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WWII: American Security and Britain and a Note on the Soviet Command Economy By Richard Sale, author of Clinton’s Secret Wars and Traitors. A reader of my comments about WWII, Mark Rodgers Esq., said of my remark that the United States has always been drawn into wars where Britain’s Navy was under siege in the North Atlantic, and loudly denounced the remark as erroneous – asserting that the U.S had intervened in WWI but not WWII. Regrettably, the observation of Mr. Rodger is entirely incorrect. Through President Franklin Roosevelt’s Lend-Lease program, we began to intervene in the Battle of the North Atlantic before Pearl Harbor bought us into the war. But throughout much of our history, American security has rested on the position of Britain in Europe and the maritime supremacy of the British Empire around the world. Our policies up to the beginning of World War II rested chiefly on Britain and its position in the European balance of power. British policies were fiercely determined to ensure that no power on the Continent would overrun and rule the European landmass, and British naval supremacy was key to securing that aim. In other words, Britain would not tolerate conquests of the sea-bordering nations in Europe by any European power that would endanger its navy and shatter its position in the world. At the time of the late 19th century, our reliance on Britain was far more clearly understood then it is today. The U.S. naval expansion that threw Spain out of Cuba, seized Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and invaded and occupied the Philippines, was in many ways “sheltered” (in George Kennan’s phrase) by Britain’s Navy and its continental policies which at the time were neutral towards American naval expansion because British policy makers did not see it as threatening its own interests. Had it been seen as hostile, the expansion probably would not have taken place. Thus by the beginning of the First World War, any Continental power, such as Germany, who posed a threat to Britain’s Navy, would have been seen by Britain as a very grave threat indeed. Historian George Kennan has had made this point clear in a series of brilliant lectures. By the time of World War I, America and Britain were increasingly dependent on the strategic position and resources of the other. With Germany’s’ new and powerful navy, allied with Turkey, among others, the alliance of the Central Powers made Britain extremely fearful of a setback that would damage its position in the world, and it feared that the hazards posed to its position by a German victory which would eliminate Britain’s superior position in the world’s balance of power. It was because of this U.S. dependence on Britain that President Wilson watered down U.S. neutrality, not just as a matter of policy, but also because America was raking in enormous profits selling arms to the British. We were not selling arms Germany, and America was “neutral” only in name. In May of 1915, when the German sub U-20 sank the Lusitania, Wilson almost went to war over the Kaiser’s unrestricted submarine warfare. In response to American anxieties and to prevent war, the German naval staff imposed severe restrictions on its submarines in the weeks that followed. But Germany continued to wage a vicious war on Britain’s shipping, with Britain losing something like fifty to one hundred ships a month. In another war measure, responding to Germany attacks, Britain imposed a war blockade on Germany that denied it any trade with the world beyond Europe and reduced the German population to desperate starvation lasting a year after the conflict ended. (The blockade lasted a year after the close of the war.) As John Keegan said, “the geography of the German-speaking lands, however configured into states, denies the Germans maritime power.” The Germans had little access to the North Sea, and even less access to the Atlantic. Germany, laboring within the fiscal limits imposed by the maintenance of a large army, could not out-build Britain in producing capital ships. It was then hardly a surprise that the US intervened on behalf of Britain. It was done out of strategic necessity and almost as a reflex. World War II By World War II, the land and air and sea power of the world lay in the hands of Soviet Russia, Nazi Germany, and Imperial Japan. Britain’s sea power had lost some of its luster because of the advent of mechanized warfare which proved that power in the world flowed form a country’s place on the map, its position in the world island – Europe, Asia and Africa. In the past, the maritime states like Britain and Holland had exercised power out of all proportion to their populations. Geographers like Mackinder and Haushofer attributed this to their navies that were used to quickly transport assets around the world island. Given the technology of the 20th century: tanks, cars, planes, highways, railway networks, a nation could consolidate power in spite of naval opposition. Their most formidable forces were out of reach of the sea. Thus, the land-locked power of the Germany and its allies was formidable. President Roosevelt was quick to see the threat posed by Nazi U-boats to Britain’s