Damduster bickering thread

i think the problem is applying modern morals to what was a world war, when entire civilizations were at risk. In principal i sort of agree with the OP but in practice i cannot - i don't think any of us can possibly imagine how bad WW2 was, or imagine the difficult decisions that had to be made.

having said that i do agree that use of the atom bomb was unnecessary.
 
Not really anything outside of Vietnam wasn't really at risk. America might not of been close to invasion but England was.

So you did read all of what I said,

Vietnam and Korea were in all essence total war and the conflicts within the war zones were not unlike WW2.

I do say within the war zones and do not state that any other country was at risk but the nature of the war within the war zones was total and not unlike WW2.
 
Last edited:
I dont know the facts of the raid, nor what effect it had on the people it effect, nor how many, if any lifes it saved or helped to bring good cheer to them fighting the German war machine at the time.

All i do know is its a sad state of affairs when a attack in war, on a country which we where at war with, is call into question by people who are living in a place where the freedom of doing what you are doing was infact helped to be won by the very action you are trying to say was wrong.

You ask where do i rip into our boys, to me, this whole thread is one giant insult to the armed forces who by their own training and work, kill, so you and I dont have to. They use what they can to get the job done as the country they try to protect gives them less and less items to protect themselfs, imposes more and more laws to stop them doing their job and doesnt even look after them when they come home.

Although you have a fair question, why did all those people have to die, i think the timing of it, quiet easy to see why you picked ow to do it, still sucks and is an insult to all the WWII vertrains on both sides.

Why dont you bring up the order of the SS to shoot all comandoes and SAS in WWII, or the masacre of the germans at mosow? There are pleanty of things you can tut-tut at, but until we come to a better understanding and all live together, picking holes in battle plans, 50-80 years after the event is the sign of a chicken. imo.

Mankind is good at two things, buiding and war, when we run out of things to build and ground to build on, then we will stop fighting. Until then, its what we do, like it or not.

You can disagree with it, you can opose it and point out the flaws, but you should have respect for the men who flew a wooden bomber, at 60ft, at night, to slow down the war and never came back. Your post, maybe i read it worng, but sounds like you have no respect for anyomne that may kill a civvie. Why do you think countries use civvies. Its because people like you wont attack them. To me, yes, the ends justifies the means. That IS war....

<ColiN>

PS - no disrespect to the OP or any other posters in this thread, just how i feel after spending the past 30 mins reading it all.
 
yes but when your country is not threatened you don't have the same response. I'm not saying it wasn't a fierce war. But not even Vietnam can be compared to a world war. It simply is not in the same league.

You miss the point, its not a compassison between world wars and local wars its a statement of the nature of the conflict wich is total war, ie:not unlike WW2 in nature, not in scale.
 
You miss the point, its not a compassison between world wars and local wars its a statement of the nature of the conflict wich is total war, ie:not unlike WW2 in nature, not in scale.

I disagree. the nature changes because the country hasn't got everything to lose and so choices are much easier.

Or am I missing what your trying to say.
 
Hi there, war is bad, people die, you gotta do what you gotta do.

Boom your dead, sorry Skyfall nothing personal and all but you were stood too close to that important piece of infrastructure.

Now to all those who think I lost the plot that is really the way it happens, not by design but Skyfall could have been in the way of a legitimate target, he was never meant to be killed but as luck would have it he posted right before me so got in the way. Same for workers and civilians in war time its nothing personal it happens high explosive dose not just break machines and factories or bridges and roads it kills. If the workers or civilians are in the way because they work or are close by its not their fault or the fault of the aggressor its just war and unfortunate.

Now Skyfall sorry mate I just needed to illustrate my statement, dust yourself off and walk away from the premature death I just dealt you :D.
 
I wish people would stop confusing the aim of the operation from the strategic reasoning.

The aim of the the operation was to attack, damage and hopefully destroy 3-5 dams. The 19 aircraft had 8 hits, or near hits, breaching 2 dams and putting few dents in a third dam (the earthen Sorpe). As such the raid was a success, but with normally unacceptable losses 47% verses an acceptable 3-4%.

Given the civilian losses on a normal area bombing raid (or even a 'precision' USAAF raid) the number of deaths was not excessive.

The hoped for strategic impact on electricity generation and industrial output was not as great as hoped (mainly as the Sorpe survived) but had a significant effect of wiping out, or severely damaging, agriculture in the area for the whole of the 1943 growing season.

In terms of allied (RAF) conduct of the war it forced Harris to at least put some of his recourse into precision operations which helped the other two services more that area bombing did (although it would have been much better to have Grand Slams bomb against the sub pens in 1942/43 than in 1944).

One little know fact is that as the aircraft were landing Memphis Belle (or at least some of its crew) was about to set of on its 25th mission
 
Last edited:
Don't get me wrong, I think war is a farce. Especially the motivation.

The motivation for the aggressor,

motivation to destroy therefore in turn put yourself at risk of destruction, no matter who your foe and how easy victory may seem destruction will be visited on you the aggressor, for the aggressor the motivation for whatever reason they choose to be the aggressor is one of possible gain weighted against possible destruction by the defender.

The motivation for the defender,

motivation to defend, you have been attacked and now you in turn attack your aggressor your motivation is to halt the aggressor and prevent further destruction being visited upon you, for the defender the motivation is clear, defend or be destroyed.
 
