Wow! What an impressive record your family amassed, Fantastic!
I wasn't criticizing the bravery of British troops, far from it; I'm working on a novel how Great Britain wins WW2 and saves the empire , not just surviving; I was criticizing their political leadership.
I'd love to hear some of those stories when you have the time, and yes the British Army took heavier casualties than the US from a population a third the size, but Monty's usual record is always based on his outnumbering the defenders, so the idea of seriously attacking millions of soviet soldiers would have made him do something embarrassing in front of witnesses.
Given the political reasons for the Brits taking the coast (pre-invasion positions and clearing the 'vengeance weapons') yet despite RN traditions, the Allied amphibious capability was largely unused by Monty, then his stupid decision giving his army group 3 days off after taking Brussels, NTM ignoring the fact he hadn't cleared the Approaches to Antwerp, the supposed other primary purpose of his advance, then chose to waste the allied airborne army driving to a bridge too far, desperately trying to get out in front of the Americans, when he was supposed to be reducing the critical allied armies' supply problem, so he created Hitler's opportunity because it took 2 more monthes to finally start using Antwerp, less than a month before the BoB.
Typically, rather than risk British lives against the vastly stronger German forces he let slip by him, NTM getting bogged down in an embarrassing way, he assigned the Canadians to do the dirty work (the survivors are not great Monty admirers); kind of like MacArthur giving the Australians the 'difficult' bits in Bougainville and Borneo etc.
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SilverbladeTE wrote:Lyonheart
In 1944+ the British were going up the much tougher coastal route which would have caused extreme US casualties....that's why the armies were set out that way
Let them play to their strengths
UK had been in the war taking casualties years longer than the USA so that was a massive SOCIAL issue.
Yes it was 6 long years, and who's fault was much of that? Montgomery!
Celerity was not one of his watchwords in his 'pursuit' of Rommel, NTM the invasions of Sicily and Italy, or advancing along the French coast; indeed between him and Admiral King's stubborn stupidity, which delayed Torch by 4 monthes, the war may have dragged an extra year, maybe more if the rest of the generals hadn't also dawdled on occasion.
All the allied armies were very aware of the need to conserve their troop strength, and the simple blockade and besiege approach to the German occupied ports certainly kept casualties on the low side, but ignoring the opportunities to grab Antwerp and use it back in mid-September which could have kept western allies advancing rather further possibly reaching the Rhine by winter, thus preventing the German counter-attack, that should have been predicted since it obviously had a much greater chance of success than simply being swallowed up by the soviets in the east.
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French leadership collapsed in 1940 largely as a result of too many older officers who'd been brought up on the insane "aggressive" doctrine that got their men butchered in 1914/1915
And those officers basically had a collective mental breakdown when things went wrong in 1940
And Europe damn near had a total revolution because of the carnage in 1918
Thus, worrying over "casualties" wasn't a joke to nations and officers who'd suffered that.
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No, it wasn't a joke, and I was only trying to be as succinct as possible rather than my too wordy norm.
The French Army revolt in 1917 was due to that reckless attitude regarding always attacking under inept leadership, that compelled the British to hold so much of the front until the French reorganized.
The British professional officers who survived and stayed in were far more determined to prevents more Somme's than JFC Fuller, but he had the ear of the politicians.
Then there those who argue the British Army did much better in WWI than WWII.
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Monty was an arrogant ass, so was Patton and Patton didn't have the skills/temperament for the slower "grind" up the coast, he was great at "blitzkrieg".
My great uncle fought in France 1940, they didn't "run" they got beaten by having as usual, top brass mind set of the last war fought, and the poor bloody French having top brass that melted down.
French and British could have defeated the Germans but....
Oh and then he came back in 1944, ended up liberating Belsen
British troops in 1940 had to deal with the Luftwaffe scum butchering civilians on road and trains, which FYI was very hard on the troops to cope with mentally
And yeah "scum" deliberate policy of slaughtering refugees
Alas UK took up civilian slaughter from the air, too
My 2 grandads fought in North Africa/Italy and Burma respectively
Paternal was in Royal Artillery, at one point 25 pounder firing over open sights as antitank gunner. Was buried alive twice by shell fire, one occasion ALL his Indian mates in the section drowned in the sand because of that. Was also at Monte Cassino.
Maternal was in the Chindits and saw what the Japanese did with prisoners and their 14 inch SMLE bayonets...though he said what they did to the local people especially their women was even worse.
And I don't think the US would be so damn complacent of casualties causing issues after Saipan.
It IS a serious issue.
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Again Wow! and I hope your grandfathers and great uncle felt fully appreciated for their service!
Casualties are a very serious issue, and one I was quite familiar with in Iraq, thanks to 'Force Protection' measures, but there were times when it was or seemed more important than fighting and winning.
I think Tarawa upset Americans at home more than Saipan, given how much bigger and more useful Saipan was, not to mention Guam was a former US territory.
But the lessons learned the hard way are sometimes what it takes to get big bureaucracies to pay attention.
Kudos to your grandfathers and great uncle for their service and experience!
L