Now, you tell me -- and cite and quote your source -- where Stalin would have any say in any plan for the Aleutians and the Kuriles IF there had been one?
You have cited a somewhat intelligent discussion (except for the part about the weather) about secondary campaigns. The discussion is NOT about the plan to build a RAILROAD to NOME from Calgery, Alberta, Canada - then to extend that railroad from the Soviet side down Siberia - so that always isolated bases and towns in places like Kamchatka become properly supplied. The biggest problem with winter operations of a rail line in Alaska (or Siberia at the latitude of Alaska) is moose! [We kill as many as 800 on a run of medium distance in winter - because they like to get on the road bed which has been cleared of most of the snow. It provides a great deal of meat - more than we can use - but possibly not more than an army could use.] Roads made of gravel are repairable by roadgraders (from the effects of frost heaving) - and we run them regularly 500 miles farther north of the route in question all the year around. The ideas about weather in Alaska are amazing - universal ideas - based wholly on ignorance - and all Alaskans get used to what amounts to dumb questions or statements or shipments or whatever - because everyone not actually familiar with Alaska "knows" the weather is a big problem. I am from Michigan - and I have NEVER seen in Alaska the 108 inches of snow we got EVERY YEAR in Grand Marais - nor have I met even one Alaskan who knows how to cope with really deep snow using things like screens. Because it is not part of life in Alaska. You are confusing the campaign as it happened with the campaign contemplated in 1941 and 1942.




