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HAPPY BIRTHDAY HITLER!!

Nothing extraordinary. Germany was the leading industrial nation together with England long before Hitler even was born. The military and technological raise really kickstarted when Germany (under Prussian rule) was united.

It seems you intentionally left out the era of the Weimar Republic Germany. Under the terms and conditions of the Treaty of Versailles, Germany was solely to blame for WW1 and thus had to pay massive war reparations to the victors. This included Germany being stripped almost completely of her industrial capacity. Almost every working German machinery, from factories to tractors was confiscated by the victorious allies.

Hitler had to rebuild Germany's industrial capacity following his victory in the election of 1933. Not only did he rebuild Germany's industrial capacity, but he also brought Germany out of the massive economic depression which had plagued the nations of the world and Germany was the first to suffer from the depression as well as the first nation to pull out of it under Hitler's leadership.

So yes, it was an extraordinary feat which Hitler and the National Socialist had achieved. Even many economists acknowledge this fact.


@Talon
 
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Never Again

Hitler, the man of the hour. A man, who stood against all odds, determined to break the shackles of slavery imposed upon his nation by the international financier mafia.



 
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Hitler could win the war if he was luring Russian people to his side. But because of his crazy racial theories he considered Russians (and all Slavs in general) as subhumans. He murdered Russians by millions, he had plans to relocate Russians to Siberia and turn the remaining into the slaves. If hitler was winning it would result into a genocide over 100 million Slavs. As result Russians started to fight harshly and defeated him.

Only at very late stages, when he was losing everything he agreed to recruit Russians to the army and give them a state. Similarly he started to recruit some other nations also he despised them. But all was too late.

In short hitlers racism killed him. Unfortunately he died fast unlike tens of millions of his innocent victims.
 
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Rocket is different from missiles in that the latter employs a sophisticated guidance system.

And i'm no rocket scientist either.

The German V2's guidance system was as sophisticated as an egg timer. I gave up arguing with the other idiot, so please don't trouble yourself.
 
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When Hilter meet John McClane

Hitler : All great movements are popular movements.
John : What gives you that idea? (Die Hard 1 opening, when John hop on a plane and see his wife in LA)

Hitler : All propaganda has to be popular
John : Yeah. But not for a long time (Die Hard 4 when matt ask if John like killing)

Hitler : As a Christian I have no duty to allow myself to be cheated
John : Yeah with the Ambulance Chaser (Die Hard 2 referring to his wife affair with a lawyer)

Hitler : Germany will either be a world power or will not be at all.
John : Attention! Attention! Nils is dead! I repeat, Nils is dead, fxxk-head. So's his pal, and those four guys from the East German All-Stars (Die Hard 3 after John killed the Dump truck driver chasing thru sewer)

Hitler : I use emotion for the many and reserve reason for the few.
John : You tell me kid, you're the criminal (Die Hard 4, when John look for Matt in his apartment)

Hitler : If you tell a big enough lie and tell it frequently enough, it will be believed
John : Yeah, well don't, I'm an arsehole. (Die Hard 3 John tell Zeus the bomb was found in Chinatown, not Harlem

Hitler : Make the lie big, make it simple, keep saying it, and eventually they will believe it.
John : I told you I was an arsehole (Same quote see above)

Hitler : It is always more difficult to fight against faith than against knowledge
John : Yeah, like you did with Takagi? (Die Hard, when Hans point the gun at John)

This ends with

Hitler : If today I stand here as a revolutionary, it is as a revolutionary against the Revolution
John : Yippie-kai-yay, motherfxxker
 
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One of the most prominent general of WW2 was Erich von Manstein. His comments on Hitler are very valuable when we want to analyse him as a war leader. Manstein in his book 'Lost Victories' writes a whole chapter on Hitler titled 'Hitler as a supreme commander'. I am posting extracts from there.

Part I

When considering Hitler in the role of a military leader, one should certainly not dismiss him with such clichés as 'the lance-corporal of World War I'. He undoubtedly had a certain eye for operational openings, as had been shown by the way he opted for Army Group A's plan in the west. Indeed, this is often to be found in military amateurs - otherwise history would not have recorded so many dukes and princes as successful commanders.

