Sorry proline, but I have to chew you out on several points.
And I would be hard pressed to see how having hundreds of thousands of soldiers- even if often lacking- was a weakness.
proline wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2019 5:48 am
1) They weren't great in Spain even against an opponent that lacked the training and equipment they had
False.
I mean, everybody really remembers Guadalajara- and with good reason- but most people don't remember Malaga, Santander, Teurel, the riposte to the Ebro offensive, and so on.
Italian troops were on the whole above average- and even sought after- units compared to most others (including the veteran Spanish Nationalist ones) and were rarely defeated even given some of the lingering trouble.
proline wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2019 5:48 am
2) They did terribly in France
Agreed, but as someone else noted there were major extenuating circumstances, and even the oh so famed Germans had great trouble in both WWI and WWII with similar terrain (anybody remember the Battle of Mount Grappa? Anyone?).
proline wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2019 5:48 am
3) They lost their navy to a handful of biplanes
They lost their navy to the most powerful navy on the planet, including carrier based biplanes with torpedoes... and advanced destroyers and battleships with radar and night-fighting equipment that preyed upon the Italian Navy's lack of resources.
proline wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2019 5:48 am
4) They lost to Albania and Greece who had minimal support from the UK. They had to get bailed out by Germany which may have weakened Germany for Barbarossa
Sorry, but the only remotely accurately true thing here is the "minimal support from the UK" and maybe the "weakened Germany for Barbarossa" (if only because having lots of troops get killed or captured weakens any force).
But the Greeks NEVER Took Albania, only parts of it on the Greek-Albanian Border. And to be fair they had never cared much about it. They repulsed the Italian invasion (often against great odds), and having done so they then did try to counterattack into Albania.
But a steady stream of reinforcements, better equipment, and Cavallero's reorganization saw Greek attempts to break through blunted and even repulsed. Which was quite bad for Greece because it had dispatched most of its military strength to the border, hollowing out its positions elsewhere (like on the Metaxes Line with Bulgaria). Which would've made a Bulgarian and/or Turkish entry into the war alone dangerous, nevertheless a German one.
So Italy was on a trajectory to win the war- even if very gradually and inefficiently- before the Germans came in (buoyed- AGAIN- by the fact that the Greeks had pulled their forces away from where the Germans would attack).
As for Barbarossa, probably not. The timeline for Barbarossa was always going to be delayed by the late spring in 1941 and other logistical problems.
proline wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2019 5:48 am5) They lost much of Libya despite much larger forces and needed to get bailed out again tying up even more German forces
True.
proline wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2019 5:48 am6) They lost all their colonies in East Africa
True.
proline wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2019 5:48 am7) They couldn't protect the German flanks leading to the surround at Stalingrad
The REASON they couldn't protect the German flanks leading to Stalingrad was because of Army Group B's insanely overextended and undersupplied situation, resulting in EVERYBODY getting below average and inadequate reinforcements and support. Why?
Thank Halder and the OKW.
And that failure was by no means Italian exclusively. As someone else pointed out, the Hungarian and Romanian sectors (which had similar problems) collapsed first, with the Italian Expeditionary Force being one of the few to get even a *sizable* portion of its forces out.
And ultimately this problem was due to the German operational command's inability to properly manage reinforcements or provide for adequate flank security. Blaming "Muh Italian Weakness" holding back the superior German soldier is utterly unjustified and stupid in this case.
proline wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2019 5:48 am8 They switched sides, then did what they did best which is beg for help this time from the west since they sure as hell couldn't protect themselves from Germany even on home turf
This is painfully true, but primarily came down due to a couple major problems.
Firstly, the Germans were ALREADY ON Their home turf. Italian positions and units- whether in Italy proper or elsewhere like Southern France or the Aegean or Romania- were generally blanketed by German units or those of other loyal allies like Bulgaria and Romania. Indeed, Kesselring was fighting the Western Allied breakout attempts at Salerno when he received word of what happened, so he pulled his rear units around ad started crushing them.
Secondly: Badoglio's orders were utterly garbage, coordinating with NOBODY (least of all their new allies) nor giving adequate warning or orders to their own troops to actually resist, meaning that even in the cases where units would be capable of fighting off the Germans if properly notified, they were not.
proline wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2019 5:48 amAnd yes, we know they did ok in Africa when Rommel was running things.
Sorry, but no.
You ever hear of Giovanni Messe? The Italian Rommel?
The guy who was actually in charge for most of the Tunisian Campaign and who did such a spectacular job that the Western Allies- even with Enigma and other cryptographical info- *didn't know Rommel had left?*
(Ironically they might've been able to know if they understood the signs. The last major act of Rommel in Africa was the foolhardy attack by unsupported armor over the flat terrain at Medenine, which got spanked hard. Messe didn't make the same kind of mistake.)
proline wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2019 5:48 amAnd they got some early victories against Russia while Russia was very weak.
And later, unto mid war.
proline wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2019 5:48 amAnd they put on some resistance in Sicily.
And Italy and elsewhere.
proline wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2019 5:48 amThe trouble is overall they had only small amounts of modern tech
Not really. The problem was that they didn't keep up with the cutting edge of tech as it move.d
proline wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2019 5:48 am and they weren't very mechanized or mobile.
True.
proline wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2019 5:48 am There is no faction they could beat unless they had overwhelming advantages or got really lucky, not even minor ones like Ethiopia or Greece.
Eh what?
I'm sorry, but this is just stupid. And flatly false.
Spanish Republicans.
Ethiopia (See: the Christmas Offensive's collapse).
Albania
YUGOSLAVIA (big time).
Greece
Britain (esp. in East Africa and in wafare with an in depth defense).
and the Soviet Union.
Yes. The Italian Military was certainly dubious in many things, chief among them leadership, and support from allies (especially their main ally, Germany). Their performance is FAR from the best recorded here. But there's a difference between acknowledging this and arguing they couldn't do much of anything except run to daddy Rommel (while ignoring the times that Daddy Rommel $hat the bed by depreciating their qualities unjustly- even after he had his command staff wiped out by them in WWI- while doing stuff like sending the Ariete to attack over utterly defensible ground with the British waiting or how Daddy Halder and Hitler left them unsupported out on the flanks with no reserves and even the German formations in Stalingrad being screwed for reinforcements).
Especially since if the player does anything right, they will solve perhaps the single greatest flaw they had. Incompetent and inadequate leadership.