The Allies didn’t have “a” plan to wage the Battle of the Atlantic, and neither did the Germans. The Battle of the Atlantic was a complex battle of attrition on a gigantic scale which lasted all the way from September 1939 to May 1945, and it was characterized by constant changes of plans and tactics and weaponry on both sides as it progressed, with each side trying to overcome every new enemy development with a suitable counter-development. The campaign see-sawed several times, with one side or the other gaining the advantage at various points; some methods of waging the campaign became ineffectual as time progressed, but were highly effective in earlier stages and therefore were entirely correct to use at those points.
You May Be A WWII Junkie
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@ABWorsham:
If mash potatoes generally cause you to think of potato smasher grenades, you may be a WWII junkie. Just happened to me in the kitchen 8-)
Lol now that’s bad…
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Lol ><
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You may be a junkie if your vanity plates on your car are 1181942.
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My son had some Axis and Allies submarines out on table next to his tablet. I told him, your tablet makes a great U-boat pen.
That makes you a WW2 junkie.
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If you see the headline of the article linked below and immediately wonder why they stuck an “s” on the end of Sir Arthur’s nickname, you might be a WWII junkie:
https://winnipegsun.com/sports/football/bombers-harris-earns-star-of-the-week
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LOL !
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If you actually know what the War of 1941 is.
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@Caesar-Seriona said in You May Be A WWII Junkie:
If you actually know what the War of 1941 is.
And if you know that there were two of them: the Russian one and the American one.
Also, if you know in which country you can (supposedly) find a few small commemorative monuments to the war of “1939-1940”.
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If you recognize someone as looking like Albert Kesselring in a drive thru, you might be a WW2 junkie.





