-Sh1fty-
plundering yee booty
+510|5713|Ventura, California

Adams_BJ wrote:

France has one of the highest records for successful military campaigns.
Which is exactly why I don't understand the reasoning behind theire, "Oh we are French, we surrender" angle attributed to them.
And above your tomb, the stars will belong to us.
ROGUEDD
BF2s. A Liberal Gang of Faggots.
+452|5628|Fuck this.

-Sh1fty- wrote:

Adams_BJ wrote:

France has one of the highest records for successful military campaigns.
Which is exactly why I don't understand the reasoning behind theire, "Oh we are French, we surrender" angle attributed to them.
More or less because of WWII. But I'd say that's more the fault of the government than the military or people.
Make X-meds a full member, for the sake of 15 year old anal gangbang porn watchers everywhere!
Shahter
Zee Ruskie
+295|7015|Moscow, Russia

ROGUEDD wrote:

-Sh1fty- wrote:

Adams_BJ wrote:

France has one of the highest records for successful military campaigns.
Which is exactly why I don't understand the reasoning behind theire, "Oh we are French, we surrender" angle attributed to them.
More or less because of WWII. But I'd say that's more the fault of the government than the military or people.
and the government falls out of the sky and has nothing to do with people. got it.
if you open your mind too much your brain will fall out.
globefish23
sophisticated slacker
+334|6563|Graz, Austria

Shahter wrote:

ROGUEDD wrote:

-Sh1fty- wrote:


Which is exactly why I don't understand the reasoning behind theire, "Oh we are French, we surrender" angle attributed to them.
More or less because of WWII. But I'd say that's more the fault of the government than the military or people.
and the government falls out of the sky and has nothing to do with people. got it.
Governments are made by the political parties that best managed to draw their votes. Doesn't dictate what they do afterwards.
If your politicians turn out to be crap in a bad moment, stupid things can happen.
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,815|6346|eXtreme to the maX

rdx-fx wrote:

rdx-fx wrote:

East Asia, nothing says "game over" like being the only kid on the block touching off nuclear weapons.

Dilbert_X wrote:

The war was already over by then.
And it took TWO nukes to get the Japanese to understand that concept.
Not according to the recorded history it didn't.

Sh1fty wrote:

Which is exactly why I don't understand the reasoning behind theire, "Oh we are French, we surrender" angle attributed to them.
They were unprepared, as pretty well every country except Germany was at that time, and once defeat was clearly inevitable didn't see the point of having their nice cities turned to rubble for no purpose. Thats gallic pragmatism for you.
Fuck Israel
Little BaBy JESUS
m8
+394|6388|'straya
The French were prepared, they just weren't prepared well. The Maginot Line and their refusal to attack beyond their defences meant they were doomed to lose. You can't rely on static defences while your enemy are masters of manoeuvre warfare. The French actually had more men, artillery and armoured vehicles than the Germans did, they just could never manage to use them effectively.

If the French had launched a proper offensive into Germany while they were invading Poland, that story could've gone very differently.
FatherTed
xD
+3,936|6740|so randum

Little BaBy JESUS wrote:

The French were prepared, they just weren't prepared well. The Maginot Line and their refusal to attack beyond their defences meant they were doomed to lose. You can't rely on static defences while your enemy are masters of manoeuvre warfare. The French actually had more men, artillery and armoured vehicles than the Germans did, they just could never manage to use them effectively.

If the French had launched a proper offensive into Germany while they were invading Poland, that story could've gone very differently.
^^ investing and trusting too much in the maginot is what did the french in. they didn't really have a plan B if someone decided to just walk around it, like the germans did.
Small hourglass island
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
Shahter
Zee Ruskie
+295|7015|Moscow, Russia

globefish23 wrote:

Shahter wrote:

ROGUEDD wrote:


More or less because of WWII. But I'd say that's more the fault of the government than the military or people.
and the government falls out of the sky and has nothing to do with people. got it.
Governments are made by the political parties that best managed to draw their votes. Doesn't dictate what they do afterwards.
If your politicians turn out to be crap in a bad moment, stupid things can happen.
thank you, captain obvious.

now, what was that about french people having nothing to do with their government again?
if you open your mind too much your brain will fall out.
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,815|6346|eXtreme to the maX

Little BaBy JESUS wrote:

