Tingkai, my point about Guderian was not that he was sacked by Hitler, but he had not bought into the personality cult. When Das Fueher vs. Mein Fueher issued an order, if Guderian felt it was disastrous or wrong, he would disobey. I suspect you will find almost total congruency between generals who would disobey Hitler's military orders (due to incompoetency) and generals who would disobey his extermination orders (moral bankruptcy). One of the best analysis (translated from German) I have seen of WW2 Germany calls it the "Hitler state" and examines it as a cult. It's not that they were a "right-wing" state, but that they were involved in a cult that took control of the mechanisms of the state. You can argue it may not have started that way, but it difinitively ended up that way.
As a point to Ned, I read in one biography of a German who survived who estimated over 80% of his unit died (captured in 1944). While searching for it, I came up with this interesting site.
For a fascinating discussion on it at a hitorical site like us, except They require documentation and the moderators intervene for posts without it look here.
Nice argument over the Hitler vs. Stalin atrocities. It strikes as an argument of "how many corpses can you bury on the head of a pin."
As a point to Ned, I read in one biography of a German who survived who estimated over 80% of his unit died (captured in 1944). While searching for it, I came up with this interesting site.
For a fascinating discussion on it at a hitorical site like us, except They require documentation and the moderators intervene for posts without it look here.
Nice argument over the Hitler vs. Stalin atrocities. It strikes as an argument of "how many corpses can you bury on the head of a pin."
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