What If The Labour Party Got Rid Of...
Politics0 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by randy-andy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There were three main things I think. Firstly starting the second front. When the Germans took France they could have come across the channel and took Britain within days. We would not have been able to stop them.
This was partly our saving grace because when Hitler opened up the second front he did it in the knowledge, at that time, that Britain was ripe for picking whenever he wanted.
Secondly, as someone pointed out, he went to Russia ill equipped and at the wrong time of year. He also under-estimated the Russians, who the Nazis considered to be an inferior race and who put up a tremendous fight.
Thirdly Japan hitting Pearl Harbour caused the Yanks to enter the war. It is generally considered that if it was not for Pearl Harbour then the Americans would not have entered the war. Indeed some of the America's finest were hoping for a German victory so that Ireland could negotiate with Germany reference the joining of North and South Ireland.
Finally my Mother was not religeous but she did say many a time, if there is a God then he was on our side during that period because we were at Hitler's mercy for a long time.
BigAl1st,
The very fact Britain WASN'T 'ripe for the picking' was the reason Hitler called off his planned invasion in May 1941 and turned his attention towards the east (Operation Barbarossa) the following month. The Battle of Britain was won by the RAF (and allies) and Hitler failed to get air superiority so opened up the Russian front instead. Britain stood alone, and was victorious.
Therefore the two factors are:-
The Spitfire
Wearing the wrong underpants in Stalingrad
So Hitler's up in his Austrian summer house saying "I'll just bomb the living daylights out of London, Glasgow, Liverpool and Coventry but I've 'no great beef with England' .However I agree, Gary, that Russia was paramount to the Nazi war machine but the very fact that it was idealogical war on the west front and the Nazis blitzed the cities more than the airfields, resulting in Britain just about keep enough Spitfires flying to beat off Germany meant the Allies had a perfect springboard to launch the D-Day counter offensive in 1944.
Hitler may or may not have invaded. The fact is he didn't and Britain had the chance to resupply with help from her allies and head over the channel to Normandy to liberate France. Bad move on Adolf's part.
I'd also like to nominate Alan Turing and all those at Bletchley Park (Station X) as an important element in Hitler losing the war, however not one of the main two factors, but close enough.