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German Infantryman vs Soviet Rifleman - Barbarossa 1941 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R484
Discovery Miles 4 840
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German Infantryman vs Soviet Rifleman - Barbarossa 1941 (Paperback)
Series: Combat
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Loot Price R484
Discovery Miles 4 840
Expected to ship within 9 - 17 working days
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Featuring full-color artwork, specially drawn maps and archive
photographs, this study offers key insights into the tactics,
leadership, combat performance and subsequent reputations of six
representative German and Soviet infantry battalions pitched into
three pivotal actions that determined the course of the
"Barbarossa" campaign at the height of World War II.
The Axis invasion of the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941 pitted Nazi
Germany and her allies against Stalin's forces in a mighty struggle
for survival. Three German army groups - North, Center and South -
advanced into Soviet-held territory; Generalfeldmarschall Fedor von
Bock's Army Group Center, the largest of these three, was tasked
with defeating General of the Army Dmitry Pavlov's Western Front in
Belarus, and was assigned two Panzer Groups to achieve this. Bock's
command would complete the encirclement and destruction of vast
numbers of Soviet personnel and materiel at battles such as
Białystok-Minsk in June-July and Smolensk in July-August before
being halted as German efforts centered on the conquest of the
Ukraine, only to resume the offensive at the end of September. As
the dust of summer gave way to the mud of autumn, the ensuing
German drive on Moscow was slowed and then halted by a Soviet
counteroffensive mounted by Konev's Kalinin and Timoshenko's
Southwestern Fronts in December amid unusually harsh winter
conditions, marking the failure of the German Blitzkrieg; Army
Group Centre was forced back and Moscow remained in Soviet hands.
At the forefront of the German advance, fighting alongside the
spearhead Panzer divisions, were the lorry-borne infantrymen of the
motorized infantry divisions. Unlike the Schutzen, the specialist
armored infantry integral to the Panzer divisions, these highly
trained motorized formations were organized, armed and equipped as
per their footslogging counterparts in the standard infantry
divisions; together, these two troop types were the forerunners of
the formidable Panzergrenadier formations that would provide the
Germans with their mobile infantry forces in the climactic years of
World War II.
Opposing the German mobile forces, the Soviets deployed rifle
divisions and motorized rifle divisions, some of which would be
upgraded to Guards status following outstanding combat performance.
The Soviet forces fought tenaciously in the teeth of sometimes
overwhelming local German superiority and with the threat of savage
reprisals from the NKVD troops at their backs, suffering huge
losses but remaining in the fight until the lines could be
stabilized in the worsening winter conditions outside Moscow. Their
clashes with the motorized infantrymen of the German vanguard would
shape the outcome of this mighty battle for survival.
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