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Reg, G4FGQ wrote:
"The German Generals must have known then that the war was lost. But it was not until 5 months later, in the Battle of Machines around the City of Kursk, on the broad summer grasslands of the surrounding stepps, littered with thousands of burning tanks, wrecked mobile guns and aircraft, and troop carriers, that Hitler must have been convinced of ultimate defeat." You would think so. Fortunately, for the most part, Hitler wasn`t known for seeking and following the counsel of his subordinates, some of whom were very competent. Often it seems Hitler believed what he wanted to believe. His hubris was a serious fault, second only to his lack of respect for human decency. The world would have been better off had Hitler had minor vices, I believe. Hitler was a teatotaler, non-smoker, vegetarian, and monogamous. Why couldnt he have been more like a Churchill or a Roosevelt? With less imagined supeiority, he might have been an ordinary fellow. Hitler may have refused far too long to admit that Germany had lost the war, but there are plenty of stories that his subordinates knew. They were aware of the Allies weaknesses but they also recognized Allied strength. U.S. P-38 fighter planes were outclassed by single-engined German fighters over Europe. But, when Herman Goering saw P-51 fighters escorting Allied Bombers over Berlin, he is reported to have declared Germany as the loser in the war, and that Germany should immediately seek peace. He said that, knowing the Luftwaffe, though on the defensive, was equipped with fantastic weapons including superb conventional aircraft and with jets and rockets coming online. The fact was that the U.S. could build aircraft faster than the Germans could shoot them down. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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