r/HistoryMemes Taller than Napoleon 23h ago

See Comment Awkward...

7.3k Upvotes

201 comments sorted by

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u/FrenchieB014 Taller than Napoleon 23h ago edited 20h ago

In May 1945, during the final campaign in Bavaria, the 2nd Armored Division commanded by General Leclerc captured Berchtesgaden and its surrounding including Adolf Hitler’s personal residence, the Berghof in coordination with American forces of the 101 airborne

Let’s go back to the 1930s. A certain Captain Gaulle wrote a book titled Vers l’armée de métier (“Toward a Professional Army”). In it, he outlined the principles of modern warfare and the decisive role of tanks and armored formations. (I’ll let the HOI4 fans handle the rest.. .) Had his ideas been adopted, they could have modernized the French army and, at best, prevented the rapid defeat of 1940.

Although innovative and strikingly forward-thinking, the book received little support in France. The French army clung instead to its obsolete doctrines. However, it enjoyed significant international success and was translated into several languages...

Soooo yep... when French troops entered Hitler’s residence, one soldier discovered a copy of General de Gaulle’s book on the shelves. It was translated in German and best of all annotated in Hitler own hand*

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u/Supermind18 23h ago

Wow, really shows how incompetent the French governments after WWI were from fear of another war

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u/Ryjinn 23h ago edited 23h ago

It's more than that, even leadership who weren't outright terrified of another war were pretty bad at leaving old practices behind. A lot of military leaders on both sides, even German, thought of tanks as a sideshow, or at best, a replacement for cavalry to be used in support of infantry. On the military build up side, reluctance was primarily fueled by fear and anxiety over the prospect of another war, absolutely, on the strategy side, misuse of tanks and other new technology like aircraft carriers (the British tried using them as submarine hunters of all things), came more from dogma than fear.

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u/D3k4s 23h ago

This seems so ridiculous, And especially so if considering the success of the Renault FT Tank in WWI.

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u/helicophell 22h ago

Renault FT defining what tanks would be after it, for the French to just ignore the excellent thing they made? Hey wait a moment this is starting to sound like that book…

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u/D3k4s 22h ago

👀

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u/FrenchieB014 Taller than Napoleon 21h ago

The ft was here to cheerlead the French

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u/Kaourdouar 18h ago

only the female one where the cheerleaders

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u/morrikai 13h ago

To be fair France had several tanks built like modernized ranault ft and often cited for having had better armament and armor then the average German tank during battle of France. It is just that they never really left the ranault ft with tanks that had two man crew and doctrine based on WWI

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u/helicophell 13h ago

Hey hey, it wasn't 2 man crew, it was 3 man crew!

What do you mean putting an extra guy in the hull isn't helping?

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u/morrikai 12h ago

maybe three in tower hade been more useful? Just a small thing like information manegment

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u/Perseus_NL 3h ago

Also, German tankers had two things going for them:

1) Commanders who knew how to use them and against what targets
2) A radio set in each tank for real time guidance & orders on the battlefield.

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u/bzdelta 12h ago

In the Mouth of Madness but it's Charles De Gaulle

RIP Sam Neill

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u/TheJadeChairman 20h ago

Sure it does, but society always resists change, even if the evidence shows that the result would be overwhelmingly positive. There is always some institution or demographic that wants to protect its own interests, and there are always high ranking people with outdated ideas who don't want to risk anything now that they're near the top.

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u/Poppis86 17h ago

I'm sure in the future they will write similar stories about how some countries did not immediately realize how to use drones "correctly". Predicting how the next war will be won is difficult.

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u/ChuKoNoob 11h ago

True but if it turns out that the winning side used doctrines that were published but not adopted by the losing side that would really rub salt in the wound.

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u/archbid 52m ago

Or firing the secretary of defense that was modernising the army

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u/ArmiaStars 7h ago

Do keep in mind that the first ever use of tanks, where IIRC they used something like 300 Mark 1 tanks, most of them broke down on the way in - not exactly a great show, and tanks didn't exactly make much of a strategic impact during WW1, so to some extent it's kind of understandable that there were voices against throwing a big part of a limited budget into a relatively unproven technology

With hindsight it's obvious that tanks would become a pretty big deal, but I think even more than that is air power (The Luftwaffe in 1940) and communication technology (radios in every tank) that allowed things like the blitzkrieg (the Battle of the Bulge is what you get when the opponent has air power instead)

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u/JacobJamesTrowbridge 22h ago

In fairness, aircraft carriers did actually turn out to be extremely effective at hunting u-boats. Just not fleet carriers.

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u/Razzmatazz856 22h ago

A lot of military leaders on both sides, even German, thought of tanks as a sideshow, or at best, a replacement for cavalry to be used in support of infantry.

That's how tanks ARE used in combined arms doctrine.

Both sides of the war had examples of tank commanders gallivanting off on their own without regard for supply lines or infantry screening and it worked, but that was mainly because the other side had their pants down, not because it wasn't dumb as shit.

