And they likely would have won, in spite of Ultra, had Hitler let his generals do their jobs their own way. Luckily for the world, Hitler was an idiot when acting in the role of general. (Politicians almost always make lousy generals, and vice versa.)Simon_Jester said:Well, Germany was really powerful; historically they took on all the major nations of Europe and came surprisingly close to winning.
Of course, had Hitler let the high ranking Generals run Fall Gelb WW2 may have looked a lot like WW1. There is also pretty good evidence to suggest that Hitler had a much better grasp of the balance of political, logistic and military concerns in Africa then did Rommel.ShadoWarrior said:And they likely would have won, in spite of Ultra, had Hitler let his generals do their jobs their own way. Luckily for the world, Hitler was an idiot when acting in the role of general. (Politicians almost always make lousy generals, and vice versa.)
Hitler did let the generals *begin* that campaign, according to the plan devised by von Manstein. The plan would have worked better if midway through he hadn't overruled Guderian and Rommel and let them crush the Allies at Dunkerque.grendel2 said:Of course, had Hitler let the high ranking Generals run Fall Gelb WW2 may have looked a lot like WW1. There is also pretty good evidence to suggest that Hitler had a much better grasp of the balance of political, logistic and military concerns in Africa then did Rommel.
That was Rommel's view too. He kept pressing the Italians to put supplies into ports closer to the front lines. The Italians did the best they could and were more or less successful.ShadoWarrior said:As for Africa, Hitler was clueless. Had he listened to Rommel and gotten the Italians to seriously commit their naval and air forces to securing the logistical pipeline to North Africa, Rommel would have kicked the UK out of Egypt.
Weellll....ShadoWarrior said:And they likely would have won, in spite of Ultra, had Hitler let his generals do their jobs their own way. Luckily for the world, Hitler was an idiot when acting in the role of general. (Politicians almost always make lousy generals, and vice versa.)
In fairness, there was a fairly good reason not to commit the Panzer forces to the destruction of the Dunkirk pocket.ShadoWarrior said:Hitler did let the generals *begin* that campaign, according to the plan devised by von Manstein. The plan would have worked better if midway through he hadn't overruled Guderian and Rommel and let them crush the Allies at Dunkerque.
Shrug.As for Africa, Hitler was clueless. Had he listened to Rommel and gotten the Italians to seriously commit their naval and air forces to securing the logistical pipeline to North Africa, Rommel would have kicked the UK out of Egypt.
Generals with a knack for mobile warfare and a love of pursuit, such as Rommel and Patton, will always tend to blame supreme command for not getting them the supplies they wanted. That doesn't mean they're right, or that getting them the supplies will produce the results they promise.grendel2 said:That was Rommel's view too. He kept pressing the Italians to put supplies into ports closer to the front lines. The Italians did the best they could and were more or less successful.
Of course they would have done better. They wouldn't have issued conflicting orders, such as pulling panzer divisions out of one portion of the front to send them elsewhere (where they weren't asked for or needed), and then shortly after they arrived at their new sector sent them back to do what they could have accomplished had they been left in place originally, wasting enormously valuable time and scarce fuel. They wouldn't have kept shifting the focus of the campaign back and forth from Leningrad, to Moscow, to Leningrad, to destroying encircled pockets, to Moscow, etc. In short, if you have a plan, and the plan is working (the enemy has not rendered the plan obsolete), and there are no changes you can make to the plan to better accomplish the campaign's goals, then stick to the darn plan, and don't change the goals midstream without sound military reason.Simon_Jester said:It wasn't until the invasion of Russia that Hitler really started making mistakes, and it's not clear that the German High Command would have done much better on their own. They might have, but they might not have.
{snip} Well argued.Simon_Jester said:In fairness, there was a fairly good reason not to commit the Panzer forces to the destruction of the Dunkirk pocket.
Egypt isn't important (though the Suez canal is). What it's worth is as a gateway into Palestine, which itself leads to Iraq and Persia. Denying the UK the Middle East doesn't hurt the UK much. But having the oil fields would have drastically altered matters later on in the war. Not to mention the Africa Korps not having to fight its own two-front war in North Africa. It would have been far easier to defend North Africa with the Eastern Med solidly under Axis control.Simon_Jester said:Kicking the UK out of Egypt probably wouldn't have had as dramatic an effect on the course of the war as some might think; it would have marginally strengthened the Germans but would likely not have improved their position decisively. Moreover, the North African campaign was very much a sideshow compared to the war in Russia, and it was not at all unreasonable for Hitler to be far more concerned with Russia than with Egypt.
