Why was WWII different than WWI?




 
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August 11th, 2004  
Mark Conley
 
 

Topic: Why was WWII different than WWI?


It was the same land...just about the same opposing armies...almost the same technology (planes, tanks machine guns) yet the war in europe during the first world war turned into a slugfest for mud...and the Germans totally over ran the allies in the first weeks of WWII.

What was the difference?

This is a topic to talk about those differences. Lets see if we can come to some common point as to what made both wars different.


The topics here. Im just going to sit back and let you people do the work...
August 11th, 2004  
Paddster
 
Well, the technology was still there in WWII, but different, for example,

Tanks were now used effectively as offensive weapon as opposed to support, they also were armed with a main weapon of a cannon, as opposed to a machine gun.

Sub machine guns were much more common in WWII, which would greatly act against trench warfare, because of quick movement, and tactics that could be used with a SMG, as opposed to a bolt action rifle.

Basically, World War One was a war fought with modern weapons, but with 19th century tactics.
August 11th, 2004  
J.Hawk
 
In the West, the balance of forces in 1914 was close enough that stalemate ensued. In 1940 the Wehrmacht moved too fast for the French to stabilize the front, and in 1944 it was too weak to stop the Allies. In the East the spaces were too large, so the war stayed mobile, as it was in WW1. In Italy, however, the war was about as static as it was anywhere in WW1, slow slogging from one defense line to the next.
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August 11th, 2004  
Airborne Eagle
 
 
While I agree that WWI was fought with modern weapons and antiquated tactics (same as the US Civil War - more accurate arms, outdated tactics), I think there's a major component missing.

Airpower.

Carpet bombing, dive bombing, close air support. Cities were more vulnerable in the rear, forcing militaries to defend their rear and neccessarily spreading their defenses.

I also think the improvement of tanks was important. Speed, armor, range, firepower, all improved.
August 11th, 2004  
yurry
 
Whe I read Achtung Panzer by Guderian I couldn't help noticing that one of the nreasons behind the concept of Blitzkrieg was to avoid another WW1

The Germans at that time (unlike in WW1) couldn't stay in constant combat for more than 6 months or they would run out of oil. At at that time the Romanians and Hungarians hadn't yet joined the Axis thus providing continous oil suply.

As for tanks - they hadn't joined WW1 for 2 years and even than they were only tractors with some "aluminum foil"
August 11th, 2004  
ENRG
 
I think, that the morals of the German soldiers where sky-high at the start of WWII because one man (Adolf Hitler) promised a entire nation that Germany would rise to wealth and power again, after the big depression after the lose of WWI.
August 12th, 2004  
godofthunder9010
 
 
The Axis Powers has adapted their military strategies to account for the new technologies available. Guderian was not the only person who thought of the idea of massing the tanks and slamming them into the enemy line at a single point (and making stationary trench warfare obsolete). The general idea was there in most countries, but those persons were not listened to. Granted, Guderian went into the concept in much greater depth, but the officers in the Allied powers who promoted the idea were scorned by (generally higher ranking) military traditionalists.

Because Hitler was willing to subscribe to new ideas he supported Guderian. He was outnumbered on all fronts and he knew it. And so, in Germany, the concept was not only allowed to grow, but in depth training was allowed to occur. So there you have your biggest ingredient in Germany's Blitzkrieg. The rest of the military concepts go the same way. Rethink Airfoce, rethink U-Boats, rethink everything.

From there, you needed a man like Adolf Hitler who was crazy enough to attack when vastly outnumbered. Then your military geniuses had to figure out how to make it happen. Then Hitler mucks with things cripples their ability to actually win, etc, etc, etc.

The Allies started out expecting trench warware and planned their entire strategy based upon it.

One interesting strategy that was heavily believed in that didn't work in WW2 was the concept of bombing the enemy into submission. Germany failed to do so and the US and UK failed to do so (vs Japan and Germany both). The idea never has worked in history that I'm aware of.
August 12th, 2004  
Mark Conley
 
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by godofthunder9010
...One interesting strategy that was heavily believed in that didn't work in WW2 was the concept of bombing the enemy into submission. Germany failed to do so and the US and UK failed to do so (vs Japan and Germany both). The idea never has worked in history that I'm aware of.

I have to make a response in this vien: the object is never to try and bomb your enemy into submission (although they did give it a round the clock go in hanoi during Viet nam): its to try and deny you enemy his needed supplies, goods or what ever at certain points in your caimpain. If the object at polesti was to bomb it into submission, they would have followed up the inital bombing with proceedingly more and more bombings...but they didnt. They bombed swinefurt, the ball bearing factory of germany...once. Sure, they sent over lots of bombers...but it usally was to take out one or two of the more important areas for a short time..to deny the product for just a short while. most allied planners knew you couldnt drop enough bombs to bomb them into submission: they were not fools.

with japan, bombs went out the window...low level incendary drops was much more effective. and yes, it was very effective: in tokoyo alone, 70 percent of the city was reduced to ash.
August 12th, 2004  
godofthunder9010
 
 
The concept was to bomb the opponent into submission, ie winning a war SOLEY on air attacks. The idea was that this could be used to avoid revisitting the horrors of WW1 and trench warfare by bombing them till they gave up the fight. Collatoral damage was supposed to eventually lead to their surrender. While numerous creative means for inducing collateral damage were tried (Tokyo, Dresden, etc), the concept didn't work. Though it didn't exactly boost the morale of the citizens, in many cases it strengthened their resolve. Attacking civilian targets was the biggest mistake by Germany during the Battle of Britain.

Now what I'm talking about was a very real military theory.

Other justifications for the idea of winning by air power alone: Attacking enemy industrial sites? Didn't work very well because the factories were just rebuilt deep enough underground that they couldn't be hit anymore. The truly effective tactic of hitting things like oil supplies weren't tried until very late in the war BECAUSE OF the theory of victory by air alone.

The one notable exception is the Atomic Bomb, simply because that method confronted the Japanese with the choice: Surrender now or be nuked off the face of the Earth.
August 12th, 2004  
Mark Conley
 
 
oh i see what you are geetting at now. okay.