In addition, though, Hitler possessed an astoundingly retentive memory and an imagination that made him quick to grasp all technical matters and problems of armaments. He was amazingly familiar with the effect of the very latest enemy weapons and could reel off whole columns of figures on both our own and the enemy's war production. Indeed, this was his favourite way of side-tracking any topic that was not to his liking. There can be no question that his insight and unusual energy were responsible for many achievements in the sphere of armaments.

Yet his belief in his own superiority in this respect ultimately had disastrous consequences. His interference prevented the smooth and timely development of the Luftwaffe, and it was undoubtedly he who hampered the development of rocket propulsion and atomic weapons.
Moreover, Hitler's interest in everything technical led him to overestimate the importance of his technical resources. As a result, he would count on a mere handful of assault-gun detachments or the new Tiger tanks to restore situations where only large bodies of troops could have any prospect of success.

What he lacked, broadly speaking, was simply military ability based on experience — something for which his 'intuition' was no substitute.
While Hitler may have had an eye for tactical opportunity and could quickly seize a chance when it was offered to him, he still lacked the ability to assess the prerequisites and practicability of a plan of operations. He failed to understand that the objectives and ultimate scope of an operation must be in direct proportion to the time and forces needed to carry it out — to say nothing of the possibilities of supply. He did not - or would not - realize that any long-range offensive operation calls for a steady build-up of troops over and above those committed in the original assault. All this was brought out with striking clarity in the planning and execution of the 1942 summer offensive. Another example was the fantastic idea he disclosed to me in autumn 1942 of driving through the Caucasus to the Near East and India with a motorized army group.

As in the political sphere (at all events after his successes of 1938), so in the military did Hitler lack all sense of judgement regarding what could be achieved and what could not. In autumn 1939, despite his contempt for France's powers of resistance, he had not originally recognized the possibility of attaining decisive success by a correctly planned German offensive. Yet when this success actually became his, he lost his eye for opportunity where conditions were different. What he lacked in each case was a real training in strategy and grand tactics.
And so this active mind seized on almost any aim that caught his fancy, causing him to fritter away Germany's strength by taking on several objectives simultaneously, often in the most dispersed theatres of war. The rule that one can never be too strong at the crucial spot, that one may even have to dispense with less vital fronts or accept the risk of radically weakening
them in order to achieve a decisive aim, was something he never really grasped. As a result, in the offensives of 1942 and 1943 he could not bring himself to stake everything on success. Neither was he able or willing to see what action would be necessary to compensate for the unfavourable turn which events then took.

While strategy must unquestionably be an instrument in the hands of the political leadership, the latter must not disregard - as did Hitler to a great extent when fixing operational objectives - the fact that the strategic aim of any war is to smash the military defensive power of the enemy. Only when victory has been secured is the way open to the realization of political and economic aims.

This brings me to the factor which probably did more than anything else to determine the character of Hitler's leadership - his over-estimation of the power of the will. This will, as he saw it, had only to be translated into faith down to the youngest private soldier for the correctness of his decisions to be confirmed and the success of his orders ensured.
Obviously a strong will in a supreme commander is one of the essential prerequisites of victory. Many a battle has been lost and many a success thrown away because the supreme leader's will failed at the critical moment.

The will for victory which gives a commander the strength to see a grave crisis through is something very different from Hitler's will, which in the last analysis stemmed from a belief in his own 'mission'. Such a belief inevitably makes a man impervious to reason and leads him to think that his own will can operate even beyond the limits of hard reality - whether these consist in the presence of far superior enemy forces, in the conditions of space and time, or merely in the fact that the enemy also happens to have a will of his own.

Generally speaking, Hitler had little inclination to relate his own calculations to the probable intentions of the enemy, since he was convinced that his will would always triumph in the end. He was equally disinclined to accept any reports, however reliable, of enemy superiority, even though the latter might be many times stronger than he. Hitler either rejected such reports out of hand or minimized them with assertions about the enemy's deficiencies and took refuge in endless recitations of German production figures. In the face of his will, the essential elements of the 'appreciation' of a situation on which every
military commander's decision must be based were virtually eliminated. And with that Hitler turned his back on reality.

