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| General Forum for general World War 2 talk. Anything about WW2 that doesn't fit in any other category |
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| | #1 (permalink) |
| Junior Member Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 9
![]() | hi, i was wondering if the forum users thought that the soldiers in ww1 differed to those of ww2. if so were the ww2 soldiers bitter about their losses in ww1 or was it someththing more deep rooted than that? in ww1 one could say the germans were being patriotic when fighting and killing their enemies but in ww2 the killing was different and moved over to murder. anyway any thoughts would be gratefully received herman |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Feb 2004 Location: Born in Germany, French citizen and living in Mexico...
Posts: 339
![]() | The soldiers of the Great War went indeed cheerfully into war in 1914 because of patriotic fervour. Then they just kept fighting because of their mates. "All quiet in the Western Front" by Erich Maria Remarque and "Tempests of Iron" by Ernst Jünger portrait this very accurately. That these men endured inarrable suffering because of each other. The kaiser, the prussianism and their officers really didn't care much, nor did they hate the Tommies, the Ivans or the Poilus they were fighting. In WWII the German foot soldier went to war convinced he was superior, that what he was doing was right and it had to be done no matter the way. The average foot German soldier in the east did fight for his buddies and endured even worse things than in the trenches of the Great War, but didn't have the slightiest pity for Soviet POWs, partisans, communist officials, downed pilots and even less, Jews. The German soldier in WWI wouldn't have shot innocent unarmed civilians —in Poland, France or Russia— by the thousands, nor would have killed coldly enemy prisoners as was the rule in the eastern front or as the SS kids did with the Canadians at Caën. The German soldier of WWI killed, fought and threw gas and grenades to his enemy, but didn't hate him. The German soldier in WWII went to war full of hatred, arrogance and an air of superiority and invencibility, product of typical German Megalomania and of nazi despicable influence. Remember that the German soldier of WWII was a soldier from Nazi Germany, and he behaved accordingly.
__________________ "Only the dead will know the end of the war" Plato "Tempus edax rerum" (Time devours all) Ovidious "Vivire militare est" (To live is to fight) Seneca "Tout est perdu forst l'honneur!" (Everything is lost, but the honour!) François I of France. |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Member ![]() Join Date: May 2004 Location: Ulm, Germany
Posts: 31
![]() | I agree with Friedrich H on the matter. In WW1, the German Soldier were fighting for the Fatherland, patriotic indeed. German Soldiers in WW1 were fighting for their country, they were not out to murder civilians, but then again WW1 was the first major "Total War", when both sides target military, civilian personel and the morale of the country. In WW2 the German Soldier were fighting for the Country, for the Fatherland, it too had roots in patriotic duty but it also had to do with a little thing called propoganda/ the nazi party. They were told that they were ridding the world from evil and that the aryan way is the only way to go. Before WW2 the soon to be German Soldiers were being flooded with nazi propoganda, the hitler youth, the German Education reform and other things. Many soon to be Germany Soldiers were forced to join work groups, where they had a sense of brotherhood and a nice pay check. You could say that the WW2 German Soldiers were "brainwashed", they were set up to be loyal soldiers for Hitler. The Basic Line on the matter is that In most wars the man are German Soldiers, well trained and loyal to their causes, you can not call them murders or Nazis, because the members of the German Military could not be Nazi members. They followed orders or were shot. In both wars, German Soldiers were the best in the world. No one can judge a soldier, especialy a combat harden soldier. The Waffen-SS is a nother story they commited murder sometimes but then again you can not call them members of the German Military. The Waffen-SS were a political ARMED Army establised out of the SA to protect Hitler and to serve the Nazi Party, to the death. Those are my thought on the matter.
__________________ "The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his." George Patton, US ARMY "We make war that we may live in peace." Aristotle |
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| | #4 (permalink) | |||
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Feb 2004 Location: Born in Germany, French citizen and living in Mexico...
Posts: 339
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__________________ "Only the dead will know the end of the war" Plato "Tempus edax rerum" (Time devours all) Ovidious "Vivire militare est" (To live is to fight) Seneca "Tout est perdu forst l'honneur!" (Everything is lost, but the honour!) François I of France. | |||
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| | #5 (permalink) | ||
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 275
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Feb 2004 Location: Born in Germany, French citizen and living in Mexico...
Posts: 339
![]() | Finnish, British, Americans... Almost in all the battles of the Western front, the Germans took more casualties than the Allies...
__________________ "Only the dead will know the end of the war" Plato "Tempus edax rerum" (Time devours all) Ovidious "Vivire militare est" (To live is to fight) Seneca "Tout est perdu forst l'honneur!" (Everything is lost, but the honour!) François I of France. |
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| | #7 (permalink) | |
| Junior Member ![]() Join Date: Apr 2004 Location: Poland Kolobrzeg
Posts: 26
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Hmm. Dont think so. Between allied forces only Russians and Poles had equal morale as German soldats. Books that will tell something more, about polish forces, then poor Discovery programs. And maybe a few other thing, like : how the British soldiers saw their polish companions. 1. Matthew Parker "Monte Cassino" 2. Lynne Olson and Stanley Cloud "A question of honor" But be reasonable. It is hard to tell 'Who was the best?' We can discuss about specific attributes of soldiers for example. And about 'Simple not-SS German Soldiers' You really had to be blind to believe and follow such... thing like Hitler. Germans considered WWI as a disgrace and a enormous defeat. They simple wanted to see Great Germany once more time. So please dont tale me storys about propaganda. People have brains dont they? And dont tell me about 'some' people that knew that this Nazi thing was bad. They were scared ? No! just 95 % of Germans didnt worried about it even if they knew what was going on. I dont want to accuse everybody around but... this is simply odd. | |
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| | #8 (permalink) | ||
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Feb 2004 Location: Born in Germany, French citizen and living in Mexico...
Posts: 339
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Polish soldiers at Cassino were indeed very brave and very good —not to mention, feared by the Germans. But generally speaking, a British or an American regular unit of 1944 had the best organisation, tactics, equipment, training, leadership, etc. Quote:
Germans from 1933 until 1945 not only didn't shut up and ignored what was happening to Jews, communists and many others, but they APPLAUDED IT, and it doesn't stop there, they CONTRIBUTED to it. Nazi crimes are GERMAN crimes.
__________________ "Only the dead will know the end of the war" Plato "Tempus edax rerum" (Time devours all) Ovidious "Vivire militare est" (To live is to fight) Seneca "Tout est perdu forst l'honneur!" (Everything is lost, but the honour!) François I of France. | ||
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| | #9 (permalink) |
| Member ![]() Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 84
![]() | You do have to give credit to the poles. There country was under Nazi control. Many times they were fighting eachother as alot of them were forced to join the Nazi forces but many of them also escaped and joined the allies. Take D-day for an example. Alot of the german soldiers were actually soldiers from different eastern european countries and probably favored the Allies. That's just my opinion |
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| Member ![]() Join Date: May 2004 Location: Ulm, Germany
Posts: 31
![]() | Yes those German Units were called OstBattalions and were soldiers that were forced to be in the German military, some of the first "German" POWs that were taken alive from D-Day were Korean. Watch Saving Private Ryan, when they already stormed the beaches and climbed up top, when those two "Germans" are comming forward to surrender to the Yanks, they were actually Poles and the Yanks couldnt understand them so they shot them.
__________________ "The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his." George Patton, US ARMY "We make war that we may live in peace." Aristotle |
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