https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-49462613

The last time there was a very big trade deal between the USA and UK was 1941 when the USA traded 50 destroyers to the UK and then the UK and USA bombed Germany into the stone age.

Moderator: Community Team
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:The last time there was a very big trade deal between the USA and UK was 1941 when the USA traded 50 destroyers to the UK and then the UK and USA bombed Germany into the stone age.
riskllama wrote:Sovs broke the back of the Wehrmacht @ Stalingrad - this is widely known.
Dukasaur wrote:riskllama wrote:Sovs broke the back of the Wehrmacht @ Stalingrad - this is widely known.
Stalingrad was expensive, to be sure, but it would be wrong to say that any one event was decisive.
Every component of the alliance was important. Britain, Russia, and the U.S. all made huge contributions, and it's possible that if any one of the three didn't do their share, the other two would have failed.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:Dukasaur wrote:riskllama wrote:Sovs broke the back of the Wehrmacht @ Stalingrad - this is widely known.
Stalingrad was expensive, to be sure, but it would be wrong to say that any one event was decisive.
Every component of the alliance was important. Britain, Russia, and the U.S. all made huge contributions, and it's possible that if any one of the three didn't do their share, the other two would have failed.
The difference is that failure for Britain or the Soviet Union would have meant invasion and destruction. Failure for the United States would have meant the loss of Midway Island, the world's #3 per capita guano producer.
Dukasaur wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Dukasaur wrote:riskllama wrote:Sovs broke the back of the Wehrmacht @ Stalingrad - this is widely known.
Stalingrad was expensive, to be sure, but it would be wrong to say that any one event was decisive.
Every component of the alliance was important. Britain, Russia, and the U.S. all made huge contributions, and it's possible that if any one of the three didn't do their share, the other two would have failed.
The difference is that failure for Britain or the Soviet Union would have meant invasion and destruction. Failure for the United States would have meant the loss of Midway Island, the world's #3 per capita guano producer.
Yeah, it's been 205 years since anyone thought about invading the U.S. as anything other than a fantasy role-play.
Which makes it really ironic when Americans try to justify their stomping around the world as "defense". Defense from what? Jackalopes and wyverns?
NomadPatriot wrote:
Canada couldn't defend itself for 3 days.. good thing America is right next door..... right
Dukasaur wrote:NomadPatriot wrote:
Canada couldn't defend itself for 3 days.. good thing America is right next door..... right
Actually, America is the only one who could attack us. So it's a good thing we're on friendly terms.
Against the U.S., yeah, Canada couldn't defend itself for 3 days. Against anybody else, not a problem. You don't need vast forces when you're protected by an ocean. It's a massive undertaking to bring an army across any body of water. When you get across, home field advantage is huge. The home side repairs, rebuilds, refuels, reinforces at will. The invader has to bring everything from home. Easy when you're next door, much harder when you're crossing an ocean.
The Canadian Forces are small, but large enough for the job. The home team in an invasion re-arranges and reinforces at will. The invader, once he selects a landing ground, is constrained by that choice and has only a few obvious and predictable directions to go from there.
Canada is out of range for everything except the largest Soviet bombers. As far as fighters, only the tiny number that a carrier carries would be useful to the invader. Only Newfoundland and some of the vacant parts of Quebec are within the useful range of fighter jets from Europe, and nothing at all is within the useful range of fighter jets from Asia.
Anyway, my point here is not to brag, but to point out that the sheer size and distance makes a trans-oceanic invasion virtually impossible. The U.S. enjoys the same geographic isolation. There is nobody at all who has any realistic chance of invading you. The whole professional army is completely unnecessary. The difficulties of putting an army across an ocean can't be exaggerated. Even for you. When you invaded Nazi Germany, the forces had to be gathered and assembled in Britain. In the Korean War, American forces had to stage in Japan. For Iraq, they staged in Saudi Arabia. Etc. For a foreigner to come and invade you, where would they stage? Cuba maybe, and then they could seize Miami and get on a narrow peninsula with no room for maneouver, for a few days until you mobilized the National Guard and came to wipe them out.
You could park every plane, every ship, every tank, and there's nobody out there that would have a hope in hell of coming and invading you. Whatever little threats did materialize, the National Guard could easily deal with. The only reason for a professional defense establishment is for you to go stir up shit in other people's countries. None of it is needed to deal with the non-existent threats to yours.
riskllama wrote:you in the military, NP?
Dukasaur wrote:Soviet bombers.
The only reason for a professional defense establishment is for you to go stir up shit in other people's countries. None of it is needed to deal with the non-existent threats to yours.
NomadPatriot wrote:
where as North Korea is ranked #1 in Naval Power & #1 in Rocket Projectors Power & ranked #11 in Air Power...
they have 5,000 Rocket Projectiles vs your Zero..
they have 967 boats in their navy vs your 63 boats..
they have 949 planes vs your 384 planes..
