• Could Russia and Great Britain have defeated Germany without help from the U.S.


  • Well, I think that one of the major consequences of the US staying out of the war would have been all of Germany being run by Soviets, as opposed to just their chunk in the east.

    -Midnight_Reaper

  • '20 '19 '18

    Could the USSR and UK have defeated Germany without the aid of American forces? Quite possibly, though I suspect the war would’ve dragged on into 1947 or even '48, and like Midnight_Reaper said, the Soviets would’ve ended up in control of most of Western Europe.

    Could they have defeated Germany without US Lend-Lease and other aid? I doubt it. England would’ve been starved into submission and forced to sue for peace, leaving Germany with only one enemy to worry about. The Soviets might still have kept them out of Moscow, but at a much higher cost (which, given the price they paid, boggles the mind).


  • UK I believe would of ended up stale mating Germany by each other being unable to invade each other however USSR wasn’t looking good without Lend-Lease and Germany wasn’t going to go beyond the Ural Mountains. So I think USSR would of been a lose.


  • If Germany only had to fight Russia, they would lose from 1942 onward. The Soviets won that on their own and had greater manpower draw than Germany and could replace loses much more quickly. The west doesn’t like this truth, but who cares. But before 1942 Germany could have won depending on actions.


  • I just read that Norway delivered a substantial part of the nitrat used in the Russian ammunition production during WWI, along with some other stuff that was needed to make bombs and explosives. I dont know if Russia had developed any way to make their own nitrat before 1940, or if they were dependent on foreign trade to get it. After Norway was captured by Germany in 1940, Russia did not get any nitrat from us. Before 1940, Norway sold nitrat to Germany, France and Russia, in that order. UK got nitrat from USA. But, as IL said, the Huns had no plans to cross the Ural mountains any way, so nitrat or no nitrat, the Slavs would be safe behind the Urals

  • '17 '16 '13 '12

    If US stays neutral while Japan takes over European colonies, its pretty much a Germany to Soviet Union then assuming that U.K. Focuses on the empire instead of trying to establish a beachead in Europe.


  • @Imperious:

    If Germany only had to fight Russia, they would lose from 1942 onward. The Soviets won that on their own and had greater manpower draw than Germany and could replace loses much more quickly. The west doesn’t like this truth, but who cares. But before 1942 Germany could have won depending on actions.

    Except you are ignoring the fact that Germany and his allies drove so deep into USSR territory with a military literally 1/3 the size of the Red Military and drove almost to the middle east. With Stalin refusing to abandon his eastern front except when he absolutely needed it. Without help, it’s clear that Germany would of eventually over turned the tide. Even more so if they didn’t have to worry about another front like they had to.

  • '20 '19 '18

    @Imperious:

    If Germany only had to fight Russia, they would lose from 1942 onward. The Soviets won that on their own and had greater manpower draw than Germany and could replace loses much more quickly. The west doesn’t like this truth, but who cares. But before 1942 Germany could have won depending on actions.

    From 1942 onward, the Germans were forced to commit ever-greater resources to North Africa/the Mediterranean, not to mention diverting fighter squadrons to combat the UK/US bomber offensive. In this scenario (UK forced out of the fight, US strictly neutral and sending no aid to the USSR), the Germans would’ve fought a single-front war against a single enemy - one which, without the benefit of Lend-Lease, would’ve had 400,000 fewer jeeps and trucks, 7,000 fewer tanks and over 11,000 fewer aircraft. Under those circumstances, I don’t think the Russians could’ve done it on their own.


  • Germans would still need to protect all her other non eastern holdings with about 20% of her forces, and even with 100%, they were outproduced by Russia alone and with inferior manpower reserves by comparison to the Soviets. Its still the Elephant vs. Ants syndrome


  • Remember you have to discontinue the idea that Lend Lease isn’t happening except from UK which was mostly tanks and fighters.

