A TALE OF TWO DICTATORS
By S. Craig
Taylor, Jr.
OPERATION BARBAROSSA
On June 22, 1941, so the story goes; Soviet archaeologists near
Samarkand opened the tomb of the cruel fourteenth century Tartar conqueror,
Tamerlane (1336 – 1405), famed for his limp, bad temper and towers of skulls.
The dig defied a curse that opening the tomb would initiate the most terrible
war in history. In the event, this put King Tut’s more famous curse in the
shade as, hundreds of miles to the northwest, "Operation Barbarossa" started
that same Sunday morning, with three million Axis soldiers pouring across the
border into the Soviet Union. The German, Finnish, Hungarian, Romanian and
Italian troops attacked along the 930 mile border that stretched from the
Baltic Sea to the Black Sea, opening what would be known as the Great Patriotic
War in the Soviet Union and as the Russian Front, the Eastern Front or the
Russo-German War to most of the rest of the world.
The National Socialist Party ("Nazis") under Adolph Hitler (1889 – 1945) had
taken control of Germany as recently as 1933. Eight years later, Hitler, now
titled "Der Fuhrer" ("The Leader"), the political head and supreme warlord of
Nazi Germany and conqueror of much of Western Europe, looked back on an
incredible string of victories. Germany had annexed Austria, dismembered
Czechoslovakia, and conquered Poland, France, the Low Countries, Scandinavia
and the Balkans. By golly, it just could be destiny! These victories had not
only been decisive; they had been quick and the losses had been acceptably
small. The new German "blitzkrieg" or "lighting war" operations utilized masses
of "panzers" (tanks) and mechanized supporting arms, allied with close air
support from the "Luftwaffe," all controlled and coordinated by radio.
Blitzkrieg attacks are intended to break through enemy defenses and drive deep
into their unprotected rear areas; this not only kills people and breaks
things, it destroys command, control and logistics, making further resistance
disjointed and futile.
Josef Stalin (1879 – 1953) had taken control of the Soviet Union in the 1920s,
starting when Vladimir Lenin (1870 - 1924) died. Stalin cabled prime successor
Leon Trotsky (1879 – 1940) that there was no time for him to return for the
funeral so, not to worry, he might as well remain on vacation on the Black Sea
coast. This gave Stalin the room and time to maneuver, plot, and intrigue,
assassinate and purge until he emerged as the absolute leader a few years
later. After years of mutual threats, the Communist Soviet Union shocked the
world when it allied with Nazi Germany just before the Second World War started
in September 1939. Maybe they were two socialist powers who admired each
other’s planned economies. Or, maybe, they just admired each other’s mustaches.
At any rate, the Soviets clumsily shared in the early spoils of victory by
acquiring half of Poland, conquering Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, grabbing
Bessarabia from Romania and finally seizing part of Finland, after first
suffering embarrassing early defeats in the Finnish snows.
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As the technically proficient German army added experience and
confidence from its many victories, as well as scores of additional
well-trained divisions, the Red Army’s problems against the tough Finns
showcased their deficiencies in equipment, training and, especially,
leadership. Through the late 1930s and early 1940s, Stalin’s paranoia led him
to systematically execute much of the Red Army’s experienced leadership
remaining from World War One and the Russian Civil War, among his many other
mass liquidations of any conceivable opposition. Stalin insisted on having his
own way in everything, even executing his census takers when they reported a
reduced population in his "Socialist Paradise." Beheading the army, political
purges, the gulag and episodes of mass starvation in the Ukraine may have
cemented his power but the result was a Soviet army that, although huge, was
clumsy, inexperienced, unresponsive and cowed but not necessarily loyal.
Further, during the first week of the invasion, the "Man of Steel" was too
unnerved by the double-cross by his former buddy Hitler ("We understand each
other.") to issue any coherent orders, leaving the Red Army with no strategic
direction. Once he recovered from this blue funk and became his old homicidal
self, Stalin imitated Hitler by constantly interfering with his military
leaders.
