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I believe the United Kingdom should be a first on the list of allied nations. Between 1939 to 1941/2 the UK fought the Nazi's alone. I believe that when you put names in the combatants list, put Winston Churchil first and Roosevelt after him. Think of how many British citizens were killed during that time, how many children were killed during the nazi bombings and how many British soldiers died in Egypt and France alongside Americans. Remember another thing that when you put America first on that list, your also claiming America was involved in the war from the beginning. Your people left the British people suffer between 1939 to 1941 when America had the power to stop Germany 10 times over. I am not anti-American, but there are countries that were involved in World War 2 that stood the longest. I also thank America for defeating the Japanese, now America deserves the top credit on the combatants. I am not against America. God Bless. Amlder20 12:38, 4 August 2006 (UTC)
Amlder20 22:41, 5 August 2006 (UTC)
May I remind you that France got overun by the Germans, may I also remind you that Hitler walked the streets of Paris, what European allies they were all under German control? Their governments in exile weren't so powerful, they had small numbers of men and they joined the British forces, not all of them had their own armies on British soil. I did not say the Soviet Union lost less than us, and that turns out to be a daft comparison reason being that Stalin killed his own men alongside the Germans killing his men, Stalin would kill them when they got back from the battlefield for dessertion.
Amlder20 16:46, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
I realize the names that the United Kingdom and its related states call themselves are complex and vary over time. However, at the time and in most history books, it was acceptable to refer to the group let by Winston Churchill as simply "Britain". All this talk of the "British Empire" or "Commonwealth" doing this and that is misleading and anachronistic, because right or wrong places such as India and Canada were not really calling the shots and the leadership was in London. One does not talk of the "Battle of the UK" either. Britain was and is the term used by most English-speakers, except for a small community of nitpickers on Wikipedia. Please just let us use it. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 65.93.100.179 (talk • contribs)
i've revised the opening of the article to include a recognition of the british war effort as a collective action by the empire & commonwealth as well as the home country; i admit the wording is less that perfect, but the british war effort was absolutely dependant on the efforts of the empire & commonwealth taken as a whole; with the major countries being canada, australia (& nz), south africa, & india; all of them except for india being effectively separate powers & independant allies, & even india having some significant degree of autonomy. without the combined war effort, britain itself could not have continued the war, & possibly might not have even entered into it. canada particularly deserves recogniton as being a separate power, entering into alliance agreements with the untied states on matters such as the defence of north america (even before the formal entry of the usa into the war), separate from its ties with britian (as did australia, where the american military effectively replaced the british as the leading allied power in the region), canada also was involved more closely in the american efforts to produce atomic weapons, among other things, and canada was included in the representation of most major allied war conferences, certainly the "all powers" ones; with the canadian prime minsiter being included in the churhcill-roosevelt photos of the quebec conference..
also re: nitpickers.... i would assume that you are including winston spencer churchill among the nitpickers, as he spoke of "britian and her empire", "the empire", and "the british empire and it's commonwealth of nations" as a matter of common practice, particularly in discussing the war effort & made a specific effort to do so DURING the war. I recognize that the issue of the commonwealth countries is somewhat problematic as they are simultaneously independant allies, and affiliates of britian; but they were recognized as separate powers, responsible for their own declarations of war (unlike in ww1), and had recogniton as such on the major legal documents relating to the war.
I haven't listed tham all (major empire/commonwealth countries) in the intro to the article as this would take too much space, but i do feel that the unusual nature of the "british" war effort as including more than just the "home/mother country" does deserve some kind of specific recognition. I wuold also like to point out the subtle difference between "britian" as it might have been understood to include the empire & commonweath to a reader in the ww2 era, and "britian" as it is understood to be today (ie: just the uk & close territorial possesions such as the channel islands, isle of manx, etc.; or simply "britain" as being just great britian itself, & specifically excluding northern ireland; i admit that occasionally the few remaining colonies are included, although the practice of including any outside parts of the empire in the terms 'britain" or "british" has pretty much fallen from common usage;) It is both disprespectful & inappropriate to simply lump the empire/commonwealth cuontries all together as "british" without at least adding this caveat.
It's also inaccurate.
i'm not looking to start a war here, but the matter is too important to just let it pass.
also, the british seat on the UN security council was originally meant as a "british empire" seat; the addition of a second permanent/veto seat for a commonwealth country would have been seen as unacceptablle to some of the other powers & it would have been somewhat problematic as australia (or aus/nz) & canada both had populations too small & india was too poor too troubled & too non-white to be considered; i believe there was a fair amount of discussion of these issues @ the time the UN was being formed, but there's rly not a good compromise option that offers itself... a "commonwealth seat"? an aus/nz/ca seat? As with so many things about the UN, including only one "british" seat was the "political" & somewhat unsatisfactory compromise that was reached. the subsequent falling away of the other commonwealth countries from britain has changed the preception of the british seat on the sec. coun. from empire to just home country & it certainly nvr really worked as being representative of the empire & commonwealth as a whole. currently there is good reason to argue that neither britian nor france rly deserves a permanent/veto sec. coun. seat anymore, and that the membership/structure/voting powers of the UN should be changed to better reflect current world realities & perhaps democratic prinicples, but changing it has proved to be rather difficult (yes off-topic i know, i digress... but i'm not the only one who does...).
the "big 5" representation included both a france that had been defeated in 1940 & who's subsequent (or total) contributions to the allied war effort, while not completely negligible, were rather less than those of the major commonwealth countries, and chiang-kai-chek's kuomintang "republic of china" which did not represent the entire chinese nation, or effectively govern the whole of "free" (non japanese occupied) chinese territory. while china certainlly did contribute (& suffer) greatly during the war against japan, arguably the communist chinese were the more effective "ally" in the actual fighting (as well as eventually decicively wining the chinese civil war against chiang & the kmt), & on the whole they did not receive the recognition they deserved from the western powers, particulary in subsequent & later UN politcs.
long story short: the UN seats were given out for laregely political reasons & they do not accurately reflect the relative conributions and/or significance of allied nations in WW2.
as a candian i'll quietly point out that @ the end of world war 2, if you were to make a list of the "great powers" the ranking would be something like: usa & ussr as the 2 superpowers, then it's something of a toss-up between canada & china; the chinese having a larger army, but far less advanced technologically & less well equipped, & split btwn 2 major factions already engaging in the beginning of the end-phase of the chinese civil war; canada having a more technologically advanced & far better equipped military, although somewhat unbalanced as it was geared to serve as part of a combined western allied force, rather than a stand-alone power. ...germany & japan not being counted, having of course been defeated & italy being in the somewhat awkward position of having tried to change sides in the middle of the war & having thoroughly disproved its status as a great power with its combat record. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 65.93.100.179 (talk • contribs)
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