Originally posted by Charles_22
The Finns were good for the type of warfare they found themselves in, but there's no way they were likely to exceed the GE accomplishments in the USSR, quite a different form of warfare indeed, should they have had the same numbers. Nobody till the USSR in '43, had any concept of using tanks and aircraft to advance in anything resembling rapid fashion, except the Germans (with the "early" tactics in NAfrica being an isolated British exception). If the Finns got all the German training/tactics, and then remembered their own, they would've combined really good defense with really good offense, but that's a fairy tale force.
You don't take an exceptional force, and realistically, with the kind of training they had, be able to make a case that they would've been a better force for another job, at which another force was already exceptional at it. Nobody thinks the Germans were better at beach invasion than the US, do they? Or would the Finns be better at beach invasions? Of course not, though the soldiers may had been very high quality, even high quality will probably be average at best when taking on a completely different mindset.
I´m back from the local bars and I´ll cut and paste some piece of information I sent to WarfareHQ´s forum couple of days ago, or something....
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IMHO the Germans were pound for pound the best fighting force of WWII. I'm talking about the major combatants who could field large scale military forces and project them well outside their own borders. Many countries have fine units that are experts at fighting in their own element. The Germans proved they could fight in the steppes, the desert, the mountains, central Europe, etc. The Germans certainly didn't have the best equipment or industrial base. How then did they achieve such remarkable success? Simple. Training and leadership. No doubt about it.
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There was one curious exeption in that German all-around fighting ability during WWII. It was fighting in forested areas. Finnish Army experienced this when fighting together with German divisions in Lappland (northern part of Finland, 1941-44) and finally against them. (1944-45; known as the War of Lappland).
What very often happened was that co-ordinated attacks (usually towards Murmansk rail line) had to be halted when German units were miles behind and sofore exposed Finnish units´ flanks to Russian counter-attacks. Finnish soldiers were amazed by the poor ability of German infantry to scout, move fast and silently, and fight effectively on those vast areas of forests and marshes. German soldiers fe shouted to each other to keep themselves in right direction and that was (and is) a big no-no in forest warfare. It appeared then that German soldiers were suffering some kind of "forest-fright". It was said that when Finnish advanced through forests and stopped when open terrain came, Germans advanced through open terrain and stopped when forests came.
All this was a bit confusing for Finns, because all the training otherwise was based on German doctrines. Guderian, in his memoirs, explained this curiosity by the fact that German landowners were so jealous about their forests, that German Army had absolutely no possibilities to train themselves in woodlands.