The French were prepared, they just weren't prepared well.
The were prepared for war along the lines wars were fought pre-WWI, not even that well in fact.
Thats unprepared.
Fuck Israel
Cybargs
Moderated
+2,285|6956

Dilbert_X wrote:

Little BaBy JESUS wrote:

The French were prepared, they just weren't prepared well.
The were prepared for war along the lines wars were fought pre-WWI, not even that well in fact.
Thats unprepared.
Not really considering the Germans pretty much were the first people to use maneuver warfare properly and nobody expected them to go through the ardenes forest.
https://cache.www.gametracker.com/server_info/203.46.105.23:21300/b_350_20_692108_381007_FFFFFF_000000.png
Cheeky_Ninja06
Member
+52|6972|Cambridge, England

Cybargs wrote:

Dilbert_X wrote:

Little BaBy JESUS wrote:

The French were prepared, they just weren't prepared well.
The were prepared for war along the lines wars were fought pre-WWI, not even that well in fact.
Thats unprepared.
Not really considering the Germans pretty much were the first people to use maneuver warfare properly and nobody expected them to go through the ardenes forest.
Considering the Germans went through Belgium the first time, it doesn't take too much imagination to think they will try something similar the 2nd time..
rdx-fx
...
+955|6831

Little BaBy JESUS wrote:

The French were prepared, they just weren't prepared well.

Dilbert_X wrote:

The were prepared for war along the lines wars were fought pre-WWI, not even that well in fact.
Thats unprepared.
Problem with military procurement is that the old crusty bureaucrats & generals tend to equip their military for the last war, rather than the next war.

cybargs wrote:

Not really considering the Germans pretty much were the first people to use maneuver warfare properly and nobody expected them to go through the ardenes forest.
They were most definitely not the first to use maneuver warfare.
The modern use of maneuver warfare was implemented by Napoleon, so the French really have no excuse for forgetting.
The Prussians used maneuver warfare against the French in 1870, to good effect.
The Germans attempted to use maneuver warfare at the beginning of WW-I, and failed.

No, the French let their Ego get in the way of honest military planning.

rdx-fx wrote:

And it took TWO nukes to get the Japanese to understand that concept.

Dilbert_X wrote:

Not according to the recorded history it didn't.
  • 11 May 45 - Germany surrenders
  • 11 Jul 45 - Potsdam Conference, call for Japan's unconditional surrender or "the alternative for Japan is prompt and utter destruction"
  • Japan rejects the "conditions", apparently being completely unclear on the concept of unconditional surrender.
  • 6 Aug 45 - Hiroshima nuked
  • 9 Aug 45 - Nagasaki nuked
  • 14 Aug 45 - Emperor Hirohito broadcasts surrender speech
  • 2 Sep 45 - Japan formally surrenders, treaty signed on the deck of the USS Missouri


So.. which "recorded history" are you using, Dilbert?




If we had really wanted to be merciless bastards, we could've nuked the Imperial Palace first.
Or Tokyo.
Cybargs
Moderated
+2,285|6956
AFAIK the US didn't want to firebomb the imperial palace since it would ruin any peace deals if the royal family was hurt. Remember he is a living god to the Japanese, without him nothing could get done properly.
https://cache.www.gametracker.com/server_info/203.46.105.23:21300/b_350_20_692108_381007_FFFFFF_000000.png
globefish23
sophisticated slacker
+334|6563|Graz, Austria
The targets selected were key industrial and military locations, since the US still had Operation Downfall in mind.
They were located in large city areas, untouched by the conventional air raids, so that the weapon effects could be fully recognized.

Operation Trinity obviously didn't yield much info about weapon effects on (city) buildings, military installations, etc.
So much for not being merciless bastards...
Cybargs
Moderated
+2,285|6956

globefish23 wrote:

The targets selected were key industrial and military locations, since the US still had Operation Downfall in mind.
They were located in large city areas, untouched by the conventional air raids, so that the weapon effects could be fully recognized.

Operation Trinity obviously didn't yield much info about weapon effects on (city) buildings, military installations, etc.
So much for not being merciless bastards...
Hiroshima was hardly a military target
https://cache.www.gametracker.com/server_info/203.46.105.23:21300/b_350_20_692108_381007_FFFFFF_000000.png
Karbin
Member
+42|6534

Cybargs wrote:

globefish23 wrote:

The targets selected were key industrial and military locations, since the US still had Operation Downfall in mind.
They were located in large city areas, untouched by the conventional air raids, so that the weapon effects could be fully recognized.

