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Previous comments... You are currently on page 5.
In Asia, the Chinese hated the Japanese bitterly. Japan invading China was a true example of the Prince trying to rule 'in the face of the direct opposition of the people'; fleeing Chinese refugees stopped to build airstrips with their bare hands to provide the Allies with a means to strike back against their enemies.
Wars are won by logistics. They can, however, be marvelously shortened by the correct application of technology.
Jan
Superior technology has always had an effect on who wins and who loses, in war. The advent of radar would, definitely, have had an effect.
Imagine if our enemies had obtained nuclear technology, before us...you can well imagine how that would have turned out.
What was once the USA would be filled with Caucasian goose-steppers. No other race would be allowed to survive here.
There would be no Cold War. The Nazis would have nuked the Soviet Union big time by 1948.
Japan would be carpet nuked before they could split the atom also.
Red China would not be allowed to exist.
The world would only have room for the "master race." Everyone else would be slaves or dead.
The first man on the moon would arrive during 2001 and be killed on impact. By this date we would never have heard about it.
http://www.history.co.uk/study-topics...
Secondly, We would have won, no matter whether we had radar or not. It might have taken longer, but it took WW2 for the world to recognize that no country on earth could defeat us. Since then, we've thrown that ability Almost away. Not because of lack of resources, but because of lack of will.
From Churchill's 'The Second World War'-
When in Moscow in 1942, Stalin said he wanted to show Churchill's accompanying technical staff a recent invention and hoped there could be a trade in such.
Churchill said, no trade, we will give you as an ally everything we have got, but then said except for anything which if captured would give the enemy an advantage. With hindsight the reader knows he was referring to radar.
There are allies and there are allies, radar gave the US Navy an edge in several of the crucial Pacific battles.