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The historical end of the Third Reich occurred in May 1945,
before the Luftwaffe could bring its advanced rocket and jet aircraft into full
combat service. For over 50 years, historians have debated what could have
happened if a number of events had ended differently. Ted Nomura and Ben Dunn
of Antarctic Press have created a fictional world where several key events
delayed the allies' victory. Fitting within the broader scope of the
Families of Altered Wars fictional timeline, Luftwaffe 1946 and
Kamikaze 1946 describe WW II in the air from the view of pilots on all sides in the
conflict.
What follows is just a brief overview of the circumstances that
led to World War II continuing another year, giving the Luftwaffe and their
counterparts in Japan a second chance. A chance to overcome their numerical
weaknesses and training deficiencies through technology and the courage of their
pilots. Suspend your disbelief, consider what might have been, and join us as we
explore the people and story of LUFTWAFFE 1946.
June 13, 1944 the skies above Normandy, France
General Eisenhower flies above the D-Day beaches to view the
ground situation himself. Flying in a two-seater Mustang P-51, Ike feels safe due
to Allied air superiority. In this altered history, a Me-262 Jabo (the German
nickname for fighter-bombers) ordered to harass the landing beaches with bombs,
stumbles across Ike's P-51 and shoots it down. In an instant, the entire command
structure for the Allies is upset.
Following the agreement reached when Eisenhower was made the
commander of SHAEF (Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force), Field Marshall
Montgomery is named as Ike's replacement. The ramifications are both drastic and immediate.
June - September 1945, Normandy, France
Seeking to redeem his inexcusable failure to seize Caen on D-Day,
Monty directs the majority of supplies and support to the Northern flank of the
Normandy beachhead, running headlong into the 21st Panzer Division and
the SS Panzer Corps, thereby losing thousands of men in a battle of attrition through
difficult terrain. Without the Southern breakout by General Hodges, which released the
3rd Army under Patton to strike into France and encircle the German defenders
in the Falaise Pocket, the struggle to breakout of Normandy lasts into September. When
the American forces finally get the supplies and support for the breakout, the Germans fall
back to prepared positions, bitterly contesting each yard of ground. The French and American
commanders are held in check by Montgomery so they won't outrun his supply plans.
Bitterly jealous of General George Patton, Montgomery refuses him
any command in the European Theater. Patton returns to the US, assigned to train new
divisions for the invasion of Japan. Without Patton's risk taking and constant battling
for supplies, the US Army is unable to make the sweeping drive into France that allowed the
Allies to reach the Rhine by the end of 1944.
Frustrated by his inability to break out of Normandy, Monty demands
more and more air support for his ground forces. Instead of shifting the heavy bombers
to strike the transportation nets and oil manufacturing systems of the Reich, Allied Air
Command is increasingly committed to daylight carpet bombing in support of tactical
advances. The relief from the destruction caused by daylight precision bombing allows
Albert Speer, Reich Minister for Production, to increase fuel and armaments production, and
to rush revolutionary new weapons into production for the Luftwaffe. When the Allied Air
Commanders finally regain control over mission selection in September, it is too late, the
Luftwaffe is once again able to challenge the Allies in the air. Without the overwhelming
air superiority that the Allies historically enjoyed, their advance through France and the
Low Countries is tragically slow, and casualties mount rapidly.
June, Vitebsk, USSR
But what of the Eastern Front? As Stalin and his Marshals had feared,
the lack of an emergency threat in the West allowed the Germans to focus their resources on
the East. Barely holding an advantage over the Luftwaffe as it was, the introduction of jet
aircraft and new long range bombers on the Eastern Front returns air superiority to the
Luftwaffe. Coupled with the earlier introduction of new tanks and anti-tank weapons from
Speer's underground factories, the Soviet Summer Offensive of June 1944 stalls at Minsk,
while German counterattacks in the south reclaim Odessa and much of the southern Ukraine.
This allows Bulgaria, Rumania, and Hungary to remain in the Axis, adding their raw materials,
production capacity, and manpower to the forces stopping the Soviets. The war drags on, the
toll of death and destruction growing ever greater.
North Atlantic, Autumn 1944
The check in the Allied bombing campaign and the lack of progress on
the ground in France allowed the German Navy to introduce the Type XXI U-Boat in enough
numbers to make a difference. Although the Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW) forces of the
Allied Navies are still vastly superior, and they continue to sink the U-Boats at a deadly
rate, enough supply ships are lost that America's production capacity can't be brought to
bear quickly enough in Europe. The Allied armies are held back by supply shortages. The
Germans, with shorter supply lines, and less harassment from the air, are able to contest
every yard of ground.
What of the Manhattan Project and the atom bomb? While that topic will
be addressed more fully in a special booklet, some of the things that went right for the
Allied scientists go wrong, delaying the program by months. These decisive weapons end the
war in 1946, but not before the additional air battles that our story is based on.
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Luftwaffe 1946 and its derivative materials are works of fiction. No
similarity to any actual character(s) and/or places is intended, and any such similarity is
purely coincidental. Nothing from this website may be reproduced without the express written
consent of the authors, except for the purposes of review or promotion.
Luftwaffe: 1946 title © 1996, 2001
Ted Nomura and Ben Dunn, used with permission by MSD Games.
Luftwaffe: 1946, Kamikaze 1946 and
Families of Altered Wars © Antarctic Press 2001.
Luftwaffe: 1946 and Kamikaze 1946
game materials and this website © 2003 MSD Games.
The creation of an alternative history and supporting fictional material
describing what could have happened if certain key events in World War II were changed does
not imply any sympathy or support for the evil regimes or evil policies of the Axis powers.
These materials are not meant to glorify or praise the tyrannical regimes that spawned the
battles and weapons described herein, but instead to help us to understand how fortunate we
are that World War II ended as it did, with the freedom loving people of the world victorious.
MSD Games, in cooperation with Antarctic Press, is bringing that fictional
word to life with an air-to-air combat miniatures game, 1/300th scale miniature
aircraft, and supporting publications. Fans of the comic book series will be able to re-fight
the air battles portrayed in the series. Gamers will have new technologies and events to
recreate on the table top. History buffs can explore the what-ifs through simulations and
rich source material. Aviation enthusiasts can collect and model the numerous aircraft and
secret weapons that the Luftwaffe had on the drawing boards when the war ended. For the first
time, they can see them go head to head with late-war Allied aircraft, seeing for themselves
if the advanced German technology could have altered the war's historical outcome.
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