The Axis blitzkrieg into the Soviet Union advanced rapidly and, for most of the
rest of 1941, it was springtime for Hitler and Germany. Army Group North raced
through the Baltic states and reached the outskirts of Leningrad (modern
Petersburg). Army Group South captured Kiev and Odessa, bypassed the Crimea,
overran most of the Ukraine and reached Rostov. Army Group Center, the most
powerful force, took the delightfully named Minsk, Pinsk and Smolensk and its
leading armored wedges reached the suburbs of Moscow. Besides these impressive
gains and victories, there were a noteworthy series of flashy secondary
operations dictated by Hitler that caused huge Soviet losses but, also,
unnecessary wastage on the Axis forces and, more importantly, cost the Axis
armies precious time. His fellow dictator Stalin, informally known as the
"Boss," repeatedly ordered unnecessary attacks and refused to allow necessary
withdrawals, which greatly increased the Red Army’s butcher’s bill. Many Soviet
soldiers had family members or friends murdered or imprisoned during Stalin’s
purges and were only too happy to surrender during the early weeks of the
invasion, when the invaders were often greeted as liberators. Right to the very
end of the war the German army would be supported by hundreds of thousands of
"Hiwis," Soviet citizens who supported and accompanied the German divisions in
the east.
Soviet losses in men and material were enormous but their replacements were on
a corresponding scale. If the new soldiers were no better trained than those
who had been lost, they were better equipped and better led by more experienced
officers and noncoms, and faced a weakened German war machine that had lost
some of its vaunted "edge." After an initial scramble to evacuate their
factories to the east, Soviet industry went on to produce prodigious quantities
of basic, but effective, weapons and munitions. Further, although a comparative
trickle in 1942, "Lend-Lease" from the United States and Great Britain would
become a flood by 1943, providing many thousands of tanks, aircraft and other
useful weapons and hundreds of thousands of trucks for lovable "Uncle Joe" and
his heroic Red Army.
Axis casualties were lighter but also heavy and harder to replace. Whenever the
Germans initiated a maximum effort, as in June 1941, their practice was to
incorporate most of their training cadres to gain additional experienced
manpower. This caused little disruption during the short campaigns early in the
war but the losses in the east were aggravated by the length of the campaign,
which led to a lack of trained replacements and, later, the need to withdraw
many experts to resume large-scale training. Second, the Nazis apparently
believed their own propaganda about the German army being "stabbed in the back"
by the civilians to end World War One and bent every effort to supply both
"guns and butter;" to provide for the army in the field while still keeping the
home folks happy with consumer goods. Third, the Nazis wanted German women to
stay at home to breed the next generation of German soldiers and made little
use of female factory workers, essentially forcing half their population to
take no real part in the war, except as bombing targets.
After advancing hundreds of miles into the Soviet homeland, the German vehicles
were worn out and broken down, their lines of communication were stretched to
the limit over primitive roads and unusable rail lines, thousands of otherwise
uninjured soldiers suffered from frostbite and the replacements of trained men
and vehicles were totally inadequate. The Fuhrer had pushed his armies to the
limits of their strength and stamina and their foremost spearheads were weak
and vulnerable.
Persisting in their hopes of an early victory, the Germans had forwarded little
winter clothing to the front and this had a significant effect on the campaign.
The Soviet’s great ally, "General Winter," closed its icy grip on the front in
early December, just as the Red Army launched a massive counteroffensive
spearheaded by fresh troops railed in from the wilds of Siberia. Ace Soviet spy
Richard Sorge had revealed that the Japanese were going to attack into the
Pacific Ocean, making most of the Soviet troops in the Far East superfluous
there and available for redeployment. Pushed back all along the front, the
German army seemed to be on the verge of disintegration when Hitler issued an
order for all units to hold where they were. Air supply kept surrounded Axis
troops supplied through the winter and primitive Soviet logistics arrangements
and clumsy tactics made their attacks less and less effective as snow blanketed
the battlefields. Like his opposing dictator had done during the advance on
Moscow in November and early December, Comrade Stalin gambled in a futile
attempt to win it all in one campaign and pushed his troops to the limits of
exhaustion and beyond.
By spring, a front line that had been 930 miles long at the start of
"Barbarossa" was over 2,000 miles long and both opposing armies were seriously
mauled. Interestingly, Hitler took full credit in claiming that his "hold"
orders saved the German army and, in the future, increased his interference
with his military chiefs while Stalin, who, to be sure, still interfered on
occasion, learned a lesson and came to defer more to the trained professional
soldiers in his "Stavka" ("Supreme Headquarters").
PLANNING THE 1942 CAMPAIGN
The coming of good weather in 1942 found the German forces too stretched and
too weak to recreate the heady days of the "Barbarossa" offensive along the
entire front. Still possessing a clear qualitative advantage, the Axis could
seize the initiative but had to decide on a more limited, though hopefully
decisive, offensive than during 1941. Axis prospects still seemed good. After
all, during World War One, with fewer allies (Romania and Italy were Allied
powers in that war and Finland was then part of the Russian Empire) and most of
their forces tied up in the west, the Germans had defeated the Russian Empire.