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u/Ryjinn 16h ago

Using your tanks to go ahead and break up enemy formations and help encircle them, or to cause havoc in advance of infantry to give them an easier time wasn't stupid, especially when prevailing wisdom of the time had tanks placed either within masses of troops or behind them. It certainly did become problematic when they'd significantly outpace troops or supply lines, and that I'd argue is absolutely an example of the pendulum swinging too far the other way.

That said, I'll admit my knowledge here is very much limited to WWI and WWII, and I don't truthfully know much about how tank doctrine has evolved since then.

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u/Muninn088 Still salty about Carthage 10h ago

My understanding (as an armchair general, never been trained or been in combat) is that if Tanks are Calvary they basically swapped places with infantry.

Infantry down the center to draw in the main forces and then a flank attack by calvary to roll up the line encircle the enemy and rout them.

Heavy armor has reversed that, heavy calvary down the center to draw and main force and then a flank attack with infantry to roll up, encircle and rout the enemy.

There is a metric ton of nuance I'm skipping because again I have no formal training (just many hours in Total war). But thats the basic plan and the change in simplest terms.

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u/Ryjinn 10h ago

That's about where I'm at with my understanding, too.

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u/johnsmith312 8m ago

Pretty bold to speak on military tactics when your baseline is total war.

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u/RatBot9000 22h ago

Imagine suffering a crushing loss of life in WW1 due to trying to calvary charge machine gun emplacements and then deciding to not learn a single thing about modern warfare.

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u/Irish_Caesar 21h ago

I think you're forgetting the entente won ww1 through developing a radically new approach to warfare. The real issue was they got stuck in thinking the next war would be like WW1. For WW1 the maginot line would be utterly formidable, and indeed there was shockingly little progress made against the maginot line in the few assaults attempted on it. For WW1 thinking the formation of tanks and infantry made sense.

It was the classic blunder of preparing for the last war instead of the next one

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u/sixouvie 21h ago

And if not for trying to make Belgium happy, the Maginot line would have worked much better, and the WW1 tactic may have worked.

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u/PrinzEugen1936 5h ago

The Maginot Line actually did what it was supposed to do. The fortifications were designed to force Germany to go around them, into Belgium, where the Belgian and French Armies would meet the Germans in battle, using the numerous rivers of Belgium as defensive positions.

The problem was that Belgium ended up cancelling its military alliance with France thanks to domestic political pressure, the Belgian population being unwilling to take part in another war between France and Germany. (Not considering that, just like the First World War, the choice wasn’t really up to Belgium.)

This meant that by the time the Germans invaded Belgium, there was no time for the French army to get into position in Belgium, and then the Germans surprised them again by forcing their armoured divisions through the Ardennes much faster than was thought to be possible. General Gamelin had already committed the French reserves elsewhere and no one had been left to respond to the break through.

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u/Sganarellevalet 3h ago

Ironically the french army made the opposite mistake in WW1, the effectiveness of german heavy artillery in Belgium convinced France heavy static defences where outdated so many forts like Douaumont where stripped of their guns and much of their garrison.

The battle of Verdun then proved these forts to actually still be very effective and France lost thousands of men to retake Douaumont after it fell without a figth.

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u/RenegadeMoose 13h ago

Not just the new approach to warfare with tanks. The Entente won WW1 because America joined and was able to get men into the trenches before the German "Kaiserslacht" plan to crush them before the Americans got there.

People really do not understand how close the Germans were to winning WW1 in April and May of 1918. The British and French had simply run out of re-inforcements.

But massive numbers of US soldiers showing up during May plugged the holes in the Entente line. By June the Entente was able to start pushing the Germans back.

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u/Irish_Caesar 12h ago

You are heavily overstating the impact of the US forces. Their addition was important, but what won the war was the entente armies breaking the german army on the battlefield. It was the german army that broke. The French and British had not run out of reinforcements, things were getting tense but there were plans to continue massing forces until 1919 or 1920.

The American army had hardly arrived by the time the war ended, and their actions, while an important contribution, did not have enough tactical impact to win the war. More than anything the arrival of American troops allowed, mainly the British (as the French were still recovering from the mutinies), to launch assaults that would culminate in the 100 days campaign. Not to understate French participation, but it was intentionally limited to avoid kicking off another round of mutinies. Knowing they had fresh troops to fall back on should the attacks go poorly allowed the Entente to finish the war.

You are also heavily overstating how close the Germans were to winning by the time of the Kaiserschlacht. The commonwealth and the French empire stopped the Kaiserschlacht without American troops, and it is rather well accepted that that offensive had used up the last of German resources. Under the total blockade of Germany and the collapse of her allies there was no feasible way for Germany to amass enough materiel to launch another offensive. This is not to say the broader American contribution to WW1 is not important, simply that it was not won by the Americans. The British and French, with their empires, would have ultimately won without support from American troops, it would simply have taken longer.

Edit: i am incorrect about American troops not being present to halt the spring offensive, however I think my broader point still stands that the war was not won or ultimately decided by American military involvement

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u/RenegadeMoose 12h ago

Check out this book sometime: "Great Battles of WW1: On The Land"

Even though published in the 60s, the stories were all written during the 1920s. It paints a very different picture of the war than we're used to.

It has stuff in it like "you knew the Germans were trying to sneak across no man's land because one of them would cough" ( due to Spanish Flu ).

