No, the German's lost Stalingrad to the Red Army.
During World War I, the convoy tactic employed by the Triple Alliance (particularly, Great Britain) in the second half of the war was vitally important to their final victory. Until convoying was put into practice, the German submarine campaign was starving Great Britain into surrender; afterwards, the ocean campaign was virtually won, and final victory was rendered possible.
A victory at great cost, outweighing the benefits.
During World War II, victory in the Battle of the Atlantic was essentially achieved in 1943 after years of back-and-forth conflict. In the middle of 1943, Allied technological advances and numerically superior air and naval forces finally gained the upper hand over the German "U-Boats". While the submarines continued to prowl the Atlantic until the end of the war, they did so at great loss and without inflicting serious damage upon Allied ships.
appeasement
The victory of National Socialism in Germany began a path which would eventually lead to World War II. Hitler came to head Germany through a cult of personality, and the promise that Germany could once again be great. It also began a path to one of the worst genocides in world history.
Germany lost the Battle of Stalingrad
The connection between German submarine warfare & the battle of Stalingrad is a distant one............Ans 2 - The Battle of Stalingrad was fought between the Russian and German Armies and air forces. Submarine warfare was not a part of it.
It was the battle of Stalingrad that signaled the demise of the German empire, the battle of the bulge was the last great offensive Germany planned to stop the lightning advance on the German homeland after several military defeats on the eastern front.
El Alemein was the first major victory against the Germans by the British 8th Army. It gave Britain and its allies confidence to fight on. After Alemein no major battles were lost. Midway was a great victory for the US Navy. It turned the Pacific war against the Japanese who never recovered from their defeat. Stalingrad was the victory that turned the war on the Eastern front in Russia's favor. After the German surrender there, the Red Army grew stronger by the day and gradually pushed the Germans back.
The victory over the Germans at the battle for Stalingrad on the Eastern Front meant that the Germans were effectively fighting a two-front war . This meant that the Germans were forced to divide the bulk of their resources to fight both the Russians on the Eastern Front as well as the Allies on the Western Front . The Allies knew that complete victory over the Germans was then inevitable for had the Germans defeated the Russians then the Germans would then be able to commit their full resources to thwart any effort on the part of the Allies to invade and defeat the Germans who no longer had two fronts to fight on in the war . The Russian victory at Stalingrad meant that the Russians could indeed defeat German efforts and the Allies were encouraged by this who were then committed to the eventual defeat of Germany now having confidence that their Russian allies were capable of turning the tide of war against the Germans .
During World War I, the convoy tactic employed by the Triple Alliance (particularly, Great Britain) in the second half of the war was vitally important to their final victory. Until convoying was put into practice, the German submarine campaign was starving Great Britain into surrender; afterwards, the ocean campaign was virtually won, and final victory was rendered possible.
a great success or victory
Not such of a big problem. In world war 1 the sniper were not such a big problem due to the way of fighting. There was a mess of dozens of soldiers in a single combat that were ordered to run forward. You can picture this in your head and understand that sniper will not be so effective. In world war 2 the Russian snipers did a great job at Stalingrad for examples. They killed many German soldiers and more important demoralize the German fighting spirit.
A great British victory.
I would have to say their were 2 major events: the German surrender of the 6th army at the Battle of Stalingrad in Feb 1943. That was the great turning point of the war on the eastern front. The other would have to be the surrender of all German forces and the end of the war in May 1945.
what great victory has Caesar just accomplished
Pyrrhic victory.