The only remarkable feature was that this over-estimation of his own will-power, this disregard for the enemy's resources and possible intentions, was not matched by a corresponding boldness of decision. The same man who, after his successes in politics up to 1938, had become a political gambler, actually recoiled from risks in the military field. The only bold military decision that may be booked to Hitler's credit was probably the one he took to occupy Norway, and even then the original suggestion had come from Grand-Admiral Raeder. Even here, as soon as a crisis cropped up at Narvik, Hitler was on the point of ordering the evacuation of the city and thereby of sacrificing the fundamental aim of the entire operation, which was to keep the iron-ore routes open. During the execution of the western campaign, too, as we have seen earlier, Hitler showed a certain aversion to taking military risks. The decision to attack the Soviet Union was, in the last analysis, the inevitable outcome of cancelling the invasion of Britain, which Hitler had likewise found too risky.

During the Russian campaign Hitler's fear of risk manifested itself in two ways. One - as will be shown later - was his refusal to accept that elasticity of operations which, in the conditions obtaining from 1943 onwards, could be achieved only by a voluntary, if temporary surrender of conquered territory. The second was his fear to denude secondary fronts or subsidiary
theatres in favour of the spot where the main decision had to fall, even when a failure to do so was palpably dangerous.

There are three possible reasons why Hitler evaded these risks in the military field. First, he may secretly have felt that he lacked the military ability to cope with them. This being so, he was even less likely to credit his generals with having it. The second reason was the fear, common to all dictators, that his prestige would be shaken by any set-backs. In practice this
attitude is bound to lead to the commission of military mistakes which damage the man's prestige more than ever. Thirdly, there was Hitler's intense dislike, rooted in his lust for power, of giving up anything on which he had once laid hands.
 
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Part II

Whenever he was confronted with a decision which he did not like taking but could not ultimately evade, Hitler would procrastinate as long as he possibly could. This happened every time it was urgently necessary for us to commit forces to battle in time to forestall an operational success by the enemy or to prevent its exploitation. The General Staff had to struggle with Hitler for days on end before it could get forces released from less-threatened sectors of the front to be sent to a crisis spot. In most cases he would give too small a number of troops when it was already too late - with the result that he usually finished up by having to grant several times what had originally been required. The tussle used to last for whole weeks
when it was a question of abandoning untenable positions like the Donetz area in 1943 or the Dnieper Bend in 1944. The same applied to the evacuation of unimportant salients on quiet stretches of front for the purpose of acquiring extra forces. Possibly Hitler always expected things to go his way in the end, thereby enabling him to avoid decisions which were repugnant to him if only because they meant recognizing the fact that he must accommodate himself to the enemy's actions. His inflated belief in his own will-power, a certain aversion to accepting any risk in mobile operations (the retour offensif, for example) when its success
could not be guaranteed in advance, and his dislike of giving up anything voluntarily - such were the factors which influenced Hitler's military leadership more and more as time went on. Obstinate defence of every foot of ground gradually became the be all and end all of that leadership. And so, after the Wehrmacht had won such extraordinary successes in the first years of war by dint of operational mobility, Hitler's reaction when the first crisis occurred in front of Moscow was to adopt Stalin's precept of hanging on doggedly to every single position. It was a policy that had brought the Soviet leaders so close to the abyss in 1941 that they finally relinquished it when the Germans launched their 1942 offensive.

Yet because the Soviet counter-offensive in that winter of 1941 had been frustrated by the resistance of our troops, Hitler was convinced that his ban on any voluntary withdrawal had saved the Germans from the fate of Napoleon's Grand Army in 1812. In this belief, admittedly, he was reinforced by the acquiescent attitude of his own retinue and several commanders at the front. When, therefore, a fresh crisis arose in autumn 1942 after the German offensive had become bogged down outside Stalingrad and in the Caucasus, Hitler again thought the arcanum of success lay in clinging at all costs to what he already possessed.
Henceforth he could never be brought to renounce this notion.

Now it is generally recognized that defence is the stronger of the two forms of fighting. This is only true, however, when the defence is so efficacious that the attacker bleeds to death when assaulting the defender's positions. Such a thing was out of the question on the Eastern Front, where the number of German divisions available was never sufficient for so strong a defence to be organized. The enemy, being many times stronger than we were, was always able, by massing his forces at points of his own choice, to break through fronts that were far too widely extended. As a result, large numbers of German forces were unable to avoid encirclement. Only in mobile operations could the superiority of the German staffs and
fighting troops have been turned to account and, perhaps, the forces of the Soviet Union ultimately brought to naught.

