WWII Historical References

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Happycat
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Re: Free Download of a Classic Book

Post by Happycat »

StevenCarleton wrote:"The Rise and Fall of the Luftwaffe - The Life of Field Marshal Erhard Milch" - David Irving

Wow, I can't believe they made this available as a PDF!
http://www.fpp.co.uk/books/Milch/Milch.pdf

WW2 buffs sometimes wonder why the Luftwaffe collapsed so quickly in the last two years of the war.
After reading this you'll wonder how, under Goering's leadership, the Luftwaffe got anything right at all!
Milch was a sort of Chief of Staff under His Majesty Goering.
This well-researched text also describes the roles of Speer, Galland, Udet, etc.
Thanks for posting this. In addition to Irving's book about Milch, there are several other Irving books available on the same site, also for FREE. I have in the past read several of them, and no matter what you think of David Irving and some of his more controversial statements, his approach to history is very sound and always entertaining.

Here is the root URL for the rest of the books: http://www.fpp.co.uk/books/
Chance favours the prepared mind.
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He enlisted because he loved his country and felt himself to be a patriot. He enlisted because he admired and respected the country's leader
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Post by rkr1958 »

Vaagso (Norway) Raid: Ch. 3. Commando Operations

I was watching an episode of World War II in Color on the Military Channel last night, which included a discussion of the formation and employment of the British Commandos as a means to bring the war to Germany after the fall of France.
pps 9-10 wrote:The term [commandos] was first used by the Boer guerrillas in South Africa. The Boer commando units consisted of field cornetcies (150 to 200 men), v/hich were subdivided into corporalships of about 25 men. The Boer units were loosely organized and disciplined. They were irregular guerrillas in the traditional sense of the term, depending on nationalism and the ineptitude of the British for success. Both were available in abundant supply. Their World War II counterparts were just the opposite. The men of Combined Operations were professional soldiers, picked from the Independent Companies that had been raised for the Norwegian expedition and from volunteers. They were subject to military discipline and training, which, if unorthodox, was still of a professional military caliber. ] They qualified as guerrillas only in the sense of professionals fighting la petite guerre or kleinkreig ("little war"), a conflict or strategy waged within the scope of a larger conflict or strategy. The commandos of World War II were a product of both traditional skirmishing tactics and modern technology. The hybrid was created for the purpose of striking back at the Germans. Raiding was one meâns of doing this. An army does not have to do things in a big way to hurt the enemy; anything that drains the enemy's resources is justifiable military action. Temporary occupation of enemy territory, such as Churchill envisioned, is one way. Even less
ambitious raid can cause the enemy more loss than he inflicts, hurting him both materially and psychologically. This application of "little war" can also drain and overextend his resources. In 1940 raiding was one of the few options open to Britain for bringing military force to bear against the enemy. This was to be done initially by ten commando units (35 officers and 500 men each), ten troops of 50 men to a commando [unit].
Commando operations in Norway by Simon Orchard provides a nice summary of the 10 commando operations that the UK, Canadians and Norwegians took against German forces in Norway. 4 of 10 of these operations involved significant number of commando raiders (i.e., 800, 1500, 800 & 300 men). I thought I had remember from the WW-II in Color episode that Germany stationed 250,000 men in Norway throughout the war. In searching to try to confirm this number I found an article on Norway's liberation that puts that number at 360,000 to 400,000. Specifically,
It was widely feared that the war would end differently. Such apprehensions had a basis in arithmetic - the Germans had a huge concentration of armed forces on Norwegian soil. As many as 400,000 men- members of the German army, navy and air force - were stationed in Norway and when the Third Reich's collapse drew near, there were still 360,000 enemy troops in the country.
Regardless, British and Canadian commando operations supported by Norwegian resistance fighters caused Hitler significant grief. Enough grief for him to station 5 to 7 corps worth of troops there for the entire way and, from British Commandos,
"In October 1942 Hitler issued his famous "Commando Order," which called for the execution of all Allied commandos and paratroopers captured by the German Army. Failure to obey this order was punishable by court-martial. No specific penalty was specified, but disobeying the order amounted to disobeying a direct order from the commander-in-chief. It was obeyed in all theaters except North Africa, where Rommel was the commander. The members of these special forces were entitled to full rights as prisoners of war by the Prisoner of War Convention of 1929, and a number of Germans who obeyed the order faced war crimes charges at the end of the war. Hitler's order amounted to an official German recognition of the commandos and their potential to damage the German cause. The commandos were quick to realize this."
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Post by rkr1958 »

Airborne Operations During World War II

A very nice summary of airborne operations undertaken during WW-II.
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Post by rkr1958 »

Here's another interesting article that I dug on airborne operations in WW-II.

