I think the point of what many people are saying, is while not easy, a war against the USSR *could* be won through logistics and bombing.
Also, the lend lease program gave the Russians many, many trucks. Without that many of their factories would turn from tank production into truck production, or else they would face many logistical problems.
Yep, almost two-thirds of their truck fleet is Allied-made. 86% of their aviation fuel is Allied. Soviet production of locomotives and rolling stock for repairing existing and constructing new rail lines effectively ceased, replaced entirely by Lend-Lease. The critical component, though, is food - the total food shipments was well over 1 million tons. Much of the Soviet breadbasket, the Ukraine and the black earth belt, was ravaged in the war, and won't recover for a couple years.
Ah, and my assumption was completely different. Just out of curiosity, how does it go hot in 1946? Stalin doesn't make his move on Berlin until 1948.
Whoops, mixed up the years I guess. I have no clue what the politics are, just looking at the military side of things. But I imagine the politics would work themselves out pretty quickly because the Soviets are probably going to start pushing into West Germany, trying to grab territory before NATO brings it's troops in.
An understandable mistake, and one I'v emade before. Unfortunately, the two-year difference is critical to this argument. The Soviets no longer need to hold off for four years, but less than one - RDS-1 will be detonated in August of 1949. A war over the Berlin Blockade (say, an accident during the airlift), is at a critical stage in global politics and a tenuous military situation. On the Soviet side, they've started to recover from the war; Lend-Lease becomes less relevant, as the Soviets have rebuilt at home and added on the industrial spoils of war from a denuded Germany. The army numbers are absolutely terrible for the Allies - the entire US Army of half a million men, worldwide, is outnumbered thrice-over by the Soviet forces surrounding Berlin alone, and we're no longer looking at tattered divisions fresh from the Battle of Berlin that you mentioned, but a fully-prepared force that is taking part in a carefully-staged provocation that has just gone off the rails (Stalin didn't want war, either; he wanted to use it to secure concessions). The Soviet Air Force has just been thoroughly reorganized; the VVS is getting a lot of love, and is on the verge of following the American lead as a separate branch of the armed forces (1949). On the Allied side, though official doctrine calls for nuclear carpet-bombing in order to stem this tide, they have no nuclear-capable aircraft available at the commencement of hostilities - less than three dozen atomic-capable B-29s exist, and the first of them won't arrive in Europe until April of next year, though that's likely to be expedited under the circumstances. Still worse, that means that each of those aircraft will get less than two bombs to drop: in mid-1948, the American nuclear arsenal hasn't yet breached the hundred-count. On the bright side, the Mark 4 about to enter full production, and the first cruise missile, the Matador, will be tested in 1949 (for general production by 1953 and deployment by 1954, though I'd expect it to be rushed due to the war - expect it a couple years after the war begins). The mention of Pershings and Centurions earlier is also changed by the two year separation - they've gone from blueprint to reality, and are now the main battle tank of the American and British forces, with the imminent arrival of the Pattons also to be eagerly anticipated. By contrast, the T-44 is going through serious teething issues, but the T-54 is also entering mass production as well. France is also going to be in much better shape for such a war; they'll be organized and ready to fight.
On an ancillary theatre, the Sino-Soviet split is still far away, and the Soviet occupation of Manchuria has ended two years before, freeing up Malinovsky's Far East forces and giving Mao a stable base of power from which he will be able to launch his pivotal campaigns to crush the KMT - by the end of next year, Sichuan will have fallen and Chiang and his entourage will have fled the mainland. In Korea, Syngman Rhee has not stabilized South Korea yet; he was only just elected in 1948, though he'll waste no time getting his army to work shooting civilians. The occupation of Japan is still in full swing, which is a mixed blessing: the Eighth Army is slowly decaying away under the ravages of peace and Walker either hasn't yet or has only just arrived, with inadequate time to whip them back into shape, but they are a significant source of manpower already on the scene.