Although many professional German officers felt that the front should be
shortened and reserves accumulated to wear down Soviet attacks, Hitler felt
that there was no time for a defensive strategy. If the Soviet Union could not
be driven out of the war in 1942, the American and British forces would become
a substantial threat by 1943, forcing the Germans to greatly reinforce their
western forces and fight on two fronts. The events of 1943 would prove this
assessment to be correct. Of course this situation was caused by a clumsy Nazi
diplomatic strategy that had put Germany simultaneously at war with all of the
most powerful nations on Earth. Germany had been at war with the still-powerful
British Empire from the start and declared war on the even more powerful United
States to support their Japanese allies just as the Axis front line was being
swept back from the gates of Moscow.
German units on secondary fronts were thinned out to provide, along with a
major reinforcement effort, enough soldiers and equipment for 1942’s one major
Axis offensive. Many divisions on inactive fronts were left at the regimental
strengths to which they had been reduced during the winter’s fighting. Even
with extreme measures, a planned total of over 60 German divisions had to be
reduced to just over 50 divisions for the offensive. As a substitute, Germany
called on their Axis allies of Hungary, Italy and Romania to provide
substantial additional raw manpower, although none of these armies approached
the quality of the German units and their equipment put them at a major
disadvantage against the better-equipped Russian units. Refitted Luftwaffe air
units returned to the east from Germany and the Mediterranean to add additional
support and punch to any offensive. The means appeared to be available. The
question was where the attack should be directed; as there were not enough
resources for more than one major offensive and two or more smaller offensives
could not possibly accomplish a decisive victory in 1942.
In the north, Leningrad was in the middle of a ghastly siege that would
eventually drag on for 900 days and kill hundreds of thousands of soldiers and
civilians. Taking Leningrad would secure that important city, make the Baltic
Sea an Axis lake and enable the Germans and Finns to finally link-up. However,
after that, the bogs, forests and rivers of the area would effectively shut
down any further major advances. There was little scope to exploit the
considerable German edge in mobile operations and little chance that major
operations in the far north would lead to the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Near the center of the line, Moscow, site of the Kremlin, was a political,
communications, cultural, historical and manufacturing hub – easily the largest
and most important city in the country. Moscow had been the penultimate
objective in 1941 and many automatically assumed that it would be the target of
any 1942 offensive. However, there was excellent defensive terrain around
Moscow, line after line of entrenchments and fortifications had been
constructed during the winter and about two-thirds of the Soviet army and most
of their superior new KV-1 and T-34 tanks were
positioned to defend it. Hard fighting and heavy losses were guaranteed in any
drive for Moscow but there was no guarantee of success.
After examining the rest of the front, what about an offensive in the south?
You can guffaw and say this is exactly where Herr Hitler turned his moustache
and look what it got him, but there are some excellent arguments for a drive to
the south. Voronezh was the third-largest city in the Soviet Union at the time,
which made it an important objective. Turning south, Rostov was also an
important city and the seizure of the Caucasus oil fields would greatly help
future Axis operations and greatly hinder Soviet ones. Turning north from
Voronezh, there was a possibility of outflanking the Moscow defenses. The flat
steppe terrain in the south positively invited blitzkrieg maneuvers. Subsidiary
operations to capture the Crimea would shorten Axis lines, curtail sorties by
the Soviet Black Sea Fleet and make more troops available in the south as well
as freeing giant siege guns to blast and capture Leningrad, in another planned
subsidiary offensive, after Sevastopol fell. In the south, the Axis armies
could hit the Red Army where it was the least prepared, exploit the mobile
strengths of the German army and capture valuable objectives. All-in-all, it
was a plan with some promising prospects. The real problem with the Axis plan
was that, as the campaigning season progressed; Hitler lost focus and attacked
the wealth of possible goals like a starving man at a feast and, with the
exception of a drive north on Moscow, tried to secure all of the offensive’s
possible objectives and then some.
DRIVE ON STALINGRAD
A Soviet offensive near Kharkov, demanded by Stalin, started on May 12 and was
crushed by an Axis counterstroke, which began on May 17. After that promising
preliminary, the Nazis launched "Operation Blue" in late June to officially
open their 1942 offensive. The defeated and outnumbered Soviet troops, for the
first time, retreated and fought rear guard actions instead of standing, being
surrounded and destroyed. The Germans, spearheading the Axis drive but
supported by some 30 Hungarian, Italian and Romanian divisions, drove forward
relentlessly across the open steppes. Meanwhile, in a successful subsidiary
operation, the Crimea was overrun by German and Romanian forces with the
capture of 170,000 Soviet prisoners. The immense German siege guns used there
were ordered to be shipped by rail to Leningrad while the powerful 8th Air
Corps was transferred from the Crimea to support the main
offensive.
