Not a war time what-if but let's say Washington runs for a third term as President and dies in office. Does the Republic sustain such a loss?
Interesting. It depends on who his Vice President would have been in 1796, I think. Had it been an Adams, Jefferson, or someone with that kind of gravitas, then it likely would have been fairly seamless a transition. Had it been Hamilton, his Reynolds affair scandal was revealed in 1797 would have lead to massive upheaval at the highest levels of the Republic. The death of Washington on the heels of that might have caused major problems.Smokedraw01 said:
Not a war time what-if but let's say Washington runs for a third term as President and dies in office. Does the Republic sustain such a loss?
Belton Ag said:Interesting. It depends on who his Vice President would have been in 1796, I think. Had it been an Adams, Jefferson, or someone with that kind of gravitas, then it likely would have been fairly seamless a transition. Had it been Hamilton, his Reynolds affair scandal was revealed in 1797 would have lead to massive upheaval at the highest levels of the Republic. The death of Washington on the heels of that might have caused major problems.Smokedraw01 said:
Not a war time what-if but let's say Washington runs for a third term as President and dies in office. Does the Republic sustain such a loss?
If Adams was not the VP, then It would have been because he declined to run, he famously hated the office of VP. Hamilton's machinations behind the scenes in 1796 nearly cost Adams his shot at President, and was the reason for the split between the two.Smokedraw01 said:Belton Ag said:Interesting. It depends on who his Vice President would have been in 1796, I think. Had it been an Adams, Jefferson, or someone with that kind of gravitas, then it likely would have been fairly seamless a transition. Had it been Hamilton, his Reynolds affair scandal was revealed in 1797 would have lead to massive upheaval at the highest levels of the Republic. The death of Washington on the heels of that might have caused major problems.Smokedraw01 said:
Not a war time what-if but let's say Washington runs for a third term as President and dies in office. Does the Republic sustain such a loss?
I don't see how Adams could have been the VP over Jefferson, especially with the D-R machine behind him. Hamilton and Adams still had a decent relationship, so maybe he could have gotten Adams the VP slot.
titan said:
For WW II at sea? If favorite scenario means simply: one where you have the most likelihood to really change things,it might be these:
For the Atlantic: What if Captain Topp's pleading to let Tirptiz go ahead and sail with sister-battleship Bismarck even though had not completed shake-down had been granted. (His instincts were correct--the USN, Royal Navy, and IJN all would rush a new ship into action if needed and it usually worked out okay) If you have both Bismarck-class battleships and two cruisers (Hipper would likely have joined Tirpitz in turn) you have a really different sequence of events in May 1941 most likely. It took almost the whole available British fleet in the area to run down Bismarck -- with Tirpitz with her her, all bets are off.
For the Pacific:
What if Yamamoto listens to the Army and Hara and Takagi and cancels Midway in favor of making Coral Sea II the next grand carrier battle. It is somewhat doubtful it would fail a second time with the logistics more available there. Close second --- Yamamoto commits the super-battleships and real punch of the surface fleet to the naval battles of Guadalcanal --- that campaign really decided the rest of the war at sea in the Pacific and it was possible to lose there --it was a narrow thing.
Eliminatus said:
Hitler doesn't attack Russia. Does Russia backstab Hitler and attack Germany themselves?
I know this is a fairly talked about topic but haven't been able to dredge up some solid evidence to point what would happen if this scenario occurred. Hitler not attacking first I mean.
Also, would widespread chemical warfare have changed WW2 at all ya think? Tactically and strategically?
JABQ04 said:
I agree. Stalin bought into the Soviet/Nazi non-aggression treaty hard core. iIRC he was straight up stunned on June 22,1941.
Very true. He was AWOL and showed no leadership for the first few weeks. For those saying he was preparing to attack Germany, it doesn't match with his focus that he was most worried about war coming with Japan.expresswrittenconsent said:JABQ04 said:
I agree. Stalin bought into the Soviet/Nazi non-aggression treaty hard core. iIRC he was straight up stunned on June 22,1941.
He refused to get out of bed for several days.
