David wrote:I didn't bother to read all the replies, but in response to the original question~
It entirely depends upon the time period. If we are talking about the height of the Cold War, U.S.S.R. takes it hands down. US and NATO intelligence knew that the Russians could raise a reserve army of over 20 million in just a few months. The Russian standing army already out numbered the entire US army + reserves + all NATO armies combined. The only important theatres of war would be the US, Europe, and Asia. Using the Chinese as allies, South Central Asia and the Middle East would be an easy grab.
Height of the Cold War? In the early '60's they have the conventional and tac missile advantage, but the strategic nuclear balance is 5 to 1 in America's favor. Additionally once you get to the '70's Soviet planners were worried about a possible Sino-Soviet war, and this is one of the reasons Nixon extended a hand to the regime. We might not have been buddies, but we both might have wanted to see Brezhnev go down.
Tac missiles blast the Soviets to hell before they cross the Causcaus into the Middle East and before they make more then 50 km acroos the East German border.
David wrote:The Russians could do the same thing the Americans did to the Japanese as far as the Pacific goes, hop around any hardened defense points and destroy the air bases. With the US Pacific fleet busy with the Russians, the islands would be cut off from support and reinforcements.
NATO/American fleets outclassed the Soviet fleet well. We also had far more experience with amphibious landings and amphibious infantry tactics then they did. Their island-hopping campiagn falls flat due to Soviet military inexperience and tactical nukes.
David wrote:Europe would likewise be a cake walk. Britian might pose a slight problem, but cut off from the rest of the world, it would starve to death if the Russians and the Warsaw Pact didn't simply overwelm them. The US might take Cuba at first, but cut off and alone, it would suffer the same fate Germany did in both World Wars.
In a conventional war, Soviet armor and infantry divisions plow through NATO lines. In the real world, they are blasted to hell by tac nukes before they make 50 km into Western Europe.
North and South America and East Asia is not "highly alone". Furthermore, mumblings about "conventional war" between the powers is deeply meaningless. The NATO powers accepted Soviet conventional land superiority because the NATO playbook called for tactical weapons to be used immediately against Soviet offensives into Western Europe. Since their development and strategy were based around nuclear war, the conception of possible conventional wars is a farce and wholely meaningless.
David wrote:What peeves me is the fact that people seem to think that the US only built nuclear weapons to respond to a Soviet nuclear attack. The US would have used its nukes if Russia never even touched theirs! The US realized post WWII that they could never defeat the various Communist states throughout Europe, Asia, and Africa by conventional means. The US and allies simply did not have the manpower, material, money, or means to raise a conventional army of equivelent size and transport it to the battlefield. Their first response to a conventional attack by the Soviets and their allies would be to annialate their armies in the Warsaw Pact with the hundreds of tactical nukes they had in border nations, and launch every ICBM they could get off the ground at Russian bases throughout Asia and Europe. While this most certainly would have resulted in the deaths of hundreds of millions, if not billions, it was their one slim hope of actually beating the U.S.S.R. in a war.
As if the Russians didn't develop strategic nukes for any reason? To apply "who's fault" and "who's the aggressor" type white-black moral colors to military strategy, especially in the Cold War, is infantile and absurd.