Quote:
Originally Posted by Prison Bitch
The far likelier scenario is Europe would've been ruled by the two in perpetuity and America wouldve seen any action as futile. Germany alone nearly held off all allies over a 3-front war (I include Italy as a front they defended)
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Err...no, it's a two front war. Two different enemies on different sides equals two fronts. Unless you want to say the US/UK were also fighting a "two front war" in Europe (in Italy and France), which makes no sense at all.
Second "nearly held off"? In what sense? The German military's high watermark came at the height of Barbarossa, which was the summer of 1941. Once the Russians stopped them at Moscow, and the US entered the war, they just steadily lost the war. They didn't nearly hold off anything -- they just managed to hold them off for four years, which is pretty impressive, but it wasn't like a close call or anything. After Barbarossa failed, there really weren't any "close calls" anymore, either for the Russians or the Brits, much less the Americans.