One of the greatest secrets of the war is that stalin was attacking hitler. All soviet logistics were deployed for offense. How do you think the wehrmacht encircled and captured nearly 2 million russians in the first 2 months? Fdr never wanted that out, as it would raise too many questions - primarily - why are we fighting the lesser of two evils in this war?Eliminatus said:
Hitler doesn't attack Russia. Does Russia backstab Hitler and attack Germany themselves?
I know this is a fairly talked about topic but haven't been able to dredge up some solid evidence to point what would happen if this scenario occurred. Hitler not attacking first I mean.
Also, would widespread chemical warfare have changed WW2 at all ya think? Tactically and strategically?
Further, they were dramatically out producing him in war materials and men. He had to do it or be swamped.Smokedraw01 said:Eliminatus said:
Hitler doesn't attack Russia. Does Russia backstab Hitler and attack Germany themselves?
I know this is a fairly talked about topic but haven't been able to dredge up some solid evidence to point what would happen if this scenario occurred. Hitler not attacking first I mean.
Also, would widespread chemical warfare have changed WW2 at all ya think? Tactically and strategically?
Hitler has to attack the USSR. They were enemy number one against his regime.
Great point. Another dynamic I always think about.Belton Ag said:
Had Hitler been able to convince Japan to stick to their border conflict and not sign the neutrality pact with Russia just prior to Operation Barbarossa, it would have tied up a significant portion of the Red Army in the East. The Soviets had spent a decade dealing with the Japanese threat after Japan invaded Manchuria and Mongolia and Stalin was terrified of a Japanese invasion.
The Nazis still wouldn't have been able to pull off Operation Barbarossa, but they'd have gotten much closer. A few tweaks of that plan, plus the looming threat of Japan, and it could have been a vastly different war.
Personally, with my finite knowledge, this is where I am at.kubiak03 said:
I'm no World War Two scholar but am an avid reader on the subject, so maybe I'm totally wrong.
It seems to me Stalin would have been content to sit on the sidelines for a few more years if not indefinitely.
Stalin didn't really say a peep or react negatively when the Germans did their balkans campaign and that was right on the USSR's doorstep and opened up a another major invasion into Russia.
He was more concerned about keeping his power and not so much spreading the revolution. I don't think he ever bought into the revolution per say, just the power it allowed him to amass.
Here Is mine, what if the Germans/Italians went for Malta at the beginning before the invasion of Crete mess and instead of the invasion of Russia, move those forces to North Africa.
My what if is pretty different than that. Hitler should have gotten the Japanese to keep the Russians occupied in the east - even by attacking. Those Russian troops were key to pushing back Hitler. Hitler should have cut the Italians loose and let them fend for themselves in North Africa and the Mediterranean. The Italians were never going to be of any use for 3-4 years other than screening armies like the Romanians.Eliminatus said:Personally, with my finite knowledge, this is where I am at.kubiak03 said:
I'm no World War Two scholar but am an avid reader on the subject, so maybe I'm totally wrong.
It seems to me Stalin would have been content to sit on the sidelines for a few more years if not indefinitely.
Stalin didn't really say a peep or react negatively when the Germans did their balkans campaign and that was right on the USSR's doorstep and opened up a another major invasion into Russia.
He was more concerned about keeping his power and not so much spreading the revolution. I don't think he ever bought into the revolution per say, just the power it allowed him to amass.
Here Is mine, what if the Germans/Italians went for Malta at the beginning before the invasion of Crete mess and instead of the invasion of Russia, move those forces to North Africa.
And the shift from Russia to Africa via all those isles, is an interesting take. Cementing down the southern front as it were, would have been a major change for sure. Very interesting. Opens up all sorts of follow on scenarios of course. Would have protected Italy so maybe Italy could have had a more lasting impact on the war?
Well, now that I know the level of intel that Russia had warning of the German attack, I am now convinced that Russia had no plans for an attack early 1941.Eliminatus said:
Hitler doesn't attack Russia. Does Russia backstab Hitler and attack Germany themselves?
I know this is a fairly talked about topic but haven't been able to dredge up some solid evidence to point what would happen if this scenario occurred. Hitler not attacking first I mean.
