Fighting for freedom and fighting for existance is very very different things.You will never understand that, pnoozi.
Lol? What was professional in Soviet Army? O_O I may agree that this was the biggest army...but professional...man...just no ;pJust because Soviets were winning battles by numbers, it doesn't mean that the whole organisation was professional.
Have you ever heard of Hitler's summer pause? Basically, during Operation Barbarossa in 1941, Hitler and his generals had trouble agreeing. This caused their summer advance to be delayed long enough for the warm months to pass. This pause is widely considered to be a major reason the Germans (relatively ill-equipped for harsh winter warfare) were not able to take Moscow. This served as a great moral victory for the Russians.
No more ignorant than saying the Soviets didn't need allies to win the war. Without lend-lease and the Battle of Britain added on top of Hitler's incompetence, the Soviets lose Moscow, a defeat so demoralizing it would have been hard for the Soviets to recover.
Actually, the fact that the Red Army was a disorganized mess suggests something entirely different. It suggests that they must have had some "help" in defeating Germany.
Because the OP stated that the western powers viewed Russia as an enemy... which was not the case until 1945 (the start of the Cold War) at the earliest. And the western powers (other than Nazi Germany and Italy) wanted Russia bled to death? Where are you getting that from? Russia had been an ally of the western powers since WWI, and westerners didn't really start fearing socialism until the whole State Department fiasco and McCarthy.
So we waited until June 1941? The Soviets initiated their invasion of Poland and the Baltic states in 1939. If the United States was trying to stop the Soviets from advancing, why on Earth would they HELP them by opening up a second front with Germany?!
The important part of what I wrote is not the satellite buffer zone part - it's the oppressive regime part. The OP said the Soviets were fighting for freedom. Sorry, just not the case. They were fighting for oppression, because it's better to be oppressed than dead.
Exactly! They weren't fighting for freedom... that's the only point I'm trying to make. The Soviets weren't fighting for freedom at all. In fact, they made a pact with Hitler agreeing not to fight just so they could get a little piece of Poland. The OP is full of it.
So the US should have waited for German boots to hit American soil? Then they would have been justified?
QuoteHave you ever heard of Hitler's summer pause? Basically, during Operation Barbarossa in 1941, Hitler and his generals had trouble agreeing. This caused their summer advance to be delayed long enough for the warm months to pass. This pause is widely considered to be a major reason the Germans (relatively ill-equipped for harsh winter warfare) were not able to take Moscow. This served as a great moral victory for the Russians.When the gloves are off and you're at war with someone - you do your best. Whether you made mistakes or had problems with your generals, no one cares about that. They are simply excuses. I'm sure the Soviets had plenty of problems with their generals too, or Stalin's meddling but no one uses those reasons as an excuse for their poor performance. The Germans were simply a better fighting force at that point in the war.And your point about the summer pause...the reason there was a pause was because Hitler diverted Army Group Center to the south in order to encircle the Soviet forces at Kiev. He didn't just "pause" and sit on his thumbs - he made a decision that he thought would bring about a major loss for the Soviet army. The fact that it did not change the outcome of the war in his favor is his fault and in no way excuses the defeats that were brought about by the Soviets.
QuoteActually, the fact that the Red Army was a disorganized mess suggests something entirely different. It suggests that they must have had some "help" in defeating Germany.They were a disorganized mess...in 1941. In 1945 they were the most powerful army in the world. This leap was achieved through four years of fighting the most powerful army at the time.
QuoteBecause the OP stated that the western powers viewed Russia as an enemy... which was not the case until 1945 (the start of the Cold War) at the earliest. And the western powers (other than Nazi Germany and Italy) wanted Russia bled to death? Where are you getting that from? Russia had been an ally of the western powers since WWI, and westerners didn't really start fearing socialism until the whole State Department fiasco and McCarthy.You have a very naive view of the world. The Western powers were not a fan of the Soviet Union since it was simply another competitor. Not only that but the Soviet Union advertised a socio-economic system which empowered the worker. This was greatly feared by the ruling class in the Western world and they didn't want that propagated either in post war Europe or before then (see the First Red Scare).
