by JWintjes » Mon Jun 02, 2008 1:52 am
ASFC wrote:chuck wrote:As far back as 1900, Germany had prepared war plans against the US. It should be pointed out that Spanish-American war and the charge up San Juan hill did not impress the Germans of American fighting ability and the will to resist. The German war plan stipulated that at the onset of war, Germany would transport 30,000 troops, on chartered foreign ships no less, to New York. Once there these 30,000 troops would seize New York, apparently overwhelming any local resistance. It is thought the loss of New York would cause American to immediately sue for peace, accepting any condition the Kaiser care to impose, thus bring the German-American war to a successful conclusion in an expeditious manner without taking even a single German corp out of the European stand off.
Have you ever watched the 1978 film Riddle of the sands? (not that i'm denying that the Germans (sorry, the Kaiser) would come up with such a scheme) It should be remembered that he was surronded by a lot of sycophants in his court (like who thought they could hire these 'foreign ships'). Although i'm not sure of US Army strength at the time, it sounds like it would never have succeeded.
Ok, a couple of things.
1) "Riddle of the Sands" is a 1903 piece of fiction by Erskine Childers - I strongly suggest reading it, it's fantastic fun, and both the film and the TV series they made out of it pale into insignificance in comparison. It was hugely successful at the time, particularly as it arrived on the market when there was a (or rather another) invasion scare going on in Britain.
2) Proper German invasion planning for the US was
never done. What we have are some studies that were written by one low-ranking German navy officer in particular; while these caused some interest among higher-ranking circles there was never something like a "attack plan USA". Don't forget that academic papers are written all the time by aspiring young officers as well as established ones - there is a nice piece of Schlieffen on the Battle of Cannae. This doesn't mean they even remotely think about putting that into practice.
3) While the political relationship between Germany and the USA was indeed strained around the turn of the century, there would have been no invasion even if war had actually broken out, which in itself is not exactly likely.
4) I know it is quite popular to think of German pre-war policy as being essentially the Kaiser stumbling around totally and utterly clueless. Nothing could be further from the truth. While German foreign policy ultimately failed - or not, depending on whether you believe that they actually
wanted the war - people by and large knew what they did. And invading the USA was most certainly not in.
Jorit
[quote="ASFC"][quote="chuck"]As far back as 1900, Germany had prepared war plans against the US. It should be pointed out that Spanish-American war and the charge up San Juan hill did not impress the Germans of American fighting ability and the will to resist. The German war plan stipulated that at the onset of war, Germany would transport 30,000 troops, on chartered foreign ships no less, to New York. Once there these 30,000 troops would seize New York, apparently overwhelming any local resistance. It is thought the loss of New York would cause American to immediately sue for peace, accepting any condition the Kaiser care to impose, thus bring the German-American war to a successful conclusion in an expeditious manner without taking even a single German corp out of the European stand off.[/quote]
Have you ever watched the 1978 film Riddle of the sands? (not that i'm denying that the Germans (sorry, the Kaiser) would come up with such a scheme) It should be remembered that he was surronded by a lot of sycophants in his court (like who thought they could hire these 'foreign ships'). Although i'm not sure of US Army strength at the time, it sounds like it would never have succeeded.[/quote]
Ok, a couple of things.
1) "Riddle of the Sands" is a 1903 piece of fiction by Erskine Childers - I strongly suggest reading it, it's fantastic fun, and both the film and the TV series they made out of it pale into insignificance in comparison. It was hugely successful at the time, particularly as it arrived on the market when there was a (or rather another) invasion scare going on in Britain.
2) Proper German invasion planning for the US was [b]never[/b] done. What we have are some studies that were written by one low-ranking German navy officer in particular; while these caused some interest among higher-ranking circles there was never something like a "attack plan USA". Don't forget that academic papers are written all the time by aspiring young officers as well as established ones - there is a nice piece of Schlieffen on the Battle of Cannae. This doesn't mean they even remotely think about putting that into practice.
3) While the political relationship between Germany and the USA was indeed strained around the turn of the century, there would have been no invasion even if war had actually broken out, which in itself is not exactly likely.
4) I know it is quite popular to think of German pre-war policy as being essentially the Kaiser stumbling around totally and utterly clueless. Nothing could be further from the truth. While German foreign policy ultimately failed - or not, depending on whether you believe that they actually [i]wanted[/i] the war - people by and large knew what they did. And invading the USA was most certainly not in.
Jorit