Comments by "Winston Smith" (@kryts27) on "TIKhistory"
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I don't want to take away Rommel's ultimate skill as a CIC and his outstanding career as a soldier, but he did have good forewarned intelligence (equivalent to the Ultra decrypts for Montgomery later), early in the North African desert war, via the help of the Americans. The American embassy had been raided in Cairo by Italian intelligence (during 1941) where their "Black code" had been stolen. Incredibly, the Americans did not report these codes as compromised, and did not immediately change their signal codes. Since, by Churchill's insistence, the American embassy attaches got much of the British forces' strength, readiness and disposition, Rommel (via the Italians) got this valuable intelligence firsthand as well and put it to good use with his limited forces in 1941 & 1942. There was little guesswork in Rommel's forces deployment and campaign objectives, early in the desert war.
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"History is wrong", even when you dig up old pots from thousands of year ago (archaeologists love ancient rubbish tips). It's a negative reactionary viewpoint that not only affects historians, but venerable professions like archaeology, forensic science and geology. That is why the scientific method works and the emotive method doesn't, i.e objectivity. What people write down, under certain regimes with their own biased objectives, are important (although not vital to evidence such as Hitler's Table Talk), and often their viewpoints and language do not concur with your own. We should be not bothered by that, but what they might have said (not verbatim, but in essence), might be useful. Now we're getting to a point of stupidity matching an eight year old and a CCP official: Possibly the Second World War never happened (even though it was allegedly over just under 80 years ago) and the Roman Empire was non-existent with lot of pots under the ground with a few marble ruins (the Romans built primarily with brick, by the way). Worse, putting the pots and ruins there was the work of forgeries (very busy and unnoticed forgers, by the way, seeing the extent of the Roman Empire in three continents). But we shouldn't trust what Cicero said or what Pliny the Elder said because it was mistranslated Latin or Greek, incomplete writing (because of bits of age damaged scrolls), had been repeatedly translated to and from other languages, or these (alleged) people lived in age very different from our own.
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