security and began to offer ships and other aid, using the U.S. Navy to secure Britain and make the case for U.S. intervention. When Germany declared war on Dec. 8, 1941, the event triggered a huge flow of arms and men that began to arrive in Britain in preparation for the attacks on North Africa, Sicily, and Italy, along with the 1944 cross-Channel attack on German-occupied France. The other urgent task for American aid was to land enough aid and supplies to defeat Nazi submarines in the North Atlantic and, using the railway from Persia into Russia, deliver U.S. supplies that would be used to defeat German forces in Russia and in the occupied countries. A Note on Russia’s Command Economy “It is absolutely fundamental that the Soviet economy was (before and after the war) wildly inefficient, esp. given (that) the vast resources in the Soviet Union. Germany was (sic) far more efficient in industrial production and military effectiveness.” (My emphasis.) “Stalin was forced to deploy 'blocking battalions,' i.e., soldiers designated to shoot retreating Russian soldiers. I had to read this bit four times to impose some sense on it,” etc, etc. This statement was made again by one Mark Rogers, Esq. Unfortunately, Mr. Rodgers either has misunderstood his fundamentals, or he has not learned them. The last of the above statement is not entirely correct, but we will pass over it in order to deal with his comments on the Soviet wartime economy. When World War II began, the Soviet Union was the world’s third largest economy. By 1941, that economy was near collapse. One third of the Soviet rail network was lost, along 40 percent of its generating capacity, while the lifeblood of its industry – coal, steel, and iron ore -- had been reduced by three quarters, taken by German forces. According to Richard Overy, an outstanding analyst of the war, the Soviet Union had been a centrally planned economy, but its initial defeats in 1941 unraveled the Soviet program. But by 1944, the Soviets were again operating a centrally planned economy, and Overy noted that Russia had “repaired the fractured the web of industry, transport and resources so that by 1942, (the Soviets) produced more weapons than the year before…more weapons than the enemy.” Plus the Soviet weapons were superior in quality to the German ones. This scholar also says that in 1943, the gap between Soviet and German production “widened further” in favor of the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union was producing three aircraft or every two German aircraft produced. It produced double the number of tanks produced by Germany. “The Soviet Union operated a command economy, directed by the state and centrally planned,” Overy said, pointing out that Russia’s centrally planned economy operated unimpeded by the pressures of the free market, and workers were, of course, brutalized: for example, being tardy or not showing up for work could end with the state shooting or imprisoning workers. Overy’s views on this are shared by every historian of the war I have read including John Keegan, Max Hastings, Wilmont, Gatzke, Porter and White. (In fact, C. Jones Porter authored a superb account, Moscow in World War II that reaches the same conclusions at the rest.) These same sources make clear that the German wartime economy was by far inferior to the Soviets, chiefly because the Germans were used to a production system of technical sophistication and were reluctant to embrace the techniques of mass production as the Soviets and Americans did. Hitler issued in 1941 an edict calling for “Simplification and Increased Efficiency in Armaments Production” that had little effect on German industrial leaders. Under the driving leadership of Albert Speer, the German industrial leaders then pledged to deliver the sort of production totals enjoyed by America and the Soviet Union, but the German military continued to disrupt long production runs and defy standardization. The German military regarded Speer as an “inexperienced intruder” and resisted him at every step. This is indeed very odd. Germany possessed a wealth of resources, skilled entrepreneurs, industrialists, a skilled work force, technical genius -- all at the disposal of a brutal authoritarian system that killed or imprisoned dissenters. But as Overy points out, the German economy fell between two stools – it was not capitalist enough to recruit private enterprise as America did, and it wasn’t enough of a command economy to coerce the German military dissenters who often stifled Germans industries attempts at improvement. On the T-34. I noticed one reader said that the Soviet T-34 tank was not American in design. In fact, it was. It was designed by the American inventor J. Walter Christie, who in 1931 designed an armored vehicle known as the T-3, which, tracks removed, could travel over 60 miles per hour. Although his design “revolutionized tank warfare” according to one account, it potential was ignored by the American military. The Russians locked onto it. They purchased several 10 ton T-3, relatively light tanks, and incorporated them into their own designs, ending in the BT Medium Tank. In 1938, the BT group was replaced by the A-20 which eventually became the legendary T-34.