But the Germans must have had pretty good high command, as military high commands go.
We know Stlain purged his country's officer class, presumably of some of their best commanders. Stalin, unsurprisingly, given that he was a paranoid, was jealous of Zhukov after the war, and at a celebration parade before the Russian public, had him sit astride a horse which had thrown him a few times. The horse, however was as good as gold with Zhukov. All the more reason I suppose for Stalin to have banished him (ever so politely and informally) to remote rural outpost.
A wonderful anecdote about Zhukov was related on a cable programme. It went something like this:
A couple of Russian soldiers were pretty wounded and worn out as they trudged along the road. A car with a couple of officers and room for both of them passed by, but wouldn't stop to give them a lift. When they arrived at their HQ, somehow it came to Zhukov's ears what happened, and when he questioned the men, they told him there would be a lot of other wounded foot-sloggers trudging along back there a long way behind them. Zhukov found the officers and told them to drive back to find them, get out of the car and hand it over to them. They could walk back on foot themselves.
Obviously, the story sounds a bit vague and odd the way I've told it, but if it sounds apocryphal it would be because of my memory. I tried to give the gist of it. Anyway, needless to say, Like Rommel, and Nelson before him, two others who led from the front, Zhukov was worshipped by his men. Montgomery had to order our Desert Rats to take down photos of The Desert Fox they had as a kind of pin-up! One of Rommel's tricks was to tie brooms to the back of his tanks, thereby raising a lot of dust and giving the impression of a much bigger formation.
Another outstanding naval commander was Cunningham, who was Admiral of the Mediterranean fleet. To evacuate our troops from Crete was a bit like the Charge of the Light Brigade.
From Wikipedia (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Cunningham,_1st_Viscount_Cunningham_of_Hyndhope):
'Cunningham was determined, though, that the "navy must not let the army down", and when army generals feared he would lose too many ships, Cunningham famously said,
“ It takes three years to build a ship; it takes three centuries* to build a tradition.<37> ”
The "never say die" attitude of Cunningham and the men under his command meant that of 22,000 men on Crete, 16,500 were rescued but at the loss of three cruisers, six destroyers and 15 other major warships were damaged.<37>'
* Many more centuries, in this case, since the Normans were, in fact, Vikings, who'd only settled in Normandy 150 years before their invasion of England in 1066. I'm sure that's why it's held to be the Senior Service - though clearly that honour really falls to the army grunts.
Today, the bean-counters would have computed the worth of those soldiers' lives at considerably less than one major warship, in all probability, if this Government's foot-dragging in the matter of accepting the Ghurka soldiers and their families as permanent residents, and their scandalous underfunding of the troops' equipment in Iraq and Afghanistan and their after-care back home, are any guide.