In all fairness, Patton never failed to deliver on his promises. He had a keen sense of what his troops and equipment could and could not accomplish, more so than most other generals. Which is why he frequently did the "impossible" ("impossible" according to other's expectations, and "rulebooks" written in an earlier war where mobile warfare hadn't yet been invented). He especially learned from his enemies (what worked for them, and what mistakes they made that he must avoid). A trademark of the very best generals such as Guderian, von Manstein, etc.Simon_Jester said:Generals with a knack for mobile warfare and a love of pursuit, such as Rommel and Patton, will always tend to blame supreme command for not getting them the supplies they wanted. That doesn't mean they're right, or that getting them the supplies will produce the results they promise.
In my current game it's mid-1941 and Japan hasn't defeated NatChi yet.Chris783 said:To answer the original question; I think its reasonably realistic, with the exception of the Far East, where Japan always without fail manages to defeat and puppet Nationalist China.
Snowmelk said:Back to the original question:
I think that C.O.R.E. adds a lot of realism to the game, especially due to the detailed tech tree and the additional events. Or, at least, that makes it feel more realistic to me.
Only problem I see is that in some cases there are maybe too much details, e.g. the single ship approach. Basically a fantastic thing (IMHO), but as the AI is hard coded to use 2 DD units as ASW flotillas, I cannot see how they ever could make CORE to simulate a good Battle of Atlantic.
Would that have made a decisive difference, though? The Germans might have taken Leningrad, or they might have taken Moscow, or they might have done a more thorough job of destroying the pockets. But would the gains made on one front offset the lesser gains on other fronts, and would they have made much of a difference? It's possible that the fall of Moscow would have been decisive, or at least potentially decisive, but it's also possible that the Russians would have rallied and kept fighting. And nothing but the fall of Moscow was to prove decisive.ShadoWarrior said:Of course they would have done better. They wouldn't have issued conflicting orders, such as pulling panzer divisions out of one portion of the front to send them elsewhere (where they weren't asked for or needed), and then shortly after they arrived at their new sector sent them back to do what they could have accomplished had they been left in place originally, wasting enormously valuable time and scarce fuel. They wouldn't have kept shifting the focus of the campaign back and forth from Leningrad, to Moscow, to Leningrad, to destroying encircled pockets, to Moscow, etc. In short, if you have a plan, and the plan is working (the enemy has not rendered the plan obsolete), and there are no changes you can make to the plan to better accomplish the campaign's goals, then stick to the darn plan, and don't change the goals midstream without sound military reason.
Not really. The British couldn't ship much in the way of goods along the length of the Mediterranean anyway because of the danger of interdiction by the Italian navy and air force. Until Italy was beaten, the Mediterranean was simply not safe for Allied shipping. Most of their stuff had to go the long way around Africa anyway.Egypt isn't important (though the Suez canal is).
That's a very large area that the Axis would have to control, with poor infrastructure to support a campaign. They could have done it, but the advantage might not have been as great as you'd think. Moreover, the Allies would likely have made it a priority to drive the Axis back out of Mesopotamia, and could probably have done it given time. The Torch landings would have proceeded more or less as they did historically with or without British positions farther east in the Mediterranean; the Eastern front would likely have proceeded in more or less the same general pattern. So the Axis would not have had permanently secure control of the Mediterranean (with the Allies operating out of Gibraltar) for long, nor would they have been able to stop the Russians from eventually wearing them down in the East.What it's worth is as a gateway into Palestine, which itself leads to Iraq and Persia.
Denying the UK the Middle East doesn't hurt the UK much. But having the oil fields would have drastically altered matters later on in the war. Not to mention the Africa Korps not having to fight its own two-front war in North Africa. It would have been far easier to defend North Africa with the Eastern Med solidly under Axis control.
Well, when Patton ran up against the fortifications around Metz, he ended up banging his head against them for about three months, no?In all fairness, Patton never failed to deliver on his promises. He had a keen sense of what his troops and equipment could and could not accomplish, more so than most other generals. Which is why he frequently did the "impossible" ("impossible" according to other's expectations, and "rulebooks" written in an earlier war where mobile warfare hadn't yet been invented). He especially learned from his enemies (what worked for them, and what mistakes they made that he must avoid). A trademark of the very best generals such as Guderian, von Manstein, etc.
