>Napoleon thought steam-ships were impossible and didn't invest in them at all
>>2570647
>Kept a respectable distance from Wehrmacht high command decision making from September 1939 - to June 1941, his input was limited.
>High Command took Europe in a matter of months and with minimal casualites
>Months into Barbarossa, he got scared and took personal command over the front and placed everyone on a short leash.
Smooth move.
>>2570647
>Hey you uneducated, unskilled peasants. You make steel now!
>>2570681
>>Kept a respectable distance from Wehrmacht high command decision making from September 1939 - to June 1941, his input was limited.
>>High Command took Europe in a matter of months and with minimal casualites
Literally the exact opposite. He repeatedly butted in on High Command's plans, and that's why he was successful. High Command wanted a WW1 redux.
>yo army go invade britannia lmao
>nvm just collect seashells on the beaches there kek
How about some classic Mao
>think agriculture is better than industry
>but you need iron
>make farmers build iron smelters in their backyards that produce unusable scrap
>>2570647
>promote germanic general
>ask to kill germanics
>???
>legions.exenotfound
>>2570647
Napoleons bigger mistake was trying to reinslave Haiti
>>2570647
Considering steam warships only came about when Napoleon was already dead this was perhaps not to much of a problem.