But the Mongols kinda beat the ruskies at their own game. Throw men at a problem until it goes away.
Make X-meds a full member, for the sake of 15 year old anal gangbang porn watchers everywhere!
they are the kind of easy quick sayings that make idiots feel educated because they saw a history channel specialMacbeth wrote:
The whole Russian winter destroying armies thing is a massive historical myth. The same with Afgahistan being the grave yard of empires.
Last edited by eleven bravo (2012-05-11 17:14:46)
and the portions of what was produced and then used in the war by those two were...?HITNRUNXX wrote:
If you would prefer numbers:
Soviet Union Production throughout WWII was less than 1/3 of the United States...
and the numbers of nazi troops and war assets destroyed were...? and territory covered...?Around 11 Million Soviet soldiers died in WWII (not counting the 13 million civilians).
Around 500,000 Americans died during WWII on two different major fronts.
Manpower was the Russian contribution more than production.
-40 degree temperatures helped too.
Who beat the Nazi's? Hitler. History has proved time and again what normally happens when you try to march into Russia.
Last edited by Shahter (2012-05-12 02:17:38)
I am doubting Napoleon and Hitler would agree with you.Macbeth wrote:
Those are just two off the top of my head. The whole Russian winter destroying armies thing is a massive historical myth. The same with Afgahistan being the grave yard of empires.
This isn't a matter of opinion. It's a agreed upon fact that Napoleon's army was destroyed by disease in the summer and fall. By the time Napleon made it to Moscow in December, his army of 400,000 was reduced down to 100,000.HITNRUNXX wrote:
I am doubting Napoleon and Hitler would agree with you.Macbeth wrote:
Those are just two off the top of my head. The whole Russian winter destroying armies thing is a massive historical myth. The same with Afgahistan being the grave yard of empires.
Those are just two off the top of my head...
Manpower + Being prepared for your own environment + that environment being harsh enough to kill people while you wait it out all seem like viable options.
Seeing a massive army fail at something, then attempting to do it the exact same way and expecting different results seems pretty crazy to me.
Add to those deaths the battles like this one which pealed off 30,000 men from Napoleon's army, and this one which peeled off a similar number. The constant harassment from peasants and cassocks. The starvation due to preparing enough supplies for a 40 day expedition. The deaths from exhaustion because of the forced marches, and poor diets. Lack of clean water. Dissertations and suicides peeled off more numbers. Also general accidents like 20,000 to 40,000 people drowning in a river reduced the army further. The winter's effect on the army was marginal in comparison.Authour of the book "The Illustrious Dead: The Terrifying Story of How Typhus Killed Napoleon's Greatest Army" wrote:
In the first week of the campaign alone, 6,000 men a day fell ill. "The numbers of the sick grew in overwhelming numbers, and they crawled along the road where many of them died," observed Belgian physician J.L.R. de Kerckhove.
The war was already over by then.rdx-fx wrote:
East Asia, nothing says "game over" like being the only kid on the block touching off nuclear weapons.
rdx-fx wrote:
East Asia, nothing says "game over" like being the only kid on the block touching off nuclear weapons.
And it took TWO nukes to get the Japanese to understand that concept.Dilbert_X wrote:
The war was already over by then.
Emperor Hirohito would've probably surrendered, if his military leaders actually obeyed their Emperor honorably...unnamednewbie wrote:
Japan was seeing what it could get out of a conditional surrender. The US wanted unconditional surrender, which it didn't want to sacrifice manpower to achieve. It took a second nuke before the emperor finally threw his hands up. Even afterwards, there were still Japanese fighting on islands around the Pacific and some who suicided rather than surrender.
Lesson: don't bomb Hawaii.
Last edited by rdx-fx (2012-05-13 06:50:34)
You're so wrong.eleven bravo wrote:
Id say America is about 85% responsible for winning WWII
Last edited by War Man (2012-05-13 20:05:58)
http://forums.bf2s.com/viewtopic.php?pi … 5#p3282185rdx-fx wrote:
rdx-fx wrote:
East Asia, nothing says "game over" like being the only kid on the block touching off nuclear weapons.And it took TWO nukes to get the Japanese to understand that concept.Dilbert_X wrote:
The war was already over by then.Emperor Hirohito would've probably surrendered, if his military leaders actually obeyed their Emperor honorably...unnamednewbie wrote:
Japan was seeing what it could get out of a conditional surrender. The US wanted unconditional surrender, which it didn't want to sacrifice manpower to achieve. It took a second nuke before the emperor finally threw his hands up. Even afterwards, there were still Japanese fighting on islands around the Pacific and some who suicided rather than surrender.
Lesson: don't bomb Hawaii.
His military leaders made that difficult.
Even to the point of staging a coup over the Emperor's surrender speech.
Note: credit to the Finnish special forces, for shit-canning the German's stockpile of heavy water, thereby permanently wrecking the German nuclear weapons program.
Between the fall of Rome and Waterloo, France was the military and social center of Europe.Adams_BJ wrote:
France has one of the highest records for successful military campaigns.