A continent that Germany will be in near control over. Britain can't compete with that. Therefore, Germany will have more industrial power at its fingertips.No,this is what I was talking about. Specific text highlighted.
Because I would think that attacking Japan means attacking anything owned by Japan.Why didn't you say Japanese assets, then? There's a bigdifference.
Say it with me now, FORMOSA!The Germans would be operating at extreme dis-advantage, yes. But the Japanese would be operating at extreme range for their ships, even being that much closer to home.
That would take time and there's still no way it can accomidate a fleet of the magnitude Germany will be forced to send.Beyond the range of some their ships, even. While the Germans are dealing with a great deal more, this is no walk in the park for the Japanese, either. Dar-es-Salaam may be to far away for a damaged ship to make, and it may be very primitive at the beginning of this, but if the Germans are going to try for Indochina, they would be building it up with every scrap of resource they can. It would be beyond stupid to try this without biulding it up somewhat before the fleet even leaves Germany.
Japan will obviously need to develop long-range subs, just like Germany did when faced with the same situation. And still, Japanese convoys will be far out of Germany's way.The Japanese would need to provide escorts with a comparable range to the ships they're escorting, don't you think? Escort in this case would more than likely comprise their armored cruisers. You do know that gunnery ranges far exceed torpedo ranges, that any ships the Germans send east would be faster than those armored cruisers, and that torpedo engagement would be next to impossible. The faster ship sets the range of an engagement. If the Japanese escort with their few light cruisers, they're toast.
At the outbreak of war Japan had TWO modern destroyers, the rest were turn of the century anachronisms, with, at best, HALF the range needed. If the Germans attack Japanese convoys, it will be armored cruiser vs battlecruiser, battleship, or armored cruiser. Far beyond torpedo range. Torpedoes are not a threat, unless the ships being targeted are slower, or cannot run, or are surprised.
Why?Then we have a repeat of Port Arthur with the Japanese being the ones blockaded, possibly.
FORMOSA, not to mention Indochina.Fuel limited all nation's naval operations at this time, with the possible exception of Britain. Yokosuka is 2400 miles from Saigon. The Japanese will also be burning the fuel stores they have onshore at a prodigious rate, nothing to dismiss.
Perhaps, but it won't be hard sinking ships from the vast supply horde.Getting them on target is the question, though, now isn't it?
Weren't those during night encounters? Regardless, a destroyer is far more visible and prone to take fire than a sub.I have shown that. Several posts ago. The British had NINETY modern destroyers at Jutland, modern destroyers. They achieved two torpedo hits on capitol ships.
Then they build some subs, just like Germany.Japan, if they refit and force every TB they have, can get, at MOST, 40 TBs to sea. And that's including antiques from the early-mid 1890s that no one in their right mind would even contemplate using in 1914. The two modern destroyers and various older craft are not a significant threat. Japan had no effective submarines at this time, either.
Ok then.If the Germans could get passage for troopships through the Suez Canal, they might be at danger, yes.
Without the success against British armored cruisers that the U 9 had, it's not impossible that the French wouldn't even try this. Then again, if they're deperate, they could.
True, but so is extreme strain where the ship is forced to operate at routes over quadruple the length of their normal ones. Converting ships never really amounted to more than stripping out the furnishings and installing bunks, I don't see why the Germans would pay to refit their vessles before sending them off.Leaving a piece of machinery to lie unused, unmaintained, for a couple years, is very destructive.
The Germans would be converting their own ship, fresh, and quite possibly by the same people who built her.
Well first the light cruisers have to make it to the Pacific and be in a position to resupply from vulnerable merchantmen. As for converted liners, none that I've come across really did anything special. I am limited to knowledge of Atlantic liners, I admit.Germany's most effective commerce raiders were light cruisers, and a few converted merchantmen achieved moderate success, too.
They can get resources from China far more easily than the Germans can get resources from anywhere else.As to having more sea to hide in, the Japanese can't go too far out of their way, they have their own fuel stuation to think about, and you can't sail half way around the world just because you might run into an enemy ship. Wildly impractical, compared to the possible risks.
I noted that I forgot about their fleet. Still, where do the supply ships get their supplies from?The German merchant marine being free of the blockade is what I base my ENTIRE argument on.
Without the merchant ships being there for support, I would have no argument.
In the real WWI, even with the blockade, the merchant fleet played a partial role. Without that little contribution, what Germany did achieve at sea would have been impossible. With their entire resouces.....see my point?
1) RightYou dressed a link with a comment.
You were apparently trying to prove that the Japanese, by taking German possessions during WWI, were a major threat and that their performance in WWI supported you in this.
I replied to that, and in your own reply to that, you edited out the comment in the link.
2) Right
3) Wrong, or at least I did unintentionally. When I quote, I copy and paste. I figured anyone who wanted the link could go get it.