How right you are. The German general staff was a fearsomely efficient and far-seeing organisation. The phrase about " sticking a few popular books onto the assumptions of a 21st century American civilian" is alas too optimistic. Reading books? Naah. We're talking podcasts and videos here.Physics Guy wrote: ↑Wed Jun 25, 2025 10:14 pmYeah, it seems realistic that Hitler and all his generals and functionaries were caught out like that—if your understanding of World War 2 amounts to sticking a few popular books onto the assumptions of a 21st century American civilian. The German General Staff were not civilians, however. They were expert professionals at logistics who were all on at least their second large war. They were all about anticipating and planning things like this. It was their job, and they were good at it, and there were a lot of them.
There is no chance at all that they didn’t know well in advance exactly how this would work out. And the problem with taking amateur historians seriously when they tell a seemingly plausible story isn’t that the amateurs will merely fail to put all the right umlauts in their footnotes. It’s that they’ll make ridiculous howling mistakes like this one.
Confucius is recorded as saying 'knowing that you do not know - that is wisdom'. If only Markk had the modesty to realise that, as things stand, he just does not know enough about WWII to have an opinion about it worthy of serious attention ...