Posted on 05/08/2003 3:16:09 PM PDT by risk
Hitler's Britain (2 ´ 50'), produced by AAC FACT, Lark International for PBS and Lion Television, examines one of the most intriguing questions of our time: what would the Nazis have done if they had conquered Britain? Told in two equally compelling parts, Thinking the Unthinkable: The Nazi Occupation of Britain and Churchill's Last Stand: The Secret of the British Resistance, Hitler's Britain will examine the unsettling possibilities of an alternative world order, and the chilling consequences that Hitler's victory would have had on the UK and beyond. Using reconstruction and graphic manipulation, the programme shows how Hitler's plans would have transformed Britain from a gentle, free-spirited country into an unimaginably harsh and repressive regime.
Excuse me? Did you use "common sense" and "congress" in the same sentence? Was congress really that different 60 years ago from now?
Lots of good points and they're accurate. Our support for Britain initially would most likely have been air, troop wise not much, we only had about 2000 or so in Iceland. But in 1940 the draft had been resumed in the US right at the same time Hitler planned to execute Operation Sealion, which was in September. Any total subjugation of Britain would have taken weeks or months, if at all giving us time to train troops and mobilize them.
It would have been difficult for us if Hitler did succeed in conquering Britain before we could prevent it, but I believe during that period we would have gradually built up our forces in Iceland and possibly sent troops to Ireland for plans to invade Britain. Either way, he would have faced us directly and economically the US was a giant compared to Germany, we would have beaten him with or without Britain.
o DUNKIRK - as a "gesture", Hitler held back in capturing the BEF. If he had not done so, English morale would have suffered a tremendous hit, not to mention the loss of experienced troops.
o BATTLE OF BRITAIN - if the Luftwaffe/Goering had seen the destruction of the RAF airfields all the way through and gained air supremacy, things would be grim indeed for the Brits. I believe the guy who "really" saved England was Bomber Harris, who launched a bombing raid of Berlin when things were at their grimmest. This bombing raid attacked German *civilians*, and caused both Hitler and Goering to lose face, but the result was to take the Luftwaffe out of their gameplan and start bombing the British cities in retaliation, giving the RAF airfields and radar installations badly needed respite (the British civilians had to bear the brunt of course, but they did it with typical British aplomb).
o BARBAROSSA - if Hitler had postponed the attack on the Soviet Union, he probably would have had an easier time of it against the Brits. The Soviets were unlikely to take on the Germans until/unless the Germans were already on the ropes.
o DECLARING WAR ON THE US - if Hitler had not declared war on the US, it is not clear the US would have declared war on Germany...imagine Hitler denouncing the Japanese and in a very public way saying it was willing to help the US defeat Japan! (imagine the effect on US public opinion particularly given the German/Italian/Irish population which was inherently anti-British)
o THE BALKANS - if the Italians had been able to take Yugoslavia by themselves, the Wehrmacht would have had many more soldiers and assets to use against the Soviets and Stalingrad could have had a very different outcome.
o ME262 - if Hitler had not tried to turn a fighter jet into a bomber, the Luftwaffe might have been able to stem the waves of bombers against the German heartland.
As to those who say that taking Britain/Scotland wouldn't have changed the outcome of things, perhaps and perhaps not.
Gibraltar probably would have fallen. The great convoys would probably not be able to get to Murmansk. The nightmares would have started to pile up in a hurry...
the list goes on and on... just a few of these might have lead to a very different outcome -- it looks like God was helping out in this one!
Back then, the Nazi's would have had time to get a strong toehold in Britain before we could get there. They didn't have long distances from which to bring supplies, etc. You think supply lines in Iraq were in difficulty? Just imagine what it would have been like for us to maintain a supply line across the Atlantic. We would have have to bring more carriers from the Pacific making that area of operations less efficient and dragging thewar in the Pacific out. We would still have won, but it would have been long, bloody and costly for us and for the Brits.
And a lot of good people either slacked off on their duties under Hitler (Heisenberg?), and a lot of even better people made sure they were on our side of the front lines before the war started.
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Excellent program.
I know we can knock the PBS networks and stations for slanted content but this is one show that made a number of strong points about what could have happened.
The information about the creation of the books that listed the targeted members of the English Isle was very interesting.The FBI files come to mind when I saw that segment, for some reason.
I am always on guard for the many historical programs that detail the WW1 and WW2 goings on, including most recently World War 2 The Complete History.
It has a spellbinding effect to see the sacrifices made to stop those who would have conquered the world and destroyed it at the same time and so many innocents.