    Germany drove very deep into USSR with the help it was getting so I can’t image how much worse it would of been if US wasn’t sending supplies.

  • '21 '18 '16

    Play a game and leave the USA out. Just skip their turn. It should become very apparent that it wouldn’t have ended well for the remaining allied forces.

  • Liaison TripleA '11 '10

    @seancb:

    Play a game and leave the USA out. Just skip their turn. It should become very apparent that it wouldn’t have ended well for the remaining allied forces.

    Well applying this game logic to the question, could Russia/UK beat Germany,  I would say in Global 1940 it’s entirely possible for the allies to win with no US help.

    US often goes full pacific, and UK/Russia is left to it’s own devices in Europe.  If Adolf plays and mishandles Germany because he’s a noob.  It’s an Allied W! :)


  • A UK/USSR partnership might well have defeated the Axis (though it would have taken longer than was historically the case, and much more of Europe would probably have ended up under Soviet control than was the case historically), but let’s look at the UK element by asking the following question: would a US/USSR partnership without the UK have been more successful than a UK/USSR partnership without the US?  The answer depends partly on whether the British Isles would have remained under UK control, and thus on whether they would have been available for use by the US as a springboard for its strategic bombing campaign and its later cross-Channel invasion, but I’m raising the point because of another factor: the fact that the US and the UK had very different material capabilities and significantly different philosophies when it came to waging war against the Axis.

    The difference in material capabilities doesn’t need any elaboration: the US was massively superior to the UK in terms of numbers, though the qualitative difference wasn’t as large.  In terms of philosophy, however, the British and the Americans were worlds apart and they had many bitter arguments on the subject throught the war.  The British – in part because they’d been in the war longer, in part because the war was on their doorstep, and in part because they had fewer resources overall – favoured the indirect approach of fighting the Axis on the periphery of its territories, and they also sometimes favoured tactics that economized men by taking a slow-and-steady approach.  (Montgomery was heavily criticized for this by the Americans during the Normany campaign and its follow-up in the rest of France.)  The Americans, by contrast, wanted to hit the Germans head-on, in the Ulysses S. Grant tradition, and get the job done as quickly as possible.  That’s why, for example, the British lobbied for operations like the invasion of Italy and the Market-Garden paratroop operation in Holland, while the Americans pushed for a cross-Channel invasion and a broad-front push across France towards the Rhine.  Ironically, the Americans were closer to the Soviets in their hit-them-head-on approach to ground warfare than they were to the British were, though like the British (and unlike the Soviets, who were prepared to take massive casualties) they did make considerable efforts to use capital-intensive technology (like strategic bombers) to reduce to a minimum the overall number of human casualties they had to incur in their war effort.

  • 2023 '22 '21 '20 '19 '18 '17 '16

    What I’m not seeing yet in the comments so far is a discussion of whether Britain would have had additional resources to commit to the German/Italian front because Japan presumably stayed out of the war. How many extra divisions can Britain ship in from ANZAC, New Guinea, Malaya, Hong Kong, Burma, etc. once Britain’s not tied down by the Japanese Empire?

    Right, like if the war is Germany, Italy, and Japan vs. Russia, France, and the UK, with absolutely no involvement by the USA, then it seems like a pretty clear Axis win. Without the USA serving as a check on Japan, Japan would have been free to focus its full might on either Siberia or India, either of which would have been a disaster for the Allies. If Japan goes north, Russia runs critically short of the manpower it needed to push the Germans back west of Moscow. Instead of building up a wall of reserves that won the famous January 1942 counter-offensive outside Moscow, Moscow winds up in street-to-street fighting over the winter, with Germans penetrating part of the way into the Moscow suburbs and using them as winter quarters. Hitler winds up with a real chance of taking Moscow in spring 1942, potentially triggering a collapse of Russian morale. With an unbroken string of land-based military victories, further resistance to the Wehrmacht might have looked hopeless – even if much of the Red Army fought on, many divisions would surrender without fighting, further weakening Soviet strength, and setting off a chain reaction leading to an Axis victory.

