Wonderful inputs!!!
Was just digging up some facts & data. Ok, - here goes. Some may have been mentioned before, since I've been working with notes.
-USSR outnumbered the Finnish (troops) by incredible numbers. (will find more about this if I need, - I have a hunch that a Fin may beat me to this)
- Germans were easy about the exchange rate of 1 to 3 (3 being USSR) in manpower or tanks (especially).
- USSR had way more aircraft than the Luftwaffe.
- Sir John Keegan (Historian) regards it as relatively safe that had Zhukov not arrived to defend Moscow with the Siberian troops (10 Divisions, 1000 aircraft, 1000 (?) tanks), Moscow would surely have fallen.
- Strength of the Germans on the eve of Barbarossa was 198 divisions.
- Loads of those kept tied up in W-Europe.
- The Luftwaffe had by the eve of Barbarossa, lost roughly the amount of airplanes and crew to the guns of the RAF as they mustered for Barbarossa. (7/1940 to 7-1941)
- Hitler met with Franco (Spain) in order to be able to push through the occupation of Gibraltar, - the door to the med. Franco said "NO"
- THe supply problem for Barbarossa was a manyfold challenge, it was the train track width, it was the seasons, it was the size of the front, it was the routes to the front (i.e. through the Balkans), it was the depth of the assault, and the widening perimeter, and more...Not just the winter.
- Had the German initial plan (of speed) worked, most of the USSR's industries would have fallen into German hands. (The USSR were moving entire factories to the Urals at amazing speed right under the German noses)
So, I keep to my theory. The Germans lost by a margin, and even that margin lasted a year or so. In a cauldron like that, just a few divisions along with an ally will count a lot....
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