Stas Bush wrote:The WWII matter:
I know a few thousand British veterans who know you are talking out of your ass.
Try spelling the word: Dunkirk. Or the Battle of France.
What they did in 1940 was irrelevant for everyone else but THEM. What they did in 1944 was also irrelevant. Triumphing over a beaten enemy is
not really something to be proud of.
The tactics of the Allies had not evolved to meet the times. Russia had the same problem. That was how they were forced from Poland all the way back to Moscow.
Considering that was an extra 18% on top of the USSR's TOTAL Gross Domestic Product
Lend-lease? FUCK YOU. 3%.
OK, I was wrong. I ran my numbers again and forgot to divide by the number of years the Lend-Lease was provided. 4.25% is what it comes out to after that. The difference is minor, so I won't quibble 3 or 4%, but it's still significant.
Russian units often used American and British vehicles, including tanks and aircraft.
3%
*cough*bullshit*cough* The USSR produced a total of 70,740 aircraft during World War II. The Lend-Lease act added 14,982, or 16.69% of the USSR's total Air Force. 1,285 of those were in 1941, many BEFORE the United States even entered the war (to provide a counterpoint to the whole "late gift" theory). While only about 30% were supplied before 1944, America's industry was still gearing up and refitting the American forces during this time, developing advanced versions of the P-38, P-39, P-47, P-51, P-61, F4F, F6F, F8F, F7F, F4U, B-17, B-20, B-24, B-29, and other aircraft. 64% of its trucks were American, used for hauling artillery. Over 9,000 tanks were given to the Soviets. Over 5 million tons of food were supplied by the USA alone, enough to feed an army of 12 million for the entire war. This is according to Andrew Gregorovich, who said "the USSR tried to keep this information limited and the role of Lend-Lease is generally not well known although it constituted about 15 per cent of the total equipment used by the USSR."
Zhukov himself said the USSR would have lost the war without American support.
Try this - Battle of Moscow. Of course, USSR would lose. You ever compared Germany to USSR?
It's about 2 times more productive. But the "support" mostly occured AFTER Stalingrad, when it became clear who's the winner.
I see. That's why the rifles in Stalingrad used American gunpowder.
and both armies are technologically obsolete
Shut up. China is not in my area, but don't u brag about the RUSSIAN army. But you're right, US is by far the most powerful country in the world. But against 2 or more opponents...
The only things I would truly worry about militarily, avoiding the nuclear weapons, would be Foxhounds, Flankers, and T-90 tanks. The Foxhound and Flanker are each relatively rare and roughly equivalent to current fighters, inferior to the Raptor. The T-90 could take on anything, but is still outclassed by the Abrams. The Russian army is still one of the most powerful in the world, but it has always relied on quantity over technology, and the maintenance costs have been excessive considering the recession at the fall of the Soviet regime. However, this is not important as far as the current discussion is involved. If you would like to discuss this, we could start a new thread on current trends in military development.
Hopefully it will never come to any of the possibilities I have mentioned.
Yes.
Good to see we agree on something
.