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Overlord: Same resourse

Discussion in 'What If - European Theater - Eastern Front & Balka' started by Tomcat, Feb 8, 2008.

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  1. Tomcat

    Tomcat The One From Down Under

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    Hey

    I have often thought that what if the germans during operation overlord had the same military resourses as the allies?

    You read stories of the crack german troops from the russian front tearing apart allied formation such as omaha beach (that was only remanents ote 352nd not the whole divsion). Or the reports of the germans expertly deploying there pak 43 AT guns in the headgerows of france. I read of 2 pak 43's destorying 43 tanks of a polish armoured divions equipped with shermans. Not to mention Germans crack Tiger commander Mike Wittman and his expert gunner Bobby (cant remember his last name) Destorying well over 100 tanks and assorted armoured vehicles with his tiger before being killed at normandy.

    We have to remember that the germans at this time had virtually no airforce, there navy relied on battle cruisers, pocket battleships and there famous uboats. while the allies having over 5000 thousnads naval units both of the military type and conscripted civillian crafts, plus the hugh combined airforces of all the allied armies such as (England, America, polish, french) (plus anzac, polish, yugoslavian, french, norwegian, belgium, dutch, danish airmen, soldiers and sailors. that list does go on.) well all that verse the single power of germany, plus smaller austria, romania, bulgaria, and some ostruppen troops forced into action form the east nations.

    if both sides had the same military power, with the germans having some of the best equiment ever seen at that time, plus some of the best military minds from prussia and germany. the germans could have taken the world.

    any thoughts?
     
  2. Martin Bull

    Martin Bull Acting Wg. Cdr

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    Well, I think that wenn die Deutschen identische Betriebsmittel zu den Verbuendeten am 'D-Day' hatten, wurden wir alle Deutsches jetzt sprechen.....
     
  3. JCFalkenbergIII

    JCFalkenbergIII Expert

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  4. wlee15

    wlee15 Member

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    Remember that Germany like every other country in World War II made decisions which resulted in great strengths in some areas but vast weakness in other areas. The Germans had great weapons like their tanks, but that resulted in an army that relied on horse for transportation of supplies and material while most of the army marched. In terms of motorization and mechnization Germany was basically a World War I army when compared to the western allies.
     
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  5. Tomcat

    Tomcat The One From Down Under

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    maybe earlier on perhaps with the pz I and pz II how ever as the war progress the germans had some of the best armour of the war the pather, tiger, hetzer, pz IV earlier on and the awesome sturmgesshutz III, as well as the hamburg halftrack used to ferry panzer greanadiers to the front the first of its kind (the birth place of the APC as we know it). All great weapons of war I could go on about armour thickness and shell veloicty and how the mere mention of a single tiger being in front of an advancing colum could halt it. but i'm sure you already know all that. The british armour at the time was generally inferior to german tanks look at the crusadar and cromwell, the comet was under gunned and lightley armoured and the honey (AKA M5 stuart) was no good as a battle tank. the only good tank was the 75mm M4 sherman and the 17 pounder firefly . and the americans just look at there M10 wolverine what idiot would create a battle tank designed as a tank killer, design it with an open top, thats just asking for an enemy grenade. and don't get me stated on the pershing, the suppossed match the tiger. I don admit that the hitler went over the top with his 'biggist is best' theory such as the elephant(failure) the bismarck and tirpitz were asking for trouble and the king tiger we that thing in a stationay position was a great weapon, pkus the jadgpanzer and jadgpather lefta bit to be desired.

    besides even if the germans were inferior, just look at how many years, mean, machines, and different nationalitys armies it took them to win

    so i think your quote there is a bit off see they used horses quite a bit diring the war bit in terms of mechinization they were second to none the allies feared german armour espicalliy the SS panzer divions.

    now lets look at germany's generals, amazing Erwin Rommel's tank atatics were second to none, rundstedt was an awesome army commander Model became hilters 'fireman' ( to fix up his problem areas that caught ablaze), Von paulus on the russian front, the list goes on and on.

    while allies well, mont was the best, followed by einshower, patton was an idiot. the only reason the allies won normandy was luck with the weather, superior over whelming numbers of men and armour, complete air superiority and because hitler was an idiot and a terrible tactian who really should have listened to his generals.

    although the allied mulberry harbour and the flail tanks and the brisith avre corps were quite amazing.

    oh and thankyou JCFalkenbergIII that info on the 352nd was quite extensive and impressive i didn't know that existed thankyou.
     
