Tuesday, November 26, 2019
Russian WWII Offensive Of 1941 Essays - Free Essays, Term Papers
Russian WWII Offensive Of 1941 Essays - Free Essays, Term Papers    Russian WWII Offensive of 1941        It was devastatingly cold in the Russian winter of 1941,   during the peak of the German offensive against Moscow. Just as it   had Napoleon's armies in the century before, the Russian winter   conditions had stopped the advance on Moscow. Hitler had not planned   on a winter war, and thus had not properly equipped his troop   frostbite, and thousands of them died of exposure. Indeed, it was this   biting winter which had provided the Russians with an opportunity to   gather themselves, and prepare for one of the most heroic   counter-offensives of World War II - known to the Russian people as   "The Great Patriotic War."       It would be wrong to attribute the German failure at this time   solely to the harsh winter; the main failure was that of misjudgment   and mistiming. The offensive had been launched too late in the year,   at a season where the weather was due to break up. The Germans had   underestimated the effects of the harsh weather and terrain on their   motorized units, and had poorly rationed their resources - too much   had been asked of the German troops, and strengths had been allowed to   drop too low.      Despite a few more victories by German forces in November and   December, they would never again subeztially advance into the areas   surrounding Moscow. On October 28th, the German 3 Panzer group, under   the command of Field-Marshal Von Kluge, had again tried to penetrate   into the northern area of Kalinin, and failed. Hitler called in 9   Army to join the 3 Panzer, and moved them towards the northeast area   above Moscow. Russian resiezce had been uneven, but in the front of   Tula and on the Nara, where new formations were arriving, it had been   the most determined and tough. The Red Army had fallen back to within   forty miles of Moscow, but was sustained by massive Muscovite power, a   continuing flow of troops to the front line.      During the months of October and November, nine new Russian   armies had been trained, and were being deployed throughout the   fronts. Two complete armies and parts of another three were to reach   the Moscow area towards the end of November. Many of the divisions in   these armies were raised from newly inducted recruits, but some were   well trained and equipped and had been withdrawn from the military   districts in Central Russia, and Siberia.      In October and early November, a few German battalions still   fighting had brought all Red Army motor vehicles (except tanks) to a   stop, and the Russian Quarter-master-General Khrulev, was forced to   switch his troops to horses and carts. He was criticized by both his   own troops and Stalin, but was granted permission to form 76 horse   transport battalions. The problems caused by the transport shortage   and weather were recognized by the Soviet High Command, and fuel   refills were sent to the front lines. Defenses were restored and   thickened up, and Moscow awaited the second stage of the German   offensive, which is described in detail in the German Offensive   section of this report. By November however, German casualties had   reached 145,000 troops.       The German position in the South, between Tula and Voronezh   was both confusing and disquieting, as on October 26, German 2 Panzer   leader Guderian had suddenly been attacked by the renewed Russian   forces on the east flank, and was fighting to hold his ground. The 2   Panzer had been meant to surround Moscow, but was so weak in armor,   and with the addition of several infantry corps, its mobile strength   was greatly decreased.      As the German drive against Moscow slackened, the Soviet   commander on the Moscow front, General Georgy Koneztinovich Zhukov,   on December 6 inaugurated the first great counteroffensive with   strokes against Bock's right in the Elets (Yelets) and Tula sectors   south of Moscow and against his center in the Klin and Kalinin sectors   to the northwest. Levies of Siberian troops, who were extremely   effective fighters in cold weather, were used for these offensives.   There followed a blow at the German left, in the Velikie Luki sector;   and the counteroffensive, which was sustained throughout the winter of   1941-42, soon took the form of a triple convergence toward Smolensk.       Before the end of the year    
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