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Gordian Protocol Teaser MAJOR spoiler added

David's and Jacob Holo's newest alternate, cross history series.
Re: Gordian Protocol Teaser
Post by Dilandu   » Tue Dec 11, 2018 11:59 pm

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runsforcelery wrote: The only way I can see for the Kaiser to hang onto them in an alternate history would be for Japan to have signed on with the Central Powers and played the role of protector and that was . . . unlikely.


Yep. Japan wasn't particularly inclined toward Germany at this time (especially after Kaiser started to push the "yellow peril" agenda), and was an ally of Britain since 1902 anyway. To break such alliance - which was pretty valuable for Japan - would require... extraordinaire measures.
------------------------------

Oh well, if shortening the front is what the Germans crave,
Let's shorten it to very end - the length of Fuhrer's grave.

(Red Army lyrics from 1945)
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Re: Gordian Protocol Teaser
Post by Dilandu   » Mon Mar 04, 2019 6:42 am

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Okay I finally received the book, and to put it short: someone played too much "Red Alert" game as kid. And mixed history with propaganda enough to make dr. Goebbels really, I mean REALLY proud.

I'll make a more coherent review of this particular fragment as soon as I have time.
------------------------------

Oh well, if shortening the front is what the Germans crave,
Let's shorten it to very end - the length of Fuhrer's grave.

(Red Army lyrics from 1945)
Top
Re: Gordian Protocol Teaser
Post by runsforcelery   » Mon Mar 04, 2019 5:04 pm

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Dilandu wrote:Okay I finally received the book, and to put it short: someone played too much "Red Alert" game as kid. And mixed history with propaganda enough to make dr. Goebbels really, I mean REALLY proud.

I'll make a more coherent review of this particular fragment as soon as I have time.



You are, of course, entitled to your own opinion, and since you're a Russian and I'm not, I would be surprised if our reading of history was identical. Nonetheless, I stand by mine.

I don't believe that I portrayed Joseph Stalin as one bit more cynical, ruthless, calculating, or defensive minded (after all, is it fair to call it paranoia when they really are out to get you?) than he actually was. In the alternate history, he did precisely what he did in our history, right up to the point at which Hitler had his accident. Based on his actions up to that point, and his desire for "spheres of influence" (i.e., strategic depth) which had impelled his invasions of both Finland and Poland, I really don't see him suddenly feeling all warm and safe following the restoration of the German monarchy.

I understand that some people have viewed us as Nazi apologists because, after all, Klaus von Schröder was a supporter of Hitler in his twenties, and therefore nothing can possibly redeem him. Once a Nazi, always a Nazi.

Of course, anyone who thinks that Klaus von Schröder was ever a card-carrying Nazi hasn't read the book carefully. And they have also failed — possibly because their moral outrage blinders popped up too early in the process — to understand that the entire theme of the book where the von Schroeder family is concerned is that of moral responsibility. It was almost inevitable that Klaus — a young man growing up in a defeated Germany which had been saddled with the moral guilt for World War I, which had been humiliated, which was in economic chaos, which was torn by armed conflict between people like Rosa Luxembourg's Spartacists on the one side, the friekorps on the other side, and people like Gustav Noske using the one against the other — would have been attracted to any voice of strength. The ability of human beings to close their eyes and ears to clues that lead to conclusions they don't want to reach is one of our best developed talents, and Klaus was guilty of exactly that right up to Crystal Night. But he was never a Nazi, never joined the Party, never swore any oath of allegiance to Adolf Hitler except for that required of every officer in the German military after Hitler rose to power. And once he wound up in an intelligence career track, he gravitated into the ranks of those who ultimately attempted to assassinate Hitler. I think that my fictitious Klaus would probably have been less inept than the real-life plotters, and I think he almost certainly would have moved earlier, but because I'm working with real life, I have to take what I can get.

The key thing, though, is that Klaus von Schroeder never — ever — forgive himself for having been associated with the Nazi state, however it came into existence and whatever his youthful beliefs might have been. His wife, whom he had sent to the US for safety, refused to ever return to her native Germany again because of what it had done. And as soon as Klaus had finished what he regarded as his duty to West German intelligence, he joined her in the US and never again returned to Germany himself. He taught his son, and his grandchildren, that there must never be any compromise with expediency and that moral choices can never be shirked. That was the "life message" that our timeline's Klaus von Schroeder learned the hard way and passed on to his descendents. That is, in fact, the central theme of the entire novel: that moral choices cannot be shirked or ignored.

