T. A. Gardner
Serial Thread Killer
The Russians were getting to attack Germany. Germany found out about it and attacked first. What's so hard to believe about that. Anybody who thinks otherwise is a Stalin ass kisser. Supporters of history written by the victors. You know. The type who would like to think of "Uncle Joe" at the time was a great guy. An ally. They found out differently after the war ended, didn't they. Next, when I looked up "Seelowe" the first thing I found was that it referred to a particular battle that took place when Russia was fighting to take Berlin. So I didn't know it also referred to a plan to invade England. And seeing how such an invasion never took place, it's hard to say how it would have turned out.
Stalin's army was a mess. He knew it, his generals knew it. They were focused on consolidating their gains in Poland and rebuilding units to up-to-date standards. The Russians also predicated their expectations on their own military capacity. They assumed it would take Germany 15 to 30 days to mobilize and place units in position to attack. That was an incorrect assumption and one that cost them.
As for the invasion of England by Germany, no it's easy to envision how it would turn out. We know the German plan. We know what equipment and shipping the Germans were going to use. We know what the British planned to do to repel such an invasion. The Germans would have lost and lost bad. The Berlin battle you refer to is the Seelow Heights, a suburb of that city. Different thing.