I don't know which Gladstone you're talking about. The one most people mean died before Hitler was ten years old. Our airforce was not atrocious either - it inflicted heavy losses on the Luftwaffe during the battle of France, despite being heavily outnumbered. We further had our secret weapon - Radar, something that the Germans did not, which acted as an enormous force multiplier during the war. The Luftwaffe would also not have "turned our army into pincushions" - it was given that opportunity at Dunkirk, and failed spectacularly. Keep in mind that the key reason for Hitler calling off the proposed invasion of GB was that he could not get air superiority - the RAF was too strong. Further, V2s were not developed until way later in the war, and were, well, pretty rubbish. The damage they could inflict was minuscule in comparison to conventional bomber forces.The_root_of_all_evil said:We wouldn't have been able to make a successful campaign on Germany. Gladstone was known to be talking about "That nice man Adolf", and without Churchill's charisma, the War would have never have got off the ground. Before Churchill we were just saying "You bad man Hitler, stop doing that".gh0ti said:I'm not quite sure what you're getting at. Are you saying if Churchill wasn't around, we would never have gone to war with Germany? Because, that's just not true. When we declared war, Churchill was still more or less an exile. He didn't get welcomed back into high level politics until he was appointed First Lord of the Admiralty after war was declared.
I'd take a look back then. Our airforce was atrocious, a fortnight before the Battle of Britain we simply didn't have the air-defences to hold off the Luftwaffe. If you look at "Dad's Army" that was our coastal defence at that point. A bunch of senior citizens.And I don't think that our troops were 'pitiful' in 1939 by any stretch of the imagination.
And I beat all that with one stroke. The Channel.In truth, we weren't really that far behind the Germans in many areas and were superior in some. The UK had been feverishly rearming since 1935 in response to German aggression and was actually a much more modern standing army than the Wehrmacht. The German army, for example, relied heavily on horse-power whilst the British had invested in almost complete mechanisation. And the gap of quality between Allied tanks and their fabled Panzer counterparts is seriously overestimated - it was how they were used that caused them to seem so superior. This was the real crux of the German success, that the Allies had yet to form coherent, up-to-date tactics for the use of combined arms in a war of mobility. Hence, Blitzkrieg was able to knock France out of the war in a matter of weeks.
And the Luftwaffe would have turned our standing army into pincushions. They had V2's as well.
Another thing you overlook is the Royal Navy, which was at that point the strongest in the world, capable of matching the German Navy many times over. Other than the U-Boats, not one German capital ship saw action in the war without being sunk or heavily damaged.
And Dad's Army was not Britain's serious defence. It was a propaganda peace made to con the Germans into thinking that an invasion would be met not only with the full strength of the professional British army, but hundreds of thousands of armed militiamen. They were only drawn up to buy time to make good the loss of equipment the regular army abandoned in France. In short, on the dawn of war in 1939, Britain may have been behind, but her forces were most definitely not pitiful.