Yes, capturing Leningrad (and even more so Moscow) would have been decisive. First, it would have been a terrific morale boost to the Germans, and a stinging defeat to the Soviets. Second, it would have freed up many divisions that could *then* be used to push towards one of the other goals. Third, even the loss of an industrially unimportant, but politically sensitive city like Leningrad (not to mention the home port for the Soviet Baltic fleet) would have so shaken support for Stalin's running of the war that he might not have been able to mount an effective defense of the rest of the country, or have emboldened someone like Beria to replace him. Stalin's personal security was nowhere near as tight as that around Hitler, and Beria, unlike Himmler, coveted Stalin's position. Stalin committed publicly and politically to hold Leningrad. Failure to do so would have had a cost. He assuredly wouldn't have survived (for long) the loss of Moscow, even if he somehow did retain power after losing Leningrad.Simon_Jester said:Would that have made a decisive difference, though? The Germans might have taken Leningrad, or they might have taken Moscow, or they might have done a more thorough job of destroying the pockets. But would the gains made on one front offset the lesser gains on other fronts, and would they have made much of a difference? It's possible that the fall of Moscow would have been decisive, or at least potentially decisive, but it's also possible that the Russians would have rallied and kept fighting. And nothing but the fall of Moscow was to prove decisive.
I don't recall exactly why that happened, but IIRC, he wasn't allowed to maneuver around them. Don't recall if it was a fuel issue or an issue with sticking to his assigned sectors. (Kind of like the Soviet generals who were ordered to go "over the hill" and not permitted to go "around the hill".)Simon_Jester said:Well, when Patton ran up against the fortifications around Metz, he ended up banging his head against them for about three months, no?
Were the German generals likely to commit to taking Leningrad if they had been given their head? How likely was their commitment to succeed?ShadoWarrior said:Yes, capturing Leningrad (and even more so Moscow) would have been decisive. First, it would have been a terrific morale boost to the Germans, and a stinging defeat to the Soviets. Second, it would have freed up many divisions that could *then* be used to push towards one of the other goals. Third, even the loss of an industrially unimportant, but politically sensitive city like Leningrad (not to mention the home port for the Soviet Baltic fleet) would have so shaken support for Stalin's running of the war that he might not have been able to mount an effective defense of the rest of the country, or have emboldened someone like Beria to replace him. Stalin's personal security was nowhere near as tight as that around Hitler, and Beria, unlike Himmler, coveted Stalin's position. Stalin committed publicly and politically to hold Leningrad. Failure to do so would have had a cost. He assuredly wouldn't have survived (for long) the loss of Moscow, even if he somehow did retain power after losing Leningrad.
Well, he had his sector of the front. If he pulled out of that sector and left it uncovered, Bad Things could happen (like a nasty German counterattack).I don't recall exactly why that happened, but IIRC, he wasn't allowed to maneuver around them. Don't recall if it was a fuel issue or an issue with sticking to his assigned sectors. (Kind of like the Soviet generals who were ordered to go "over the hill" and not permitted to go "around the hill".)
That's not giving very much credit to the ability of historians to sift fact from wishful thinking, and assumes they mostly rely upon testimony rather than documentation of orders, plans, and most of all divisional reports.Simon_Jester said:Remember that this idea traces back in part to the efforts by those same generals to make themselves look good after the war.
That assumes he'd be foolish enough not to leave a blocking/covering force. Patton was bold. He wasn't reckless. During the Ardennes offensive, he did pull out of his sector(s) and moved next door. In the process he did not leave his prior sector completely undefended. You're using the same argument that his own (cautious) superiors used. Which vastly underestimates the value of tactical surprise, and also gives too much credit to the ability of the Germans to mount a counterattack in force in the face of withering Allied air supremacy.Simon_Jester said:Well, he had his sector of the front. If he pulled out of that sector and left it uncovered, Bad Things could happen (like a nasty German counterattack).
Just for the record, I'm not a huge fan of Rommel. He was reckless (his own subordinate commanders attested to this after the war), and his reputation is, IMO, overblown. He's certainly not in the same league with the likes of Guderian, Manstein, Model, or Patton (just to name a handful). Rommel had good success against what were essentially incompetent and/or inadequately supported opponents. As soon as he encountered opponents of good quality with good support, his successes more or less ceased. This is not to say that he wasn't a good general. I just don't think he was a *great* one. (I certainly don't think he deserves a "5" skill, and 4 is likely pushing it. Most of the generals in CORE with a 4 rating were, IMO, better than Rommel.)Simon_Jester said:Patton, Rommel, and other high-reputation commanders of World War Two tend to attract a certain amount of fannish behavior. People show a lot of faith in them, assuming that their genius would have allowed them to win any victory they expected to be able to win but were somehow denied the chance to win. I try to be cautious about that sort of thing, because these same generals tended to ignore what was going on outside their own area of operations.