  6. PactOfSteel

    PactOfSteel Dishonorably Discharged

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    Germany did have the best military in WWII, however as strong as they were they couldn't prevail because you can't win a two-front war. If most of their forces were at Normandy/D-Day they could have stopped the Allied invasion, but they were spread across continents, Africa, Russia ect... Basically the war was over when the bitter cold hit the Wehrmacht in Russia, after that there was no stopping the Asian hordes but they came sooo close to taking Russia. Like I've always said it was a bad move for going into Russia, I understand why he did it, he was running out of oilfields but Hitler should have understood the threat of the USA and that would lead into two-fronts. If England had been annexed or capitulated then that would have been different.
     
  7. Za Rodinu

    Za Rodinu Aquila non capit muscas

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    Ah well, picking up some little bits here and there...

    The Hetzer was an impossibly cramped vehicle, totally unsuitable to fight within with the loader on the left side of a gun that was supposed to be loaded from the right... And what's so awesome about the (misspelt, but that's a pattern with this poster, which leaves me worried as well as his lack of capitals) "sturmgesshutz" III? This was only an improvised infantry support gun on a serviceable chassis that just grew along as requirements also grew, so what then?

    Yes, we know that, we also know stories about Russian KV tanks holding up entire panzer divisions for days, or so Heinz Guderian himself reports.

    The Honey wass no good as a battle tank because it was never a battle tank but a reconnaissance vehicle. The M-10 was not a battle tank either (what is a battle tank, by the way?), it was a tank destroyer. http://www-cgsc.army.mil/carl/download/csipubs/gabel2.pdf Try and read something, by the way, you might learn a thing or two.

    "and the king tiger we that thing in a stationay position was a great weapon". Despite the funny syntax, if the King Tiger (capitals and all) was so good in a stationary position, then why give it tracks? I used to be convinced that a fighting vehicle is defined by firepower, protection and mobility, but here I am learning otherwise.

    And I don't know what a "jadgpanzer and jadgpather" are.

    Luck with the weather? Numbers superiority? Air superiority? Hitler an idiot? Well, as for the weather that wasn't luck, it was a good weather service that accurately forecast a decent weather window. As for the three other factors wars are won by the careful management of the strategic preconditions.

    Heck, good old Sun Tzu has been dead for the last 2500 years, that gives more than enough time for any staff college to learn a thing or two, or so I would guess.

    Sorry, Tomcat, you will have to do a lot better than that if you want to grow above pub talk level.
     
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  8. Kai-Petri

    Kai-Petri Kenraali

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    Same resources?

    I just throw some approx figures from my mind: Germans would need some 1000 fighter planes and 800 bombers more, 500-600 tanks more, and perhaps some 250,000 men more in Normandy. And that´d be just for D-day as the Allied were pouring more tanks and men to the shores all the time. Now, that is a job for you mr Speer!
     
  9. JCFalkenbergIII

    JCFalkenbergIII Expert

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    I know I posted this in another "What If?" thread but thought it was apropo here also.




    "Despite highly ballyhooed emphasis on employment of mechanized forces and on rapid movement, the bulk of German combat divisions were horse drawn throughout World War II. Early in the war it was the common belief of the American public that the German Siegfrieds of Hitler's Blitz rode forth to battle on swift tanks and motor vehicles. But the notion of the mechanized might of the German Wehrmacht was largely a glamorized myth born in the fertile brains of newspapermen. Actually, the lowly horse played a most important part in enabling the German Army to move about Europe.

    Public opinion to the contrary, so great was the dependence of the Nazi Blitzkrieg upon the horse that the numerical strength of German Army horses maintained during the entire war period averaged around 1,100,000. Of the 322 German Army and SS divisions extant in November 1943, only 52 were armored or motorized. Of the November 1944 total of 264 combat divisions, only 42 were armored or motorized. The great bulk of the German combat strength-the old-type infantry divisions-marched into battle on foot, with their weapons and supply trains propelled almost entirely by four-legged horsepower. The light and mountain divisions had an even greater proportion of animals, and the cavalry divisions were naturally mainly dependent on the horse.

    The old-type German infantry division had approximately 5,300 horses, 1,100 horse-drawn vehicles, 950 motor vehicles, and 430 motorcycles. In 1943, due to the great difficulties in supply and upkeep of motor vehicles in the wide stretches of the Eastern Front, the allotment to divisions in that theater was reduced to approximately 400 motor vehicles and 400 motorcycles, and the number of horses was increased to some 6,300. The 1944-type divisions had about 4,600 horses, 1,400 horse-drawn vehicles, 600 motor vehicles, and 150 motorcycles.

