Quote:
Originally Posted by Herr Oberst
Well thanks I'm glad you gave me a chance to elaborate on this subject of not being ready.
The US had a well supplied able force and got her clock cleaned by the Afrika Korp at Kassarine. The Germans were excellent experienced soldiers but lacked supply. The Americans were simply not ready or experienced and resulted in a rout in that Battle. Had the Germans exploited their short victory, they would have done more serious, though short term, damage to the Allies in Afrika.
As far as Italy, again they faced quality German troops but with the American lack of leadership from Mark Clarke, experienced unacceptable set backs and losses. Kesslering did have quite a say in the matter of defense. Italy was on her way out after the defeat in Afrika and the partisan groups hitting the fascists. True, the Allied presence in Italy just sped the inevitable up.
Similar instances can be made to the PTO, The Japanese with a superior carrier force, ran into alot of bad luck and guts of American TB pilots that didn't return. Many landing tactics needed to be refined as to not waste so many Marines. Still the Japanese resolve became stiffer the closer America got to Japan. So when thinking back to Corregidor it would have been a disasterous gamble to have tried to save the situation, liken it to a Dunkirk gone bad.
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Yes that maybe so, but if reading correctly that the Americans knew sooner or later that Japan was to be an enemy, America had imposed a raft of tough sanctions onto Japan, due to it's current invasion of China and that the Americans knew American territory was vulnerable to future attack, with the Philipines bearing the main attack but, this is where the American psychy of isolationism went against it, it needed to bolster its territories to attack but need an attack to overide their Neutrality Act, hence Catch 22. I will even entertain the fact MacArthur did not know of the impending attack, but he had 10s of thousands under his command but waisted them. And finally when he was given an opportunity to escape he did leaving behind thousands and then blamed them for his failure.