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I've no quibble with Rommel not being rated as a very good panzer commander because he was. It's just that he's not that good, not in the calibre of Guderian or Manstein. If you compare all their achievements together Rommel comes up well short IMO. |
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Might as well throw on top of that the 3 Greatest Russian Generals in history: General Mud, General Distance and General Winter. The Germans faced a Red Army that ALWAYS had a gigantic numerical advantage in tanks, and we're talking about some significantly higher quality tanks than the USA and UK ever had in North Africa. Germany played exceptionally well against a stacked deck vs Russia. There is a long list of other commanders who were exceptional on the Eastern Front.
All things considered, Europe definitely WAS NOT the "easier" front to fight on. |
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Yes, but Rommels supplies had to be transported across the ocean, and britian had cracked the code and new when and where his supplies would be coming from. also, russia wasnt the superpower it was at the end of the war in 1941. the numbers where much more even at the beginning of the campaign in russia. i dont disagree with the arguements of miracle after miracle in the east. i agree totally. it was almost a numerical impossibility for the wermacht to fight as long as it did. Rommel just needs to be given his due is all
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What Erwin Romell was: He was the primary commander that the West fought, so he's the one that the West is aware of. Erwin Rommel, while a good field and operational commander benifits from the Western World permanent blind spot: We think that the war was won or lost in Africa, France and Italy. Most people think that the USA and the UK played a very large role in the war on Germany. Unfortunately, this assumption is false. The war was won or lost 99% on the bloody battlefield of the USSR and Eastern Europe. Even France only remained relevant for as long as it took Germany to knock them out of the war in 1940. The UK was only a minor thorn in the side of Germany from Dunkirk to D-day. Without victory by the USSR, victory as we remember it, would not have happened. Why does this blind spot exist? Partly, I think it is because there is great room for inaccuracies in the accounts of the Eastern Front. Both Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union are notorious for rewriting history however they saw fit. Partly it is because the Cold War began immediately after World War II, so it was in the Western Allies best interests to not emphasize the enormous role that the USSR played in defeating Germany. Afterall, the USSR grabbed up enough of Europe as it was. Diplomats of that day must've figured, "Why create excuses for them to take anything more?" Look at this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_II_casualties Should be obvious to anyone where most of the action was. |
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