I thought the book looked so boring. Then I read it and found myself completely hitting the mental reset button on my understanding of WW1.

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u/Irish_Caesar 12h ago

I appreciate the reading recommendation but WW1 is the primary war I engage with and one I have read on extensively and written papers on. Not to say I can't be wrong of course, but I don't feel a single source will be enough to change my mind. It seems to me to be a broad agreement in the works I have engaged with that while the US was critical in ending the war in 1918, it was not the deciding factor in the Entente winning the war at all.

It does sound like a very interesting read though and I will search it out

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u/DocMorningstar 8h ago

The us lost ~50k soldiers kia in ww1. The French lost 27k kia on 1 day in the battle of frontiers.

US troops comprised <10% of entente front line troop by armistice day.

The US was absolutely a contributor, but the amount of combat they saw was tiny compared to what the main combatants had been through.

The biggest effect was Germany knowing that a fresh manpower pool of millions was coming, and rhey had no way to counter it.

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u/Illesbogar 20h ago

Well, they did have more and better tanks than the germans. So that's not entirely true. They just didn't figure out how to use them effectively and also refused to put radios in them.

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u/AsstacularSpiderman 22h ago

I mean lots of countries are in a similar case with drone warfare. Like how a certain military leader is more interested in pumping their soldiers up with testosterone instead of teaching them how to pilot drones.

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u/fulknerraIII 21h ago

Not sure where you're getting the idea that the US doesn't care about or use drones. We just used sea drones to attack Iran, one of the drones that Ukraine has used so effectively in its "logistic lock down" program is American. The military is definitely taking drones seriously you're just not seeing it.

https://www.war.gov/Spotlights/Drone-Dominance/

https://www.reuters.com/business/aerospace-defense/us-army-buy-1-million-drones-major-acquisition-ramp-up-2025-11-07/

https://www.navytimes.com/news/your-navy/2026/07/14/the-us-navy-is-eyeing-next-gen-carrier-based-drones-heres-what-they-might-do/

https://www.twz.com/air/new-jets-drones-will-transform-fort-hood-into-armys-aerial-intel-hub

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u/Excellent_Parsley_18 14h ago

For those of us actually paying attention to and working in the defense arena, drones are incredibly hot right now. The US is probably funneling more money into drones right now than any other country in the world.

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u/romainhdl 12h ago

Except maybe China

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u/Excellent_Parsley_18 9h ago

China’s drone programs work differently than ours, to my understanding. Not to say they’re being underestimated, because holy shit do their drones keep me up at night, but in terms of raw dollars to donuts we’re spending more money, even if you count the disparity in spending power.

The US generally is still ahead in terms of the high tech stuff — China excels at lower tech and the disparity there should scare the pants off everyone, but I believe we’re still allocating more spending power to spinning up drone tech.

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u/Razzmatazz856 21h ago

Acting like drones will replace soldiers while we are currently engaged in a conflict that is proving the wall lickers who think that you can win a war with just air superiority wrong is definitely a thing.

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u/taeerom 16h ago

It's more a case of making fun of those that look at the success of drones toda, so they invest heavily in drones that are cutting edge now. But when war starts, they are well prepared for the last war. Which was Ukraine.

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u/PrivilegeCheckmate And then I told them I'm Jesus's brother 21h ago

DronesArrows cost money. Conscripts cost nothing.

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u/ArvaroddofBjarmaland 20h ago

Wrong. Very, very wrong. Although if you're the Taiping Rebellion dude I can understand why you would think so . . .

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u/PrivilegeCheckmate And then I told them I'm Jesus's brother 15h ago

I'm just doing a Longshanks reference, I don't believe it myself, guy.

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u/LocalPresent6031 19h ago

Some of us old enough to get the reference

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u/PrivilegeCheckmate And then I told them I'm Jesus's brother 15h ago

There are...well, two of us, at last count. Still, point for you at least.

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u/Kaltovar 21h ago

Another neat fact about French military incompetence in ww2: They were very poorly trained because training rarely took place, due in part to a fear that if the officers and the troops could interact they might stage a coup. In fact I have been lead to believe any non essential interaction whatsoever between troops and officers was banned.

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u/Illesbogar 20h ago

Tbh tanks are still nit the main event of warfare, just a bit more important than how the french thought.

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u/Polar_Vortx Let's do some history 9h ago

To be fair, carriers are good as sub hunters, and nobody really knew what to do with them for a while. Once Taranto, Pearl Harbor, and Midway happened people really started cluing in.

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u/Bitter_Marzipan_8348 12h ago

Funny how "tank" has become synonym with "sturdiness" to the point absorbing damage can be referred to as "tanking"

And they call it sidegrade to fucking horses?

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u/DocMorningstar 8h ago

In ww1, and the start of ww2, you had man carried rifles that could penetrate tank armor. Some US interwar tanks had browning .50 cal as their main gun - which would pentrate the frontal armor of most tanks of that period with AP armor.

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u/n_lens 10h ago

Clinging (to old practices in this case) truly is the cause of suffering, as the Buddha outlined!

