| |||||||||||
| ||||
| Re: Sudetenland 2.0
Zetetic11235, Quote:
1991-92 S Ossetia fights war to break away from newly independent Georgia; Russia enforces truce 2004 Mikhail Saakashvili elected Georgian president, promising to recover lost territories 2006 S Ossetians vote for independence in unofficial referendum April 2008 Russia steps up ties with Abkhazia and South Ossetia July 2008 Russia admits flying jets over S Ossetia; Russia and Georgia accuse each other of military build-up 7 August 2008 After escalating Georgian-Ossetian clashes, sides agree to ceasefire 8 August 2008 Heavy fighting erupts overnight, Georgian forces close on Tskhinvali. South Ossetia had a referendum and declared independence from Georgia, but was not recognized by any other country, not the EU, US, not Russia, and least of all Georgia. From the US/EU point of view therefore, it might be argued that this is a civil conflict within Georgia and that Russia is violating sovereignty. But rather like the Serbia's actions in Kosovo, there are humanitarian considerations, ethnic cleansing conducted by the state that the US/EU position at least implicity sanctions. The US/EU couldn't recognize Ossetian independence because they'd forged ties with Georgia to get oil from Azerbaijan, overland through the BTC oil pipeline, but in recent years there have been questions about its economic viability - relative to shipping, and the war on terror has put it in jeapordy. On 5th Aug - two days before Georgia launched it's offensive, the flow of oil was halted by a 'terrorist attack' in Turkey. On the 7th Georgia attacks S.Ossetia - Russia counters, and now the US/EU, who acted in Serbia/Kosovo, but refused to recognize S.Ossetia's refferendum and declaration of independence, condemn Russia's actions on the basis of sovereignty. The Russian action isn't dissimilar to the NATO action in Serbia, but is condemned by the EU-US on the basis of a principle they clearly have no respect for - for afterall, what is soveriegnty based upon if not the democratically expressed will to self determination? In light of failure to recognize Ossetia the US/EU should just mind thier own business - but there's the missile shield in Poland, that has been a stalled project until now. This is the US/EU interest - underlying the logic of a political stance that is profoundly hypocritical. iconoclast. |
| ||||||||
| Re: Sudetenland 2.0 Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
![]() Quote:
Then why doesn't Bush get out of Iraq now, let alone Harper. Canada is threatened by Taliban to get out or civilians will die. And Bush has been asked by the reluctantly coopertive Iraqi government.Quote:
__________________ My country is the world and my religion is to do good. - Unsure who said this. |
| |||||
| Re: Sudetenland 2.0 Quote:
But honestly, you can only judge him as a diplomatic gambler up to that point, because starting from 1939 he repeatedly asserted himself as the single most incompetent military leader ever to exist. The initially successful battlefield tactic of blitzkrieg (which was thanks to Heinz Guderian, not Hitler), was no reflection on Hitler's prowess as a military leader. Yes, the world's first true mobile warfare overwhelmed Poland and France, was a failure in North Africa, and died its last death in Russia. Hitler's first huge mistake was believing that he could conduct a war against Poland without inviting war with Britain and France. He miscalculated -- he never wanted a war in Western Europe, he only wanted to wage war in the east. He and his fat friend Goering, in the Battle of Britain, conducted a terror bombing campaign that killed a bunch of civilians, but had no strategic value, and they ended up losing air supremacy for good for the remainder of the war. Worse for him, he was hoping to get Britain to sue for peace, and his bombing campaign made that impossible. Next, once the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, Hitler independently declared war against the US. The US would have been just as happy to fight Japan and not have their own two-front war. But Hitler invited FDR and Eisenhower and Patton on board. But the biggest blunder of them all was the invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941. It was from the start an unwinnable war. His reconnaisance in the USSR was terrible (his generals had no idea how bad Russian roads were), and he was utterly delusional to think that he could bring the USSR to its knees with swift blitzkrieg tactics. Once the Wermacht got stopped in front of Moscow and Leningrad, and had to overwinter in 1941-1942, Germany was doomed. Hitler knew that Germany couldn't fight a war of attrition, in which the winner would ultimately be the one that could withstand the greatest loss of lives. But he pressed on, leading to the Battle of Stalingrad in 1942-1943 which was the biggest battle in world history (2 million dead all in all), and absolutely crushed the Wermacht. It was an unnecessary battle, it was tactically atrocious, and he forced ~300,000 Germans to stay and fight while surrounded by the Red Army rather than break out. Following the Kursk a few months later, Hitler never launched another significant offensive in the east for the rest of the war. D-day was another leadership catastrophe for Hitler, dividing his generals, not allowing them use of tanks, and not allowing them emergency authority to respond to an invasion without his approval. And there are so many other stories of his unbelievably dumb decisions, especially in the last year of the war when he launched hopeless operations (like the Battle of the Bulge), when he refused to let his troops consolidate near Berlin to form defensive lines, etc. Read two books by Antony Beevor, "Stalingrad" and "The Fall of Berlin" if you want to know more... Quote:
|
| |||||
| Re: Sudetenland 2.0
Hitler was a meth addict by late '42. His main consultant in all matters was a mystic astrologist. Theodore Wulff was this mystic drug giver. Besides, Hitler's brilliance was in Oratory and propaganda, rather in millitary prowess. Romell was the tactician of the bunch. |
| |||||
| Re: Sudetenland 2.0
Rommell looked awfully good in the desert and awfully bad in France. We think of D-day as a bloody epic, but honestly the Atlantic Wall was broken by noon on June 6. Rommell effectively recreated the Maginot Line, i.e. a useless static defense made out of strongpoints. Of course being asked to fortify the coast from the Bay of Biscay all the way up to Norway was a bit of a mission impossible for him, and there were a lot of other factors that compromised it, but either way it was a pretty low moment for Rommell's tactical legacy. I should add that I don't give Rommell much of a humanitarian pass either, by the way -- he just kept far worse company. Of the Wermacht generals, the best tactician was clearly Guderian, who essentially invented the blitzkrieg tactics, i.e. highly mobile warfare with tank and air support, usually moving in quick pincer formations. That's how the Germans captured (and very promptly executed) around 600,000 Red Army troops within the first few weeks of the war. Guderian was actually brazen enough to openly bark at Hitler for his stupid tactical micromanagement, nearly up until the Battle of Berlin (he was dismissed shortly before it). Last edited by Aedes; 08-19-2008 at 09:08 PM. |
| |||||
| Re: Sudetenland 2.0
This is interesting. It is rather uplifing that the best tactician was one of the few sane men involved. He was never charged with any war crimes and remained reasonably productive after the war.
|