how poor a decision it was.

And in my opinion, if adherence to orders wasn't so prevalent in the Wehrmacht, von Paulus just might have pulled a Rommel, ignored orders and gotten his men outta there.
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Old 02-02-2008, 10:57 PM   #288
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Some good points, F-14 but Stalingrad would never had happend if Barbarossa had never happened. The major battles were a result of the major decision to invade. Stalingrad, Kursk, Leningrad just proved how poor a decision it was.
Njaco, I don't think you can call Barbarossa a blunder because Hitler really had no other choice, he had to attack USSR before they re-organizrd the Soviet army. Stalin would have attacked Germany in 1942, Hitler was quite astute in realizing this. (no honor among thieves?) Once Britain & France upset the German plan by declaring war, Hitler was stuck. I think he made the correct choice by attacking, it was just the application that was bungled

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Agree that USSR/German conflict was inevitable and that Babarossa had a chance to succeed were it not for a parade of bungles (delaying onset, failure to winterize, questionable changes in objectives, wasting of resources in other theaters, etc.). Perhaps Barbarossa might best fit on a poll titled "Worst Military Bungles of WW2.
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And in my opinion, if adherence to oders wasn't so prevalent in the Wehrmacht, von Paulus just might have pulled a Rommel, ignored orders and gotten his men outta there.
In this i agree, if Hitler had a capable leader in charge (Manstein, Guderian) they could have had a totally different outcome at "Stalingrad", and we might be debating what a brilliant move Barbarossa was. (Although we might be debating in German... )
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Old 02-02-2008, 10:59 PM   #289
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thank you for the Comment .But if you remember Op Barbarossa would have been a success if the Wehrmacht prepared well enough the success that they (Read : the Wehrmacht ) with out preparing much had achived in the Begennig of the operation was enormus While the Russians were well aware of German preparations, and were tipped off to the impending invasion by both their own intelligence, as well foreign sources, the Germans achieved total surpriseCoupled with the element of surprise, the Germans possessed better training, more extensive experience, and were able to obtain decisive superiority at the points selected for attack. The Russians had large amounts of obsolete equipment, were poorly deployed to meet the attack, and lacked defensive positions. As a result, the Russian frontier was quickly overrun and the Germans achieved penetrations in many places. By 16 July, 1941, the Germans had captured Smolensk, which was less than 250 miles from Moscow, and Army Group Center alone had captured about 600,000 men and 5,000 tanks.so from this postion to the varge of total defate at the hands of the Russian Red army . The conner stone of this german defeat lie at Stalingrad
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Old 02-03-2008, 04:53 AM   #290
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I don't believe the defeat of the Wehrmacht lay at Stalingrad; I don't believe there was a single blunder on the Eastern Front that turned the war against the German nation - it was a collection of blunders that became too large to overcome.

The first blunder on the Eastern Front was the movement against Moscow in the winter of 1941. Guderian should have been allowed to winter in Smolensk where defensive positions could have been erected which would have been capable of halting the Soviet counter-offensive that in reality forced the Wehrmacht away from Moscow as they tried to dig into open, frozen, ground.

The second blunder was moving armoured forces away from the Moscow push to Kiev. This spread of forces gave Guderian no mobile punch and slowed the chase. With this armoured force at hand Guderian could well have taken Moscow in the winter of 1941, or at least held up against the Soviet offensive.

If, with the armour at hand, Guderian was allowed to move back to Smolensk then the Soviet counter-offensive would have failed and Moscow would have fallen in the spring of '42 - plunging the Soviet rail network into confusion and slowing Soviet reinforcement on all fronts.
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Old 02-03-2008, 06:58 AM   #291
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Ok, I can see the point about Barbarossa but if it was necessary then how the blunder of not being actually prepared to take on such an endeavour? Just from the Luftwaffe standpoint, no long range bombers for the massive movements of factories out of range.
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Old 02-03-2008, 09:31 AM   #292
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I agree with Najco if you look at the Inventroy of luftwaffe there was not a single long range Bomber like the ones that allies had this factor saved the soviet industries and as soon as the soviets were reorganized the Number of tanks and other munitions of war including manpower was easily available this lack of Long range bombers was due to the fact that the Gremans depended a bit to much on the Ju stutka
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Old 02-03-2008, 02:22 PM   #293
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Ok, I can see the point about Barbarossa but if it was necessary then how the blunder of not being actually prepared to take on such an endeavour? Just from the Luftwaffe standpoint, no long range bombers for the massive movements of factories out of range.
I like Pflueger's distinction between "Blunder", a strategic decision or plan that was badly flawed from the beginning {such as Operation "Lustre" the intervention in Greece 1941, or "Sledgehammer" the planned 1942 Allied invasion of France} as opposed to a "Bungle" which is a generally sound plan that fails because of the execution. I would put "Barbarossa" in the latter category, it could have worked, save for some mistakes carrying it out {S ome of which Plan D has listed}