In Benjamin 2's universe, things proceeded exactly the same way they did in ours until Hitler's death. Please do note that Jacob and I never said that any of the people involved in the original post-Hitler dogfight in Germany was a hell of a nice guy. All of the key players in government were members of the Nazi party, and they wound up devouring their own. I don't think there's anything particularly unrealistic in the way the immediately post-Hitler political alliances inside Germany shook down. And I think people should remember that (in terms of political appeal) this was Hermann Goering at the height of his power. His Luftwaffe owned the air over France; in this universe, the BEF wasn't getting out at Dunkirk because he or Hitler thought airpower alone could prevent it; his strategic offensive against Great Britain hadn't failed; his boast that he could keep Stalingrad supplied by air hadn't proved hollow; and he hadn't failed to stop the Allied strategic bombing offensive against the Reich. So, yeah, he'd have a lot more "street cred" than any of the other contestants.

Klaus von Schroeder 2's actions throughout were those of someone who had already recognized that Nazis were scum. But, again, it's critical to remember that for Benjamin 2's universe the Holocaust never happened. It certainly hadn't happened prior to the choosing up of sides following Hitler's death. And, following Goering's encounter with his very own IED, there was nobody left to fill the void, Germany was tired of the Nazis' internal, bloody warfare, and a proposal to restore the Hohenzollern monarchy really wouldn't have been that far out of line barely 20 years after Wilhelm II's abdication.

What happens after that in Benjamin 2's universe moves in a very different direction. I think it's totally reasonable to assume that Stalin, who had already seen the West's hatred for the Comintern (and vice versa; both sides with good cause), had good cause to assume that things weren't going to get any better with a restored German emperor on the throne. If he wanted strategic depth before the war, he damned well wanted it after the truncated version of the war fought in Benjamin 2's universe. So of course he refused to give back Soviet-occupied Poland. And, equally of course, a new German Kaiser who wanted to display the difference between him and those nasty, rotten Nazis, did agree to give back most of the Poland Germany had occupied (as long as it got to keep the Polish corridor), as well as withdrawing from France and repatriating the captured BEF. And when the secret protocol of the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact was revealed as part of that same process of proving what an improvement he was on the previous management, it only confirmed (1) that the new German Empire was coming clean and that (2) the Soviet Union was just as cynical and calculating as everybody who hated it had always claimed it was. So the emergence of an anti-Soviet front in Western Europe is scarcely unlikely.

It's also unlikely that an opportunistic Stalin who felt ever more threatened would stop thinking in terms of strategic depth, and when the Pacific War broke out, diverting both the UK and the US from European events (and, at least theoretically, diverting France, as well, given its colonial interests in Indochina) he could scarcely fail to see his opportunity to acquire the "spheres of interest" (strategic glacis) he'd wanted in 1939 all along his western border.

I also don't think that it's at all unlikely for the combatants in the war which followed to do precisely what they did on the actual eastern front and concentrate on developing tactical airpower to a pinnacle of efficiency without developing its strategic counterpart. British strategic airpower evolved largely because it was the only way the UK could even pretend to be attacking Germany after it was evicted from the continent. That wasn't going to be a factor for the Western Alliance and the Soviet Union, and neither of them was going to want to divert resources from direct tactical applications when they were locked in combat along a front hundreds of miles — heck, thousands of miles — in length. The Pacific Allies, on the other hand, would still have faced the distance challenges that the combatants actually did face in our world. Let's not forget that the B-29 was ordered not to attack Germany, but to reach Japan. I did color outside the lines a little bit when I had the UK deploying the Lincoln and the US deploying the B 36, but both of those aircraft were available in our universe within a few years of when they were available in Benjamin 2's universe (Lincoln's first flight June 9, 1944; B-36 first flight August 8, 1946), and the ordinance I described was in fact developed during World War II.

