Note minor things like the changes in French governments and
the make up of the legislature are deleted, the conspiracy
requires inconvenient facts to disappear.
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.dePost by Geoffrey SinclairNoted how many of those Prime Ministers were in theory more
comfortable with left wing politics than right.
But no, the one quote from Churchill must be correct, the conspiracy
demands it, a no war with Germany policy that survives all changes
of government, one that would have been changed to an early war
with Germany had one, sorry, THE ONE, person been alive for a
while longer.
Some historians suggest the assassination of JFK was the crucial
turning point for the Vietnam war.
Oh good, we now shift to another time and place and unsubstantiated
claim.
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.deA change at or near the top
can well change the direction of an institution, even a state.
I see, you are sure your wish is true and will for example, assume
another killing of a head of state made a difference to government
policy therefore a killing of a foreign minister made a permanent
change to government policy that survived several prime ministers.
Very good, always it probably happened somewhere sometime
in sort of the same way and so it must have happened here, much
easier to ignore the idea to provide facts to show the effect.
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.deLess controversial most German historians suggest the leave
of Bismarck in 1888 was the crucial turning point for Germany
towards the policy that in the end brought WWI.
And others can note the new Kaiser with his attitudes to the
world played a part as well.
And of course it has to be the fearless leaders leading, not
for conspiracy land is the idea things like demographics and
the attitude of the successful (we should export our success,
even if the other people are ungrateful), see for example
today the rise of nationalism in China and India.
It all has to be those handful of key leaders, never constrained
by others or circumstances.
And these all wise leaders can predict the future so well they
will play to lose major military battles, because they know the
alternative will be much worse.
Some of the deleted stuff, starting with the French High Command.
However you are quite convinced of what they thought, despite no
evidence, as opposed to the solid evidence from their military
writings and command how they had missed the changes the
Germans were about to use.
You are quite convinced they knew the Sedan attack and far
more importantly the exploitation would end the war in a
short time while being also sure there would be a long war
of attrition and genocide if the Sedan attack was not allowed
to succeed.
Quite a contradiction, either the new mobile war worked or
it totally failed.
You are the one coming up with the idea there could only ever
be one successful thrust into France by the German mobile
forces, all other attacks would be WWI like in terms of ground
gained and casualties, while the Germans conducted genocide
in the areas they did gain control of.
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.dePost by Geoffrey SinclairSo what was so special about Sedan, the location? The
French troops present? Druids hidden in the Ardennes
calling down curses on the French?
Instead of Sedan one could call it Ardennes breakthrough.
Ah yes, when in trouble retreat to deciding what to call something.
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.deBut
in German its often called Sedan because
(1) it was the way German forces usually took (like in 1870, 1914),
(2) the crucial Meuse crossing happened at and near Sedan.
We agree that this tank force that went through here was the decisive
part in the invasion of France?
Do we agree this reply is a sad attempt to ignore the fundamental
contradiction in the great French military conspiracy to lose in 1940?
That the French generals were supposed to know, really KNOW,
the Sedan attack would succeed so well, but at the same time, know,
really KNOW, no other panzer thrust would work, dooming France to
years of attrition warfare and genocide in the parts of France held
by the Germans.
So what was so special about Sedan that a panzer thrust would
work there and ONLY there?
Come on, why? And how did the French command know this?
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.de(...)
Post by Geoffrey SinclairPost by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.deThe war in Africa was dominated by intel on both sides.
The war in North Africa for most of the period consisted of
almost zero ground combat and not a lot in the air, it was
really only in Tunisia the armies stayed in contact instead
of keeping most of the forces well back from the official
front line. Lack of supplies and men.
You do know Rommel found out about the size of the
November 1941 offensive from the BBC? He had been
fixated on Tobruk, not willing to be distracted by an
obvious spoiling attack. Meantime 8th Army's plan
unraveled as the Germans were not fighting it very
much, the Germans were supposed to strongly react
and attack the key ground the 8th Army had captured,
why those particular parts of the desert were key
grounds was left unexplained.
In the end 8th Army won, one tank reserve to none.
Some German historians saw the initial success of Rommel due to
the intel he got by the broken code of the US military attache
in Cairo and his Seebohm Sigint group. Similar they see his defeat
by the loss of this sources and the British apply of Ultra intel,
specialy against his supply.
You have been reading the thread about Ultra and how it had its
strengths and weaknesses in the Mediterranean, along with the
counter moves by, especially, the Italians?
You know Rommel arrived in February 1941?
You have noticed Colonel Fellers started reporting in October
1940 but the axis only started telling Rommel about the
messages in December 1941? That the theft of the code by
the Italians was in September 1941?
Hence why Rommel found out about the November attack
from the BBC?
Fellers switched to a new code on 29 June 1942.
And the over extension to Egypt, the expansion of 8th Army, a
new British Army commander who seemed capable of
commanding an army played no part in Rommel's defeat?
Correspondingly it was not flaws and failures on the allied
side that contributed to their defeats?
Do you actually understand things are more complicated than
some key person and message, and having an intercept is not
the same as it being true. For example the pessimism of Feller's
June 1942 reports may have helped Rommel decide to drive for
Alexandria?
