Sicily was a short ferry ride to the Italian mainland, which is why most of the Italians and Germans got away easily in the first place in the real Husky. Moreover, do you know how many Panzer Divisions they shipped in 1944 from the East Front all the way to Normandy? None!Simon_Jester wrote:Perhaps. Although I must note that Sicily is an island, limited in size by its very nature. There are only so many places on the island to park soldiers, and new soldiers cannot be easily shipped in once the island is heavily invested by enemy air and naval forces. So once you know how many soldiers are physically standing in Sicily, you know all that really matters- the theater of operations can be isolated from enemy reinforcement.
And again, Normandy '43 was not about liberating all of France. It was about securing Normandy and Cherbourg. Even if the Germans pile 60 Divisions just outside the bocage it doesn't really help them - they're charging into a narrow front that's bocage defensive terrain, and as they get near the beaches they get hit with progressively heavier air and naval attack (if they get that far). France may not be liberated that year, but the chances of the Allies being pushed out of Normandy entirely are almost nil and in the meantime those 60 Divisions are gonna be missed everywhere else.
It took the Allies two months in 1944 to clear the Bocage, and that's with the Germans having seven Panzer Divisions around Caen. The 1943 naysayers keep assuming that the Germans, who somehow conjure 7 Panzer Divisions from the East, can push back the Allies over the exact same defensive ground that gave the British and Americans so much grief in 1944? Heck, every time the Panzers even tried a counter-attack in the real 1944 invasion it turned into a fiasco. Panzer Lehr for instance lost a quarter of its tanks in a single day trying to attack the Americans in the St Lo sector!
By contrast, the Germans could just leave a Division or two to hold up entire Corps in the Italian front precisely because Italy is not wide open country like the France south of Normandy.
Yes, and I'm saying 1) is uncontestably true. The only reason it didn't push through was British politicking.Again, we must separate the two claims:
1) A 1943 Normandy attack would probably have worked, and
2) It was foolish not to launch such an attack.
These are logically distinct claims. Being worried about a German counterattack was not illogical when the Allies had little or no practical experience with successful amphibious assaults.
Remember, the most recent historically relevant example for the Normandy landings in mid-1942 was the Gallipoli Offensive. Or possibly the Dieppe Raid and/or Guadalcanal.
None of which would give the Allies much confidence in being able to get large fighting forces ashore quickly and not only succeed in repelling counterattacks but rapidly 'puff up' their beachhead into a territory that would be defensible in pitched battles against army-scale German formations.
And yes, while Roundup was cancelled in '42 because they didn't have experience doing large-scale amphibious assaults yet other reasons ultimately came into play which were strictly political in nature and are quite retardedly dumb from a military perspective. And most of this can be laid at the feet of the Brits who wanted their silly underbelly strategy that led to the wall known as the Alps.
Had the premise in 1942 been "let's wrap up North Africa then hit Normandy once Torch succeeds" then a '43 invasion was still possible. Again, the start date for planning Husky was Feb 1943. You already had a successful Torch from a couple of months ago to show that it can be done.
The Soviets launched Bagration within days of D-day, and to be blunt I don't think they particularly cared that D-day was on June 6th; all they went with was "Allies are gonna land in France sometime in June" and were ready to launch Bagration regardless if it happened or not. If you're gonna pussy-foot an offensive depending on whether or not your co-belligerent is going to be fighting at the same time as you; then you're just confirming the Soviet perspective that the Western Allies weren't serious at all about invading France (which was Dunn's ultimate position)You don't need a psychic to know there will be heavy fighting on the Eastern Front in the late spring and early summer of 1943. You do, however, need a psychic to predict the exact timing of a major offensive the enemy hasn't decided to launch yet. Or to know in advance whether the enemy will have to commit literally their entire reserve... or whether there will be some left over to drop a few inconveniently placed panzer divisions and several divisions of infantry into the area you plan to invade, a few months before the invasion arrives.
You can't just shift tens of thousands of troops with a wave of a wand. It takes weeks, moreso in 1943 with the Wermacht much deeper in the Soviet Union.
It was unwise compared to the way the US army was built from the ground up. It was a motorized tank/infantry army, that wants to fight mechanized battles against the Germans in France. Churchill wanted it to go crawl up Italy and then bang its head against the Alps.So your argument is that Churchill's ideas for how to employ the US army were unwise in light of the composition and doctrine of the US army. Right?
In mid '42 a case can be made against Round-up, certainly. But the problem again is that mid '42 is very different from February 1943, which was the date when Normandy '43 was finally put to bed permanently. By 1943 it was clear that the Axis were on the wane - Torch had gotten off without a hitch and the Afrika Korp's days were numbered. Stalingrad had already happened. Japan had lost Midway and Guadalcanal.My perception is that the decision not to launch Roundup was made because it was seen as a major gamble, which at the time was not supported by much if any experience. This was before Stalingrad, before Torch, before victory at Guadalcanal- hell, Rommel was still an active threat in North Africa at the time the decision to focus on the Med in 1943 was made...
Meanwhile, the US Army was all ready to go and fight a decisive battle despite having minimal experience in direct combat with the enemy... while the British, accustomed to fighting effectively alone, had been doing literally nothing but nibble at the periphery for the past two to three years.
For two allied combatants in a strategy session to advocate different approaches in light of such wildly different types and degrees of war experience is... hardly surprising or foolish.
And in any case if the issue was more invasion jitters then the answer wasn't to do more "rehearsal" invasions in Sicily and Italy. The US Army was ultimately a mechanized force. So were the Brits. The only real rehearsals that would have mattered were further raids and invasions in France itself, not along the useless peripheries.
But because of British politicking - wanting to secure Balkans and such and Churchill thinking he's Wellington - you instead get a mechanized army trying to trudge up a mountain and Churchill making snarky comments wondering why the going was so slow. British strategy was simply plainly wrong to begin with.