Rats Riley
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 365
- Location
- Whitewater WI
Why do they have to brig em back in 2018? They could totally have a blast with the 50's or early 60's...
All you are describing is one Carrier Strike Group! Today that consist of 1 Aircraft Carrier, 2 Guided Missile Cruisers, 2 Anti Aircraft Warships, and 1-2 Anti Submarine Destroyers or Frigates. So hardly an invasion fleet! For the Normandy invasion there were 1,213 combat ships, and for the Okinawa invasion the Royal Navy alone supplied 17 carriers. The Americans brought 1300 ships of which 40 were carriers. This was against known enemies, what would you bring against a unknown supper race? There is no tangible evidence that we went down there looking for Nazis, just speculation based on little knowledge. Like I said, the real story of exploration is far more exciting then the myth!If the American military didn't expect to encounter enemy forces, then why did they send 4 warships , 2 destroyers, a submarine, and an aircraft carrier loaded with combat aircraft? I think that they, ( quite prudently) were not about to underestimate the maniacal enemy with which they had just been in a life or death struggle. Which struggle, we could have lost or at least ended in a different cold war, if not for Hitler's insanity.
All that was really needed for exploration in Antarctica, were the flying boats, seaplane tenders, ice breakers, and supply ships. They obviously took that stupid nazi junk seriously.
Given the facts of the time, I don't blame them.
I heard it was a guy in a pinstripe suit, with a dark shirt!I heard they found the Ark of the Covenant but some dude in a fedora sort of spoiled their party...
So they sent 4 warships along with the exploration vessels just in case they encountered a force of fanatical nazi super-penguins? :rofl: I never said they did or did not expect to find nazi UFOs, just that they were prepared in the event the Germans still had a presence there. Which is definitely implied by the types of vessels they chose for the task force, and definitely expected too I think given the nature of the nazi regime. There was no such thing as satellite surveillance then. So the U.S. government had really no idea how many ships or what types the Germans might have sent back and forth over the years. The first,(documented) German expedition was in 1938. If they found something deemed worth further investigation, minerals of strategic importance for example, they had plenty of time and resources to send supplies to build an outpost and establish a presence there. There was also a report from a British exploration team of an encounter with German troops.All you are describing is one Carrier Strike Group! Today that consist of 1 Aircraft Carrier, 2 Guided Missile Cruisers, 2 Anti Aircraft Warships, and 1-2 Anti Submarine Destroyers or Frigates. So hardly an invasion fleet! For the Normandy invasion there were 1,213 combat ships, and for the Okinawa invasion the Royal Navy alone supplied 17 carriers. The Americans brought 1300 ships of which 40 were carriers. This was against known enemies, what would you bring against a unknown supper race? There is no tangible evidence that we went down there looking for Nazis, just speculation based on little knowledge. Like I said, the real story of exploration is far more exciting then the myth!
On a side note, a mountain was named for Maxwell A. "Val" Lopez, one of the men who perished in the crash!Whatever the purpose(s) of the expedition, and the much smaller subsequent Operation Windmill, they certainly did gain a lot of knowledge, most of which unfortunately we may never know. One purpose was to test equipment and men, under arctic conditions, as was done previously in the arctic with Operation Frostbite, and Operation Nanook. The logic behind it being the then real possibility of fighting a war with Russia in the north polar region. Truly a "Cold War".
Here is a story of true heroism from Operation Highjump, one survivor's story of the crash of the PBM known as George One. http://www.south-pole.com/p0000153.htm
There were a lot of crazy rumors going around at the end of the war. One was that the Nazis were prepared to hole up in a secret underground base in the mountains and keep the war going indefinitely. As the Allied armies advanced, the stories got bigger and bigger. At the end they supposedly had fully equipped underground cities with airplane factories, stocks of bombs, weapons etc.
Of course it all turned out to be hooey but a lot of top military intelligence people took it seriously and convinced the high command that it was possible.
I got the information from a book written at the end of the war by a war correspondent who got the story from military intelligence. Apparently he heard talk during the invasion and later had it confirmed that the top brass took it seriously though it was top secret at the time.
not neer as advanced...
Hi
Actually, what was said was TRUE, but not the WHOLE TRUTH. The Nazi's were prepared to hole up at the Eagle's Nest in Berchtesgaden, but Hitler decided to end it all. I'm not really sure how much company he'd have had anyway. They also had underground facilities with airplane factories, stocks of bombs, weapons etc. Not really CITIES, but factories that you couldn't bomb.
Also, they didn't lose because a myth was bust wide open: they lost because of lack of resources and strategic stretch.