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antfreire wrote:genstab wrote:Guderian was against it. He tried to warn Hitler of Russia's tank production but Hitler didn't believe him. He later admitted to Guderian that if he'd known the figures were true he wouldn't have invaded.
Best regards,
Bill in Cleveland (OH)
In what year did Guderian expressed that concern?. Un 1940 and 1941 the tank production figures of URSS were not impressive at all. It was after they began to receive the help in steel, aluminum, engines, and other vehicles that they could concentrate in the manufacturing of tanks almost exclusively. Had the germans been able to end the war in Dec 41 no one would have ever known of the "great tanks manufacturing abilities" of Russia.



There is a short movie of a discussion between Hitler and marshal Mannerheim , toward the end of 41


tomar wrote:Just wondering which german high ranking officers were againts the war with the USSR. Was it a significant number, or a very small minotiry ?


Qvist wrote:Well, I think it is a much too simple assumption that they ought to have known better.
Qvist wrote: Looked at from the vantage point of 1940/41, the arguments in favor of Barbarossa are fairly strong.
Qvist wrote:And ultimately, knowing that there's a lot of things you don't know about the Soviet Union isn't a better argument for inaction than for any other course of action.

I disagree strongly. The study of Military Science was well established with well versed and well studied professionals in the military and the diplomatic corps of all the belligerents. It may not be what we have today but there was plenty of knowledge and case history.
I disagree strongly. To think that Germany could attack and occupy the land mass they sought to enslave is mind boggling. And at the same time they were also engaged in a hostile occupation of Western Europe and Scandinavia, and still pursuing a war with a World Power, Great Britain. I don't think it is 20/20 hindsight to say that it is mind blowing arrogance.
I disagree strongly. It wasn't an agrument for inaction. The equation wasn't 'attack or be attacked', there were other options including strategic defense, diplomacy and politics.


Qvist wrote:I disagree strongly. The study of Military Science was well established with well versed and well studied professionals in the military and the diplomatic corps of all the belligerents. It may not be what we have today but there was plenty of knowledge and case history.
So, what do you think that is most likely to show? That all this expertise mysteriously capitulated in the face of a nonsensical scheme, or that there were in fact arguments for Barbarossa that has not so far occurred to you?
Qvist wrote:I disagree strongly. To think that Germany could attack and occupy the land mass they sought to enslave is mind boggling. And at the same time they were also engaged in a hostile occupation of Western Europe and Scandinavia, and still pursuing a war with a World Power, Great Britain. I don't think it is 20/20 hindsight to say that it is mind blowing arrogance.
I think that's an extremely superficial analysis, which I frankly doubt has been arrived at as a result of a careful and in-depth consideration of all pertinent factors. If anything is "mindblowing arrogance", it's your assumption that only foolishness can explain a course of action that does not immediately commend itself to you.
Qvist wrote:I disagree strongly. It wasn't an agrument for inaction. The equation wasn't 'attack or be attacked', there were other options including strategic defense, diplomacy and politics.
The point is that it is not the case that the absence of adequate knowledge is automatically and unequivocally a prohibitive argument against embarking on a campaign in the East.
Qvist wrote: It represents an element of risk, but there are always risks.
Qvist wrote:Secondly, you overlook that alternative courses of action were arguably equally plagued by similar insecurities. The same lack of knowledge, for instance, made it equally hazardous to assess what level of threat the USSR might come to represent if it was not attacked.

Graeme Sydney wrote:My broad argument was that it was ignoring risk rather than risk taking or risk management.



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