Aside from that little one, you know, Zama.fnlrpa said:Hannibal Bacca. Fought the roman army with less men in most battles, but still managed to beat them in every battle
And what has that got to do with being a good war leader or not?SckizoBoy said:So all it boils down to is: Bernard Montgomery was a fucking twat. (I will qualify that opinion on request.)
well...it is my opinion, so once again......Hitler.RAKtheUndead said:Actually, it's not. We've discussed this already - he may have been an extraordinary public speaker with a good eye for a crowd, but his administration skills were poor, he didn't have a great grasp on tactics and his strategic calls were terrible.ninonybox360 said:man.....im afraid to say this...but its obvious.....Hitler.
I was in a ranting mood *shrug*, and one of the rants I have is against Montgomery (largely for his opinion of Auchinleck and how much of a pain it was to work alongside...).Triangulon said:And what has that got to do with being a good war leader or not?
Fair enough. I won't argue much. As a fellow brit I always feel the need to stick up for him a bit. In terms of WW2 I would say read up on 'Paddy' Mayne. He led the SAS after the capture of David Stirling. He comes across in the literature as a 'real-life' BJ Blazkowicz.SckizoBoy said:I was in a ranting mood *shrug*, and one of the rants I have is against Montgomery (largely for his opinion of Auchinleck and how much of a pain it was to work alongside...).Triangulon said:And what has that got to do with being a good war leader or not?
Im sure its been said, but you are so wrong.ninonybox360 said:man.....im afraid to say this...but its obvious.....Hitler.
He had SO many more plans than thatKwaggaDan said:Not really, his big plan was to funnel troops down a bridge. That's so Spartafunguy2121 said:William Wallace, anyone?![]()
He was iconic and exploited xenophobia and the butthurt after WWI. He did say "The most important thing in my office is that I have all the right men in the right places" so I'll give him that.Kenko said:I by no means agree with his political views and ideals. But im going to have to go with Adolf Hitler. He pulled a country of the dirt, gave them pride, built up their country and then brought all of Europe too its knee's singlehandedly. Not a great strategist or tactician, but he was a great man and a great leader. Anyone who disagree's with that needs to read up on history![]()
Heehee! Napoleon: 5'7", Lord Nelson: 5'4"Kenko said:And Napoleon for obvious reasons. And no he wasn't short, thats british propaganda for you.
Argh! Forgot about Genghis! He was fething awesome. He unified the mongols and lol-raped most of the planet.Shirokurou said:He was iconic and exploited xenophobia and the butthurt after WWI. He did say "The most important thing in my office is that I have all the right men in the right places" so I'll give him that.Kenko said:I by no means agree with his political views and ideals. But im going to have to go with Adolf Hitler. He pulled a country of the dirt, gave them pride, built up their country and then brought all of Europe too its knee's singlehandedly. Not a great strategist or tactician, but he was a great man and a great leader. Anyone who disagree's with that needs to read up on history![]()
But fighting Russia, against the wisdom of Germany's unifier Bismarck i might add, really showed his short-sightedness.
Genghis Khan for my vote.
the early nukes were too heavy and too bulky to be carried by anything less than a quad engine strategic bomber like the B-29. there's absolutely no way planes like that could have been operated off of any carrier of the time. that said, if the British isles had fallen in '41, the US could still have mounted a campaign from Iceland and Greenland, both of which were occupied by US troops by july of that year. Such a campaign would have been long and hard, but certainly doable, especially given the success the US would have with amphibious operations in the pacific.thaluikhain said:They'd presumably have to be carrier based, yes (alternatively, deployed by infiltration by submarine). But, assuming that to be impractical...if the US, with its massive increase in industry, couldn't reach Europe, then Europe probably couldn't reach the US, and the war wouldn't progress.mb16 said:May i point out that the USA didnt join the war till after the battle of Britain. So if the Germans had made all the right decisions, like continuing to attack the RAF and the UK had fallen. Where would you have attacked Europe(Germany)from? As i doubt that there we any planes that could carry a nuke and make a round trip USA-Europe without refuelling in those days.thaluikhain said:More importantly, the Allied forces (predominantly, but not exclusively, the US) developed atomic bombs. As soon as that happened, the Axis powers could not win. The Aliies might have had to remove alot of Europe and the Pacific, but they'd win.
Yeesh... that's stretching it, but I see where you're coming from. A viable staging point for about 100000 troops plus armour/artillery/air cover is what you're going for, right?aashell13 said:the early nukes were too heavy and too bulky to be carried by anything less than a quad engine strategic bomber like the B-29. there's absolutely no way planes like that could have been operated off of any carrier of the time. that said, if the British isles had fallen in '41, the US could still have mounted a campaign from Iceland and Greenland, both of which were occupied by US troops by july of that year. Such a campaign would have been long and hard, but certainly doable, especially given the success the US would have with amphibious operations in the pacific.
oh dear. someone's a bit vague on the details.Maraveno said:though hitler repeated every mistake made by napoleon and only actually following napoleons ideas of conquering europeSkullkid4187 said:HE is the best of the best, actually Hitler might have been a bit better.mikespoff said:That's a pretty tiny subset of the possible options, though. Don't limit yourself to the US - that way you can include some real military superstars...Skullkid4187 said:Mine answer would have to be.....Stone Wall Jackson! The greatest military general in United States history!
Oh how ever so original he was, someone of the escapist should go back in time and tell him to "search bar" the napoleon tales to see he's just been ninja'd right
anyway now we're throwing in irrelevant people how about The Blacksmith of Balinalee : Sean Mac Eoín leading the sole succesfull defense against the british of a given position in the entire irish war for independence
or I dunno Ho Chi Minh since according to how most Americans think he's the only one who taunted america so bad that their tactics in the end just seemed like shooting soldiers out of cannons into a wall, that wall being vietnamese farmer boys given guns and taught how to run and hide
and also he turned vietnam into a rather prosperous nation untill the U.S.A Bombed the industries and farms that he had brought into design
Millions of americans died there as did so many frenchman
He liberated his own people and then fended against and obliterated the biggest military power in the world at that time