Germany's Tactic's
Germany's tactic was Blitzkrieg and they learned to profect it in the Spanish War. Blitzkrieg was first used by the Germans in World War Two and was a tactic based on speed and surprise and needed a military force to be based around light tank units supported by planes and infantry soldiers. The tactic was developed in Germany by an army officer called Hans Guderian. He had written a military packet called, Achtung Panzer which got into the hands of Hitler. As a tactic it was used as a dramatic effect in the first years of World War Two and resulted in the British and French armies being pushed back in just a few weeks to the beaches of Dunkirk and the Russian army being devastated in the attack on Russia in June 1941.
American's Tactic's
World War II involved both strategic and tactical air warfare. Strategic air warfare is the use of bombers to destroy an enemy's industry, cities, and morale. Tactical air warfare is the use of planes to attack the enemy's troops
on the battlefield, usually in coordinated support of one's own troops. The heavy bomber was used to conduct strategic air raids, most notably by British and American forces in the war against Germany.
on the battlefield, usually in coordinated support of one's own troops. The heavy bomber was used to conduct strategic air raids, most notably by British and American forces in the war against Germany.
Japan's Tactic's
Japanese tactical planning tended to be inflexible. Once a plan was established, it wasn't varied from, even if the enemy had obviously made it impossible to continue. Not untypical I think of armies with poor communications. World War I tactics tended to be similar to plan was made and launched there was no real way to change it. The tactics themselves were however quite flexible, much more so than the Allies' in the early war period and more readily adaptable to the terrain they found themselves in Jungle. In Malaya, Burma, New Guinea they proved to be quite difficult and dangerous foes when first encountered. However, once the Allies learned about the inflexibility of their planning and their seeming willingness when pushed came to shove, to resort to the desperate frontal attack in the hope of proving that they could overcome the Allies use of bullets and shell, it became fairly easy, but was a loss of great amounts of men at times of defeat. When the Japanese was on the offensive they were difficult to stop. When they were on the defensive there walls were hard crack, and there positioning was strong.
Britain's Tactic's
German strategy in World War II is wholly intelligible only if Hitler’s reaching power politics and his racist ideology are borne in mind. Since the 1920s his program had been first to win power in Germany proper, next to consolidate Germany’s domination over Central Europe, and then to raise Germany to the status of a world power. The only world powers to be left after the elimination of France and the U.S.S.R. through the acquisition of colonies in Africa and the construction of a strong fleet with bases on the Atlantic. In the succeeding generation Hitler could see a conflict between Germany and the United States, during which he hoped that Great Britain would be Germany’s ally.