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TeletubbyPrince wrote:Wow what's with these steaming pile of shit threads today. The USSR had the same industrial potential regardless of Stalin's mucking about, in fact he probably hampered his country's output due to his inneficient use of quotas and killing 20,000,000 workers. The new equipment he brought in was a likely course for any government to make and other than that his policies achieved nothing.
TeletubbyPrince wrote:Wow what's with these steaming pile of shit threads today. The USSR had the same industrial potential regardless of Stalin's mucking about, in fact he probably hampered his country's output due to his inneficient use of quotas and killing 20,000,000 workers. The new equipment he brought in was a likely course for any government to make and other than that his policies achieved nothing.
BigBallinStalin wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Not necessary, probably hurt the Soviet Union more than it helped.
"In order to prepare for war, let's kill all our officers."
Stalin was a paranoid freak.
That being said, what happens if the Soviets have a counter-revolution before Germany invades?
Yeah buddy, Stalin was paranoid, and killing so many officers wasn't too good for morale, but that's just part of the package deal with Stalin. He quickly modernizes the country, kills millions of civilians, and then kills tens of thousands of officers--so it's not beneficial but it can't be separated from Stalin's package deal.
That being said, what happens if the Soviets have a counter-revolution before Germany invades?
thegreekdog wrote:I guess my point is, were the killings a byproduct of modernization, or a byproduct of Stalin being a crazy fool? I think the latter more than the former.
qwert wrote:But Hipotetic,who know what will hepend if Eastern Front its finish in 1944, and that 3,1 milion(or more)German Soldier its ready to be transfered to Western Front. They will outnumbered Western Allies,and war will be much much longer.
thegreekdog wrote:I guess my point is, were the killings a byproduct of modernization, or a byproduct of Stalin being a crazy fool? I think the latter more than the former.
Luftwaffe could not beat the RAF
Opening up 2 fronts would have been essential if the countries could get the man power and heavy artillery (inc.planes) to back them up.
One of the more interesting things from this is that the war in Europe would have lasted much longer meaning things like the V2 once it was fully developed could achieve its true potential (which it could only do in small numbers at the end of the war)
the first atomic bombs would have been destined for Berlin
nippersean wrote:A few questions.
1.In what way was the Russia economy and modernised?
By how much (and what measurement are you using) was Russia's industrial capacity increased during this period.
2.How would (human considerations aside) losing 40mio of the workforce help boost the economy, let alone be necessary?
3.In what ways did Stalin gear up for war? Do you think losing 40mio potential soldiers (including many experienced militiary leaders) helped?
4.The massive purges that didn't really help in the beginning. Are you suggesting they helped in the end? Are you suggesting that the purges ultimately helped the Russian war effort. How and why?
5.Finally, the modernisation policies that saved Russia and helped defeat the Nazi's. What were they?
Durr, maybe if we forget the part of how it did
Oh look the uneducated, inbred American thinks he has an opinion on somethingTell me, John Wayne, how exactly are you drawing these conclusions? Opening two fronts kind've interferes with the, you know, logic behind D-Dayesque invasions
Full potential? SMALL NUMBERS?! You'd best learn yourself some books, boy.
Atomic bombs would've ended the war before any of your KRAZY predictions could come to be
TeletubbyPrince wrote:What killings are you fucking talking about? The purges had nothing to do with the USSR's modernization and the Gulags provided an excellent form of labour. Neither of those methods even came close to killing as many people as the famines did, and those famines were necessary for acquiring capital. I guess your argument is rendered impotent on all fronts