Deleted bits include refuting the idea the air force could always
find and destroy tanks and trucks.
Also not bothering to explain why the genocides in Poland by
both the USSR and Nazi Germany should mean one can be
expected in France.
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.dePost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.dePost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.deAnd the occupied part of France could have faced
a very different regime compared to what it had in WWI or WWII.
So 10 millions is not unthinkable.
Simply put 10 French million deaths from combat either military
or civilian is so wrong it does not even make a bad joke, it
shows a detachment from reality.
A 1940-44 war of attrition with a German focus to create civilian
deaths in France, how many deaths, civ and mil, could be the worst
expectation? Assume 20% of France got occupied.
Oh good, a homework assignment from someone who deletes any
reply that does not fit.
No, I want to understand your line of argument.
Given the failure to actually deal with facts that contradict the claims,
there has been little attempt to understand, much more devoted to
saying it must be so.
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.deThe above scenario
is something the old men of French HQ must had in mind in April
1940.
Genocide?
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.deI think we agree that they feared a repeat of WWI.
Everyone did.
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.deFrom an only military point of view, what would be the result
such 4 years in your opinion?
Now try and actually note what you are asking for, over the 4 years
Does Italy remain neutral?
Does Japan remain neutral?
Does the USA remain neutral?
Does the USSR remain neutral?
Do the Balkans remain neutral?
Do the U-boats lose significant effectiveness due to the lack of
French bases and the French fleet being available?
Now understand I really doubt the French would be combat
worthy by the end of 1940 given how badly behind the command
structure was, and how little strategic depth they had and how
quickly the Belgians were out of the war and how far ahead the
Luftwaffe was combat strength and quality wise.
Poland had revealed real shortcomings in the German system
and troop training, these had been significantly improved, and
even in Poland the Germans were much better than the French
command system.
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.deDo you think tech of 1940 would no allow death numbers like in WWI
or at least not more?
Do you think by ideology the Nazis would not target civilians in
the west if they saw it as a way to win?
Do you think you can actually stop trying to tell us you know what
the French high command was thinking, including ideas about
genocides, and making conspiracies to lose?
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.dePost by Geoffrey SinclairWhy does the war last until 1944? Why is the only active front
in France? Why does Germany activate a genocide program
in France only? Why do Japan and Italy stay out, enabling
around 3 more British field armies to join the BEF? Plus
all the airpower from the Middle East etc.?
Why does US public opinion and FDR ignore the killings?
I want to discuss a scenario most likely in the mind of
the old men at French HQ 1940. Not a political what if.
Sorry, over 4 years lots of things change, the most obvious
if the U-boats are less successful that releases a lot of
resources for other operations and overcomes a major
allied problem in WWII, shipping shortages.
Not to mention no need for major invasion craft programs
as France is still open for allied armies.
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.dePost by Geoffrey SinclairWhy do you fixate on one or two quotes and backfill ludicrous
conspiracies to fit?
The quotes supplied from Winterbotham and Bertrand are
wrong and can easily be shown to be wrong, the allied
code breaking they require did not exist at the time.
Thats not true. It was reported here that in the 3 months
after March 1940 several 1000s Ultra messages were read.
So 3 months is April to June 1940, including the Norwegian
attack, the increase in allied capabilities and the increase in
German radio traffic generally. And by the way several
thousands of messages would need to include those
recovered after the early May blackout, way after it mattered
when it came to the initial German attack plans.
How many were intercepted and how many were decrypted
from the units in Germany say from mid February to early
May 1940?
You announce the German radio traffic surely must have
included the really important messages, the Germans had
radios therefore they must have used them.
By the way how come the allies were surprised by the
invasion of Denmark and Norway, if Ultra was that all
seeing eye?
The Polish cryptographers arrived in France by 20 October
1939, even with them the French effort was smaller than the
British one, including the fact the British had people in France.
The RN captured a naval enigma in late 1939. It helped
cracking of German messages from 28 October 1939 in
mid January 1940. More work meant the French could
read other traffic. It would seem as usual the Luftwaffe
was the easiest to penetrate.
Winterbotham was shown the first British decrypts in April
1940, which of course were low level items from the Luftwaffe.
Then came the problems of setting up a system to use the
information, the first attempt took until July 1940.
The French managed to decrypt around 1,141 messages
during the Norwegian campaign. Ever thought all those
early 1940 decrypts could be mainly from the active front,
not the passive one? The one where the Germans had to
use radios?
German radio traffic from the units in Germany declined in
April 1940, the usual understanding of what traffic analysis
could reveal. On 1 May a procedure changed locked out
allied code breakers from all but Norwegian traffic.
Captures from German ships in Norway helped start to
crack the German naval enigma system.
On 10 January, the same day as Hitler ordered the attack
on the west to take place on the 17th, the Luftwaffe courier
plane landed in Belgium. On the 13th the attack is
delayed to the 20th, on the 16th the attack is delayed to
the spring.
I suppose Ultra was revealing all of this to the allies?
Or does the major boost in allied code breaking occur
after 17 February?
