No. Both the Nazis and the Soviets were a lot of authoritarian bastards. The mistake of WWII was that they stopped after Berlin. They should've kept going to Moscow and spread Stalin's cheeks with a Sherman.
It wasn't really a mistake. There was no good causus belli to go to war with the Soviets so quickly, and there was certainly no way that the US could have reached Moscow, let alone the Ural Mountains. We got as far as we were going to get.
All we would have needed to do was stop shipping the Soviets arms and ammo on D-Day. By the time we reached Berlin, their own industry would have still been too far behind to put up an effective resistance.
The only reason the russians were able to produce something like 35k tanks is because they literally didn't have to produce anything since it was all coming from the US.
No. Both the Nazis and the Soviets were a lot of authoritarian bastards. The mistake of WWII was that they stopped after Berlin. They should've kept going to Moscow and spread Stalin's cheeks with a Sherman.
It wasn't really a mistake. There was no good causus belli to go to war with the Soviets so quickly, and there was certainly no way that the US could have reached Moscow, let alone the Ural Mountains. We got as far as we were going to get.
All we would have needed to do was stop shipping the Soviets arms and ammo on D-Day. By the time we reached Berlin, their own industry would have still been too far behind to put up an effective resistance.
The only reason the russians were able to produce something like 35k tanks is because they literally didn't have to produce anything since it was all coming from the US.