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- Date sent: Mon, 15 Apr 1996 22:23:24 -0500
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- "When Operation Barbarossa is launched,
- the world will hold its breath!"
- -Adolf Hitler
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- OPERATION BARBAROSSA: A GOOD PLAN?
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- On the night of June 22, 1941, more than 3 million German soldiers, 600 000 vehicles
- and 3350 tanks were amassed along a 2000km front stretching from the Baltic to the
- Black Sea. Their sites were all trained on Russia. This force was part of 'Operation
- Barbarossa', the eastern front of the greatest military machine ever assembled. This
- machine was Adolf Hitler's German army.
-
- For Hitler, the inevitable assault on Russia was to be the culmination of a long
- standing obsession. He had always wanted Russia's industries and agricultural lands as
- part of his Lebensraum or 'living space' for Germany and their Thousand Year Reich.
- Russia had been on Hitler's agenda since he wrote Mein Kampf some 17 years earlier
- where he stated:
- 'We terminate the endless German drive to the south and the west of Europe, and direct our
- gaze towards the lands in the east...If we talk about new soil and territory in Europe
- today, we can think primarily only of Russia and its vassal border states'i
- Hitler wanted to exterminate and enslave the 'degenerate' Slavs and he wanted to
- obliterate their 'Jewish Bolshevist' government before it could turn on him. His 1939
- pact with Stalin was only meant to give Germany time to prepare for war.
-
- As soon as Hitler controlled France, he looked east. Insisting that Britain was as
- good as defeated, he wanted to finish off the Soviet Union as soon as possible, before
- it could significantly fortify and arm itself. 'We only have to kick in the front door
- and the whole rotten edifice will come tumbling down'ii he told his officers. His
- generals warned him of the danger of fighting a war on two fronts and of the difficulty
- of invading an area as vast as Russia but, Hitler simply overruled them. He then
- placed troops in Finland and Romania and created his eastern front. In December 1940,
- Hitler made his final battle plan.
-
- He gave this huge operation a suitable name. He termed it 'Operation Barbarossa' or
- 'Redbeard' which was the nickname of the crusading 12th century Holy Roman emperor,
- Frederick I. The campaign consisted of three groups: Army Group North which would
- secure the Baltic; Army Group South which would take the coal and oil rich lands of the
- Ukraine and Caucasus; and Army Group Centre which would drive towards Moscow. Prior to
- deploying this massive force, military events in the Balkans delayed 'Barbarossa' by
- five weeks. It is now widely agreed that this delay proved fatal to Hitler's conquest
- plans of Russia but, at the time it did not seem important. In mid-June the build-up
- was complete and the German Army stood poised for battle. Hitler's drive for Russia
- failed however, and the defeat of his army would prove to be a major downward turning
- point for Germany and the Axis counterparts.
-
- There are many factors and events which contributed to the failure of Operation
- Barbarossa right from the preparatory stages of the attack to the final cold wintry
- days when the Germans had no choice but to concede. Several scholars and historians
- are in basic agreement with the factors which led to Germany's failure however, many of
- them stress different aspects of the operation as the crucial turning point.
-
- One such scholar is the historian, Kenneth Macksey. His view on Operation Barbarossa
- is plainly evident just by the title of his book termed, 'Military errors Of World War
- Two.'iii Macksey details the fact that the invasion of Russia was doomed to fail from
- the beginning due to the fact that the Germans were unprepared and extremely
- overconfident for a reasonable advancement towards Moscow.
-
- Macksey's first reason for the failure was the simply that Germany should not have
- broken its agreement with Russia and invaded its lands due to the fact that the British
- were not defeated on the western front, and this in turn plunged Hitler into a war on
- two fronts. The Germans, and Hitler in particular were stretching their forces too
- thin and were overconfident that the Russians would be defeated in a very short time.
- Adolf Hitler's overconfidence justifiably stemmed from the crushing defeats which his
- army had administered in Poland, France, Norway, Holland, Belgium and almost certainly
- Great Britain had the English Channel not stood in his way.iv
-
- Another important point that Macksey describes is the lack of hard intelligence that
- the Germans possessed about the Russian army and their equipment, deployment tactics,
- economic situation and communication networks. They had not invested much time and
- intelligence agents in collecting information from a country which was inherently
- secretive by nature and kept extremely tight security. He also states that it was far
- from clever that the General Staff officer in charge of collecting information about
- the Soviet Union had many other duties, was not an expert on Russia or the Red Army and
- he couldn't even speak Russian.v Therefore it was hardly surprising that the only
- detailed intelligence reports concerned the frontier regions of Russia that were
- frequently patrolled by German patrols and spied upon by airborne reconnaissance.
- These were the products of over-confidence. The German army plunged into Russia under
- the impression that there were 200 Russian divisions !