I am fully aware that Siberia is what you might charitably call a hostile environment even before you start worrying about possible partisan activity and guerrilla attacks, especially for mechanized forces. That's one reason we emphasized that the Pacific Allies' contribution was primarily in the air, attacking Soviet factories and — especially — oilfields and transport infrastructure. There was quite a bit of ground fighting, but it was mainly defensive on the part of the Pacific Allies, dealing with the offensives that the Soviets desperately launched in an effort to reach and take out the airfields.

As for the Ukraine's response to the Western Alliance and Klaus von Schroeder in particular, let's not forget how many Ukrainians collaborated with the Germans early on in our own world war II. There were a lot of reasons for that, including Ukrainian anti-Semitism, resentment over Stalin's purges of the Ukrainian intelligentsia, traditional Ukrainian hostility towards Russian dominion, and people who thought communism itself was a Really Bad Idea. Given that, I think it's very plausible that in a universe in which Germany was not exporting Nazi-ism and the Holocaust, in which all Slavs had not been proclaimed untermenschen and hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians hadn't been dragged off as slave laborers, and in which Ukraine was promised an independent state under Ukrainian self-rule, those four million or so Ukrainians that ended up in the Red Army after Ukraine's liberation would have been far more inclined to stick with Germany.

So, yes, I think our historical assumptions are pretty much plausible.

As for some of the other criticism that's come our way — including that this book is an apology for Nazi-ism — I find it difficult to believe that people who aren't intentionally misreading what we've written could think that.

We made it, I thought, crystal clear that Benjamin Schröder, in either universe, believed Nazi-ism and the Holocaust represented the nadir of human brutality to other humans. Our entire purpose was to take a highly moral human being, one who'd been brought up to understand the overriding importance of moral integrity and the willingness to make the hard choice, and present him with the hardest choice we could conceive of. To create a situation in which the consequences of his choice wouldn't be theoretical, but concrete, and assuming he survived, he would always know that he was personally responsible for enabling the greatest act of genocide in the history of the western world.

Steve Stirling caught a lot of flak for the Draka when he created them. I remember people who charged that the books were "a white supremacist's wet dream," and he got hammered a lot — not as much as he would today, with social media's ferocity, but still a lot — as a racist who sympathized with the Draka's objectives and, hence at least by implication, supported them. Now, I happen to know Steve personally, and because I do, I also know that my original assumption (before we ever met) about what he was doing was in fact accurate.

The Draka don't represent Steve's ideal society; they represent the most hideous society he could conceive of. And the point that he was making is that evil doesn't look into a mirror. The villain isn't the villain in his own story, or in his own eyes, and Steve "played fair" with both the villain and the reader by making that clear. And in the process, he made clear the utter disconnect between the Draka and any recognizable concept of moral behavior. The Draka were an entire society — by the time they got done tweaking their genes, an entire sub species — of sociopaths. Who had exactly zero ability to empathize with anyone who wasn't also Draka. Of people who saw other humans as sheep or cattle or, at the very best, slaves to be used and expended at will. Of people who were prepared to embrace any means, however cruel — indeed, the crueler the better — to keep their slave populations cowed and submissive. This was Steve's nightmare, not his "wet dream," and he put you inside the heads of the Draka, let you see what they were doing through their eyes, expressly so you could appreciate the bottomless evil of someone who could love his or her own children and murder millions of someone else's children without ever even considering the morality involved.

A lot of people missed that. Maybe those same people or their children will miss the point that Jacob and I are trying to make. Not much we can do about that, if they do. Frankly, not our job to "fix it" if that's how they persist in reading the story and experiencing the characters.

But we don't have anything to apologize for, either.

ADDENDUM!


It was just brought to my attention that we have also been accused of a major plot fail in a review on Goodreads because we have Shigeki going back in time to spy on terrorists and political opponents, and he never simply uses his chronoport to arrest or eliminate the miscreant before the terrorist act (or whatever) is committed. That's because he can't. In fact, it's because of a major plot element. You can't change events in your own universe by going back in time. This is a "known fact" to the technologists of both SysGov and Admin. What they don't know (prior to the book) is that, instead instead of your actions simply having no effect, they split off an alternate history in which your actions do occur and have permanent consequences.

