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Steve Fleischer's avatar

One other factor made German victory unlikely.

The Russians were able to endure hardship that no western European was willing to endure.

Compare how the Russians fought (and suffered) at Leningrad, Stalingrad and Sevastopol.

No German military force (or German city) put up a similar defense.

Compare the battles of Berlin or Konigsberg. Russians would have fought far harder than did the defenders of those two cities.

The Nazis really did not understand total war (in spite of their willingness to inflict horrendous suffering on others).

Stalin's regime was willing to do anything to survive.

And they had the Russian people (mostly) behind them.

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glindarayepix's avatar

I’ve wondered what would have happened if Hitler had turned on Japan and decisively backed the US after Pearl Harbor. The German sympathizers in the US would have provided a serious lobby at least for nonintervention. Likewise, Ukraine and the Caucasus were ripe for liberation, maybe large sections of Belorussia and Russia too. But as you note, this would have all required Hitler and the Nazis to not be Hitler and the Nazis. And not just philosophically, but in their general contempt for reality. I can’t see any military strategy that could have overcome these weaknesses.

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