Voronezh, evacuated by its defenders, fell to 4th Panzer
Army on July 6. Pleased with this rapid and relatively easy gain,
Hitler then ordered the Axis forces to advance as two diverging spearheads. One
attack was aimed at the Stalingrad area to the southeast, while the other
advance took Rostov and drove far to the south for the oilfields in the
Caucasus Mountains. The drive on the oilfields eventually floundered in
mountainous terrain, stubborn Russian defenses and a total inability to keep
the powerful German forces there in supply. The drive on Stalingrad, originally
intended to cover the deep left flank of the oilfields advance, made excellent
progress and resulted in a number of minor Axis victories. As the advance to
the Caucasus slowed, the Stalingrad operation became, de facto, the major
attack.
THE STREETS OF STALINGRAD
Aside from much vehicle wear and tear and some grit in their teeth, the Germans
completed the drive to Stalingrad in good order. The leading German divisions
triumphantly approached the city in late August and overran most of its
outskirts and suburbs by early September. The Soviet troops in the city were
supported by air, artillery and naval units based on the east bank of the Volga
River. The German attackers had ample close air support but the huge siege guns
from the Crimea were on their way to Leningrad, where they were essentially
worthless as the reserve assault troops intended to follow up on their
bombardments were being diverted to Stalingrad. Although the Axis forces
already dominated the stretch of the Volga River near Stalingrad and Stalingrad
was only a medium-size city, Hitler decreed that the city had to be conquered
for a propaganda victory over its namesake.
By 1942, the Russian people had some idea of the infamous Nazi death squads and
concentration camps and the Red Army was prepared to fight with their historic
stubbornness for "Mother Russia." The Communist Party was happy to let the
people rally for the nation and produced copious propaganda to encourage them
to do so; the story could be changed in the history books after the war was
won. Stalingrad’s city streets and huge factories offered no opportunities for
blitzkrieg tactics and the Germans were tied down in endless rounds of street
fighting at which the Russians proved to be very competent, indeed. For months
on end the thunder of the guns and the whine of bombs never ceased. The city
was almost totally destroyed in the fighting and untold thousands died there.
Both sides fed in fresh units that were gradually ground to powder and, by mid
November, most explosions were just redistributing rubble and only a few
shallow Russian pockets of resistance remained on the west bank of the Volga.
These final pockets proved to be just enough – the outnumbered defenders had
not only engaged and bled the Germans, they had sucked in Axis reinforcements,
fuel and ammunition that might have been allocated for the drive on the
oilfields and, more immediately, forced the Germans to weaken their flanks in
order to transfer fresh divisions into the maelstrom of Stalingrad’s streets.
OPERATION URANUS
Planning started for "Operation Uranus" in September, 1942, just as the Germans
were starting to attack Stalingrad. Much of the planning was by Georgi Zhukov
(1896 – 1974), who was already on his way to becoming the greatest Soviet
commander of the war. While the Soviet Stavka dribbled in just enough
reinforcements to hold parts of Stalingrad and draw the German attention there,
they gradually massed attacking forces on both flanks of Stalingrad that
numbered over 1,000,000 men. The Axis summer offensive had greatly lengthened
the front and the positions of their spearheads had been essentially static for
months. The overstretched Axis forces were faced by massed Soviet formations
that comprised not only freshly-raised formations but transfers from the huge
mass of units stationed around Moscow, now no longer needed to defend the
capital with the best German forces located far to the south. The Red Army had
learned many lessons in the war and skillfully moved their attacking units and
mountains of supplies into position in great secrecy. Both attacks were aimed
at parts of the line held predominantly by less well-equipped Romanian forces.
The Axis high command was repeatedly warned about the weakness of the flanks
around Stalingrad and intelligence reports revealed parts of the Soviet
buildup, but the warnings were ignored by you-know-who. Hitler now accepted
only intelligence reports that he wanted to believe and he wanted very much to
believe that the Soviet army was too weak to mount a counteroffensive. By late
1942, Der Fuhrer was impervious to advice and impossible (and dangerous) to
criticize.
The great Soviet offensive opened on November 19, 1942, with attacks by the
Southwest and Don Fronts to the northwest of Stalingrad that tore a hole eight
miles wide through the Axis lines. The Stalingrad Front, from south of the
city, attacked the next day and soon ripped a gap of twenty miles through the
Romanians and elements of the German Fourth Panzer Army. Driving fast and deep
into the Axis rear areas, on November 23 the Russian spearheads met near
Kalatch, trapping the German Sixth Army, with over 20
divisions and 300,000 men, in Stalingrad.