The effects of Hitler's ever-increasing predilection for 'hanging on at all costs' will be dealt with in greater detail in connexion with the defensive battles fought on the Eastern Front in 1943 and 1944. The reason for his insistence on it may be found deep down in his own personality. He was a man who saw fighting only in terms of the utmost brutality. His way of thinking conformed more to a mental picture of masses of the enemy bleeding to death before our lines than to the conception of a subtle fencer who knows how to make an occasional step backwards in order to lunge for the decisive thrust. For the art of war he substituted a brute force which, as he saw it, was guaranteed maximum effectiveness by the will-power behind it.

Since Hitler placed the power of force above that of the mind and, while having every regard for a soldier's bravery, did not rate his ability to the same extent, it is hardly surprising that, in the same way as he over-rated technical expedients, he was possessed of 'la rage du nombre' . He would intoxicate himself with the production figures of the German armaments industry,
which he had undoubtedly boosted to an amazing extent, even if he preferred to overlook the fact that the enemy's armaments figures were higher still.

What he forgot was the amount of training and skill required to render a new weapon fully effective. Once the new weapons had reached the front, he was content. It did not worry him whether the units concerned had mastered them or not, or whether a weapon had even been tested under combat conditions.

In just the same way Hitler was constantly ordering new divisions to be set up. Though an increase in the number of our formations was most desirable, they had to be filled at the cost of replacements for the divisions already in existence, which in course of time were drained of their last drop of blood. At the same time the newly established formations initially had to pay an excessively high toll of killed because of their lack of battle experience. The Luftwaffe Field Divisions, the unending series of SS divisions and finally the so-called People's Grenadier Divisions were the most blatant examples.

A final point worth mentioning is that although Hitler was always harping on his 'soldierly' outlook and loved to recall that he had acquired his military experience as a front-line soldier, his character had as little in common with the thoughts and emotions of soldiers as had his party with the Prussian virtues which it was so fond of invoking.

Hitler was certainly quite clearly informed of conditions at the front through the reports he received from the army groups and armies. In addition, he frequently interviewed officers who had just returned from the front-line areas. Thus he was not only aware of the achievements of our troops, but also knew what continuous overstrain they had had to endure since the beginning of the Russian campaign. Perhaps this was one of the reasons why we never managed to get Hitler anywhere near a front line in the east. It was hard enough to persuade him to visit our Army Group headquarters; the idea of going any further forward never occurred to him. It may be that he feared such trips would destroy those golden dreams about his invincible will.

The deficiencies I have just described were bound to detract considerably from Hitler's fitness to play the self-appointed role of the supreme military leader.
They could still have been counterbalanced, however, if only he had been prepared to take advice from - and place genuine confidence in - an experienced and jointly responsible Chief of the General Staff. He did, after all, possess a number of the qualities indispensable to a supreme commander: a strong will, nerves that would stand up to the most serious crises, an
undeniably keen brain and - as I said before - a certain talent in the operational field combined with an ability to recognize possibilities of a technical nature. If only he could have seen his way to compensate for his lack of training and experience in the military sphere —particularly as regards strategy and grand tactics — by utilizing the skill of his Chief-of-Staff, quite an efficient military leadership might have emerged despite all the shortcomings mentioned above. But this was precisely what Hitler would not accept.

Just as he considered the power of his will to be in every way decisive, so had his political successes - and, indeed, the military victories early in the war, which he regarded as his own personal achievement - caused him to lose all sense of proportion in assessing his own capabilities. To him the acceptance of advice from a jointly responsible Chief-of-Staff would
not have meant supplementing his own will but submitting it to that of another. Added to this was the fact that he was imbued by origin and background with an insuperable mistrust of the military leaders, whose code and way of thinking were alien to him. Thus he was not prepared to see a really responsible military adviser alongside himself. He wanted to be another
Napoleon, who had only tolerated men under him who would obediently carry out his will. Unfortunately he had neither Napoleon's military training nor his military genius.
 
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Part III

It has always been the special forte of German military leadership that it relies on commanders at all levels to show initiative and willingness to accept responsibility and does everything in its power to promote such qualities. That is why, as a matter of principle, the 'directives' of higher commands and the orders of medium and lower commands always contained so-called 'assignments' for subordinate formations. The detailed execution of these assignments was the business of the subordinate commanders concerned. This system of handling orders was largely the reason for the successes scored by the German Army over its opponents, whose own orders generally governed the actions of subordinate commanders down to the very last detail. Only when there was no other possible alternative left did anyone on our side encroach upon the authority of a subordinate formation headquarters by specifically laying down the action it should take. Hitler, on the other hand, thought he could see things much better from behind his desk than the commanders at the front. He ignored the fact that much of what was marked on his far too-detailed situation maps was obviously out of date. From that distance, moreover, he could not possibly judge what was the proper and necessary action to take on the spot.