    If Japan goes south, Britain runs critically short of the manpower it needs to hold Egypt and put down the pro-Axis coups in Iraq and Persia. Divisions that would otherwise have been shipped west from India to hold the Suez Canal instead get sent east to hold the Japanese and Thai armies at the gates of India. Rommel pulls off a miracle after El Alamein and drives the British forces into the Red Sea. With the port of Alexandria in Axis hands, Italy can finally send proper supply to the offensive spearhead, and so by April 1942, the Desert Fox is resupplied and marching on Baghdad with substantial Arab support. British control over the Middle East collapses, and the Axis wind up with a stable, secure, practical source of the oil they need to fight a long war.

    So what’s more interesting is UK + France + USSR vs. Germany + Italy. Japan stays firmly neutral except for its ongoing war against China. What happens there? I’m curious.


  • Look you cant use any AA game to decide this question. Its more than ridiculous to have a Larry Harris game used to deal with a Historical question. The game even in Europe is not Historical and the manpower reserves of the allies is much greater than Germany and Japan. Even China had some 500 divisions alone ( of course on average their divisions were much weaker than Japanese).

    Its pretty clear the axis win in any Axis and Allies game if USA does not play. Go play a Russian campaign style game if you want to get a closer perspective of what Germany was up against.


  • Yes Japan is in the war, only the U.S. is out

  • 2023 '22 '21 '20 '19 '18 '17 '16

    Yeah, well, at that point it’s the Axis’s war to lose. If America is out of the war and Japan knows America is out of the war, then the first strike of the Japanese Air Fleet hits Ceylon, not Pearl Harbor. Instead of just losing a battleship and a carrier, Britain loses its entire naval presence in the Indian Ocean on the first day of the war. Oil shipments from Borneo flow directly into Japanese factories with no shipping losses from American subs, allowing them to adequately train a new cadre of fighter and bomber pilots. With nearly unchallenged air superiority, Britain loses the battle for eastern and coastal India, retreating toward Pakistan and New Delhi. Revolting Indian nationalists further sap British Indian military strength. India makes no net contribution to the North African / Middle Eastern front in 1942, and as a result, British lines collapse. With no Persian oil and no American destroyers, British control of the Atlantic evaporates. With no Battle of Midway, no Battle of the Coral Sea, and no Battle of Guadalcanal, Japan successfully boots the Australians and Kiwis out of the Solomon Islands, cutting ANZAC off from the rest of the British Empire.

    So by May 1942, the “British Empire” is pretty much just England, Scotland, Wales, and Canada. South Africa and ANZAC maintain their nominal loyalty to the British crown, but they’re not logistically able to contribute any troops or supplies. That rump British Empire might be able to maintain its independence and spit defiance at the Nazis – they could maybe protect a narrow corridor for Canada to export enough grain and oil to England to feed the factory workers in Manchester and keep the fighter pilots up in the air on patrol…but they’re not going to be in a position to launch any offensive operations against the Nazis or share any supplies with Russia.

    Without importing American Studebaker trucks (not to mention ammo, boots, food, etc.) Russia is in no position to launch any offensives at all. Maybe they hold Moscow in the winter of 1941, and maybe they don’t. Either way, they’re not going to retake any ground. Russia can haul in reserves by rail to defend any cities they still hold, but every time they lose a city, it’s gone for good. The Germans have plenty of oil from Persia, and extra reserves that they can strip from a quiet Western Front. Sooner or later the Russians get pushed over the Urals.

    It’s pretty grim.


