cont. Bernd 05/28/2021 (Fri) 17:53:37 No.43812 del
(1.72 MB 2700x1930 Allied-Invasion.jpg)
Invasion
The definition would be something like this: a decisive operation on behalf of the Anglo-Saxons on the demand of the Soviet, to help to beat the Germans in open battle in order to end the war; the decisiveness demands the deployment of all the tools of moral, spiritual, and physical violence, in the decisive time at the decisive place, purposefully and expediently.
The operation has to happen on five fronts.
On the West the Anglo-Saxons have to land between the Rhein and the Elbe and lead an attack into the heartland of Germany, the river quadrant of Rhein, Main, Saale, and Elbe. If we called the Moscow-Stalingrad-Kazan triangle the Soviet "crisis area", by Szálasi's standard I think we can call this the German crisis area.
To this to work the Soviet also has to strike simultaneously from the East. They have to push the Germans back to the line of Danube-Carpathians-Vistula and beat them in the hook of the Vistula.
As a secondary front which supports the previous two operations, events have to be set in motion too, by both parties. Anglos have to move on Bergen, Trondheim, and Narvik, get Sweden's cooperation, and secure Skandinavia, while the Soviet deal with Finland.
Another supportive front has to be opened in the south, from France toward the Upper Danube valley to help the crossing the Alps of the forces in Italy. These unified armies will form the southern wall of the pocket of the crisis area.
Lastly toward the Balkans and into the Danube basin, to deny the oil and bauxite. In cooperation of the Anglo-Saxons, the Soviet, and with the involvement of Turkey.
One more detail is turning every folk of Europe against Germany, with the tools of anarchy, destruction, and sabotage.
He specifies as the final meeting line of the Allied powers at Trondheim-Stockholm-Oder-Western Carpathians-Pozsony-Fiume (Rijeka)-Rustchuk (Ruse)-Varna.
Szálasi had no doubt that in material, and especially in freight space the conditions are met. But in aptitude and personnel, they are lacking.