jake431
Practically Family
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Actually Japan officially joined the Axis Powers by signing the Tripartite Pact in September 1940, well over a year before Pearl Harbor.
-Jake
-Jake
dhermann1 said:Re: Fighting the Russians in 1945. I totally agree that it would have been difficult to convince American GIs that our erstwhile friends, the Russians, were now our enemies, but the British in Greece were able to realize the threat the Communust guerillas were posing in late 1944. They were able to shut down the leftist insurgency very quickly. So maybe after a few months more of ugly confrontations, American opininon night have changed. The policy from early on was to stand back and let the Russians into Berlin. Churchill pleaded for greater resistance to Russian plans, but to no avail.
dhermann1 said:Likewise I wonder how and when the split betwen Tito and Moscow developed.
Joie DeVive said:And if I had to pick one special event, I would find a Holocaust survivor to speak. There are so few of them left, and the Holocaust is falling out of favor as a topic of study in many circles. This may be your students only chance to hear an account firsthand. Your students will never forget what they hear. I know I never have. If you need some guidance on the subject, you could try contacting the Center for the Study of the Holocaust at Sonoma State University. http://www.sonoma.edu/holocaust/intro.htm
Mike K. said:Corto, is all this talk actually helping you develop ideas for your lesson plans?
Smithy said:Probably not!
Most likely he got all the ideas he needed in the first couple of pages or so
Twitch said:What GB developed was a superior radar control and reporting system not necessarily superior hardware. Ingenious organisation not technology is what proved Britain's forte in radar.
Twitch said:They could have been simple IFF interigators not worth a concentrated effort.
Twitch said:No level bombing of radar installations by He 88 or He 111s. Just hit and mostly miss raids with very light wing bombs without proper air to ground aiming optics.
Smithy said:I think you'll find that's what I said in all my posts on the subject above. So we're on the same page here!
I have never seen a report that says that the Luftwaffe thought the structures were for Pipsqueak HF/DF. As I said The conclusion reached by Martini and reported to Göring by Luftwaffe Signals was that the structures were for the detection of shipping. This is well documented.
surely said:"The ........ were notorious for operating on preconceived notions, especially concerning other countries military capabilities, in the absence of direct intelligence." Carebear
hmmm, now what other names can be inserted?
carebear said:I think you're completely on the same page.
Whether the Germans thought they were for HF/DF or were designed to track shipping, they apparently didn't think they were anti-aircraft radars worthy of sustained attack.
Given the infancy of radar on both sides and Britain's extreme lack of planes compared to Germany, even if the Germans knew they were air radars they would probably analyze the radar's utility in terms of their own perceptions of their technical superiority and the fact their own radar system, including C&C, wasn't particularly useful.
Given the uncertainty of the towers' purpose, and the German perception of general radar superiority, and the German experience with their own radar's limitations; they might have thought it just as efficient to concentrate on using their aircraft superiority to just stamp out the British planes in the ground and air. By the time they figured out the extent of British radar ability, the (anti-aircraft) Battle of Britain was effectively over and they had other targets (the cities) and other threats (Russia) to worry about.
The German's were notorious for operating on preconceived notions, especially concerning other countries military capabilities, in the absence of direct intelligence.
Smithy said:I think you are pretty much on the money there Carebear. But at the same time it wasn't a case that the German radar system Freya "wasn't particularly useful". Freya technologically was at virtually the same level as British radar. The difference was in terms of how the two sides utilised their radar systems.
And that is the crux of the matter. The Luftwaffe and their intelligence arms completely misunderstood what the coastal structures were along England's coast, and in turn had no idea of the scope to which the RAF was able to read what Luftwaffe raids were doing, even from form up. As you say Carebear, I think that it is fair to say that the Luftwaffe believed that their superiority of numbers would crush all resistance as it had over Europe. But the flexibility of RAF controllers to react (due to RDF) as the air picture changed during raids was also a major advantage over Luftwaffe raids which were highly pre-planned with set raid routes and waypoints.
At the end of the day RDF enabled the RAF to meet the threat as efficiently as was possible and to use her hugely limited resources to the best of their abilities. Had the Luftwaffe known the extent of the importance of the RDF structures to Britain's defence, and how vital they were in marshalling the RAF's interceptions, and had the Luftwaffe reacted to this, then it is not unlikely that the Battle may have had a very different outcome.
Naphtali said:Surveying a topic, while not useless, is significantly inferior to tightly focused analyses. Apparently, you will not have a semester to investigate the topic, so . . .
have you considered creating a series of questions/postulates of narrow focus. Either assign or allow students to volunteer to address one [each]. By spreading the load of analysis, you may be able to have the students organize their data into a coherent whole -- that is, be a resource, a supervisor, rather than a lecturer.
Naphtali said:have you considered creating a series of questions/postulates of narrow focus. Either assign or allow students to volunteer to address one [each]. By spreading the load of analysis, you may be able to have the students organize their data into a coherent whole -- that is, be a resource, a supervisor, rather than a lecturer.