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I don't believe the defeat of the Wehrmacht lay at Stalingrad; I don't believe there was a single blunder on the Eastern Front that turned the war against the German nation - it was a collection of blunders that became too large to overcome.

The first blunder on the Eastern Front was the movement against Moscow in the winter of 1941. Guderian should have been allowed to winter in Smolensk where defensive positions could have been erected which would have been capable of halting the Soviet counter-offensive that in reality forced the Wehrmacht away from Moscow as they tried to dig into open, frozen, ground.

Equipping the Wermacht with winter clothes would have helped too...

The second blunder was moving armoured forces away from the Moscow push to Kiev. This spread of forces gave Guderian no mobile punch and slowed the chase. With this armoured force at hand Guderian could well have taken Moscow in the winter of 1941, or at least held up against the Soviet offensive.

If, with the armour at hand, Guderian was allowed to move back to Smolensk then the Soviet counter-offensive would have failed and Moscow would have fallen in the spring of '42 - plunging the Soviet rail network into confusion and slowing Soviet reinforcement on all fronts.
I think one of the greatest failings was a failure of the Germans & Japanese to make joint plans, like the Allies did. # 1 on the list would have been a combined U-boat campaign in the Pacific & Atlantic starting immediatly after "Pearl Harbour". A solid combined effort in this regard might have forced the British to concentrate shipping & escorts to protect the vital North Atlantic routes, leaving Africa & the Far East vulnerable. If the Axis could have broken the British control of Egypt/Persia/India, then their chance of success improves dramatically in Russia.

I posted some of these strategic outcomes in another thread.

http://www.ww2aircraft.net/forum/ww2...ack-11317.html (Could the Kriegsmarine & IJN neutralize the US War Effort with a combined attack?)
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Old 02-03-2008, 04:15 PM   #294
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In my many years in historical aviation history, I met many living (aviation)legends, one in particular was a German high ranking general officer. This question of blunders did come up.

He summed it all very simply when he said (paraphrasing)..."the ONLY reason the Allies won the war, is that we Germans outbungled them!"
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Old 02-03-2008, 09:15 PM   #295
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Thats a good one.
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Old 02-03-2008, 09:27 PM   #296
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Another one I heard was quoted from a captured German officer in the desert. "Your men (British & Aust.) fight like lions, too bad they are led by asses (donkeys).
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Old 02-03-2008, 10:18 PM   #297
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Old 02-03-2008, 11:55 PM   #298
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Another one I heard wasquoted from a captured german officer in the desert. "Your men (British & Aust.) fight like lions, too bad they are led by asses (donkeys).
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Old 02-04-2008, 03:22 AM   #299
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"Equipping the Wermacht with winter clothes would have helped too... "

That's too easy for people to say when talking about the war in the East. The Red Army suffered from the ferocious winters too; plus Germany suffers from its own bad winters and many Germans gained winter clothing from dead Soviet soldiers.

Winter clothing would not make the German troops able to dig into the ice outside Moscow nor would it have made up for the lack of armour.

Winter clothing would have made a massive difference in Stalingrad; but in 1941 the Germans would have still been pushed away.
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Old 02-04-2008, 03:36 AM   #300
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True enough Plan, I also agree with your point about the concentration of the Panzers. In fact, I would say that they could have concentrated them in the north or south, but to split them up doomed both advances to fail the objectives in 1941.

As for winter clothes it was typical on all nations in WWII underestimating the enemy, the Japanese underestimated the US production capacity, and the Allies underestimated the Japanese ability. I just read another book about Singapore, it was then common belief that the "Japanese were not good at aircraft"
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