Also, would widespread chemical warfare have changed WW2 at all ya think? Tactically and strategically?
What if we would have won at the Alamo? Texas would probably still be part of Mexico. Independence may have not been declared by time of the victory and I would have to assume a Santa Anna army that badly damaged would have been overthrown by other enemies in Mexico City.dcbowers said:
What if Sam Houston and the Texians had gotten decimated by Santa Anna at San Jacinto?
We'd all be speaking Spanish, for one.
The United States would have become a pariah nation and very possibly would have been unable to hold together the Transatlantic Alliance (plus Australia, New Zealand and a few others). Probably earth-shattering political implications on the home front. A massive propaganda and political victory for the Soviet Union that would have likely gained some official allies and certainly would have swayed a much larger bloc into "unaligned/leaning red." Basically the textbook example of "Pyrrhic Victory."Smokedraw01 said:
What if Truman uses the a-bomb against Chinese targets during the Korean War?
TheFirebird said:The United States would have become a pariah nation and very possibly would have been unable to hold together the Transatlantic Alliance (plus Australia, New Zealand and a few others). Probably earth-shattering political implications on the home front. A massive propaganda and political victory for the Soviet Union that would have likely gained some official allies and certainly would have swayed a much larger bloc into "unaligned/leaning red." Basically the textbook example of "Pyrrhic Victory."Smokedraw01 said:
What if Truman uses the a-bomb against Chinese targets during the Korean War?
maybe, maybe not. we certainly maintained the high ground despite our strategic bombing retaliation campaign and first use of nukes.TheFirebird said:The United States would have become a pariah nation and very possibly would have been unable to hold together the Transatlantic Alliance (plus Australia, New Zealand and a few others). Probably earth-shattering political implications on the home front. A massive propaganda and political victory for the Soviet Union that would have likely gained some official allies and certainly would have swayed a much larger bloc into "unaligned/leaning red." Basically the textbook example of "Pyrrhic Victory."Smokedraw01 said:
What if Truman uses the a-bomb against Chinese targets during the Korean War?
Do you think that would have had an appreciable difference on the final outcome of the ACW? Tactically, I think it would have made a difference obviously but I still wonder if it would have been "enough" to actually matter in the end.titan said:
A Civil War one recently reminded of is worth mentioning. What if the ironclads CSS Mississippi and Louisiana were operational (they nearly were) in time to defend New Orleans in April 1862? That sure changes many things if it doesn't fall so early. The whole Mississippi River campaign goes differently.
You could go the other direction as well...what if Farragut had brought enough troops with him to garrison New Orleans, and take a few thousand upriver? After the capture of New Orleans, Farragut sailed upriver as far as Vicksburg - which, in mid-1862, was lightly garrisoned and almost unfortified. Farragut had no troops to take advantage of the opportunity - he brought Gen. Butler and 10,000 to New Orleans, but it required every last one of them to control the city.Eliminatus said:Do you think that would have had an appreciable difference on the final outcome of the ACW? Tactically, I think it would have made a difference obviously but I still wonder if it would have been "enough" to actually matter in the end.titan said:
A Civil War one recently reminded of is worth mentioning. What if the ironclads CSS Mississippi and Louisiana were operational (they nearly were) in time to defend New Orleans in April 1862? That sure changes many things if it doesn't fall so early. The whole Mississippi River campaign goes differently.
they did win the 1960 electionaggiejim70 said:
What if the Democrats won the election of 1960. No Civil War, freedom of the slaves put on hold for who knows how long. Lincoln just an answer to a trivia question. Somewhere in the neighborhood of a half a million lives saved.
I dont think the answer to that is as simple as they would have "moved on" from the issue. The dominos were leading to war. Unless a leader steps in that could have lead to a peaceful resolution, the issue and the tension it caused would have remained.aggiejim70 said:
What if the Democrats won the election of 1960. No Civil War, freedom of the slaves put on hold for who knows how long. Lincoln just an answer to a trivia question. Somewhere in the neighborhood of a half a million lives saved.