• NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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    2 months ago

    None of the above, all would require infrastructure to support their equipment - infrastructure that is decades beyond the capabilities of the time. 1941 wouldn’t even have the electricity generation capacity to turn the lights on.

    Instead I would bring the Pentagon. Forget the equipment, that building is full of people who study and operate large-scale logistics, operational security, information collection and analysis, battle tactics and broad strategy. Plus, I guarantee you there’s a copy in there of all the records ever collected about the Axis military, and hundreds of postwar analyses of those records - deployments, resources, communications, technology, officer profiles, command structure. That information could probably end the war in a year.

    Intelligence, logistics and planning win wars.

    • HappycamperNZ@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Until you realize that interference with the “timeline” means many of the battles never happen, new tactics can be countered, and modern logistics require strong communications - you have info on the wrong war.

      A boomer with non-gps ICMS would literally make a world of difference. Hell, transporting a modern university and all its research, staff and equipment could make a world of difference. Include climate change results.

      • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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        2 months ago

        Until you realize that interference with the “timeline” means many of the battles never happen

        Sure, but that would be the point actually. If you had the kind of complete information about the Axis military deployment and resources in 1941 that this scenario would provide, you wouldn’t apply that information willy-nilly, one battle at a time. You would plan a complete campaign to disable the military systems of Germany and Japan all at once, and bide your time until you could implement it.

        You would know where every major resource storage is, every production facility, every training facility, every unit deployment, every command headquarters - and the enemy wouldn’t know that you know that yet. You would just fully decapitate the command and logistics of the Axis all at once. Any remaining battles would just be a cleanup operation - they can’t run tanks, airplanes or ships if we wipe out all of their fuel storage and production because we know where all of it is (or was) in 1941. And because you have the Pentagon staff, you have capable people who could actually plan and organize such an operation.

        new tactics can be countered

        Eventually, maybe, but if you planned your operations right there simply wouldn’t be time. The point isn’t to win battles, it’s to take away the enemy’s ability to start a battle.

        modern logistics require strong communications

        This is true, and the communication options are limited by the time, but we’re not talking about trying to replace the Allies’ existing logistics infrastructure. We’re talking about using what the Allies already have, with perfect knowledge of what the Axis has when and where, and then picking the right moment to disable their military infrastructure across the board.