The Battle of Stalingrad was a unique situation, it was battle that shouldn't have happened, but to the ego and arrogance of Hitler. He wanted to destroy the city totally disregarding the military reality of the situation and the arrogance led to the destruction of General Paulus and the German 6th Army.
23 August 1942–2
February 1943. Stalingrad’s worst luck was that it was named after Josef
Stalin. It was a perfect town in Russia, a gem on the Volga River and
an industrial center. So on August 23rd, 1942, Hitler ordered the German
6th Army under Von Paulus to lay siege to Stalingrad.
This of course turned into a
“shoot your self in the foot” proposition. The steel reinforced
buildings still stood after the bombing, and once the Luftwaffe made
short work of the town, it also created a new and perfect environment
that supported the operations of snipers and made the free movement of
armor problematic. High dark rooms with their windows blown out were
perfect for hiding killers watching quietly with bolt action Mosin
Nagants.
The Germans began the
offensive with a quarter of a million men under arms and ended up
bringing in over a million men, including Italians, Hungarians, and
Romanians. The Russians started with 170,000 and brought in over a
million additional troops themselves.
This was to become worst
conflict seen on the Eastern Front. The Germans, just over a year after
the invasion of Russia began, now had an intractable Russian force
defending against all odds in an unrelenting arctic winter storm.
Nothing worked. The German guns froze. Their food rations ran thin.
Resupply was slowing in the war.
It took thirty trainloads a day to resupply Army Group North. This was
hardly sustainable in the 30º below zero weather. Men starved and
suffered in the bitter cold they were hardly ready for. Alfred Jodl had
refused to pack jackets into the first logistics load because he thought
it would sow doubt in the minds of the soldiers who expected that this
war would be over before winter.
Stalingrad is now called
Volgograd, and there a battle began that some historians call the
largest battle in history. Why Stalingrad? Some say Hitler was trying to
poke a finger in Stalin’s eye by decimating his namesake city. And,
obviously, because of it’s strategic location on a bend in the Volga
River.
The Germans sought to control this
waterway where oil supplies and manufactured goods were brought into
the northern Soviet territories, and where factories created everything
from tractors to sewing machines to tanks. The total estimated dead
including civilians and combatants was over two million. This alone
makes Stalingrad a holocaust all its own.
One
would think that Hitler would want to capture Moscow, the Soviet capital
city, first, but he delayed Operation Typhoon, the battle for Moscow,
at the last second. He even ordered Heinz Guderian to take his half of
Army Group Center and link up with General Von Paulus to support the
offensive against Stalingrad. The battle began roughly in July 1942 and
ended in February 1943.
Some historians, however, give the
battle dates as being November 1942 to January 1943. The entire history
of the German invasion of Russia is rife with these discrepancies.
Sometimes what we call an invasion and what we call a military action
are differentiated by semantics. Suffice it to say that the result was
the same for the Wehrmacht.
In a recent one-hour
program on the History channel, many important things were discovered
and history itself was once again revised. Here are some interesting
points discovered – or repeated depending on what you’ve already read
and seen.
In fact, most of the
buildings in Stalingrad were made of steel reinforced concrete. So the
idea that the cinder block construction seen in previous attacks on
Russian cities, where it was ground into powder, turned out to be a
disastrous assumption by German war planners.
A blast expert named David Hadden
traveled to Volgograd and discovered that the reinforced concrete
buildings, for the most part, withstood much of the bombing, and large
windows on all floors gave the blast energy from the bombs a place to
escape. So much of the city was still standing, even if severely
damaged.
The Panzer Kampfwaggen
Mark III, with its 5 man crew and 37mm gun, was the MBT of the Wehrmacht
in the Stalingrad theatre. The gun itself, however, wasn’t really big
enough to destroy buildings. Once the city’s infrastructure had been
devastated, tanks simply could not pass through the rubble.
Not unlike the use of the phalanx,
armor corps needed open ground and an open field of fire to operate.
But there was little open ground in the ruins of Stalingrad. Also, the
main gun had limitations in terms of elevation, so once it was within a
block or two of a building, snipers in the upper floors were for the
most part protected.
Then there is the famous
“drink” the Russians invented called the Molotov cocktail, which could
be dropped from a building onto the back of a tank where the engine and
petrol were located. Left burning long enough it would set off the fuel
and the tank rounds stored in the back of the turret. Soldiers
scrambling out of the tank were easily picked off by snipers.
A Molotov cocktail could be made
from many petroleum products: turpentine, gasoline, cooking oil, a cloth
dipped in paraffin and a thickening agent like egg whites or wood soap.
There were places where
German infantry could see a hundred blown out windows in buildings left
standing in the city. Each darkened hole could have easily held and
hidden a sniper. One sniper going from room to room 100 yards away could
pin down an entire company for hours. Pinned down, German infantry
would start to freeze to death in the frigid Soviet winter.
Russia had an entire
generation of people who, as a rite of passage, had joined rifle clubs
and learned marksmanship. Little did the Germans know that basically the
average Russian citizen, man or woman, knew how to shoot and shoot
accurately. The scope on the bolt-action Mosin-Nagant was easier to
adjust than the German scope on the Mauser 98K.
That might seem like a small
thing, but when snipers are the combatants of choice it isn’t a small
issue at all. Women, although ordinarily non-combatants, were available
in large numbers and many were deadly accurate.
And of course, the
Germans were not used to the Russian winter. The Russians lived it every
year of their lives. German gun oil froze, and the Russians mixed their
gun oil with gasoline that enabled it to tolerate another ten to twenty
degrees of cold to operate in. Germans had to sleep with their weapons,
hoping their body heat would keep the weapons from freezing.
Germans did not prepare for disease and starvation, while the Russians were ready
Germans died of
starvation and had to wait until autopsies could be conducted to
discover that when you have no body fat, you die. Well, duh! Plus the
Soviets had developed typhus and tularemia vaccines. The Germans had
not.
The German soldier wore an undershirt, a cotton shirt, a woolen coat,
and a scarf, and a steel helmet. The steel helmet froze and failed to
protect the Germans from cold on the part of their body that most needed
warmth — their heads.
The Russians wore heavy
cotton undergarments, a woolen tunic, a padded body length tunic over
that which was adapted from the nomadic warriors in the frozen north,
and a fake fur hat.
There was one more element to this: The Russians were defending their country. The Germans were a thousand miles from home
The air campaign set the
battlefield. The armor could not penetrate the city and the
Panzergrenadiers then had to do the dirty work. The rest is history.
A post about the Battle of Stalingrad and no mention of Pavlov's House? For shame.
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