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u/BorderKeeper 5h ago

Would it be fair to say that in todays drone world they would be somewhat right? Perhaps they assume that there will be an efficient infantry counter, or other issue with tanks, which turned out to be the case but just much later.

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u/Ryjinn 5h ago

I have no idea, I'm not really very well-versed in military doctrine or tactics broadly. I've got a bit of knowledge regarding WWII and some requisite background information from WWI, but that's about the extent of my knowledge, and even that has a lot of room for growth.

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u/LOSNA17LL 23h ago

Yeah, WW1 was a huge fucking trauma, in the mind of everyone, this war was so fucking violent there was NO WAY anyone would want to go at war and live that again

There's a reason many called it "the war to end all wars"

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u/ougryphon 22h ago

Everyone learns from wars, but not all learn the right leasons.

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u/D3k4s 22h ago

Nor everyone shares them.

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u/FrenchieB014 Taller than Napoleon 22h ago

I mean... France won ww1... Why change everything when it worked in the first place?

I guess

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u/Elamia 22h ago

Is it truly a victory if you get it without sending a whole generation of young men to their death pointlessly charging machin gun ?

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u/FrenchieB014 Taller than Napoleon 22h ago

We got it clever in ww2 and instead of Frenchmen we send a whole generation of Soviets

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u/PrivilegeCheckmate And then I told them I'm Jesus's brother 21h ago

Oh, no! We had to spend our 20's forward surrounded by lonely women!

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u/erwaro 23h ago

I won't deny that, but do bear in mind that tanks were still new. And the little experience that there was was with tanks that could, in a pinch, move about as fast as infantry on foot. There was a lot of discussion and contention about tanks, what they were good for, and how best to use them.

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u/Manetho77 22h ago

Yea, that's why ww2 had light, medium and heavy tanks. They were still figuring it out.

Early tanks in Ww1 were mostly used like heavy cavalary.

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u/Fast-Turnover-7105 23h ago

Quite consistent since.

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u/LicketySplit21 22h ago

At least that was just plain ignorance. Even worse was Stalin near-crippling the Soviet military in his paranoid purges which lead to their Deep Operation theories to be thrown away because they were suddenly bad now, and then the Nazis invaded a few years later and they had to relearn it again, under the pressure of invasion and genocide, without the original officers they purged.

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u/punkhobo 22h ago

They did the same in ww1. They started that war with outdated doctrines while ignoring people pushing forward "modern" ones. Tbf many countries did too. A lot of military leaders who thought Calvary was unstoppable despite machine guns existing. Although the French also still had bright uniforms to kick off the war

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u/quinientos_uno 22h ago

Wait until you hear about the French Air Force going into WW2

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u/Only_Plum_8187 21h ago

Not just the French. Chamberlain fooked up woth appeasement and The Nerherlands had their invasion dates handed to them

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u/itsamurdermarge 20h ago

I guess they figured the invasion of the Nederland and Belgium would trigger action from England but the speed was unimaginable before it was at their doorstep. Everything is crystal clear once it’s been proven to work

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u/No-Professional-1461 12h ago

Just after WWI? (Have to get my daily riff on the French, you don't need to answer that question.)

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u/Heavy-Apple2528 8h ago

Losing over 1 million people will do that to a country

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u/Hot-Pottato 6h ago

It's called corporate culture and change management...

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u/brinz1 6h ago

The country wasn't just hit hard by war. The 20s were rocked by an epidemic and the 30s by economic collapse

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u/Lost_Possibility_647 22h ago

I hope Russia ends up being terrified of another war.

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u/rs_obsidian Tea-aboo 21h ago

The French government was like this before WW1 as well. It's why they had their soldiers march into battle with red trousers only to get ripped to shreds by German machine guns.

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u/Dorkits 23h ago

Fuck France again, btw

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u/D3k4s 22h ago

You're only allowed to say it if you're European. Otherwise as a European I'll take offense to that.

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u/Due_Firefighter_4830 23h ago

Pretty sure Guderian wrote similar book after De Gaulle which was based on De Gaulle's book and became the basis of german military tactics.

Also IIRC the french military leadership hated De Gaulle's ideas before WW2...

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u/FrenchieB014 Taller than Napoleon 23h ago

De gaulle was seen as a baby (even if he was 58 in 1940...) the average French general was in his freaking 70s whereas the average German was reaching his 40s

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u/helluuw 22h ago

From what I understand a big part of the reason for this can actually be traced back to the Versailles treaty, because the German army was so limited in size, the people allowed in during peacetime were the best of the best with a lot of selective pressure to perform well, also the fact the Germans lost the war helped justify replacing the old guard as clearly new ideas were needed, you have the opposite situation to both of these in France

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u/crepper4454 20h ago

He was 50 in 1940, he was born in 1890.

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u/FrenchieB014 Taller than Napoleon 20h ago

50, That is not a baby

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u/Nutarama 11h ago

It also didn't help de Gaulle had been at his highest a company commander in WW1, was a POW for the last 60% of the war, had so big of an ego it was remarked on at the time before he was famous, and only survived in the interwar military through political patronage, including getting his boss to boost his war college grades to save his job.