QuoteSo we waited until June 1941? The Soviets initiated their invasion of Poland and the Baltic states in 1939. If the United States was trying to stop the Soviets from advancing, why on Earth would they HELP them by opening up a second front with Germany?!In 1941, the US did not know who was going to win the war. German victory was possible. In order to make sure that whoever wins will be at their weakest, they supported the losing side in order to bleed the other. That is why they provided help to the Soviets.
QuoteThe important part of what I wrote is not the satellite buffer zone part - it's the oppressive regime part. The OP said the Soviets were fighting for freedom. Sorry, just not the case. They were fighting for oppression, because it's better to be oppressed than dead.The Soviets were fighting for freedom from German oppression. If Stalin twisted that after the war it does not change the fact that the Soviets were still fighting for freedom at the time. Yes, from a retrospective point of view a weak argument could be made that the Soviets were somehow fighting for "oppression" but again, no one thought like that at the time except maybe Stalin.QuoteExactly! They weren't fighting for freedom... that's the only point I'm trying to make. The Soviets weren't fighting for freedom at all. In fact, they made a pact with Hitler agreeing not to fight just so they could get a little piece of Poland. The OP is full of it.The Soviets made a pact with Hitler after coming back from discussions with the Western powers and realizing that they were completely disinterested in actually stopping Hitler. Stalin wasn't going to dick around, his country's security was at stake and if that meant taking half of Poland to act as a buffer state...so be it.
QuoteSo the US should have waited for German boots to hit American soil? Then they would have been justified?Uhh no..I was just explaining to you that it's much easier for a soldier to understand a concept such as fighting for your existence than it is for one to understand interventionism.
Well, Hitler's decision didn't bring about a major loss for the Soviet army, and considering he went against the strong advice of his generals, I'd consider that his fault. Hitler is notorious for his shortcomings as a military commander. Not Stalin...
They were a disorganized mess in 1941 and the Battle of Stalingrad, the turning point of the war, was in 1942. So they went from disorganized mess to elite fighting force in one year?
The deep-seeded fear of communism in the United States didn't take hold until after World War II. Americans wouldn't have elected Roosevelt (see the New Deal) otherwise.http://www.ushistory.org/us/49e.asp"The Great Depression created an environment where the federal government accepted responsibility for curing a wide array of society's ills previously left to individuals, states, and local governments. This amount of regulation and involvement requires a vast upgrading of the government bureaucracy. An armada of government bureaus and regulatory agencies was erected to service the programs of the New Deal."
While this makes sense in theory, reality is that in 1941 the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor and the Germans declared war on the US shortly after. At that point, the US could only join the war on one side.
I don't deny that a buffer state was very useful for the USSR, but here's the thing - the OP is making the Soviets out to have fought valiantly for freedom."Today we are about to play a Game mod created by Germans, Americans, British and other people... thats freedom, and today there is freedom because million of Soviets died in the past fighting for this freedom ,they deserve respect."The facts are that they didn't want to fight, and they didn't give a shit about freedom.
What I'm saying is that eventually the US would have had to fight for its existence as well. The British were the last major power standing between Nazi Germany and the United States, and London was in bad shape.Every time the Allies would appease Hitler, he would take a little more, and a little more, and a little more... the US wasn't going to sit around and wait for Hitler to set his sights on North America. He'd already crippled all the US's major western trading partners and U-boats were in the Gulf of Mexico. That's more than enough justification.The Soviet Union was "way more justified" than the US in the sense that Bill Gates is "way richer" than Warren Buffet.
I don't know what to tell you, the results speak for themselves. Yep, the result - over 20 mil soviets dead - once again, Soviets won by numbers; Sorry, but I will never say anything good about soviet officers. For me they're just scum.