He had grown increasingly accustomed to interfering in the running of the army groups, armies and lower formations by issuing special orders which were not his concern at all. While I had hitherto been spared such interference in my own sphere of command, I was forewarned of it by what Field-Marshal v. Kluge had to tell me when I met him on a railway station on my way from Vitebsk to Rostov. At Central Army Group, he said, he had to consult Hitler before any operation involving forces of a battalion or more could be mounted. Even if I personally did not experience such intolerable interference later on, there were still to be quite enough clashes with the Supreme Command as a result of Hitler's meddling.

In contrast to his passion for individual orders, which were usually nothing but a hindrance to command staffs and detrimental to operations, Hitler was loath to issue long-term operational directives. The more he came to regard the principle of 'holding on at all costs' as the alpha and omega of his policy, the less prepared was he to issue long-term directives which took
account of the normally foreseeable development of a strategic situation. That such methods must ultimately have placed him at a disadvantage vis-à-vis the enemy was something he refused to see. His mistrust of his subordinate commanders prevented him from giving them, in the form of long-term directives, freedom of action, which they might put to a use that was
not to his liking. The effect of this, however, was to do away with the very essence of leadership. In the long run even an army group could not get along without directives from the Supreme Command - certainly not when it formed part of a larger front and was bound to its neighbours on either flank. We often thought nostagically of our days in the Crimea, when we
had been able to fight in a theatre all of our own.

It still remains for me to show - in as far as I can do so from personal experience - what pattern the disputes took which inevitably arose between Hitler and the army leaders as a result of his attitude to questions of military leadership. Many of the accounts on record depict him as foaming at the mouth and even taking an occasional bite at the carpet. Although he did undoubtedly lose all self-control on occasions, the only time he ever raised his voice or behaved badly when I was present was during the episode with Halder which I have already mentioned. Hitler obviously sensed just how far he could afford to go with his interlocutor and what people he could hope to intimidate with outbursts of rage that may often have been simulated. I must say that as far as my own personal contacts with him went, he maintained appearances and kept things on a factual plane even when our views collided. On the one occasion when he did become personal, the extremely sharp retort it evoked was accepted in silence.

Hitler had a masterly knack of psychologically adapting himself to the individual whom he wished to bring round to his point of view. In addition, of course, he always knew anyone's motive for coming to see him, and could thus have all his counter-arguments ready beforehand. His faculty for inspiring others with his own confidence - whether feigned or genuine - was quite remarkable. This particularly applied when officers who did not know him well came to see him from the front. In such cases a man who had set out to 'tell Hitler the truth about things out there' came back converted and bursting with confidence.

In the various disputes I had with Hitler on operational matters in my capacity as an army group commander, what impressed me most was the incredible tenacity with which he would defend his point of view. There was almost invariably a tussle of several hours' duration before his visitor either attained his object or retired empty-handed, at best consoled with empty promises. I have known no other man who could show anything like the same staying power in a discussion of this kind. And while the maximum time involved in any dispute with a front-line commander would at worst be several hours, the Chief-of-Staff, General Zeitzler, often had to battle for days on end at the evening conferences in order to get Hitler to take the
necessary action. Whenever one of these contests was in progress, we always used to ask Zeitzler what 'round' they had reached.

Besides, the arguments with which Hitler defended his point of view - and I include the purely military ones here - were not usually of a kind that could be dismissed out of hand. After all, in any discussion of operational intentions one is almost always dealing with a matter whose outcome nobody can predict with absolute certainty. Nothing is certain in war, when all is said and done.

Whenever Hitler perceived that he was not making any impression with his opinions on strategy, he immediately produced something from the political or economic sphere. Since he had a knowledge of the political and economic situations with which no front-line commander could compete, his arguments here were generally irrefutable. As a last resort all one could do was to insist that if he did not agree to the proposals or demands submitted to him, things would go wrong militarily and in turn have even worse repercussions in the political and economic fields.