Like imagine that kind of person in a work environment. Hasn't held a very high position, was out sick for most of the last big project, thinks he's the best thing since sliced bread, and only hasn't been fired because he's buddies with the boss. If that guy came to you and said "here's my idea for how to make the business run a lot better", would you even listen to his idea? Or would you say "that's nice, don't you have somewhere else to be right now?"

Also at the time of publishing, he wasn't even a full colonel. His book sold 700 total copies in France, and there's no data on how many German translations were ever made or sold. Like most of his books, he used it to gain connections. He was a smooth political operator, and he could tell politicians interested in Army expansion he'd written a book on what the Army should invest in. This exact play got him a promotion and eventually command of a division by connecting him to Paul Reynaud and through him Edouard Dedalier.

What really changed De Gaulle's legacy wasn't his command or his ideas or his books, but his political will. He wasn't even the most powerful French leader to escape the fall of France, but he was definitely the most politically active and outspoken. He used that to carve his way into being the sole leader of Free France, and despite his tiny amount of real power he was able to face Churchill and Roosevelt on near equal terms.

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u/bricart 23h ago

Not really. The idea of grouped armored vehicles/tanks was getting discussed in various armies at the time, so it's difficult to really give a paternity to the idea.

There is also a big difference between De Gaulle and Guderian. De Gaulle is mostly writing for politicians and stays high levels, without much details on how it would actually work. Guderian is more concrete.

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u/Due_Firefighter_4830 23h ago

Tbh I've read book about it like 10 years ago, the details are muddy. However I think De Gaulle was very salty at the time that Guderian's ideas were adopted in germany and his were ignored.

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u/bricart 22h ago

Tbf, De Gaulle was pretty salty all the time...

But yeah, he didn't really liked seeing his ideas being discarded, especially when his country then lost badly. However, he was also nowhere close to the level of details needed to conduct armoured warfare, e.g. his vision of the importance of aviation wasn't really in par with what Germany developed. Logistics aspect were also not fully accounted for.

And when he tried to implement his counter attacks he failed quite badly.

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u/FrenchieB014 Taller than Napoleon 21h ago

Yeah the main issues with Dr Gaulle is that he was just an asshole with everyone and failed to make powerful friends during the interwar to bring new fresh ideas or to block any form of political block in favor of surrendering quickly

That why he was so alone in 1940 and joined by a motley crue of minor figurehead of the legislature and army

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u/Due_Firefighter_4830 20h ago

How very french of him.

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u/Afraid_Theorist 22h ago

Sort of.

They went with most tanks being organic to infantry formations/to support infantry (even as cover and mobile pillboxes) while cavalry (*and cavalry tanks) remained to exploit breakthroughs.

Sounds dumb? Sort of. The premise was built on how tanks were used during trench warfare

The French army had both more tanks and heavier tanks often than the Germans but most also lacked radios for example

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u/MechaAti 23h ago

General Leclerc ? Wow, what Ferrari does to man

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u/su1906 22h ago

A book with words of wisdom

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u/dabnada 22h ago

Must be the tanks

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u/Raptori33 15h ago

General Potential

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u/Useful_Guide_3573 23h ago edited 18h ago

Holy shit this is so cartoony. Just imagine their reactions.

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u/RiseofdaOatmeal 23h ago

Oooof, that's a stinger

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u/Speedyrunneer 23h ago

Its worth noting that De Gaulle wasnt the only general in France that theorise the "théorie de la guerre mécanisé". He was actually not even general at the time. The pacifist mindset of the government and military at the time explain why they opted for a defensive strategy and ultimately lost the war

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u/_-DirtyMike-_ 22h ago

Same thing happened with a certain British book inspiring the blitzkrieg

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u/charioteer117 21h ago

Percy Hobart

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u/Zestyclose-Tour-8470 23h ago

did de geaulle get informet of this?

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u/FrenchieB014 Taller than Napoleon 23h ago edited 21h ago

I don't know if himself knew that his book had been translated

Apparently it reached the American, British and Soviets Toukhatchevski for exemple shared his cell with De Gaulle back in Ww1 and had cordial exchange

From memory I believed that it was translated in German without his consent and arrived in German in clandestinity

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u/Zestyclose-Tour-8470 8h ago

No i ment if de gaulle knew hitker had read it

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u/Homo_incognito 22h ago

Can’t remember exactly, but when French generals were captured by Guderian he said to them “Interesting, what would your panzer expert say about my tactics”. “Who is that?” they asked. “Well de Gaulle ofc” “….Who is that?”

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u/CmndrMtSprtn113 18h ago

Sooooo…..what you’re saying is that long before Patton did the same with Rommel, Hitler was going, “De Gaulle, you magnificent bastard, I READ YOUR BOOK!”

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u/ChuKoNoob 11h ago

Which begs the question of whether Rommel plagiarized from De Gaulle’s book. Still top tier reference though.

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u/Black_Diammond Senātus Populusque Rōmānus 2h ago

Probably not. De Gaulle was very high level and broad book, The One that actually put pen to paper on how The concrete stuff works was Guderian.

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u/Grotarin Rider of Rohan 23h ago

You really mean that copy was read and annotated by de Gaulle himself, not by Hitler?

