IRG CommandoJoe wrote:If the US was totally neutral, wouldn't the embargo on Japan never have existed? If this is so, wouldn't Japan have helped Germany conquer Russia?
After certain events in 1939 in the form of the end of a string of defeats of the Japanses by the Russians, the Japanese army would not consider attacking Russia seriously. There was little of value to capture, and defeat would be near certain . Plus it would have absorbed all remaining Japanese troop reserves and then some. That would make a sweep to the south impossible.
Imagine the Russians trying to fight a two-front ground war without US support, plus having to defend themselves from the IJN.
The Japanese navy is worth precisely nothing in an invasion of Manchuria. The only port of significance, Vladivostok, is too heavily defended to be attacked directly. Shooting it out with the 150 costal guns, including several multiple turreted 305mm batteries and 14 inch railway guns, is not going to be much fun. And it's close enough to the boarder that amphibious out flanking operations would have little value.
The IJA meanwhile is stuck with the weapons of WW1, though with nothing like the concentration of artillery and other heavy weapons, fighting against often tank heavy Russian forces equipped with superior weapons and equipment in every category, and far more of them. Did I mention how badly the terrain sucks for an invasion?
I'm surprised no one brought this up...or is there something really obvious I'm missing?
See above.
"This cult of special forces is as sensible as to form a Royal Corps of Tree Climbers and say that no soldier who does not wear its green hat with a bunch of oak leaves stuck in it should be expected to climb a tree"
— Field Marshal William Slim 1956