Let us Never Forget that we are a continuation of those same "fictional" accounts of FRee peoples struggling for survival against what sometimes seem to be unsurmountable odds.
It is the spirit and the faith of FRee people that sustains us to this day.
One thing that upset me a bit is that they got Winnie in this show. In reality, it took his own people turning their backs on him after saving them all. President Bush must never face the same result.
If, as with the 34th, the fastest one took a year, no reason to believe it could have been done any quicker. And that year is to get them to American ports, not embarked, arrived, unloaded, unpacked, and set up. Probably another 2-3 months to get there and get combat ready, so for a NG division mobilizing around the time of Dunkirk, it would be August, 1941 before they could fight in Britain.
I'm not meaning to slight the Marines, but they had their hands full in the Pacific, and, of course, some of the Army divisions had to go out there too and couldn't have helped Britain.
No doubt in my mind that Churchill is The Man of the Century. Nobody else alive (and maybe nobody who ever lived) could have kept their people's heart in the war.
If you'll allow one more thought: I've become a really WWII nut in the last year. Someday the gang needs to have a WWII book review-discussion-round robin. I love Bookfinder.com - and they love me!
Yes, you picked up on everything I intended to convey with this thread. As we look back, let's not forget to look ahead: the Islamic theofascist horde is just a reminder that free peoples can never secure their safety with any permanence. It is also our own continual sacrifice and resolve that will keep us free, not only something our parents and grandparents have done.
In honor of my father, who earned a Purple Heart over Rumania in a B24 when it was hit by a flak burst in 1944. My dad returned, and so did his brothers and my grandfather. May the freedoms their sacrifices defended never be relinquished by a future generation who fails to serve and protect.
We must never let our own children believe that any prior sacrifices were "sufficient" that they can relax their guard.
You're most likely correct on that, we would have built up our forces gradually in the surrounding area while Hitler was fighting Britain. Although given the urgency of the situation, it may have motivated the US to move a little quicker into Europe than it did following Pearl Harbor. All of the continent falling to Hitler, including Britain was seen by Roosevelt as a far greater threat to US interests than Japan was.
No doubt in my mind that Churchill is The Man of the Century. Nobody else alive (and maybe nobody who ever lived) could have kept their people's heart in the war.
Definitely agree with you there, Churchill was the inspiration the West needed to fight on, especially after the way Neville Chamberlain failed so horribly to understand the threat Britain was up against. He was the right man at the right time.
o DECLARING WAR ON THE US - if Hitler had not declared war on the US, it is not clear the US would have declared war on Germany...imagine Hitler denouncing the Japanese and in a very public way saying it was willing to help the US defeat Japan! (imagine the effect on US public opinion particularly given the German/Italian/Irish population which was inherently anti-British)
o THE BALKANS - if the Italians had been able to take Yugoslavia by themselves, the Wehrmacht would have had many more soldiers and assets to use against the Soviets and Stalingrad could have had a very different outcome.
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I recently read a book on famous strategic mistakes throughout history, and all three of these made the list. First, Russia and the Balkans. Hitler had originally planned to launch Barbarossa earlier to avoid the Russian winter that had stymied Napoleon, but was forced to divert to Yugoslavia to save Mussolini. Oops.
And then, there's Japan. The Germans were caught as off guard as anyone else, and were much relieved the next day when Roosevelt asked for a declaration of war against only Japan. The idea of going up against a force which could "sit back for years and build up a massive force which, once unleached, would be unstoppable" was unthinkable. And apparently Hitler didn't think about it.
Most are gone now, in fact, my last living uncle is 86 or so and near the end. I remember as a kid seeing the photos he had taken after liberating a couple concentration/death camps. A sight I shall never forget. I would like to think that instilled in me the spirit of Never Forget to some degree. God Bless Uncle Harold. One of his daughters and my cousins married a Viet vet and directly experienced the effects of Agent Orange and lost a daughter after many years of suffering from birth defects.
Wars fought on foreign shores and lands do still reach out and touch the faithful huddled around the home fires of FReedom. We must tend those fires vigilantly lest others exterminate them and vanquish the memories of those who gave and lost so much for all of us.
One thing that I think people ignore when they say, if Germany took Britain, we would have eventually won anyway. I'm not so sure. First of all, would the US have even bothered? It would have been a lot easier to make a peace with the new Nazi superstate. Also, remember, if Britain went down, you could count on Egypt going down also. Hitler would have been unchallenged in North Africa and the Middle East, once he turned his attention that way. India would also be in a very perilous position. I really think the defeat of Britain would have allowed the Nazi's a good chance of taking Russia down, at least the Ukraine. Think of the resources that would have been at Hitler's disposal!
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