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u/FrenchieB014 Taller than Napoleon 23h ago

Yes thanks for the correction

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u/MethFacSarlane 23h ago

Sorry, I'm confused, shouldn't it say it was annotated by Hitler's own hand?

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u/epochpenors 11h ago

Hitler was holding de Gaulle’s hand and they annotated it together like the pottery scene in Ghost

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u/Grotarin Rider of Rohan 22h ago

That would have been quite the plot twit

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u/Raptori33 15h ago

LeclEEEEEEEERC

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u/pinewind108 10h ago

Same with Billy Mitchell. He tried to convince American generals that aerial bombing made battleships obsolete, because they could be sank somewhat easily by planes. They ignored him, and got rid of him.

Japan, on the other hand, paid close attention to what he was saying.

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u/Expert-Hour-9015 19h ago

Not "captain Gaulle", but "captain de Gaulle".

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u/Rope_drop 11h ago

General Charles Leclerc?

Can somebody check?

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u/adjective-nounOne234 4h ago

We are checking

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u/tfhfate 3h ago

🤯 It appears that just like a lot of cultures around the world french people can share the same names but we still need to investigate that 🕵️‍♀️

(Also I am pretty sure op is referencing the Leclerc tank or the famous french hyper market chain E.Leclerc rather than Charles Leclerc)

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u/didsomebodysaymyname 23h ago

annotated in DE Gaulle own hand*

So what? He advised Germans on his book before the war?

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u/CarelessLet4431 16h ago

*captain De Gaulle

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u/adjective-nounOne234 4h ago

Charles Leclerc served in WW2?

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u/artrosk2 12h ago

French soldier were to busy to stile Hitler's wine. It seems that Jean Gabin said to his familly that they had abandoned their fuel drums to take the wine barrels.

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u/YourBoyFroilan 6h ago

I knew he was right 

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u/Dear-Question-868 4h ago

Hum it's not totally true about De Gaulle's ideas, while De Gaulle ideas were good and had been implemented a bit he missed a key element : the air force.

While the french had good aircrafts they didnt used/coordinates them effectively allowing the germans to gain air superiority over France. One battle that is a good example of that is the battle of Montcorner, a battle led by de Gaulle himself. After the encirclement of the allied forces in Northern France, the allies tried a counter attack to break the encirclement. While De Gaulle had initial gain and was able to repel and captured germans during this battle the Germans called in their air support and stopped the counter attack. The same scenario repeated with the British in Arras at the same time. Their armored spearhead manage to shackle the german's Frontline but thanks to a regrouping and the use of AA guns as AT guns the British counter attack was stopped.

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u/novo-280 4h ago

kind of "telling" that the french refuse to embrace new ideas. lets talk about the fact their colonial empire killed(and still does tho not directly) more people than the KZs adn VZs did.

no i am not supporting the nazis as id be one ofthe first to see mauthausen involentarily

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u/YoWazzaBro 18m ago

"All of our weaknesses" by Capitaine Baguette

No sh!t Sherlock :)

(btw ççççéééàààèèèè :p )

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u/thorgal256 17m ago

My grandfather was part of that 2nd Armoured Division and my father told me how he fought all the way to the eagle's nest.

Nice to get more details about this topic. I had never heard about the General de Gaulle's book.

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u/helicophell 23h ago edited 23h ago

*sigh* where's the context OP? (I'm clearly too early for context)

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u/FrenchieB014 Taller than Napoleon 23h ago

You're early for context

It's in the comment ;)

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u/helicophell 23h ago

Smh smh imagine not having the context pretyped into the comment box of your post /s

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u/FrenchieB014 Taller than Napoleon 23h ago edited 23h ago

I'm lazy as fuck (you are right thought)

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u/combo_seizure 21h ago

We are given a place for body text, for reason. I mean context. Cause I need it, too. There's too much history of earth to try and remember all of it.

Well, in this Existence, at least.

Be Lazy, Once. Then enjoy the conversation and dialogue. Which is what I do.

If someone's gonna ask for it anyway, we might as well just put it. Therefore, we don't have to keep commenting and commenting and commenting and commenting....lol

You should be able to edit and add the body context. Maybe. Idk. Im not History Buff Enough to post here.

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u/JohannesJoshua 13h ago

Yes they can edit it, but it looks like OP farms. I mean 4k for a comment, daym.

It wasn't even anything contraversial. It's a book on strategies and tactics that leader of Free France (Charles de Gaulle) wrote.

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u/chknboy 14h ago

Strok

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u/PoIIux 4h ago

But then how would OP farm karma?

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u/combo_seizure 1h ago

True. But maybe it was for all the OP out there.

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u/Citizen_MGS 19h ago

770k karma in 2 years.

You're not lazy. You're farming engagement by baiting people into commenting "where's the context op?"

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u/FrenchieB014 Taller than Napoleon 19h ago

Why should I care about karma, it doesn't pay my food, clothes or electricity as far I know

People like my work it's all I care tbh

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u/Citizen_MGS 19h ago

In that case, you should take pride in your work, stop being so damn lazy and post the context when you post the image.

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u/FrenchieB014 Taller than Napoleon 19h ago edited 18h ago

To wait 2 minutes is a burden for y'all?

