R_Chambers said:
Count Igor said:
I am... reasonably certain that D-Day wasn't solely American, you know.
No one said it was.
I think he's referring to:
R_Chambers said:
Which battle during World War II do you believe was more instrumental in defeating Nazi Germany, D-Day or Operation Barbarossa? I'm an American and I'm hesitant to say that either side was more instrumental. On one side the Americans liberated France and on the other side the Soviets pushed back the Germans. Arguably, the Soviets reached Berlin first, but if it wasn't for the American-led invasion in Western Europe, the Germans could have focused all of their attention on the Soviet Union and possibly launched a successful counter-offensive. But without Operation Barbarossa, the Soviet Union would have been severely weakened, and possibly even defeated. Which battle do you think was more instrumental in defeating Nazi Germany?
Being a Brit, I'd point out that Canadians, English, French (albeit only a few thousand) and American forces liberated France, but I don't make an issue of it, Americans composed roughly half of the first two waves and made up the largest single contingent so who am I to argue.
Anyway, this is one of those discussions that is akin to: what led to Napoleon's downfall more: the failed invasion of Russia, or the battle of Leipzig.
The failure at the earlier event (in both cases) allowed the remainder of the allies to pile on the pressure with more surety of a victorious result. Almost regardless of how things were commanded/handled, D-Day would have been an allied victory, it's just a question of how bloody it would've been (it already was, I know, 1st & 29th Divs were mauled half to hell). In any event, the idiotic follow-up (Op MktGdn) made up for any further potential casualties that the Allies could've incurred on 6th June. Besides, only fortress garrison divisions were defending Normandy (of which only the 352nd was any good), so the defeat was inevitable.
TLDR: what this guy said:
Frankster said:
D-day was more like a nail in the coffin, barborossa is what actually put the germans in the coffin to begin with.