Shigeki is going back in time observing known criminals/terrorists after they have revealed themselves in order to (1) gather further evidence against them for their trials and (2) to identify and track down any associates and accomplices who have not already been identified and arrested. And of course he's been arresting those people whose guilt he can prove from observations in the past in his own present. He just can't hop back and arrest them three weeks ago and thus stop them from committing the crime in the first place. Or, rather, he could hop back, arrest somebody three weeks ago, and return to the future with someone who had planned to commit the crime, but only to discover that the iteration of that person in his own universe had gone ahead and committed it.

The fact that everybody in both societies "knows" that they cannot change the past is key to all of the plot action in the book.

Just saying.


"Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as Piglet came back from the dead.
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Re: Gordian Protocol Teaser MAJOR spoiler added
Post by DrakBibliophile   » Mon Mar 04, 2019 7:26 pm

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Darn it!

MWW you are an evil man!

I really shouldn't (financially) purchase the eARC but you are working very hard to Make Me Purchase It! :twisted:
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Paul Howard (Alias Drak Bibliophile)
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Sometimes The Dragon Wins! [Polite Dragon Smile]
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Re: Gordian Protocol Teaser
Post by Dilandu   » Tue Mar 05, 2019 12:03 am

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runsforcelery wrote:

You are, of course, entitled to your own opinion, and since you're a Russian and I'm not, I would be surprised if our reading of history was identical. Nonetheless, I stand by mine.


RFC, the problem is NOT my preferences. The problems are internal & political logic. The situation just could not work that way. Nobody in 1942 would agree on any peace with Germany - Nazi or no Nazi - unless they would be absolutely sure, that Germany isn't just bidding for a bit more time. Which means, that nobody would agree on "German empire" having even a shadow of Wehrmacht military power. Contrary to popular assumptions, British leaders of 1940s weren't total idiots)

And from where this "German empire" would obtain money to have any kind of army by 1945? It is NOT the "small, safe and controlled" Western Germany. The USA would not lend them anything. And by 1942, Germany was hopelessly broke. Without the war, it would face terrible economical crisis. It would not possibly be able to have by 1945 any significant military (or hungry & disillusioned German peoples would revolt)

And what would France (occupied by Germany and burning for revenge) and Italy (betrayed by Germany, and burning for revenge) say, when self-proclaimed German "emperor" would start to whine "let's kick the Russian bear"? Look at the situation from French side; the France have only single ally that did not betray them and could be a counterweight to "German Empire" - the USSR. And the France would allow some "Western Alliance" to basically sell Germany - three years after it raped the France! - the dominance over Europe? This is beyond ridiculous.

And this is only the PART of my pretenses. There are much more (which I bring as soon as I have enough free time). Sorry, but what we have there is the ripped out of Red Alert scenario of "good godly Western nations unite with those cool, capable absolutely-not-Nazi Germans to liberate the nice, struggling Ukrainians from those terrible Russian beasts". It's just as bad as some of our Russian "patriotic" alternate history fiction, in which "good, noble Russians unite with those cool, capable absolutely-not-Nazi Germans against those cowardly American brutes".
------------------------------

Oh well, if shortening the front is what the Germans crave,
Let's shorten it to very end - the length of Fuhrer's grave.

(Red Army lyrics from 1945)
Top
Re: Gordian Protocol Teaser
Post by runsforcelery   » Tue Mar 05, 2019 7:27 am

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Dilandu wrote:
runsforcelery wrote:

You are, of course, entitled to your own opinion, and since you're a Russian and I'm not, I would be surprised if our reading of history was identical. Nonetheless, I stand by mine.


