World War II
1 Eylül 1939 - 2 Eylül 1945
- Battle Scale
- General Operation
- Winner
- Allied Powers
- Parties
Allied Powers
Allied CoalitionMulti-National (Anglo-Saxon, Slavic, Chinese)Axis Powers
Axis CoalitionMulti-National (Germanic, Japanese, Italian)
Comparative Analysis
Compare not just who won, but how it was won through the data: force balance, casualties, inventory, operational capacity, and military perspective...
1 Eylül 1939 - 2 Eylül 1945
Allied Powers
Axis Powers
28 June 1922 - 24 Mayıs 1923
National Army of the Irish Free State
Anti-Treaty IRA (Republicans)
Allied Powers
National Army of the Irish Free State
| World War II | Irish Civil War | |
|---|---|---|
| Armor / Vehicles | Allied Powers
Axis Powers
| National Army of the Irish Free State
Anti-Treaty IRA (Republicans) — |
| Air Power | Allied Powers
Axis Powers
| National Army of the Irish Free State — Anti-Treaty IRA (Republicans) — |
| Artillery / Siege | Allied Powers — Axis Powers
| National Army of the Irish Free State
Anti-Treaty IRA (Republicans)
|
| Other | Allied Powers
Axis Powers
| National Army of the Irish Free State
Anti-Treaty IRA (Republicans)
|
The Allies demonstrated asymmetric flexibility by developing amphibious landing, strategic bombing, and island-hopping doctrines in parallel; the Wehrmacht became doctrinally locked into static Festung Europa defense after 1943.
The National Army successfully pivoted from conventional offensive to counter-guerrilla operations, escalating pressure through execution powers and internment camps. The IRA, conversely, failed to generate strategic objectives in the guerrilla phase.
War of Annihilation — The Allies, through the 'unconditional surrender' doctrine declared at the Casablanca Conference, set the total destruction of Axis regimes as a strategic objective.
Attrition War — After the rapid conclusion of the conventional phase, the war evolved into a classic asymmetric attrition conflict driven by guerrilla tactics and counter-insurgency operations.
The Axis Schwerpunkt was concentrated around Hitler's will and Wehrmacht armored forces; the Allies shattered this center with the dual-front Normandy + Bagration blow. The Japanese Schwerpunkt was the Kidō Butai carrier fleet, annihilated at Midway.
The State's Schwerpunkt was Dublin and then the urban hubs of Munster — accurately identified and neutralised in sequence. The Republicans failed to define their own centre of gravity and dispersed forces.
Operation Fortitude's Pas-de-Calais deception and Operation Mincemeat's Sicily cover operation are masterpieces of military deception; the Axis could not execute a coordinated deception operation at this scale.
The State's amphibious landings (Passage West, Fenit) constituted complete strategic surprise and shattered the southern Republican defence. The IRA's deception capacity remained very limited.
Stuka sirens and V-2 ballistic missiles created psychological shock; however, the Allied strategic bombing campaign (Dresden, Tokyo) and the Hiroshima-Nagasaki atomic strikes formed the absolute zenith of shock effect.
Deployment of 18-pounder field artillery during the Four Courts siege and subsequent fortress reductions delivered psychological shock effects. Armoured cars proved decisive in urban combat.
The Russian winter froze the Wehrmacht's Operation Typhoon; the vast distances of the Pacific wore down the Japanese Navy, while the Ardennes forest worked in favor of German armor in 1940 and against it in 1944.
The rugged terrain of Munster and Connacht initially favoured guerrilla operations, yet the State's amphibious landings (Cork, Kerry) neutralised geography. Winter conditions wore down both sides equally.
The codebreaking successes of Bletchley Park and Station HYPO created an information asymmetry favoring the Allies at every strategic turning point, from Midway to the Normandy deception (Fortitude).
The intelligence capital accumulated during the War of Independence largely remained with the pro-Treaty side; Republicans were known by their former comrades-in-arms. This asymmetry proved fatal in the guerrilla phase.
The Wehrmacht collapsed France in 6 weeks using Blitzkrieg to effectively exploit interior lines; however, the Soviet Deep Battle doctrine (Glubokaya Operatsiya) and Patton's 3rd Army maneuvers shattered German interior lines in 1944-45.
The National Army exploited interior lines through amphibious envelopments into Munster, outflanking Republican positions from the rear. The IRA failed to achieve operational manoeuvre and reverted to static defence.
The Soviet 'Not one step back' order at Stalingrad and Churchill's Battle of Britain speech forged Allied will into steel; Japanese Bushido code and German Endsieg propaganda could only delay, not prevent, final defeat.
Collins' assassination at Béal na Bláth in August 1922 caused brief shock within State ranks but converted into vengeance-driven motivation. Republicans, burdened by the weight of fratricidal warfare, grew progressively demoralised.
The Allies strangled the Axis strategic raw material supply with economic blockade before combat; the Pearl Harbor strike, in turn, was a mistake that diplomatically isolated Japan from its own alliance.
By legitimising the Treaty through plebiscite, the Free State politically isolated the Republicans. The Catholic Church's excommunication threat and public war fatigue inflicted moral damage greater than any battlefield engagement.