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A groundbreaking book when first published in Russia in 2005, now
Valeriy Zamulin's study of the crucible of combat during the
titanic clash at Kursk - the fighting at Prokhorovka - is available
in English. A former staff member of the Prokhorovka Battlefield
State Museum, Zamulin has dedicated years of his life to the study
of the battle of Kursk, and especially the fighting on its southern
flank involving the famous attack of the II SS Panzer Corps into
the teeth of deeply-echeloned Red Army defenses. A product of five
years of intense research into the once-secret Central Archives of
the Russian Ministry of Defense, Zamulin lays out in enormous
detail the plans and tactics of both sides, culminating in the
famous and controversial clash at Prokhorovka on 12 July 1943.
Zamulin skillfully weaves reminiscences of Red Army and Wehrmacht
soldiers and officers into the narrative of the fighting, using in
part files belonging to the Prokhorovka Battlefield State Museum.
Zamulin has the advantage of living in Prokhorovka, so he has
walked the ground of the battlefield many times and has an intimate
knowledge of the terrain. Examining the battle from primarily the
Soviet side, Zamulin reveals the real costs and real achievements
of the Red Army at Kursk, and especially Prokhorovka. He examines
mistaken deployments and faulty decisions that hampered the
Voronezh Front's efforts to contain the Fourth Panzer Army's
assault, and the valiant, self-sacrificial fighting of the Red
Army's soldiers and junior officers as they sought to slow the
German advance, and then crush the II SS Panzer Corps with a heavy
counterattack at Prokhorovka on 12 July. The combat on this day
receives particular scrutiny, as Zamulin works to clarify the
relative size of the contending forces, the actual area of this
battle, and the costs suffered by both sides. The costs to General
P. A. Rotmistrov's 5th Guards Tank Army and General A. S. Zhadov's
5th Guards Army as they slammed into 1st SS Panzer Grenadier
Division Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler, 3rd SS Panzer Grenadier
Division Totenkopf and a portion of 2nd SS Panzer Grenadier
Division Das Reich were particularly devastating, and Zamulin
examines the nuts and bolts of the counteroffensive to see why this
was so. Zamulin does not exclude the oft-overlooked efforts of Army
Group Kempf's III Panzer Corps on the right-wing of the Fourth
Panzer Army, as it sought to keep pace with the II SS Panzer Corps
advance, and then breach the line of the Northern Donets River in
order to link up with its left-hand neighbor in the region of
Prokhorovka. Zamulin describes how the Soviet High Command and the
Voronezh Front had to quickly cobble together a defense of this
line with already battered units, but needed to reinforce it with
fresh formations at the expense of the counterstroke at
Prokhorovka. Printed on heavy stock gloss paper, illustrated with
many photographs (including a colour section showing present-day
views of the battlefield), specially-commissioned colour maps and
supplemented with extensive tables of data, Zamulin's book is an
outstanding contribution to the growing literature on the battle of
Kursk, and further demolishes many of the myths and legends that
grew up around this battle.
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