If the factory is used to make stuff supporting the war effort it is, by definition a target.
It doesn't matter who is working in it, it's nice to try and avoid a factory being manned by forced labour, but it's not practical to do so (if you make it policy to avoid hitting any such facility because it's using forced labour, you'll soon find all the main factories suddenly start using some forced labour).

It's nice to try and avoid hurting civilians, but it's not always (or even often) possible, and as acidhell says once a civilian works in a factory making weapons/stuff of the war effort they become legitimate targets under almost any definition.
We have weapons now that are unbelivably accurate compared to those used in WW2, and it's still damn near impossible to avoid civilian casualties in many situations (at best you can try to limit them).

Thats why the germans bombed Coventry and other cities to pieces, because of their manufacturing importance
 
and that's your flaw a huge flaw at that. We did not have military supremacy, we did not have the resources, we weren't fighting a 3rd world army. These are the things that make it possible in current conflicts.

You are trying to compare and apple with an orange. they simply do not fit. It's very short sighted and you obviously have yet to comprehend how a world war works.

I'd really be worried if you were ever in charge of anything where you had a say in policy.

Its all well and good making the morale choices when theres little risk and you have military supremecy, thats not brave, nothing to even be proud of, its really the minimum expected of any civilised people. The whole point of that side of a debate would essentially be good vs evil. No one in this thread has once said anything the germans did wasn't awful. Bombing cities without a care for civilian casualties is a horrible thing. The difficult decision is, do you when things get desparate and tight make the easy choice of easier targets with less risk but morally are not good choices. Or do you do the RIGHT thing in times of dire need and still refuse to make the evil choice.

Essentially a question that has been posed on many occasions for many different circumstances. If you stoop as low as your enemy, do you not become just as bad as them?

For anyone that would blindly throw away the morale choices over easier targets just because things get difficult, you really are a disgrace. The Allied side surely did some bad things, and will have caused many accidental deaths, and sometimes a target is too important and civilian casualties are inevitable. But I think its fair to say we could have done a lot worse if we didn't at least try and make the right choice most of the time.

AT the end of the day, I feel proud that the side who didn't stoop to genocide and other attrocites won the day. But if we had another world war and , like several people in this thread think is fine, were doing badly and decided to start commiting terrible attacks just to win at any cost, I would not be proud.
Its how you act when it comes down to it in the most difficult of circumstances that shows how you personally, and we as a society really are, the mere fact you think morales don't matter in times of real difficulty is a horrific thing frankly, those are the only times we are really tested on how we will act if you can't do the right thing then, well, meh.


AS for the Dambusters, it was a failure. Evangilion mentioned that it was a significant blow to the Nazi's morale, I would hesitate to think that would be allied propaganda spread at the time.

When the enemy spends a lot of money, time and effort on a supposedly crucial mission and has a very small amount of success, sure the short term morale hit might have been bad. But in 2 weeks when the power was back and the Commanders let everyone know that the attack was no where near as successful as the British wanted thanks to the fantastic defence of the Nazi's(would be what he would say to his troops) and being able to tell them they are back online years before the British thought possible, large number of casualties to the Allied pilots and a large number of the people killed from floods were infact POW's would all have lifted morale.

Also as with anything, its unlikely the news of the attack would have spread that far with bad news being heavily censored and only the positive news 2 weeks later, which would essentially read "failed british attack + incredibly resiliance of the Nazi war machine already rebuilt dams, etc, etc, etc" would only have been good for the Nazi's.


AS Evan has said before, simple facts stand that the mission wasn't much of a success, a very very small success but compared to what they hoped to achieve it was a massive failure frankly.


All the other arguing is people bringing up irrelevant points. THe Allied deaths aren't the point, the morales aren't the point(in this mission), the only thing in question here is, they were sent to completely destroy 3 dams, they failed on all accounts, and frankly, without all 3 dams taking significant damage this is largely likely to be what helped the repairs go so quickly as they could still control the water by and large with one dam in place, the mission really required significant damage to ALL THREE dams to be a real success and that simply wasn't achieved at all.

You do wonder if they shouldn't have just targetted factories in the first place and done the usual bombing and would that have not been more effective and taking far less time and effort to put together. Had all the planes, pilots and crews been running missions for months bombing targets, rather than practicing and putting this mission together, would they not have done much more damage to the war machine?
 
drunkenmaster said:
You do wonder if they shouldn't have just targetted factories in the first place and done the usual bombing and would that have not been more effective

Too much AA defending the factories? Maybe.
 
I'd really be worried if you were ever in charge of anything where you had a say in policy.

Luckily we had people in charge with some balls to make those decision. Would hate to think what most of you lot would have decided.

It's about taking the easy option, it's about taking the strategic advantage when your losing a war.

These choices don't have to be made when you have military supremacy.
 
Luckily we had people in charge with some balls to make those decision. Would hate to think what most of you lot would have decided.

It's about taking the easy option, it's about taking the strategic advantage when your losing a war.

These choices don't have to be made when you have military supremacy.

You mean like the dresden bombings a few months before the practically beaten german war machine surrendered? Damn that took some balls...
 
Back
Top Bottom