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macanchex | 3 years ago

The historical consensus is that Germany had no way of ending the war on their own terms even without the aid. The impacts of Lend-Lease materialized mostly after 1942/Stalingrad.

You might want to look into the history of Radio Free Europe and the sources they link to.

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chasil|3 years ago

I do read elsewhere that the participation of U.S. industrialists in the years before the war had profound impact on Soviet industrialization.

"The Communist party translated and published [Fredrick W.] Taylor’s book The Principles of Scientific Management, and high authorities brought over Walter Polakov, an American follower of Henry L. Gantt, one of Taylor’s most fervent disciples, to provide a liaison with American scientific-management experts and to prepare production charts for the entire First Five-Year Plan...

"By 1928, when the Soviets inaugurated the First Five-Year Plan, Henry Ford had become an even greater hero to the Soviets than Frederick Taylor. An emotional cult grew up around Ford’s methods and even his person. By 1925 his autobiography, My Life and Work, had had four printings in the Soviet Union, and one American in Russia reported that plant managers were studying Ford with as much enthusiasm as they had had for Lenin."

https://www.americanheritage.com/how-america-helped-build-so...

ahartmetz|3 years ago

Funny thing, I watched a video about Russian command style yesterday. They are still trying to do scientific management in the army, which works horribly in the uncertainties of war, especially when lies flow up the chain of command.