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View Poll Results: Bravest Large Group of WWII

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  • USN

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  • USMC

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  • RAF

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  • British civilian population

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  • British merchant marine

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  • Wehrmacht

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  • Imperial Japanese Navy

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  • Russian Army

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Bravest Large Group of WWII participants?

WW2 General Discuss Bravest Large Group of WWII participants? in the World War II - General forums; In your opinion, which large group of people during WWII gave a particulatly galant performance in the war. One which ...

  1. #1
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    Bravest Large Group of WWII participants?

    In your opinion, which large group of people during WWII gave a particulatly
    galant performance in the war. One which may be inspiring to you personally.
    I have included some civilian populations as well. Detail and define
    what bravery by that group captured your imagination.

    USAAF – Daylight bombing offensive ETO. Over 18,000 aircraft lost in ETO.

    USN – Early days of the Pacific war up to the Battle of the Solomons. Kamikaze attacks.

    USMC – Pacific Island hopping campaign.

    RAF – Battle of France, Battle of Britain, Night bombing campaign (44% casualty rate).



    British civil population – Battle of Britain (60,000 British civilians killed).

    British merchant marine – Battle of the Atlantic. 30,000 merchant seaman lost.

    Wehrmacht – Eastern Front after Kursk, and the Defense of the Reich after BOTB.
    Estimate over 4,000,000 killed. 30% loss rate.

    Luftwaffe – Particularly the Defense of the Reich against overwhelming odds.

    Kreigsmarine – Specifically the U-Boat force. Highest loss rate of any WWII participant service branch with 28,000 of 40,000 crewmen lost.

    IJN – Pacific war after the Solomons. Kamikazes. Over 400,000 KIA, about 20% loss rate.

    IJA – Pacific island defenses. Estimate 1.3 million KIA, about 25% loss rate.

    Russian Army – Entire Eastern Front conflict. Over 8,000,000 dead, estimate 25% loss rate.

    Russian civilian population – Entire Eastern Front conflict. Estimated that 14,000,000 Russian civilians died as a result of WWII.

    Poles (armed forces, resistance, and civilian combined) – Battle of Poland, Warsaw resistance risings in ’43 and ’44. 2,500,000 Polish civilians and 3,000,000 Polish Holocaust victims dead (about 16% of civilian population).

    Detail your responses. Feel free to add any large group you feel is overlooked by these options .
    Last edited by smilefan; 04-29-2011 at 09:27 PM.

  2. #2
    Senior Member pbfoot's Avatar
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    The Polish Army in the west who were in North Africa Tobruk, Italy ,Monte Cassino, They were the Cork in the Falaise Gap , the Polders and Breskins and Arnhem in Holland which in my biased and humble opinion were the toughest ops in Western Europe

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    I also voted for the Poles on the basis, not only of the armed forces
    participating from beginning to end in the ETO, but the brass balls of Warsaw partisans
    who staged two armed uprisings during occupation by the world's most
    well-armed, well-trained Army.

  4. #4
    Senior Member buffnut453's Avatar
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    Courage takes many forms and is a personal matter. I respect all veterans from any country who served with honour, and admire the quiet modesty of most veterans. To try and label one mass group as being "braver" than another is, frankly, asinine!

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    Senior Member pbfoot's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by buffnut453 View Post
    Courage takes many forms and is a personal matter. I respect all veterans from any country who served with honour, and admire the quiet modesty of most veterans. To try and label one mass group as being "braver" than another is, frankly, asinine!
    Maybe assine but certain segments got stuck in it more then others

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    Senior Member Maximowitz's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by pbfoot View Post
    Maybe assine but certain segments got stuck in it more then others

    Or asinine even.

    I'll vote for the Polish, who between Hitler and Stalin, had no luck at all.

    The bravest individual was without doubt my father, who invaded France singlehanded in 1944 and liberated several highly defended wine cellars.*








    *Ok, it was D-Day plus 8, but at least he turned up.


    Maj. Dietrich Puttfarken II./KG 51

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    Senior Member parsifal's Avatar
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    Anyone who has been under fire will know you cant answer this question. Bravery is often a conditional reflex. Something that just happens. People are scared to death, anyone who has been under fire that says otherweise is full of cr*p frankly. But people would not let your mates down. People under fire dont think about getting killed, just what has to be done to stay alive and keep your people alive.

