Germany and Europe

What if somehow Germany won every war that took place anywhere inside europe at any time. Would they have become a Superpower rather then the ununified group that they were?
 
What if somehow Germany won every war that took place anywhere inside europe at any time. Would they have become a Superpower rather then the ununified group that they were?

Rather self-explanatory - RIGHT?

If you go back till beginning of "any time" we would have a much different Europe and as you write if Germany had won every war in this Europe they'd probably be somekind of major if not superpower and not an ununified group.
 
What if somehow Germany won every war that took place anywhere inside europe at any time. Would they have become a Superpower rather then the ununified group that they were?

I gues not. Winning a waar does not mean to take over everything that the other belligrents own. If germany wins a war against france - than france is still france and not germany.
But if it were like you say, the german word would have some weight in europe!!!
 
Even the wars they didn't fight in or exist for?

Why are unified group and superpower different? :confused: IMO the two would work well together... homogeneous empires are more long-lasting.
 
What if somehow Germany won every war that took place anywhere inside europe at any time. Would they have become a Superpower rather then the ununified group that they were?
This thread tears it, I withdraw any acceptance of you I may ever have had. Everyone, please do not confuse me with this clown.
 
What Germany? The peoples defined as Germanic, or whoever has territory inside the area generally defined as Germany (which leads to the question Grossdeutsch or Kleindeutsch)? Really ASB...

Question: Would Sealion beat the Trojans?:confused:
 
If all or most of the Germannic peoples became unified early enough in their history, like just before the Punic Wars, think of just how far they would have gone.
 
What Germany? The peoples defined as Germanic, or whoever has territory inside the area generally defined as Germany (which leads to the question Grossdeutsch or Kleindeutsch)? Really ASB...

Question: Would Sealion beat the Trojans?:confused:

Or would Operation Barbarossa succeed against the wars of the earliest tribal peoples in their first migration to Europe, many thousands of years ago?
 

oberdada

Gone Fishin'
Question: Would Sealion beat the Trojans?:confused:

If that means, that the Greeks (or rather the Germans, though we had to travel back in time before,) build a huge wooden Sealion somewhere near Athens, hide their entire Army inside; then wait for the Trojans to come get it, transport it over the mediternanian and pull it into their own city,
in that case I don't think so...:cool:
 
If that means, that the Greeks (or rather the Germans, though we had to travel back in time before,) build a huge wooden Sealion somewhere near Athens, hide their entire Army inside; then wait for the Trojans to come get it, transport it over the mediternanian and pull it into their own city,
in that case I don't think so...:cool:

You deserve credit for the greatest use of "Sealion"...ever.;)
 
Maybe you could find a place in the wiki for it.

I can see it now:

"Sealion"-A general AH obsurdity*. Refers to the attempted operation of the same-name planned by Nazi Germany during WWII to invade Britain. Used as a term of scorn...

*Exception to rule (or perhaps defining rule) is oberdada's use of Sealion to describe the German takeover of Troy...

:D
 

Philip

Donor
If that means, that the Greeks (or rather the Germans, though we had to travel back in time before,) build a huge wooden Sealion somewhere near Athens, hide their entire Army inside; then wait for the Trojans to come get it, transport it over the mediternanian and pull it into their own city,
in that case I don't think so...:cool:

I think I have a sig.
 
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