North Korea could devastate Canada without ever having to step foot on
Dukasaur wrote:NomadPatriot wrote:
where as North Korea is ranked #1 in Naval Power & #1 in Rocket Projectors Power & ranked #11 in Air Power...
they have 5,000 Rocket Projectiles vs your Zero..
they have 967 boats in their navy vs your 63 boats..
they have 949 planes vs your 384 planes..
North Korea could devastate Canada without ever having to step foot on
No, not exactly.
North Korea's military forces are designed entirely around the task of recapturing South Korea.
Dukasaur wrote:Anyway, my point here is not to brag, but to point out that the sheer size and distance makes a trans-oceanic invasion virtually impossible. The U.S. enjoys the same geographic isolation. There is nobody at all who has any realistic chance of invading you. The whole professional army is completely unnecessary. The difficulties of putting an army across an ocean can't be exaggerated. Even for you.
GoranZ wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Anyway, my point here is not to brag, but to point out that the sheer size and distance makes a trans-oceanic invasion virtually impossible. The U.S. enjoys the same geographic isolation. There is nobody at all who has any realistic chance of invading you. The whole professional army is completely unnecessary. The difficulties of putting an army across an ocean can't be exaggerated. Even for you.
Argentina was playing on that card as well... until the British decided to swim across the Atlantic ocean.
GoranZ wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Anyway, my point here is not to brag, but to point out that the sheer size and distance makes a trans-oceanic invasion virtually impossible. The U.S. enjoys the same geographic isolation. There is nobody at all who has any realistic chance of invading you. The whole professional army is completely unnecessary. The difficulties of putting an army across an ocean can't be exaggerated. Even for you.
Argentina was playing on that card as well... until the British decided to swim across the Atlantic ocean.
Dukasaur wrote:GoranZ wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Anyway, my point here is not to brag, but to point out that the sheer size and distance makes a trans-oceanic invasion virtually impossible. The U.S. enjoys the same geographic isolation. There is nobody at all who has any realistic chance of invading you. The whole professional army is completely unnecessary. The difficulties of putting an army across an ocean can't be exaggerated. Even for you.
Argentina was playing on that card as well... until the British decided to swim across the Atlantic ocean.
Argentina was never invaded. A tiny Argentine expeditionary force attacked a British possession far away and was counterattacked by a tiny British expeditionary force. Neither side brought the numbers that you would need to attack a nation.
NomadPatriot wrote:Dukasaur wrote:GoranZ wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Anyway, my point here is not to brag, but to point out that the sheer size and distance makes a trans-oceanic invasion virtually impossible. The U.S. enjoys the same geographic isolation. There is nobody at all who has any realistic chance of invading you. The whole professional army is completely unnecessary. The difficulties of putting an army across an ocean can't be exaggerated. Even for you.
Argentina was playing on that card as well... until the British decided to swim across the Atlantic ocean.
Argentina was never invaded. A tiny Argentine expeditionary force attacked a British possession far away and was counterattacked by a tiny British expeditionary force. Neither side brought the numbers that you would need to attack a nation.
Argentina was not invaded.. they accepted the Nazi refugee's with open arms after WW2......
Mr_Adams wrote:You, sir, are an idiot.
Timminz wrote:By that logic, you eat babies.
Dukasaur wrote:GoranZ wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Anyway, my point here is not to brag, but to point out that the sheer size and distance makes a trans-oceanic invasion virtually impossible. The U.S. enjoys the same geographic isolation. There is nobody at all who has any realistic chance of invading you. The whole professional army is completely unnecessary. The difficulties of putting an army across an ocean can't be exaggerated. Even for you.
Argentina was playing on that card as well... until the British decided to swim across the Atlantic ocean.
Argentina was never invaded. A tiny Argentine expeditionary force attacked a British possession far away and was counterattacked by a tiny British expeditionary force. Neither side brought the numbers that you would need to attack a nation.
GoranZ wrote:Dukasaur wrote:GoranZ wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Anyway, my point here is not to brag, but to point out that the sheer size and distance makes a trans-oceanic invasion virtually impossible. The U.S. enjoys the same geographic isolation. There is nobody at all who has any realistic chance of invading you. The whole professional army is completely unnecessary. The difficulties of putting an army across an ocean can't be exaggerated. Even for you.
Argentina was playing on that card as well... until the British decided to swim across the Atlantic ocean.
Argentina was never invaded. A tiny Argentine expeditionary force attacked a British possession far away and was counterattacked by a tiny British expeditionary force. Neither side brought the numbers that you would need to attack a nation.
Its true that Argentina's mainland was not invaded, but their objective was different.
The British expeditionary force was not as tiny as you say it... 127 ships and ~30.000 men(~10% of British military personal).
What I want to say is that the British demonstrated how an invasion over the ocean can be carried out... They secured place close enough, but in the same time remote enough, and good enough to establish air superiority on the location for the mainland invasion... For the attack on the Argentina's mainland initially they would have probably needed 10 to 15 times more men.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users