RFC, the problem is NOT my preferences. The problems are internal & political logic. The situation just could not work that way. Nobody in 1942 would agree on any peace with Germany - Nazi or no Nazi - unless they would be absolutely sure, that Germany isn't just bidding for a bit more time. Which means, that nobody would agree on "German empire" having even a shadow of Wehrmacht military power. Contrary to popular assumptions, British leaders of 1940s weren't total idiots)

And from where this "German empire" would obtain money to have any kind of army by 1945? It is NOT the "small, safe and controlled" Western Germany. The USA would not lend them anything. And by 1942, Germany was hopelessly broke. Without the war, it would face terrible economical crisis. It would not possibly be able to have by 1945 any significant military (or hungry & disillusioned German peoples would revolt)

And what would France (occupied by Germany and burning for revenge) and Italy (betrayed by Germany, and burning for revenge) say, when self-proclaimed German "emperor" would start to whine "let's kick the Russian bear"? Look at the situation from French side; the France have only single ally that did not betray them and could be a counterweight to "German Empire" - the USSR. And the France would allow some "Western Alliance" to basically sell Germany - three years after it raped the France! - the dominance over Europe? This is beyond ridiculous.

And this is only the PART of my pretenses. There are much more (which I bring as soon as I have enough free time). Sorry, but what we have there is the ripped out of Red Alert scenario of "good godly Western nations unite with those cool, capable absolutely-not-Nazi Germans to liberate the nice, struggling Ukrainians from those terrible Russian beasts". It's just as bad as some of our Russian "patriotic" alternate history fiction, in which "good, noble Russians unite with those cool, capable absolutely-not-Nazi Germans against those cowardly American brutes".


And how, precisely, would Great Britain and France dictate military and/or economic conditions within Germany when Germany is basically offering them a victor's peace? The prewar British army is gone, courtesy of the Dunkirk evacuation that didn't happen. The UK's home air defense is probably pretty good; their industry is probably continuing to gear up, but the potential for any successful return to the continent without the sort of overwhelming amphibious capability that existed in 1944 is . . . unlikely to prosper, let us say.

France is militarily prostrate, and Germany is offering to return all occupied territories. I expect that France wouldn't say "Okay, but we'll only accept if you agree to trash your military."

I will acknowledge that I left Italy and Il Duce out of the historical equation. I actually had a footnote prepared for Mussolini, but I decided I was already cramming an awful lot of alternate history into a novel whose focus was on fixing what had created the alternate history, not living with the alternate history's consequences. I also didn't attempt to deal with Franco in Spain, although given his neutrality in the historical World War II I expect Spain's footprint in my alternate history would also have been relatively minor.

I'm not familiar with Red Alert, so I can't evaluate how closely my scenario equates to that scenario. But I never attempted to portray the Western Alliance as the "good, godly western nations unite with those cool, capable, absolutely-not-Nazi Germans to liberate the nice, struggling Ukrainians from those terrible Russian beasts." If that's how you read it, I think it may be because you are reacting at least partly on the basis of whatever is in Red Alert. My version of the restored German Empire is playing the Great Game just as much as any other great power of Europe, and — for example — I never had them voluntarily disgorging Czechoslovakia or renouncing the Anschluss. They are revealing the secret diplomacy between Hitler and his then-partner Stalin and returning most of the Poland they occupied as much as a calculated maneuver as for any other reason. It is a way to continue to disassociate themselves from the Nazi regime while hanging on to quite a bit of the goodies Hitler had acquired, and a way to justify maintaining a powerful military machine after withdrawing from France.

I am assuming that both the UK and France undertook or (in the UK's case) continued robust rearmament programs of their own in the wake of the peace settlement with the Kaiser. They would have been idiots not to, and if they accepted the validity of the Ribbentrop-Molotov secret protocol (which I believe they would have), they would've had no reason to feel all warm and trusting where Stalin's Soviet Union was concerned, providing another motivation for them to increase their own military capability. Indeed, the fact that they would do so was a factor in my thinking when the Western Alliance goes up against a Soviet Union which has had several more years to build its military. Germany didn't have the strength on its own to go toe-to-toe with the Soviet Union; it required the assistance of a military resurgent France, and that was available only because France had continued its post-occupation/post-war rearmament programs.

As long as Stalin is continuing his military buildup, he is providing justification for the German portrayal of the USSR as the major threat to Europe. I'm not saying — and I never did say — that the other western powers suddenly decided that the Germans were the only bastion of truth and light. What I said is that Stalin, faced with a radically different outcome of the French Campaign reacted by continuing his rearmament programs and becoming increasingly concerned about the possibility of Western Europe coming together in an — or, more properly, another — anti-Bolshevik crusade. That drove his policy decisions, including the Soviet Union's persistent drive for defensive depth (which is what the Warsaw Pact was, in the second half of the twentieth century). And the diversion of Britain and a rearmed France by the Pacific War offered him — or he thought it did — an opportunity to pick up another buffer state when he would have faced only the Kaiser's Germany.