    I think people that live through that experience know that fear reaches a certain level, and then just levels off, no matter what the threat. Its hard to overcome that fear, and suppress it so the job gets done.

    But I dont think people thin they are acting nobly or differently at the time these things are happening. Its just happening, and they are trying to do their job as best they can......
    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”.




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    Senior Member mikewint's Avatar
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    parsifal, could not agree with you more. I was totally and completely terrified in vietnam, wore my flak jacket day and night, even in the shower. but after a couple of weeks to a month the human mind cannot tolerate that level of stress and you live day by day and the totally abnormal becomes normal SOP.
    And you do indeed live and die for your "mates" as Parsifal says and any thought of greater ideals is gone.

    Motivated, Dedicated, Lethal

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    Bravery is not an attribute that can really be assigned to a large group or population. There were brave people in London during the blitz but there were also plenty who thought surrender or at least some deal with nazi Germany was preferable to the bombing. They said so in conversations overheard and noted by the authorities at the time.It caused the government considerable consternation and a collapse of civilian morale was always feared,particularly after heavy raids as on,for example,Coventry.
    Individual bravery is something else. The TV presenter Jeremy Clarkson's father in law won a V.C. during WWII but Clarkson only became aware of this when his father in law,a Major Robert Cain, died. The Major had never thought it worth mentioning which tells you a lot about the sort of men who display that kind of bravery.
    Steve

  10. #10
    Senior Member pbfoot's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Maximowitz View Post
    Or asinine even.

    .
    OK you caught me , I never finished my BA in philosphy but I knew what the question implied without it

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    Senior Member fastmongrel's Avatar
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    Daft poll how can you apply a singular and personal human reaction to stress to a group of people numbering up to millions. Thats like applying national stereotypes, the Irish are always drunk and scrapping, the Germans are brutal and efficent, the British are all tea drinking layabouts and the Americans are all fat and know there sisters in a biblical sense.

    None of the above stereotypes are true and you cant say a group is braver than another group.

  12. #12
    Der Crew Chief DerAdlerIstGelandet's Avatar
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    I don't think you can vote on this either. There is no way to decide such a thing in my opinion.

    I do however agree with these statements...

    Quote Originally Posted by parsifal View Post
    Anyone who has been under fire will know you cant answer this question. Bravery is often a conditional reflex. Something that just happens. People are scared to death, anyone who has been under fire that says otherweise is full of cr*p frankly. But people would not let your mates down. People under fire dont think about getting killed, just what has to be done to stay alive and keep your people alive.

    I think people that live through that experience know that fear reaches a certain level, and then just levels off, no matter what the threat. Its hard to overcome that fear, and suppress it so the job gets done.

    But I dont think people thin they are acting nobly or differently at the time these things are happening. Its just happening, and they are trying to do their job as best they can......
    Quote Originally Posted by stona
    Bravery is not an attribute that can really be assigned to a large group or population.
    Quote Originally Posted by fastmongrel View Post
    Daft poll how can you apply a singular and personal human reaction to stress to a group of people numbering up to millions. Thats like applying national stereotypes, the Irish are always drunk and scrapping, the Germans are brutal and efficent, the British are all tea drinking layabouts and the Americans are all fat and know there sisters in a biblical sense.

    None of the above stereotypes are true and you cant say a group is braver than another group.


    fly boy:"isnt that the first jet bomber becasue i have flown one in a flight sim before and i know how it handles"

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    Senior Member RabidAlien's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by fastmongrel View Post
    ...and the Americans are all fat and know there sisters in a biblical sense.

    None of the above stereotypes are true and you cant say a group is braver than another group.

    THAT WAS JUST ONE TIME!!!!!!!!!!





    Pillage, then burn.

    Argue not with dragons, for thou art crunchy and go well on toast.

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    Senior Member michaelmaltby's Avatar
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    ".... None of the above stereotypes are true and you cant say a group is braver than another group ....". True.

    But you CAN admire the solidarity and stick-to-it-ness of the folks in MALTA or LENINGRAD.

    MM

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    Senior Member parsifal's Avatar
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    Dedication to a cause is different to bravery. Sticking it out at leningrad or malta does not necessarily mean that all the soldiers in those places were braver than in other places. It does suggest they didnt have a lot of options, other than surrender, but chose to remain dedicated to the cause rather than take the low road. I dont think that quite meets the criteria of how brave they were. It suggests there were a lot of brave men there, but how brave and how many.....
    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”.




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