Re: Anyone read John Mosier?
I've read The Blitzkreig Myth and would recommend it to all serious WW2 historians. It is certainly revisionist and I suspect somewhat controversial, though I have never seen a discussion of it before. He supports his thesis very well and the facts seem to back him, but for some reason I still had difficulty embracing the idea even by the end. His argument seems to revolve around an essential misinterpretation of what the "Blitzkreig" tactics were and why they worked. The feeling I was left with was that he might be right, but it seemed more like a semantical argument rather than a seriously different perspective on the war. It's been several years since I read it though, so perhaps a re-read is in order.
Re: Anyone read John Mosier?
Not so certain about how revisionist such views are, though. First, I've always been under the impression that the American intervention was the main (military) cause of the German defeat because they came at a time when all sides were exhausted, and pushed Germany towards revolution. Second, the Blitzkrieg's main use was against enemies who were already politically unstable; it wasn't a breakthrough, but a tactic extremely well-suited to use against such nations as France, Poland and the Netherlands.