Actually I just thought the topic was deleted.
BTW, your overusing the word "troll" doesn't make any sence. I'm not a troll, as I already said. If you consider everyone uncomfortable with "good american policies", too bad. The topic is not in HoS. See Darth Wong's comment on flamewars.
Vympel
It was a necessary evil, securing the threat from Reich, in Stalin's eyes, until the USSR was more ready to meet it.
Agree.
Cpt_Frank
The funny thing about the long-range bombers is that there were several prototype models ready for serial production and service by 1942 but they weren't built since Göring underestimated their importance.
Yeah, right. That's exactly the same case as with the fleet: how good Bismarck may have been, Hitler underestimated the importance of a surface fleet and had the Battle for Atlantic won by the enemy.
MKSheppard
Yeah... I ever wonder, why?
How about "very very hard", as most of the Red Army's motorized and mechanized forces came from US supplied trucks and half-tracks?
How about the year you provide? Was it an error or I really saw "1945"?
Lend-lease aircraft amounted to 18% of all aircraft in the Soviet air forces, 20% of all bombers, and 16-23% of all fighters (numbers vary depending on calculation methods), and 29% of all naval aircraft.
Useless supplies like "naval aircraft" are a point. Having a puny navy, USSR would turn the tide by using naval aircraft? Don't make me laugh. Actually, I never heard that aircraft war was somewhere
near to being decisive. So just consider the fact: giving supplies which are useless in spite of Germany's way of waging war is at least strange.
The Dark
The bombing of Berlin in 1940 forced Hitler to keep major portions of the Luftwaffe back in defense.
Oh yes. I wonder who destroyed soviet planes in 1941
Keep the dates in the right order, and it'll be okay, see?
British carrier aircraft destroyed the Italian fleet in Taranto, allowing the Black Sea Fleet to survive
You think naval things were somewhat
important for USSR? Geeh.
is to slight the memories of the 160,000 aircrew who died bombing German war machines.
Please, we're not talking about honour, valor or things alike. We're talking about
effect. I'm sorry, but before late 1943 the Allied bombing had little effect, no matter how valiant were the pilots. And even after that, despite the horrible decrease in chemical production, Germany
doubled the production of fighter craft in 1944. Oh. So effective.
By ours, the Western Allies were important in retarding Germany's war industry
Check the dates. 1941-1945 vs. 1944-1945.
as the Soviets attacked only after the Hiroshima bomb was dropped and Stalin tried to grab as much land as possible before Japan surrendered to the US
Of course he did. And I never consider the total destruction of the Kwantun army anything special. It's so puny in comparison to war with Germany.
That's why German U-Boats carried airplane plans to Japan and brought supplies back.
Please, read Liddel Gart. His book is called "World War II". Poor cooperation between G. and J. U-boot krieg occured in Atlantic. Only several times the Germans sent some U-boots to Japan, and only in the very end of the war.
but there was still some dependence.
Hmm, maybe Japan was dependent on Germany, not the other way round. So what? It even gives more support to me, as war with Germany means something for war with Japan now.
Your people didn't get burnt alive by kamikazes, or undergo torture because they didn't understand how to bow and scrape properly.
You better keep silence. Japanese army was the most ruthless in the world, but neither GULAG nor konzentrationslager were more pleasant for soldiers. Visit Sonnenschmerz. Visit Perm-38. I feel sorry for everyone, but my both homelands suffered most from the war. You dare not to diminish it. The Japanese never ever reached US.
John saw Russian units in Berlin with American equipment. Jack and Bob never saw a Russian at all in the Pacific.
Did I ever
brag about Russians in the Pacific? No. I said it was wholly Allied effort. And about Russian units in Berlin: dude, check YEARS. Dates, you know. 1945. End of war. End of story. Check better if you ever saw Russians in Stalingrad.
HAD NO GUNPOWDER
Oh yes. Russians had shortage of about everything, not only gunpowder. So what? It didn't prevent them defeating Wehrmacht at Moskau, neither it prevented them capturing my grandfather near Volga. Minimal support does not count. Check PQ-17. I wonder why...
Howedar
Agree. Truth has spoken.
Beowulf
Which would have been better, 3 million Japanese causalties and 1 million American, or the citizens of Nagasaki and Hiroshima?
Oh yes. How many millions there were in Nagasaki and Hiroshima? Only 4? And were they all fighting? Or were some of them even UNCAPABLE of fighting? And dude, where did you get that 3 and 1 million figure?