good plan! i haven't even thought of paratroopers!
i will refine a few things,but it's a very good basis for a successful plan.
Attack by paratroopers was the one thing the British government & the general public feared more than any other. In hindsight this was most unlikely with the available troops & equipment.
My somewhat controversial scenario is much easier & would have avoided fighting & bloodshed. The much maligned & ridiculed prime minister Neville Chamberlain was a thoroughly decent man with strong convictions. He was a dedicated pacifist who wished to avoid war at any price.
PS. You might find this site interesting.
This quote is from the page on Operation Mercury, the airborne invasion of Crete in May 1941.
let's say 50 per cent of the german paratrooping missions went wrong,the biggest successes were crete and some action against a war castle in holland in 1940,the rest of the missions were just badly planned and went wrong.
aye. didn't germany and england have some contracts or agreements before the BoB?
Chamberlain read this statement to a cheering crowd in front of 10 Downing St. and said;
"My good friends this is the second time in our history that there has come back from Germany to Downing Street peace with honor. I believe it is peace in our time."
i know a man living in my town,who was one of those paratroopers. he was a machinegunner (MG42) and was slighly wounded during the landing operations. he said it was a big mistake to send the paratroopers in in the morning(!) and during daytime, i think this is the main cause for the high german losses. if they had landed at night or during the late evening,they would have had it much easier.
Although, I’m seriously considering Hagar’s theory right now.
Relief for the hard pressed RAF was at hand, however, but from the least expected source - the Reichmarschall of the Luftwaffe himself! Goaded by Hitler following the bombing of Berlin by the RAF, driven by his own ambition, and advised by the wishful thinking of his Intelligence Staff and some of his commanders that Fighter Command was all but finished and that either RAF reserves must by now have been consumed, or alternatively that further attacks on the airfields could only lead to a withdrawal to those north of London, beyond the range of the Jagdlfieger, he ordered the main weight of the attack be turned onto London - just as the defenders were on maximum alert for an invasion.
Umm, I don't really know. From Hagars post I take it Edward VIII staying in power would have been the deciding factor.
the big mistake japan made after the attack on pearl harbor was ignoring the american carriers ,which were somewhere on the pacific,instead of being in the hawaiian port.
if they had managed to sink them,the pacific war could have turned out quite different
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 343 guests