- in tot
- al; only to discover in the following months that there were 360 and this figure was later
- revised to over 400 divisions. The Germans also knew that the Russian roads were inferior
- for their vehicles and that the Russian railway tracks were of a different size than what
- they were using yet, no department or planning logistics ever took these factors into
- account before the invasion took place.
-
- Before the German army was poised to strike towards Moscow, one of the vital units of
- Operation Barbarossa was diverted. Army Group South, which was to secure the Ukraine
- and Romania was partly diverted to join in the theatres of battle in the Balkans and
- the Mediterranean. Initially, the Army Group South had been safeguarded by Hitler as
- he used power diplomacy instead of force to take Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria into the
- German fold yet, now he was unwittingly using these countries as a spring board for the
- diplomatic takeover of Yugoslavia and an invasion of Greece. At the same time, two
- mechanized divisions know as the Africa Corps (Lt.General Erwin Rommel) were sent to
- Tripoli to help the defeated and panicking Italian Army in North Africa, and later, a
- costly invasion of the island of Crete would further detract from the German effort
- because of the heavy losses suffered by thousands of elite troops. These deployment
- were significant because each expansion !
- to the south was a subtraction from the troops of Barbarossa as well as a cause of delay
- in its execution. This troop subtraction was brought to alarming levels when the British,
- through diplomatic intrigue, managed to ins
- tigate a coup d'etat in Yugoslavia which overthrew the government and canceled out the
- agreement the country had with the Germans for unresisted submission. With every indication
- that British bombers and troops would be within range of Romania and the Barbarossa supply
- lines, a major invasion of Yugoslavia as well as Greece had to take place at short
- notice.vi
-
- This invasion however distracting, added fuel to Hitler's confidence when his forces
- conquered both Yugoslavia and Greece in a matter of weeks, but, these delays would
- eventually prove costly as the unprepared and poorly supplied German troops marched on
- towards Moscow.
-
- While Macksey gives several valid reasons for the failure of Barbarossa before the
- action is conducted, authors Nicholas Bethell and Michael Wright both stress the fact
- that the operation failed due to the Russian peoples tenacity and the harsh weather and
- terrain conditions during the invasion. They do not agree that the attack was doomed
- from the start as Macksey contests.
-
- In Wright's book 'The World At Arms' , he describes many factors which led to the
- failure of Hitler's plan. The first was the ferocious fighting zeal of the Russian
- troops. This fighting spirit had little to do with the communist regime's inspiration
- but with the fact that the Russian people had been so used to intimidation and
- suffering under Stalin's iron fist that they had absolutely nothing to lose by fighting
- to the death, particularly if your only alternative was to be executed by your own
- government for treason. When Stalin addressed his people, he spoke to them as fellow
- citizens and brothers and sisters and not with the demands of obedience and submission
- which was commonplace in earlier times. He spoke of a 'national patriotic war...for
- the freedom of the motherland' and he initiated his scorched earth policy which would
- not leave 'a single railway engine, a single wagon, a single pound of grain, for the
- enemy if they had to retreat.vii To the Germans, t!
- his staunch and often sui
- cidal determination was unnerving and it had a negative effect on their fighting morale.
- Stories of this Russian tenacity spread widely among the Germans. Tales of Russian fighter
- pilots who wouldn't bail out if shot down but would crash into German fuel trucks; of tanks
- that were on fire but the burning troops driving would press on into battle. It was said
- that Russian women had even taken up arms and that troops would find pretty teenage girls
- dead on the battlefield still clutching weapons. The Germans started to complain about
- Russians who were fighting unfairly. They said soldiers would lie on the ground and pretend
- they were dead and then leap up and shoot unsuspecting Germans who were passing byviii. Or
- they would wave white flags of surrender and then shoot the soldiers who came to capture
- them. Having heard these actions, many Germans would kill anyone who tried to surrender.
- These tales became battlefield horror stories and raised the wars already high le!
- vel of
- hatred and barbarity. Hitler wrote to Mussolini shortly after the invasion and said:
- " They fought with truly stupid fanaticism...with the primitive brutality of an animal
- that sees itself trapped"ix
- As a result, in the opening weeks of Barbarossa the Germans lost some 100 000 men which
- was equal to the amount lost in all their previous campaigns so far.
-
- Another significant factor outlined by Bethell and Wright was the fact the Russian
- troops were well aware of the advantages they had in their climate and rugged terrain.
- Bethell outlines excellent examples of this in the dense Forests of Poland and the
- soggy lands of the Pripet Marshes. No German tanks could operate in these hazardous
- areas and there was ample cover for small groups. Russian infantry would superbly
- camouflaged themselves and infiltrate the German positions through the forests and
- they even displayed their resourcefulness by communicating to each other by imitating
- animal cries. They would dig foxholes and dugouts which provided a field of fire
- only to the rear and when the unsuspecting German infantry walked pass them , the
- Russians would pick them off from behind.