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u/Citizen_MGS 18h ago

Looking at your post history, you don't post the context on any of your stuff.

It's not like this is a one-time thing, you do it everytime.

It's actually more "work" to post the original thread, then circle back to add the information after you receive your context engagement boost.

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u/[deleted] 23h ago

[removed] — view removed comment

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u/HistoryMemes-ModTeam 22h ago

Your post/comment has been removed for the following rules violations:

Rule 3: Discrimination and Abuse

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u/usuallyherdragon 4h ago

There's more than a hundred comments now...

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u/PrivilegeCheckmate And then I told them I'm Jesus's brother 21h ago

Rommel you magnificent son of a bitch! I read your book!

-Attributed to Patton

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u/Efficient_Progress_6 Taller than Napoleon 22h ago edited 21h ago

I'm curious as to what "modern" (by WWII standards) French tanks would have been like if they had modernized.

Would France still have fallen if France actually modernized? How long would it have taken for the SU to enter the war if France drew a stalemate?

Edited to show that the tank comment is supposed to be a separate train of thought.

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u/FrenchieB014 Taller than Napoleon 22h ago edited 22h ago

putting on my tin folded hat for me my biggest red pill is that they were a good part of French society that wanted to partner with Nazi Germany to get rid of certain "pest"

So yeah I wouldn't be surprise that some of them openly open France to Hitler and resuming the war was only a priority for the army and of course the resistance (Gaullist and communist)

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u/DaudyMentol 17h ago

UK also had pro german support in the goverment and ever since war started it basically got eradicated. Seeing how French resistance did through the war i think its fair to assume France would follow simmilar path to UK. But you know your country better than me so just a thought.

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u/ww1enjoyer 13h ago

Nah, the army was actively being underfunded and weakend by the gouverment because they were afraid of a possible coup.

Plus, its the dreyfusard who held the power during the 1930s

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u/The_memeperson Sun Yat-Sen do it again 22h ago

Tanks aren't Wunderwaffen. You can have the bestest tanks ever and still lose if your strategy and tactics suck. Unless those tanks could suddenly teleport to the Ardennes and demolish the German army there not much would change.

And the French would have to stalemate for a looong time until the Soviets were ready for war, 1943-1944(?) iirc (correct me if i'm wrong)

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u/Efficient_Progress_6 Taller than Napoleon 21h ago

The tank comment and whether they would still fall were more accurately two separate thoughts. I just didn't separate them enough to make that clear.

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u/LastEsotericist Still salty about Carthage 14h ago

They had better tanks than the Germans, they just had poor tactics. The book was on tank tactics that could’ve helped them.

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u/YourBoyFroilan 6h ago

Didn't the Soviets already build enormous amounts of T-34s and KVs by 1942, with less factories? They would be ready much earlier imo

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u/ConfidentReference63 21h ago

French tanks were better than German ones in 1940. It was how the German’s used theirs.

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u/Unhappy_Researcher68 17h ago

That's not realy true. They used 1 men turrets and had no Radios.

They generaly have had better Amor and in part guns on paper.

But where badly designed.

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u/TheNotoriousSAUER 13h ago

The no radios thing I think counts as doctrine. That's a straight up answer no to the question of do we want our tanks to be able to communicate with anybody else outside the tank? In theory they were still well designed for the time especially with what they were going up against But Doctrine failed them

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u/Unhappy_Researcher68 6h ago

The no radios thing I think counts as doctrine. That's a straight up answer no to the question of do we want our tanks to be able to communicate with anybody else outside the tank?

Well they DID give them flags for that... so shity doctrine and Design.

In theory they were still well designed

I woul disagre. Char B1s hat a hull mounted gun to destroy bunkers... that thing was pretty useless.

And again 1 men turrets where a bad idear.

Some of them where very slow, brits also did that with infranty/cavalery tank doctrine.

They where not generaly horrible but therer is the notion that they outclassed german tanks that is a bit of a fantasy. There is a reason germany did not use them on mass after.

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u/TheNotoriousSAUER 13h ago

I was blown away when I learned they didn't have radios in their tanks. I mean I get the tank is still fairly new at this point and they hadn't had a real showing of them in World War One. But I mean come on there's this new technology, it's obviously very important for communication, it feels very round peg round hole. Did they think they were gonna signal flag them? Were they expecting the tanks to hear whistles or horns??

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u/prozack91 16h ago

The best German tanks were Czech funny enough.

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u/malumfectum 20h ago

The fundamental problem was the lack of radios.

Boiled down simply, the reason the Germans won the Battle of France was because they had radios and the French did not. It meant the French were hopelessly tripping over themselves whilst the Germans manoeuvred around them.

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u/Unhappy_Researcher68 17h ago

And one man turrets, those where not a very good idear.

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u/malumfectum 17h ago

True enough, but I think a lot of conversation gets hung up on who had the better tank when a lot of the kit all sides had at that point was barely worthy of the name. I mean, the Panzer I and the Matilda I were also rubbish.

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u/Unhappy_Researcher68 16h ago

And an side note.

Tanks are not supposed to kill tanks. They fought each other but that was not their job.