If you are telling me that there was no anti-Russian feeling in the Ukraine, I have to respectfully disagree based on what actually happened when Germany invaded. Klaus von Schroeder's future wife happened to be a "Ukrainian patriot," but I don't recall ever saying that all Ukrainians were noble, self-effacing, and pro-Western. What I said was that post-war Ukraine, having created a Ukrainian Republic under genuine self-rule was really, really glad to get to that point. And that Klaus von Schroeder, as the German military commander seen as instrumental in the "liberation" of Ukraine from the Soviet Union and the husband of one of the leaders of (one faction of) the Ukrainian Resistance (which, of course, would already be entering its own hagiography phase), was the Kaiser's ideal nominee as the interim governor of Ukraine while the new nation's constitution was written and its government was organized.

These were absolutely-not-Nazi Germans, and they were capable, but they were not saints. I think it's evident that you and I are not going to agree on the extent to which the reemergence of an anti-Nazi imperial Germany which has voluntarily relinquished its position of total dominance in Western Europe is going to be "trusted" by the nations which the previous German regime decisively defeated but which then were given back essentially everything they'd lost except for the lives of the troops killed on both sides, particularly when the threat (and so what was perceived in the West) of the Soviet Union continues to loom. And when German diplomacy is revealing evidence of Stalin's complicity in Hitler's rape of Poland, the factors driving both French and British rearmament and their willingness to cooperate with Germany can only be enhanced.

In our history, Germany essentially by itself (admittedly, utilizing the resources it had acquired from occupied France, as well) was able to invade the Soviet Union in 1941. In the alternate history, Germany is able to successfully invade and defeat the Soviet Union when Stalin mis-calculates and offers the Kaiser the rallying point/pretext of effectively invading another nation in the name of the Comintern, and this is in no small part due to the fact that France had continued its own rearmament programs in part out of fear of the new German Empire.

I think it's quite clear that you and I are not going to agree on the plausibility of this scenario. It's not because I regard the Germans as the champions of the Western Light any more than I think the Teutonic Knights were a godly, purely altruistic crusading order. I built the scenario out of a Western perspective on what would/might have happened had a post-Hitler Germany voluntarily renounced its conqueror's position in Western Europe after spending a year or so basically shooting all the Nazis (who hadn't already shot each other) and how willing even recent enemies would be to unite against a third, common enemy. Whether or not that's plausible to you, it is plausible to me, and that's what I have to go with at the end of the day.


"Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as Piglet came back from the dead.
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Re: Gordian Protocol Teaser
Post by Dilandu   » Tue Mar 05, 2019 8:55 am

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runsforcelery wrote:
And how, precisely, would Great Britain and France dictate military and/or economic conditions within Germany when Germany is basically offering them a victor's peace? The prewar British army is gone, courtesy of the Dunkirk evacuation that didn't happen. The UK's home air defense is probably pretty good; their industry is probably continuing to gear up, but the potential for any successful return to the continent without the sort of overwhelming amphibious capability that existed in 1944 is . . . unlikely to prosper, let us say.



Oh yeah. So after Germany betrayed everyone's trust several times in row, started the war, occupied France and established itself as dominant power in Europe, everyone would be just willing to believe, when Germans declared "okay guys, we are willing to fold a bit, but we would not give back Czech, and we would still have the biggest army in Europe. What guarantees we gave that we didnt just playing for time to re-arm once more and kill you all? Well, the best possible, of course - the honest promise of our Kaiser, who are so honest! He himself said so".