WINTER STORM
Remembering the surrounded pockets that held the line during the previous
winter, Hitler secured a (worthless) assurance from Luftwaffe commander Hermann
Goring (1893 – 1946) that enough supplies to enable Stalingrad to hold could be
flown in. The German high command, represented locally by Field Marshal Erich
von Manstein (1887 – 1973), also started assembling forces to relieve
Stalingrad and the surrounded German Sixth Army as soon as the outlines of the
crisis became clear. The Soviets placed their forces in an inner ring facing
Stalingrad and in an outer ring to hold off any Axis relief efforts. General
Hermann Hoth’s Fourth Panzer Army started "Operation Winter Storm" on December
12, 1942 and the relief operation had to cross over 80 miles of open steppes to
reach the German defense ring around Stalingrad. Russian cavalry had detected
the massing of the German counterattack force but a lack of defenders and a
German advance in an unexpected direction allowed the attackers to make good
progress initially.
The German drive was successful in reaching the Askai River, but almost a
week’s fighting was required by the three attacking panzer divisions to secure
that area and drive on to the Mishov River, only some 30 miles from the
Stalingrad pocket. At this point, the besieged Sixth Army might have launched
"Operation Thunderclap" to break out of their encirclement, evacuate Stalingrad
and join Fourth Panzer Army, but, General Friedrich von Paulus (1890 – 1957),
the Sixth Army commander, citing lack of fuel and the Fuhrer’s orders to hold
"Fortress Stalingrad," never started this attack. Instead, "Operation Small
Saturn," another Soviet offensive, smashed the Italian Eighth Army
and was threatening German forces along the Chir River by December 23,
requiring detachments from Fourth Panzer Army to halt that Soviet attack. By
sunset on Christmas Day, the German "Winter Storm" spearheads were driven back
and the Sixth Army was doomed. All German efforts now had to be directed to
extricate the Army Group south of Rostov that had never quite made it to the
oil fields.
While further Soviet offensives continued further west, the inner ring around
Stalingrad constricted the German lines around the city. Once the last airfield
was overrun, the German garrison was well and truly hopelessly trapped. All the
last working radios could pick up was the endlessly repeated Soviet message,
"Stalingrad – mass grave!" The Fuhrer’s hold fast strategy had failed. The last
Germans in Stalingrad surrendered on February 2, 1943. German propaganda tried
to make their last stand the totalitarian equivalent of dawn at the Alamo. A
German drawing showed spiffy and warmly-clad German soldiers fighting
heroically to the last breath and the last bullet, but it just wasn’t so. The
fight had gone out of the starving and freezing German soldiers, whose
ragamuffin appearance led the Soviet soldiers to refer to them as "Winter
Fritz." Some of the best divisions in the German army were destroyed in
"Stalin’s City." It was one of the major turning points of the Second World
War.
As a postscript, Hitler promoted Paulus a Field Marshal just before the
surrender because no German Field Marshal had ever surrendered and then
discovered that there is a first time for everything. Both Paulus and General
Seydlitz, a corps commander and a descendant of Frederick the Great’s dashing
cavalry commander, later broadcast propaganda for the Soviets. This drove
Hitler crazy, as if mental health had ever been his strong suit. Some days it
just doesn’t pay to get out of bed. He never could understand why everybody
wasn’t happy to die for him. Stalin, who allowed his son to die in a German POW
camp, rather than conduct an offered prisoner exchange, had that same lack of
understanding. They were two of a kind but, in the end, The Boss had the
resources to afford to make more mistakes than Der Fuhrer.
This article was primarily written as a background piece on Lost Battalion’s
BATTLELINES: Stalingrad Campaign card game system, although we also
have a number of other products based on the "Great Patriotic War". The
PANZER Miniatures Rules, along with its PANZER
PaK 1, PANZER PaK 2, and
PANZER PaK 3 modules, is a tactical miniatures game for 1/185th
miniatures that covers the entire war between Germany and the Soviet Union.
Lost Battalion also has the SERGEANTS board
game system, a man-to-man game of skirmishing and patrolling, which includes
the stand-alone infantry combat game SERGEANTS! – On
the Eastern Front. There is also SERGEANTS!
– Expansion, which includes German and Soviet vehicles (as well as much
more) and numerous scenarios, including
Free Online SERGEANTS Scenarios. There is even
SERGEANTS! - In Miniature, using 10mm MiniFigs minatures and hexagonal
LOST BATTALION TERRAIN TILES that can turn the SERGEANTS game system
into a man-to-man miniatures game.