Operation Trinity obviously didn't yield much info about weapon effects on (city) buildings, military installations, etc.
So much for not being merciless bastards...
Hiroshima was hardly a military target
Hiroshima was equal to San Fran of that time.
Large base's and manufacture center mixed with a large civil population.
Just where do you think the Pearl Harbour was planned?
rdx-fx
...
+955|6831
TL/DR:
USA ended the East Asia portion of WW-II with two very large exclamation marks
(With notable contributions in technical and logistic issues from Australia & England)

USA and UK helped ensure the end of WW-II in Europe did not end in Soviet domination of Western Europe.

Now if you Continental Europeans are quite through starting world wars for everyone else, we can get down to business, yeah?
A thousand years of world wars, started by Europe, from the Crusades to WWI to WWII.
Ended with Europe immolating itself, and handing over control of the world to the USSR & USA.

Might be a lesson in there for future generations...
Cheeky_Ninja06
Member
+52|6972|Cambridge, England
Meh only reason USA wasn't involved was because we hadn't founded it in time.
AussieReaper
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
+5,761|6393|what

rdx-fx wrote:

TL/DR:
USA ended the East Asia portion of WW-II with two very large exclamation marks
(With notable contributions in technical and logistic issues from Australia & England)

USA and UK helped ensure the end of WW-II in Europe did not end in Soviet domination of Western Europe.

Now if you Continental Europeans are quite through starting world wars for everyone else, we can get down to business, yeah?
A thousand years of world wars, started by Europe, from the Crusades to WWI to WWII.
Ended with Europe immolating itself, and handing over control of the world to the USSR & USA.

Might be a lesson in there for future generations...
Australia provided more than just technical and logistical support.
https://i.imgur.com/maVpUMN.png
unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,053|7011|PNW

rdx-fx wrote:

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.
Emperor Hirohito would've probably surrendered, if his military leaders actually obeyed their Emperor honorably...
Whatever the case may be, the US was eager to keep the Soviet Union out of Japan.
rdx-fx
...
+955|6831

rdx-fx wrote:

USA ended the East Asia portion of WW-II with two very large exclamation marks
(With notable contributions in technical and logistic issues from Australia & England)

AussieReaper wrote:

Australia provided more than just technical and logistical support.
In regards to the development of nuclear weapons?
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,815|6346|eXtreme to the maX

rdx-fx wrote:

And it took TWO nukes to get the Japanese to understand that concept.

Dilbert_X wrote:

Not according to the recorded history it didn't.
  • 11 May 45 - Germany surrenders
  • 11 Jul 45 - Potsdam Conference, call for Japan's unconditional surrender or "the alternative for Japan is prompt and utter destruction"
  • Japan rejects the "conditions", apparently being completely unclear on the concept of unconditional surrender.
  • 6 Aug 45 - Hiroshima nuked
  • 9 Aug 45 - Nagasaki nuked
  • 14 Aug 45 - Emperor Hirohito broadcasts surrender speech
  • 2 Sep 45 - Japan formally surrenders, treaty signed on the deck of the USS Missouri


So.. which "recorded history" are you using, Dilbert?
Correlation =/= Causation

I'm using the recorded history of the people who were there, and the analysts who weren't Truman apologists.

USA ended the East Asia portion of WW-II with two very large exclamation marks
The Pacific war would have occurred whether or not the war in Europe happened. Two belligerent resource hungry nations had been squaring up over the resources owned by third parties since before Hitler gained power. To blame the war with Japan on Europe is fanciful, just as it is to blame the current conflict in the ME on Islamic extremism.

Last edited by Dilbert_X (2012-05-15 05:35:25)

Fuck Israel
Spark
liquid fluoride thorium reactor
+874|6914|Canberra, AUS
You mean the ones that you agreed with a priori.

Change the record, dear, this one's broken.
The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman
Trotskygrad
бля
+354|6239|Vortex Ring State
afaik japan was in peace negotiations with the USSR before they got nuked?
Spark
liquid fluoride thorium reactor
+874|6914|Canberra, AUS
You mean the peace negotiations to end the war the USSR declared after Hiroshima had been bombed? And you mean the peace negotiations with a Stalin who had territorial amibitions in Japan and was executing a war plan to take them?

Last edited by Spark (2012-05-15 06:42:32)

The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman

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