RFC, to obtain anything like that, you need to kill Stalin and Churchill first. And also Darlang and de Gaulle. Because neither of them would agree on such conditions, AFTER Germany already demonstrated that it couldn't be trusted.

think it's quite clear that you and I are not going to agree on the plausibility of this scenario. It's not because I regard the Germans as the champions of the Western Light any more than I think the Teutonic Knights were a godly, purely altruistic crusading order. I built the scenario out of a Western perspective on what would/might have happened had a post-Hitler Germany voluntarily renounced its conqueror's position in Western Europe after spending a year or so basically shooting all the Nazis (who hadn't already shot each other) and how willing even recent enemies would be to unite against a third, common enemy. Whether or not that's plausible to you, it is plausible to me, and that's what I have to go with at the end of the day.


Well, I hope, you would not forbid me from preparing the detailed explanation, why exactly I consider this scenario utterly impossible? ;)
------------------------------

Oh well, if shortening the front is what the Germans crave,
Let's shorten it to very end - the length of Fuhrer's grave.

(Red Army lyrics from 1945)
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Re: Gordian Protocol Teaser MAJOR spoiler added
Post by Dilandu   » Tue Mar 05, 2019 9:52 am

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P.S. And, a minor technical point) Without the "Barbarossa" and all this troubles, the most numerous Soviet tank would not be T-34. It would be two tanks, actually: light, heavy-armored T-50 as main direct support tank, and T-34M as main armor unit in mechanized corps.

http://pro-tank.ru/images/stories/2-mir ... -50_07.jpg

T-50

http://ww2history.ru/uploads/1/1379965679_3-55.jpg

T-34M
------------------------------

Oh well, if shortening the front is what the Germans crave,
Let's shorten it to very end - the length of Fuhrer's grave.

(Red Army lyrics from 1945)
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Re: Gordian Protocol Teaser
Post by runsforcelery   » Tue Mar 05, 2019 2:01 pm

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Dilandu wrote:
runsforcelery wrote:
And how, precisely, would Great Britain and France dictate military and/or economic conditions within Germany when Germany is basically offering them a victor's peace? The prewar British army is gone, courtesy of the Dunkirk evacuation that didn't happen. The UK's home air defense is probably pretty good; their industry is probably continuing to gear up, but the potential for any successful return to the continent without the sort of overwhelming amphibious capability that existed in 1944 is . . . unlikely to prosper, let us say.



Oh yeah. So after Germany betrayed everyone's trust several times in row, started the war, occupied France and established itself as dominant power in Europe, everyone would be just willing to believe, when Germans declared "okay guys, we are willing to fold a bit, but we would not give back Czech, and we would still have the biggest army in Europe. What guarantees we gave that we didnt just playing for time to re-arm once more and kill you all? Well, the best possible, of course - the honest promise of our Kaiser, who are so honest! He himself said so".

RFC, to obtain anything like that, you need to kill Stalin and Churchill first. And also Darlang and de Gaulle. Because neither of them would agree on such conditions, AFTER Germany already demonstrated that it couldn't be trusted.

think it's quite clear that you and I are not going to agree on the plausibility of this scenario. It's not because I regard the Germans as the champions of the Western Light any more than I think the Teutonic Knights were a godly, purely altruistic crusading order. I built the scenario out of a Western perspective on what would/might have happened had a post-Hitler Germany voluntarily renounced its conqueror's position in Western Europe after spending a year or so basically shooting all the Nazis (who hadn't already shot each other) and how willing even recent enemies would be to unite against a third, common enemy. Whether or not that's plausible to you, it is plausible to me, and that's what I have to go with at the end of the day.


Well, I hope, you would not forbid me from preparing the detailed explanation, why exactly I consider this scenario utterly impossible? ;)



Hmmm. Thought I'd already replied to this one. Apparently I forgot to his "submit," so here 'tis again.


Knock yourself out! :P


"Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as Piglet came back from the dead.
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Re: Gordian Protocol Teaser
Post by Dilandu   » Tue Mar 05, 2019 2:16 pm

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Posts: 2536
Joined: Sat May 07, 2011 1:44 pm
Location: Russia

runsforcelery wrote:
Hmmm. Thought I'd already replied to this one. Apparently I forgot to his "submit," so here 'tis again.



Happens from time to time. The "save" and "submit" buttons really should change places; several times lost posts because of clicking "save") ;)
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Oh well, if shortening the front is what the Germans crave,
Let's shorten it to very end - the length of Fuhrer's grave.

(Red Army lyrics from 1945)
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