AIRBORNE OPERATIONS: A German Appraisal
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Post by rkr1958 »

Battle of Cape Matapan: World War II Italian Naval Massacre
Pola, dead in the water, was witness to the catastrophe that befell her sister ships. Resigned to their fate, Pola's crew abandoned all discipline. British sailors boarding Pola after the battle found empty wine bottles and drunken sailors.
:D
While Taranto may have been a tremendous psychological defeat, Matapan was the military defeat that finished the Italian navy. The next time the Italian fleet came out in force was two years later, to surrender to Admiral Cunningham at Malta.
Admiral Cunningham and HMS Illustrious in Malta During World War II
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Post by rkr1958 »

Battle of Crete: It Began with Germany's Airborne Invasion -- Operation Mercury
It was a foregone conclusion that the Germans would target the big island next. Britain's presence there gave the Allies an invaluable base for their air and sea fleets to threaten supplies and reinforcements destined for Axis forces in North Africa. Royal Air Force bombers based on Crete could also reach the vital Romanian oil fields, which fueled the German war machine, and Crete might even provide a staging area for an Allied invasion of Southern Europe.
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Post by rkr1958 »

Operation Bagration: Soviet Offensive of 1944
Many German and Soviet accounts agree that Operation Bagration was Hitler’s worst military setback of the war. But the offensive lacked a single, dramatic focal point, such as at Stalingrad, and the commanders and place names sound strange to Western ears. For those reasons, the operation was never acknowledged in the West to the same degree as any number of smaller campaigns — such as Overlord, the Ardennes Offensive, the Torch landings in Africa or Operation Husky in Sicily. Given the massive waves of soldiers and tanks that Stalin mustered for the offensive and marked improvements in Soviet war-fighting capabilities — Stavka’s successful deception campaign, the effective use of partisans, improved infantry-armor tactics and superior weaponry such as the Shturmovik ground-attack plane and the T-34 medium tank — it is an unfortunate omission. Nevertheless, Bagration, combined with the Lwow-Sandomierz offensive in the Ukraine, dramatically turned the tide of war against the Third Reich.
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Post by StevenCarleton »

I saw an episode of WWII in Color on the Military Channel where they suggested the Soviet summer offensive was such a crushing defeat for the Germans that the Red Army could've taken Berlin in 1944. Instead, Stalin halted his forces east of Warsaw and began an offensive in the Balkans, insuring that the Soviets would control all of Eastern Europe before the Nazis surrendered.
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Post by rkr1958 »

StevenCarleton wrote:I saw an episode of WWII in Color on the Military Channel where they suggested the Soviet summer offensive was such a crushing defeat for the Germans that the Red Army could've taken Berlin in 1944. Instead, Stalin halted his forces east of Warsaw and began an offensive in the Balkans, insuring that the Soviets would control all of Eastern Europe before the Nazis surrendered.
Also, the pause outside of Warsaw allowed the Nazi's to crush the pro-western partisans there who had rose up and gained control of the city. This ensured that Stalin could effectively install a pro-Soviet government.
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Post by rkr1958 »

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Post by PionUrpo »

Here's something about Balkan partisans.

http://www.history.army.mil/books/wwii/ ... BALKAN.HTM
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Major General Cota and the Battle of the Huertgen Forest

Post by rkr1958 »

Major General Cota and the Battle of the Huertgen Forest: A Failure of Battle Command?
The Battle of the Huertgen Forest began in September 1944 and culminated in mid-February 1945. It lasted nearly five months and it cost the U.S. Army more than 34,000 casualties.i It has largely been forgotten for the past sixty years for several reasons. One, it was one of the bloodiest and most disastrous campaigns the U. S. Army conducted in the Second World War. Two, its beginning was eclipsed by both Field Marshal Montgomery’s Operation Market-Garden, whose final objective was to capture a bridge over the Rhine at Arnhem, and the German’s surprise attack in mid-December through the Ardennes. What followed was the “Battle of the Bulge”. This hard fought and well earned allied victory overshadowed the debacle that was occurring less than twenty miles to the north of the Ardennes. Operation Market-Garden and the ‘Battle of the Bulge’ are two of the most documented and written about battles in history, ensuring that they will never be forgotten by present and future generations.
Reading through this give you feel that weather plays in combat and that, I think, we've captured that impact correctly in GS.
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