    The only fully motorized unit in the old-type infantry division was the antitank battalion. Most of the divisional supply trains were horse drawn, motor vehicles being used chiefly to transport fuel and for the workshop company. A far greater degree of motorization existed among German GHQ troops, the supply units of which were mostly motorized. Motorization of GHQ troops was to a large degree a necessity, since these units included such types of outfits as heavy artillery, for which horse draft would have been a practical impossibility. These motorized GHQ units were assigned to armies, corps, and divisions as originally required. "


    http://www.lonesentry.com/articles/germanhorse/index.html
     
  10. JCFalkenbergIII

    JCFalkenbergIII Expert

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    And in regards to the Pershing,

    ELSDORF RESISTANCE
    In the meantime, Combat Command "B" was meeting stubborn house-to-house fighting in clearing out ELSDORF. All streets were heavily defended by heavy log blocks and suicide bazooka teams, plus self-propelled anti-tank guns. During the afternoon, the Germans launched a counter-attack supported by four Tiger Tanks and two Mark IV's. Task Force "Lovelady", in excellent position at GIESENDORF to the south and east of ELSDORF, moved one of the new T26E3 (The General Pershing) tanks into position and, at a range of approximately one thousand yards, knocked out two Tigers and one Mark IV. When this counterattack was broken up, the enemy tanks withdrew to the east. ELSDORF was buttoned up by 1900, and Task Force "Hogan" was moving through the eastern portion of ELSDORF in an attack on ESCH."
    G-3 Supplement - The Rhineland

    There is also a claimed battle between a "Super" Pershing and a Tiger II. But IIRC there is some question as to if it really happened.

    DUEL AT DESSAU
    3AD's "Super Pershing" vs. Germany's "King Tiger"
    WWII's two most powerful tanks meet in a historic encounter
    Super Pershing vs. King Tiger - Dessau

    This also In regards to a Pershing and a Panther,

    On March 6, 1945, Sgt. Jim Bates, a First Army Signal Corps photographer attached to the 3AD, shot a now-famous 48 seconds of 16mm footage showing the destruction of a German Mark V Panther tank in the cathedral square of downtown Cologne. The Panther was struck by three 90mm rounds from an M-26 Pershing tank of E Co, 32nd Armored Regiment, 3AD. Minutes before this encounter, the Panther had destroyed a 3AD Sherman tank, killing three of its five crewmen.

    Bates was positioned on the mezzanine of a bombed out office building about 100 yards from the Panther as events unfolded. Shot at the standard 24 frames per second with relatively grainy, b&w, 16mm film, the image quality was susceptible to any jarring, hand movement, or subject movement. As a result, a number of frames suffered from blurring or mis-aiming, which is understandable in a combat situation. Bates won a Bronze Star that day for his photography, based primarily on this remarkable movie sequence.

    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-396062011779252155

    Still photo sequence

    http://www.3ad.com/history/wwll/feature.pages/bates.index.htm
     
  11. T. A. Gardner

    T. A. Gardner Genuine Chief

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    Does this include naval forces? If not, the Germans still lose.
     
  12. Slipdigit

    Slipdigit Good Ol' Boy Staff Member WW2|ORG Editor

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    JC, Good Pics of the Panther's demise. Can't wait until I get home and can see the video of it.
     
  13. JCFalkenbergIII

    JCFalkenbergIII Expert

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    The video is petty good :eek:. Strange to see it as it happens.
     
  14. tikilal

    tikilal Ace

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    Despite all of the invitations to rant I will address the concept here. IF Germany had had exactly what everyone esle had then you would end up with a real-life game of axis and allies. The outcome would depend on dice and general strat.
     
  15. Joe

    Joe Ace

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    Righto. Well the Crusader was Inferior to many German tanks, though the 6pdr Improved it a bit. The Cromwell was just about on par with the Sherman. Basically the same gun, same Armour, engine ect ect. Comet? Under Gunned and Lightly armored? It had the 77mm (an improved version of the 17pdr) gun, which was about on par with the 88 as in the Tiger. It had 101mm of armour, which, very surprisingly, is the same amount as the Tiger 1. The 17pdr Firefly was just a regular Sherman with a 17pdr squeezed in. Sure, It had great hitting power, at expense of crew comfort and the Tanks Machine guns. As the 17pdr fired a poor HE shell, what is it going to do when facing German infantry with panzershreks and Panzerfousts? Not as much as the Regular Sherman, or The Cromwell. That is why only 1 was included with every tank squadron. The Stuart/Honey was a Reconnaissance tank. Designed to gather information, using it's speed to avoid combat. The M10 was not a tank. It was a Tank destroyer. American doctrine at the time was for the Tanks (with poor anti tank weapons) to break through while the TDs dealt with the enemy tanks. And as for asking for a German grenade, only a fool would send a tank destroyer into Infantry-infested areas. TDs are for open ground Tank vs Tank combat. Nuff said.