On the other hand, Hitler frequently showed himself to be a very good listener even when he did not like what was being asked of him, and on such occasions he was quite capable of objective discussion. Naturally no relationship of any intimacy could develop between this fanatical dictator — who thought only of his political aspirations and lived in a belief in his 'mission' — and the military leaders. The personal element obviously did not interest Hitler in the least. To him human beings were merely tools in the service of his political ambitions. From his own side there sprang no bond of loyalty to the German soldier.
 
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Heil Hitler

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It seems you intentionally left out the era of the Weimar Republic Germany. Under the terms and conditions of the Treaty of Versailles, Germany was solely to blame for WW1 and thus had to pay massive war reparations to the victors. This included Germany being stripped almost completely of her industrial capacity. Almost every working German machinery, from factories to tractors was confiscated by the victorious allies.

Hitler had to rebuild Germany's industrial capacity following his victory in the election of 1933. Not only did he rebuild Germany's industrial capacity, but he also brought Germany out of the massive economic depression which had plagued the nations of the world and Germany was the first to suffer from the depression as well as the first nation to pull out of it under Hitler's leadership.

So yes, it was an extraordinary feat which Hitler and the National Socialist had achieved. Even many economists acknowledge this fact.


@Talon


BS.

Wrong, Hitlers Germany was trimmed for total war from the very beginning, yes he saved million from unemployment, build new roads, tracks etc etc..... but everything was for the final war.

He build up a world class military by taking insane amounts of debts, the only way to make up for that was to plunder other nations. He never made big efforts to hide this.
 
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A great stateaman to his people the Germans..And no.. Appreciation of that fact does not make you a anti semite.. Thats a fashionable word used by the neo liberal west to subjugate anybody diverting from thier view along with "Genocide"
1/ leader of country:
he destroyed his country
2/ military:
this stupid guy was too stupid to listen to the experts saying about the Normandie landing
3/ ideology:
kill the important communauty of Jews in his country , what a badass

people sometimes follow a stupid. Germans did.

"Happy" birthday in hell
 
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BS.

Wrong, Hitlers Germany was trimmed for total war from the very beginning, yes he saved million from unemployment, build new roads, tracks etc etc..... but everything was for the final war.

He build up a world class military by taking insane amounts of debts, the only way to make up for that was to plunder other nations. He never made big efforts to hide this.

No, it wasn't "trimmed" for total war. Germany in September 1939 lacked adequate surface battle ships to challenge British navy, Germany lacked long ranged strategic bombers, it lacked sufficient amount of U-Boats to choke Britain,
and its tanks were severely under armored/outgunned compared to French, British, and Russian tanks.
 
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No, it wasn't "trimmed" for total war. Germany in September 1939 lacked adequate surface battle ships to challenge British navy, Germany lacked long ranged strategic bombers, it lacked sufficient amount of U-Boats to choke Britain,
and its tanks were severely under armored/outgunned compared to French, British, and Russian tanks.


That is because the Wehrmacht did not fully complete their rearmament process.... the Germans felt confident enough with their new Blitzkrieg doctrine for taking on Poland and gambled that England and France would not join the war... but they did.

The Kriegsmarine has always been neglected compared to the other arms and the innovative submarine program was still taking shape.

But nevertheless, it does no chance the fact that all economic miracles were only possible due to massive rearmament and infrastructure projects and that happened by taking insane amounts of debt.
 
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That is because the Wehrmacht did not fully complete their rearmament process.... the Germans felt confident enough with their new Blitzkrieg doctrine for taking on Poland and gambled that England and France would not join the war... but they did.

The Kriegsmarine has always been neglected compared to the other arms and the innovative submarine program was still taking shape.

But nevertheless, it does no chance the fact that all economic miracles were only possible due to massive rearmament and infrastructure projects and that happened by taking insane amounts of debt.

No, that is completely false. There was no "massive rearmament" taking place in Germany pre 1943-1945, not even in the early years of the Second World War. It was only until mid 1943-1945 that Germany went into full arms production.

Earlier German victories were only the result of German tactics (blitzkrieg) in employing their limited resources strategically and successfully with the combined use of deception, misinformation, and successful gathering of intel on their own enemies.

The German economic miracle was NOT a result of "massive rearmament".

The Soviet Union in 1939 had between 15,000-20,000 tanks compared to 3,503 German Tanks.
 
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Hitler killed a lot of innocent people. Millions upon millions. But WW2 did result in the possibility of the state of Pakistan.
 
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