redcoat
Active member
I think that could apply to a lot of us yingying.yingying said:if germany won ,i think there is no me here to post in this forum.
I think that could apply to a lot of us yingying.yingying said:if germany won ,i think there is no me here to post in this forum.
yingying said:if germany won ,i think there is no me here to post in this forum.
While the U-boats may have been formitable against unarmed merchant vessels they are pretty much useless in escorting a surface fleet that would be used to launch an invasion against a nation 3,000 miles away. The US Navy, if memory serves me correct, was the second largest navy prior to WWII (Second to Britain but just ahead of France) and the largest after WWII (Second to none, obvisouly) and unlike Germany we had a large surface fleet, while we only had a handful of carriers prior to WWII our industrial capabilities were unmatched by any other nations and by the end of the war we had over 200 carriers (that number includes the "Tin Cans" escort carriers that only had about six carriers each). Any invasion Hitler would hope to launch in his own lifetime would almost certainly do so with inadequate air support and would be chewed to pieces by the Army Air Corps assuming it made it passed the US Navy (which I find unlikely).Author Unknown said:To rule the seas is to rule the world.
Now this is a good answer :-D.Damien435 said:Well then the world would be a highly radioactive place, with all the nukes that America would tried to use on Germany.
Bory said:Japan would control all of China, and all of the Pacific rim.
Damien435 said:It's simple...the technology did not exist for either nation to try and launch an amphibious assault across 3,000 miles of ocean.
Italian Guy said:Damien, your theory is certainly fascinating, but I have two things to add.
1. I haven't fully understood what the role of Japan would have been. Would they still be allies of Berlin? Wouldn't they still have Indonesia, French Indochina, Korea and Eastern China? I mean that would be a lot of raw materials for starters, and working force. Or are you implying that the US defeats Japan and pushed it back to their main 4 islands?
2. In my opinion Germany would have dominated the world as it would have had 95% of the world's oil reserves (Middle East, Russia, Northern Sea).
Italian Guy said:Damien, your theory is certainly fascinating, but I have two things to add.
1. I haven't fully understood what the role of Japan would have been. Would they still be allies of Berlin? Wouldn't they still have Indonesia, French Indochina, Korea and Eastern China? I mean that would be a lot of raw materials for starters, and working force. Or are you implying that the US defeats Japan and pushed it back to their main 4 islands?
2. In my opinion Germany would have dominated the world as it would have had 95% of the world's oil reserves (Middle East, Russia, Northern Sea).
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