QuoteI don't deny that a buffer state was very useful for the USSR, but here's the thing - the OP is making the Soviets out to have fought valiantly for freedom."Today we are about to play a Game mod created by Germans, Americans, British and other people... thats freedom, and today there is freedom because million of Soviets died in the past fighting for this freedom ,they deserve respect."The facts are that they didn't want to fight, and they didn't give a shit about freedom.Putting aside the fact that what you said is incredibly disrespectful and you are by no means an authority of any kind regarding what Soviet soldiers fought for - the OP's statement is true...Just like it is true that the Americans fought valiantly for freedom and anyone else fighting on the Allied side. Soviet soldiers fought for freedom from Nazi oppression. Let me reiterate - the fact that Stalin turned Eastern Europe into a series of oppressed states does not in any way diminish the valiant cause for which Soviet soldiers fought for. The United States fought in Korea and established a brutal dictatorship in the south - does that diminish the bravery and sacrifice of US soldiers that fought there? No. So you see how your argument falls flat on its face.
But if the commander for whom you're fighting doesn't believe in freedom, I'm sorry - you're just not fighting for freedom.
Quote from: pnoozi on February 18, 2010, 03:04:48 AMBut if the commander for whom you're fighting doesn't believe in freedom, I'm sorry - you're just not fighting for freedom.That doesn't make any sense - what does one's commander have to do with anything?
Quote from: thebomb on February 18, 2010, 09:57:48 PMQuote from: pnoozi on February 18, 2010, 03:04:48 AMBut if the commander for whom you're fighting doesn't believe in freedom, I'm sorry - you're just not fighting for freedom.That doesn't make any sense - what does one's commander have to do with anything?Replace the word commander with the word entity. That might make more sense.If the entity for which you're fighting doesn't believe in freedom, I'm sorry - you're just not fighting for freedom.
Quote from: pnoozi on February 18, 2010, 10:15:12 PMQuote from: thebomb on February 18, 2010, 09:57:48 PMQuote from: pnoozi on February 18, 2010, 03:04:48 AMBut if the commander for whom you're fighting doesn't believe in freedom, I'm sorry - you're just not fighting for freedom.That doesn't make any sense - what does one's commander have to do with anything?Replace the word commander with the word entity. That might make more sense.If the entity for which you're fighting doesn't believe in freedom, I'm sorry - you're just not fighting for freedom.If what you say is true then the United States wasn't fighting for freedom either, nor the French nor Great Britain - right? The United States still held sovereignty over the Philippines, the British and French had various colonies all over Africa and the Middle East. You certainly don't believe in freedom if you're a colonial empire.By your standard of what qualifies as "fighting for freedom", soldiers fighting for these "entities" wouldn't make the cut. If you do a thorough examination, you'll discover that no soldiers fighting for any state genuinely fought for freedom. Yet people would still say that US, British, and Soviet soldiers fought for a form of freedom because what matters isn't whether the state that they served believed in freedom but the actions of the soldiers as a whole. Soldiers from the Western powers liberated Western Europe from Nazi oppression. Soldiers from the Soviet Union liberated Eastern Europe from Nazi oppression. The fact that each of those powers turned parts of the world into brutal and oppressive regimes after the war does not diminish the quest for freedom that each soldier sought after on the battlefield. That is why US, British, French and Soviet soldiers all fought for freedom.
The Americans and British were absolutely fighting for freedom within the context of Europe, and the Soviets were definitely not fighting for any kind of freedom. Whatever their personal feelings, the facts are that they were fighting off one horrific dictatorship in support of another, even if they didn't support Stalin.
And before you say "they had no means of standing up to Stalin" - fine, I agree. But consider this. I don't have the means to win a gold medal at the Olympics. It's not my fault, but I don't go around claiming I deserve a gold medal.
I'm just saying, don't make stuff up because the truth hurts too much. Accept it. The Soviets fought for Stalin. Whether they had a choice or not, reality is that they did. If the Germans had collectively stood up to Hitler and the Russians had collectively stood up to Stalin, that would have been fighting for freedom.
If I ship off tomorrow to Afghanistan or Iraq, I can say I'm fighting for green energy or universal health care or purple teletubbies... the fact remains that I'm not fighting for any of those things. I'm fighting for the REAL purpose of the mission. My own feelings are inconsequential if they're not a part of the big picture.
The moment Polish government would allow the Soviet Army to enter Poland - it would be the end of freedom in Poland.