On 17 February Manstein managed to talk to Hitler about
an invasion plan via the Ardennes. On the 20th the order
was issued changing the plan along the lines of Manstein's
suggestions.
So please tell us all, what was the message(s) the allies
decoded, was there some master message laying out
the entire plan, in great detail? Was it only for an army
group? When was this message decrypted? How did it
not go to Britain since in March 1940 there was a full
liaison system complete with exchange of decrypts?
Any possibility the intelligence people are confusing
the 10 January incident? Any chance the intelligence
people are trying to say there was no intelligence failure
to locate the important German attack, it was a command
failure, that is it was someone else to blame?
Noticed the lack of support for the Winterbotham and
Bertrand claims?
By the way the Altmark incident occurred on 16 February,
leading to Hitler deciding to seriously plan to invade Norway,
the commander of the invasion was appointed on 20
February. So is the idea the allies completely missed
the Norway invasion plans but intercepted and decoded
the French plans? After all if the Germans are sending
invasion plans by radio surely it would be all of the plans,
not just the one the conspiracy wants.
How about the order to invade Norway on 2 April? Surely
it would be a good way to test all those radios just before
the invasion?
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.deThe
possibility and details of the Ardennes attack was known from
other source (like the Mechelen papers and spies).
I suppose it is not a surprise the capture of part of the
January 1940 invasion plans in early January is proof the
allies had copies of the significantly revised plans from mid
February onwards. So is the idea there was no change to
the Ardennes part of the plan in 1940?
Once again you exaggerate and forget to mention other
reports like the Germans were planning to go through
Switzerland.
How about the report the Germans received in 1944 that
the allied attack was going to be on 6 June in Normandy,
along with large numbers of other claims about when and
where. I suppose we must conclude the Germans knew
exactly when and where since they were told.
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.deTo confirm
this other data only a fraction of this decrypts were necessary.
I am sorry you are simply ignoring reality.
So what were these fraction of decrypts? What did they say?
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.dePost by Geoffrey SinclairThey
require the allies to have then lose late war levels of code
breaking and in any case ignore the Germans used couriers
and land lines while in Germany, not radio messages for
the allies to intercept.
Do you have some data on this wire vs radio argument?
The lack of enigma messages from the time periods on file in
the archives? Even the very basic one, the lack of allied
intercept stations? Versus later.
The idea Germans have brains? They understood how
much you can learn from traffic analysis.
The repeat of the procedure in 1944, just before that
attack in the Ardennes? The reports by allied people
in both 1940 and throughout the war how much less
traffic came out of units stationed in Germany? With
the possible exception of the Luftwaffe.
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.deOnce a radio station was with the Enigma it was to be used.
Once artillery units had guns they were to be used, similarly
I suppose the Panzers were being driven day and night, they
were there to be used.
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.deThe
possibility of decipherment was not an issue on operational level.
The operational level would not have the grand strategy plans.
Note the courier aircraft that came down in Belgium, it
would not be needed if things were being sent by radio.
But of course all it seems to "prove" is the pre Manstein
invasion plans were the same as the the one used in May.
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.deThe Enigma was assumed safe and therefore usualy used by radio.
One reason was to have the radio station in confirmed operational
status too.
Oh sorry, I forgot, the conspiracy requires the Germans to
transmit by radio even when they could use land lines, and
not just a few test messages, major plans and other important
items.
You require the Germans to lack even the basic understanding
of how much traffic analysis can tell you about the units using
radio. That the more traffic you transmit the more likely the
enemy can read at least some of it.
Post by S***@argo.rhein-neckar.dePost by Geoffrey SinclairThe quote from Churchill is also wrong, ignoring the many
changes in French governments and policy, along with the
fact such policy was influenced by more than the French
foreign minister, and more than the French government.
Churchill saw it different from you. And he had (at least since
1940) probably access to more information (MI6) around the 1930s
events than we have.
Ah yes, of course, Churchill went through MI6 information,
presumably they had a great source in the French
government who was able to confirm THE ONE man
being killed ensured French policy would change and
stay changed through all the changes in Government over
the next 6 years, the changes you decide are completely
irrelevant, since you delete the mention of them.
I know this is silly but why not look at the French Government
policies and the influences on it, including Italy shifting from
anti to pro Germany, the British actions, the depression and
its effects, the changes in Germany's attitudes and capabilities
and so on.
Try and explain with the communists making so many gains
in the elections why French government policy is supposed
to continue to be so against alliances with the USSR.
I realise the Churchill quote is so important you will invent
reasons to ignore what the French government did in
favour of what you wanted it to do, but try, reality is much
more interesting than fiction.
The allies knew when the German attack came it was
likely to be from the North Sea to Luxembourg. The Belgians
and Dutch decided despite all the information available to
avoid overt co-operation with the allies, even with the
evidence of the plans captured on 10 January 1940 and
apparently in conspiracy land, with even more of the
German plans known to the allies. In any case the
opening attacks on 10 May were powerful indications the
original German plans were being used, complete with
Panzer divisions attacking into Holland and Belgium.
Geoffrey Sinclair
Remove the nb for email.