    I am actually begining to enjoy informing these sort of people about this stuff. Used to hate it. :D
     
  16. JCFalkenbergIII

    JCFalkenbergIII Expert

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    LOL Good for you Joe :). I did too for awhile :). Some just kind of ask for it LOL:rolleyes:.
     
  17. JCFalkenbergIII

    JCFalkenbergIII Expert

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    And I think I would prefer the M36 and M18 more then the M10.;)
     
  18. Tomcat

    Tomcat The One From Down Under

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    Thats true about the heltzer but the low profile of the tank gave it an extreme advantage at concealment and it was feared for that plus General Guderian himself prasied the hetzer on its battle reports and reliability.
    and the StuG III it started out as a inf. tank but later changed to the 75mm high velocity killer that could tear any allied armour apart at normandy and even if it did grow as required , if it works why change it. you must also remember the StuG III was upgraded in the F and G models with a longer barrel gun with 48 calibres capable of bring down the Kv-1 and the T-34 very well. But of the normandy subject,



    very true but this thread is about normandy allies not the russian front.



    A battle tank: armored vehicle having caterpillar traction and armed with machine guns, cannon, rockets, or flame throwers. there for the honey is classed as a battle tank, no matter what the main purpose was. same as for the M-10 wolverine dispite the fact that it was a tank destroyer.

    So your going to say to the tiger over there in the trees don't hurt me im not classed as a battle tank.



    And I don't know what a "jadgpanzer and jadgpather" are.

    The king tiger was terrible on fuel and there was never enough to keep them going effectively, thats why its only good at a stationary position, plus there is more than one way to win a battle, perhaps you should learn a little yourself.

    and as for the jagdpanzer and the jadgpather
    sorry that would be the jagdpanzer VI jagdtiger with the 128mm gun
    jadgtiger

    armour : superstructure - top and upper hull 40mm
    frontal - 250mm

    Tanks - Jagdtiger

    and the jadgpanther
    Google Image Result for http://www.battletanks.com/images/Jadgpanther-3.jpg


    and as for the waether it was luck that it didn't change the landings had been postponed because of the weather and Einshower was given an opening and he gambled it, look at what the weather did the mulberry harbours brought across the channel. And as for the managment of strategic preconditions, so with that you are saying that if the allies had the same amount of air support, artillery and armoured and infantry divisions then the allies still would have won, i doubt that.

    plus the 'Old Sun Tzu" from 2500 years ago has nothing to do with the modern warfare displayed during ww2.


    So with that mate I think you need to review some of your facts espicially if you are asking what a jadgpanther, or the jadgtiger (misspelled as jadgpanzer earlier) are.
     
  19. von Rundstedt

    von Rundstedt Dishonorably Discharged

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    For this to work the Russian Front had to be dealt with first, it would have had the German's winning nothing more or less, or that Operation Barbarossa never took place and that German focus was within the western rhealm of Europe, meaning that Germany has something like 150 divisions in France and the Low countries, and most likely 20 or 30 in North Africa as well as 20 Italian Divisions, also that the 70% Luftwaffe was based in North-western Europe. Then again for this to work, Operation Torch had to repulsed and made into a heavy military disaster.
     
  20. Tomcat

    Tomcat The One From Down Under

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    your not serious are you, now how many single comets stopped an entire advance. "was about on par with the 88" 10mm of and it had a lower velocity as the 88.

    i am in no way disputing the effectiveness of these medium tanks or with anything you have said here.

    it dosn't matter what it was designed for, every AFV should be capable of holding its own. Just look at the SdKfz 234/3 Puma with the 50mm KwK cannon capable of taking out a sherman with alucky hit. The STuG had 2 Mgs for inf. defense.

    As I said before it don't matter what it was designed for what if the germans planned for the 'breakthrough tatics' and deployed reserve infantry in the rear what would they do then? Be prepared for the worst to happen. and as for the tank v tank all the enemy tank would have to do is load HE shells and kill the crew of M10
     
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