Hello guys
It's hard for one to place so much of the fate the world during that time on any one battle: Neither side would back down or change their policy or strategy due to the outcome of the battle, at least not the ones listed above in my humble opinion, though Stalingrad obviously had a devestating effect on Hitler's position on the eastern front.
for me, if an outcome of a battle or the battle itself was an event that effected the course of WWII, I think the most likely would have been the battle of britain...It was the closest hitler ever got to bringing the british empire to its knees, and thus smash the hopes of an allied front against him for years to come. It was such a close-run thing, that there were times when practically the whole of british RAF fighter squadrons were in the air without any reserves, and the battle was bleeding britain of its precious few pilots. The british themselves admit that 2 more weeks of the Luftwaffe campaign against RAF installations would have for all practical purposes destroyed the RAF, rendering even the powerful Royal Navy helpless against the might of the Luftwaffe and making Operation Sea lion possible. It was Hitler's typical impatience and his rage at the small raid of british bombers on Germany that ultimately saved the gallant RAF because he switched to attacking the civilian population of London itself, and although it was barbarous act, it actually helped the RAF regroup and rearm, gaining once again control of britain's sky and operation Sealion became a dud; a fact which made Hitler's turn eastwards towards Russia.
Like I said before, in my view the Axis did not lose the war because of any one battle, they made too many mistakes, and their resources were already stretched too thin by the time the Russian and American goliaths got into the war.



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