  • Germany was supposed to put away Russia by 1941, and lend lease shipments in that year were 2.1% of the total they received witch is nothing. So basically with no USA helping Russia for that 6 months and Germany? Italy  FAILED TO WIN ,demonstrates your argument also fails as they could not put away a truckless Russia. Reason is Russia would replace one destroyed division with two divisions. With better tank models that used universal parts, as opposed to German tank design that mostly had customized parts ( even within the same model the parts were not interchangeable) Russia could better cope with breakdowns. No Russians even seeing the Urals. Germany would make her same mistakes and lose eventually to the eastern hordes that made divisions like Germany made schnitzel.

    Hitler had only rearguard swine …like sgt shultz to replace loses. Stalin had ridiculous manpower to draw from

  • 2023 '22 '21 '20 '19 '18 '17 '16

    I dunno, IL, you’re kind of contemptuously waving away my arguments without really addressing them. If you just wanna say “hurr hurr, Hitler was stupid and his troops were too,” then there’s not much I can do about that. If you want to talk about the facts, please read on.

    In 1941, the Allies shipped 360,000 tons of supplies to Russia. Let’s say 5% of that was trucks – that’s still over 12,000 Studebakers in 1941. You put five soldiers in each truck, you bring two fresh truckload of soldiers to a railway junction each month with each truck, and you’ve just mobilized an extra 480,000 troops. That’s about 40% of the Russian army as it stood in front of Moscow in December 1941 – almost double the margin of superiority Stalin had when he launched the Moscow counteroffensive in December 1941. Without those troops, instead of slightly outnumbering Hitler, the Russians would have been somewhat outnumbered. You take those extra Russian troops away, and it’s totally possible the winter counteroffensive would have failed, leaving Germans in place only 15 miles from the Moscow city center.

    So I hear you that Stalin’s got his limitless eastern hordes. But the problem is, you can’t get the eastern hordes to Moscow without trucks. They live out in the trackless prairie and the arctic mining towns, a thousand miles from nowhere. And if you don’t get them to the front in time, you lose a major city, and you can’t take that city back without tanks and artillery.

    An article in WW2 magazine (http://www.historynet.com/did-russia-really-go-it-alone-how-lend-lease-helped-the-soviets-defeat-the-germans.htm) claims that 30 to 40% of the medium and heavy tanks in front of Moscow in November 1941 were imported from Britain. Having lost 60,000 tanks, Russia was down to its last 600 tanks. Russia’s artillery only had enough ammo to fire two rounds per cannon per day. If America hadn’t been providing its own lend-lease to the UK in the Atlantic, you really think Britain would have found the shipping to spare to get those tanks to Murmansk? Or do you think the Russian infantry could have stood in the snow and held ground against Panzers with virtually no artillery or and virtually no armored support?

    After the start of 1942, the Russians quickly set up tank factories and aircraft factories on their rear lines – in part by using imported Allied machine tools to jump start production. A tank factory is a complicated work of art. If you’re missing a key tool, you’ve got to manufacture the tool that makes the tool that makes the tool that finishes your factory. That takes years. The Russians didn’t have years; their tanks were driving out of the factory and into battle. You slow that process down by even a few weeks, and maybe the Germans take Stalingrad, and, with it, shut the Russians out of the entire Caucasus region west of the Volga.

    In real life, the Germans made large territorial gains against Russia all through 1942, even though the Allies delivered 14% of their total Lend-Lease that year – the equivalent of 80,000 Studebakers, plus an equivalent number of tanks and aircraft. If you cancel all of that aid, AND you free up half of the 600,000 German combat troops held on the Western Front to repulse the British, AND you reduce Soviet morale, because the Soviets can see that the British are being pushed back on all fronts, the Japanese are advancing, and the Americans still don’t care…

    Could Germany have found a way to take this cushy setup and ruin it? Sure. Hitler was insane. He could have made all kinds of mistakes and eventually lost, even without the USA in the war. That’s why I say it was the Axis’s war to lose. But I wouldn’t bet on it.

Suggested Topics

Axis & Allies Boardgaming Custom Painted Miniatures

47

Online

17.0k

Users

39.3k

Topics

1.7m

Posts