Patrick Degan wrote:
Yeah, yeah, sure. Whatever helps you to get off, I suppose...
It's not my fault you're stuck in the entire process of thinking that
the Red Bear was an unbeatable monster. Hint: The Russians routinely
kept divisions in the fight until they were nothing but mere regiments,
and then simply created new divisions, so Soviet Division counts are
mis leading.
And of course, you also forget that we had a battle hardened amphibious
landing force that we could call upon to land behind enemy lines. It would
really have sucked for the Soviets to suddenly have to deal with 50,000
or so Marines marauding behind their lines in Poland, along with
the possibilities of having to deal with airborne landings behind their
lines to the tune of a full corps worth of troops (17th, 13th, 82nd, 101st Divisions)
And of course, the little fact that a single American INFANTRY division
had more tanks in it than a full-up German Panzer Division.
Not to mention that we were very very good in chewing up enemy
divisions moving towards the frontlines by tacair.
A good example is the August 7th attack at Mortain by a full
SS Panzerkorps led by Paul Hausser, and consisting of crack
troops:
The Waffen SS: Hitler's Elite Guard at War - George H Stein wrote:
For the elite divisions of the Waffen SS the two months
since the Allied invasion had been bitter and frustrating. They
were not accustomed to failure. Even during the great retreats
in the East, an all-out assault by two elite SS panzer divisions
invariably resulted in at least a local victory. But in the West,
the SS troops had to face what they bitterly called the
Materialschlacht. Against heavy naval fire, unending streams of
tanks, fully motorized infantry, superior artillery, and above all
crippling attacks from the air, even the determination of the
SS troops came to nothing.