-
- In open battle, the Russian people would devise ingenious weapons with what little
- resources they had available. They made 'Molotov cocktails' which were flammable
- liquid in bottles which were lit and thrown at German tanks. The glass would break and
- the flaming liquid would flow into the tank and ignite the interior.x
-
- Combined with the willingness to fight at any odds and the intimate knowledge of their
- own terrain it is plain to see that the Russian were definitely not going to fall as
- easily as Hitler had first thought.
-
- Besides the brutal tenacity of the resistance, Germany had another problem, the
- climate. In the summer of 1941, the Ukraine was suffered a scorching summer which saw
- a large amount of rainfall. In the intense heat, the German tank tracks ground the
- baked earth to powdery fine dust which clogged machinery, eyes and mouths and made it
- hard for troops to function. When it rained, it brought short relief to the heat but,
- the roads turned into axle-deep mud paths that halted all movement while horses got
- stuck in mud and troops had their boots sucked right off them only to stay in the
- ground. Thousands of vehicles had to be left as they were because they ran out of fuel
- to get out of the mud and the supply paths were choked as well. These road conditions
- combined with partisan forces behind German lines stifled supply lines by destroying
- railway tracks and making all kinds of re-armament and food delivery impossible.xi
-
- While the Germans were being delayed and they struggled to get a solid foothold,
- figuratively and literally, in Russia, the months passed by and eventually gave way to
- the harsh 'general winter' which froze everything to the core. As Germany pressed on
- towards Moscow, the cold weather really took its toll. All too often the Germans
- didn't have enough supplies to survive let alone fight. Some units only had about 1/4
- of their ammunition while shipments of coats used to combat the cold, only provided 1
- coat per crew. The food supplied was often frozen solid in the -40(C cold and one
- night spent by German soldiers in their nail studded boots and metal helmets could
- cripple a man for life. Machine guns froze, oil turned thick, batteries died and
- vehicle engines had to be kept running which wasted precious fuel supplies. One German
- officer wrote home to his wife: "We have seriously underestimated the Russians, the
- extent of the country and the treachery of the climat!
- e...th
- is is the revenge of reality."xii
-
- At this stage, the Russians had the obvious advantage. On December 5 1941, with troops
- that were used to the cold weather all their lives and had the proper clothing to stay
- outdoors for days on end, the Russians counter-attacked along a 960 km front and had
- great success. The 'do-or-die' Russian troops would send out groups of darkly clad men
- to sacrifice themselves and draw German fire while white-clad, camouflaged Russian
- troops would come in along the snow and attack. While the German suffered great
- losses, they were able to hold on to key towns that they had previously occupied and
- the war in Russia swung back and forth.
-
- As the front settled into a stalemate, the Red Army could be satisfied with what it had
- accomplished. Despite the numerous defeats it had suffered in the early part of the
- invasion, Russia had managed to somehow survive, pulling back and regrouping long
- enough for the German Army to overextend itself and allow the winter to take its toll.
- It is said that hindsight is 20/20, and it is simple to point out the many factors
- which led to the failure of Barbarossa and we can see that the authors, Bethell,
- Macksey and Wright all had valid points but they just emphasized different aspects and
- time frames which all fit together to construct a much larger picture. It is fair to
- say that not one particular circumstance contributed to the failure but, a culmination
- of all the events mentioned. Hitler truly was confident that the delay in launching
- the invasion was of no consequence and he had no way of knowing just how fiercely the
- Russians would oppose him. The combination of!
- these
- factors led to the failure.
-
- Near the end, Moscow and Leningrad had been saved, and enough reinforcements had been
- scraped together to enable the Red Army to go on the offensive. Operation Barbarossa
- had been halted, and the myth of German military invincibility had been shattered
- forever.
-
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- i Whaley, Barton, pg. 12
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- ii Wright, Michael, pg. 104
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- iii Macksey, Kenneth, "Military Errors Of World War II", Stoddard Publishing Co.,
- Ontario, Canada, 1987
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- iv ibid, pg. 47
-
- v ibid, pg. 48
-
- vi ibid pg.51-54
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- vii Wright, Michael, "The World At Arms", Readers Digest Association Ltd., London,
- 1989. Pg. 108
-
- viii Bethell, Nicholas, "Russia Besieged", Time-Life Books, Canada, 1977 pg. 72
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- ix Wright, Michael, pg. 107
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- x Wright, Michael, pg. 108-109
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- xi Bethell, Nicholas, pg . 90
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- xii Wright, Michael, pg. 118
-