The whole reason tank destroyers where introduced and failed to see wide spread use even in the war is that you use tanks to atack a position or hold it temporary.

Most tanks were destroyed by anti-tank guns, hidden landmines, infantry weapons (bazooka), and airstrikes.

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u/malumfectum 15h ago

I would say that was more true of the western than eastern front. The German big cats were very specifically designed to take on the hordes of Soviet armour alongside their ostensible purpose of being breakthrough weapons, hence the need for ever thicker armour and ever larger guns. Allied doctrine was very different, of course.

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u/Unhappy_Researcher68 15h ago

The very few big tank battles, like Kursk, aside, that was never the reality.

And the big cats were a total disaster logistically because they entered when the war was already a war of retreat for the Germans, and building four times the number of Panzer IVs (I think that was the number instead of Tiger II and Panther) would have been much more useful, not that it would have helped. Also, Tiger IIs were actually bad tanks that constantly broke down. Same for the Panther, but at least the logic of the idea was sound. I think almost all Panthers broke down in the battle of kursk.

German doctrine until the Battle of Moscow focused on PACs and artillery.

After that it was: Hitler wants bigger tanks...

I think the chieftain had a Video with more concrete numbers but I could not find it tjis fast.

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u/malumfectum 14h ago

I’m not saying they were a good idea, or that they worked - I mean, we know how the war on the eastern front went. But I think it’s reasonably clear the driving impetus for bigger tanks with bigger guns and thicker armour was borne of their experiences fighting the Soviets in 1941 and 1942, and to a lesser extent fighting the British in the North African desert. That and Hitler liking big, impressive things, of course.

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u/Unhappy_Researcher68 6h ago

I think it’s reasonably clear the driving impetus for bigger tanks with bigger guns and thicker armour was borne of their experiences fighting the Soviets in 1941 and 1942

Most tanks the Russians used in 1941 and 1942 were old tanks like the T-26 and BT-7. The few KV-1s and working T-34s actually were a problem, but in Operation Barbarossa, they were not yet common.

The upgrade for the Panzer IV and the Panther was a result of that, but the Tiger II and later models were more or less purely Hitler's idea and not a requirement of the army, they really did not want them.

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u/malumfectum 4h ago

Completely agreed, but it was the nasty shock of encountering those few T-34s and KV-1s that resulted in the Panther programme, and accelerated the new heavy tank requirement that eventually resulted in the Tiger I that was already in the works as a result of encountering Char B1s and Matilda IIs during the French campaign - the Germans did clearly think that new tanks were needed to specifically to counter other tanks.

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u/Unhappy_Researcher68 17h ago

If you were a lone infantry squad with no heavy firepower, you would be dead.

Also, Panzer 1s were pretty much out of use when the France campaign began. They mostly saw use as scouts.

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u/Azitromicin 22h ago

Yes, it would have fallen, because it wasn't about the quality of tanks.

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u/Sicuho 19h ago

No, but it was about the quality of the doctrine.

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u/Kaltovar 21h ago

I sincerely believe tanks are greatly over rated in ww2. Not that they weren't important but I doubt the presence of more better tanks would have changed the outcome for France without other military reforms and better funding.

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u/Xenon009 13h ago

In an amusing twist of fate, when two blitz armies meet, it tends to devolve back into positional trench warfare

Blitz relies on making a big old bundle of troops and smashing the enemies lines before they react. If they react in time, they can do much the same back to you.

If both modernised and went all blitzkrieg, you'd probably see a few breakthroughs, followed by encirclements, as both sides tried to cover their flanks, making their spear points blunter and blunter until its trench war all over again.

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u/The_Motarp 9h ago

See the (second) Battle of El Alamein and associated fighting in North Africa. There was some maneuver warfare, but mostly it was grinding trench warfare with tank support until the Axis forces were basically out of combat power, and only then could the British forces maneuver on any kind of scale. Blitzkreig, or the more modern variant of Thunder Runs, only really works if you have a significant advantage in either materiel and/or doctrine/training.

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u/Beardywierdy 18h ago

A lot of french equipment was outright better than German kit in 1940. 

France was let down by piss poor doctrine and an outrageous run of good luck for the Germans, not outdated equipment.

And Stalin would probably have backstabbed Hitler the moment he thought he could get away with it due to being an opportunistic little shit.

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u/sephirothbahamut 3h ago

The ARL-44 is a design that could have existed in some variety earlier on at the same time as Tigers

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u/Zorops 21h ago

the word LOWKEY is used way too much for so many different meaning.

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u/meesta_masa 22h ago

Cooking French

Cooking the French

Cooking for the French

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u/bigRyan540 23h ago

It was a copy of "101 Minecraft Creepypastas"

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u/Thinktank-1733 8h ago

I thought this was about the time when a French soldier sparred a young Hitler on meeting him in the warfront during WWI?

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u/Raxzypool 17h ago

Mein Kampf?

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u/super-duper-trooper- 13h ago

Old Shatterhand?

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u/Cancerix1700 Still salty about Carthage 4h ago

So? Countries adopt someone else's ideas if they like them, I don't think that's anything strange.

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u/peepee-man 11h ago

why the tuck do they limit the number of reddits i can mute. this is so gay