If the country was making massive preparations for war, they would build storage facilities for their oil and rare minerals. I don't know the costs of storage of ton of oil per year in the 30's, but it is probably higher than the costs of not having oil stocks when the war starts.Simon_Jester wrote:Was it practical for them to stockpile such a large amount? Did suitable tankage and distribution infrastructure exist? Germany's peacetime oil consumption was 44 million barrels per year, or roughly seven million tons. You're talking about them storing a quantity equivalent to several years of their peacetime oil consumption. And presumably not all in one or two very large facilities, either, because such facilities would then be painfully vulnerable to enemy bombing raids.Iosef Cross wrote:About? Well, the fact that the US produced 130 million tons of oil per year during the years before WW2, while for Germany a few tens of million tons of oil in stock by the start of WW2 would make a large difference.Simon_Jester wrote:First, a specific claim you made, Iosef.Could you please show me some figures?
They could certainly have stored some oil for the war.Could they do that?
Today the US has over 700 million barrels in stock. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strategic_ ... um_Reserve. Japan has nearly 600 million.
Considering that Germany was planning in making war agaisnt the Allies with had nearly the entire oil reserves in the world, they certainly should have stocked some oil.
Ah. So if the Saudi fields suddenly relocated to the Black Forest in the 1930s, then the Germans could beat Russia in 1941. Somehow, I fail to see how this is more plausible than the Russians all spontaneously deciding to commit suicide.[/quote]If you understood what I said you would see that I said that if Germany had 1944 war production levels in 1940 and 1941, then they could have defeated the USSR in 1941. I also said that they probably couldn't have 1944 production levels in these years. And that they wouldn't have the fuel to use the additional equipment as well. So I was assuming away these factors."If Germany manages to defeat the USSR in 1941..."How? Does this plan involve Soviet commissars shooting every single Russian and then shooting themselves? Because if the USSR doesn't conveniently commit suicide, there's no way for the German army to knock them out of the war in 1941. They might have gotten a little farther than they did, but you yourself point out that they couldn't have delivered much more in the way of firepower (tanks, planes, etc.) to the front than they did historically. Better tactics would not have gotten them much farther.
If the Germans build a large fuel reserve in peacetime. That would be more plausible than collective suicide.
What makes you think they could do this? Even with nigh-unlimited supplies of fuel from God, the Germans would still be faced with the same problem with captured Soviet rail infrastructure. How would they support an army powerful enough to overwhelm the Soviet forces facing them in the way you describe?Also, you should note that every kilometer advanced by the Germans would reduce the manpower base of the USSR, and make then weaker in the war of attrition. While it is true that it would be impossible to any army to occupy the 20 million square kilometers of the USSR, to defeat the USSR would mean to make an armistice were the USSR gives to the Nazis most of their European lands. That could be done if they managed to occupy Moscow and Leningrad, advance further and inflict perhaps 2 million extra casualties on the Red Army in 1941.
Also, the "two million casualties" figure you throw about so lightly is roughly half the total casualties the Soviets already suffered during 1941, a year of total military disaster for them, as it is!
How would greater tank production help them cause such massive Soviet losses while avoiding getting tied down in battles of annihilation that delay them and render them unable to capture key cities?[/quote]
Well, I think that the main reason why the Germans failed to defeat the USSR was that the USSR could supply replacements at a faster rate that the Germans could inflict casualties. Between June 1941 and January 1942, they lost 4.4 million men (you have already provided a source). However, their frontline strength increased from 2.7 million in June to 4.2 million in December (source: Glantz, When Titans Clashed, page 301).
Since German production of heavy artillery rounds was 4 times higher in 1944 than in 1941 (source: The German War Economy, Nicolas Kaldor, 1946) and the bulk of casualties were inflicted by artillery, by having several times the supply of artillery ammunition and guns, they could certainly increase the rate that they inflicted casualties. I think that a 50% increase in casualty infliction is feasible, given a quadrupling in supply of ammo and guns.
This is disingenuous. You implied great increases in speed, enough to allow them to begin rapid production of advanced weapons by 1945-46, when many of the weapons in question hadn't even reached the prototype stage and still had crippling engineering weaknesses at that time historically.If they managed to defeat the USSR in 1941, they would have 4-5 years for the added funds to make a difference in research.
You are making a fallacy here, while it is true that they couldn't linearly accelerate research by simply increasing the funds available (i.e. double the speed of research by doubling the money), this doesn't imply that money won't make any difference.
They already had every available brain working on these problems, and many of the projects in question (like the V-weapons) had priority over other war production as it was. How would freeing up funds and resources from things like tank production help?[/quote]
The manhattan project involved the construction of major industrial projects. They even build the largest building in the world to make the enriched uranium needed. The millions of workers released from the eastern front would surely increase the resources available for the construction of the industrial plants to build nuclear bombs.
Aah. I see. I misunderstood.I said that they could START a serious nuclear program in 1942. You clearly didn't even try to understand that.2) Even if the German nuclear program was not led by idiots (it was), your assertion that they could have a bomb in 1942 is completely laughable.
The fact is that you would want for me to say something as stupid as that while at the same time considering anything said by the user with the label "Iosef Cross" to be wrong and making the most uncharitable interpretation possible of my points.
Instead of making the insane claim that the Germans could have a bomb in 1942, you merely made the irrelevant claim that they could have started a bomb program in 1942. They surely could have; in fact, they did have one at that date It was a complete cluster-fuck.[/quote]
Hitler didn't believe that nuclear bombs would work because he though that nuclear physics was "Jewish physics". They gave priority for programs like the V-2, because these programs weren't based on Jewish physics. Actually, with the surplus resources from the lack of an massive front like the eastern front, resources could be used to supply marginal programs like the nuclear program.
1- The countries that Germany occupied by 1941 had produced 65% of the nobel prize winners of 1918-1938 in physics, chemistry and medicine (source: just look at the nobel prize site). By 1941, Germany probably controlled greater intellectual resources than the US. Though the fact that the Nazi state was a total disaster for scientific research would help to decrease the difference. Also, the GDP of the German dominated area was a little greater than that of the US, second to estimates for 1928 and 1938 (source: http://www.ggdc.net/maddison/Historical ... 2-2010.xls), thought it decreased during the war while US GDP increased. With the supply of natural resources from conquered parts of the USSR, Western Europe's economy wouldn't suffer like it did during WW2, and their GDP would probably increase rather than decrease.And in that case, the relevant point for you was not "...starting in late 1941, early 1942. Over 3 years before the first American nuke is tested." That's what misled me, because it made me think you thought it somehow mattered that this would be happening before the Trinity test. It wouldn't, if all you meant was that the program started at that date... because the relevant point wasn't "over three years before the first American nuke is tested." It's "No earlier than the American nuclear program began." And since the German program would be less competently led and staffed, in a country with fewer assets, that was still being bombed at the time from Britain... they're still not going to be the ones to build the bomb first. Or even a close second.
2- Strategic bombing before 1943, was insignificant. German bombing of Britain before Barbarossa was greater than British bombing of Germany in 1941 and 1942. If they manage to make peace with USSR by december, they will focus in the Luftwaffe, increasing their strength agaisnt enemy bombing raids. Hence, the allies will have a very hard time in trying to disrupt the German research programs though bombing.