The Great Patriotic War and its Impact on the SU 1941-45 Flashcards
By the summer of 1941 what was the situation in Europe?
Hitler had been poised for the invasion of Russia - he had been preparing his strategy since Oct 1940
Britain had refused to make peace after the German conquest of France and western Europe, but was not able to offer a military threat
Hitler knew the SU was badly unprepared for war and German forces were experienced and well-equipped so was confident of achieving a rapid and decisive victory
When was the invasion initially scheduled for and why was it delayed?
1st June, delayed for three weeks because the policies of Hitler’s Italian allies had caused a crisis in Yugoslavia which compelled Hitler to invade Yugoslavia in another blitzkrieg
When was the invasion rescheduled for and why was this significant?
22nd June - at the time the delay didn’t seem significant but it did cut short the time-window for completion of the operation, before winter weather conditions intervened
What was the code-name of the invasion of the USSR?
Operation Barbarossa
What was blitzkrieg?
Term widely used to define the rapid victories achieved by German armies in conquering Poland in September 1939 and France in 1940, using fast-moving, armoured units, backed by close air support, the invasion of the USSR was intended to be another such ‘lightening war’
What was the strategy behind Barbarossa?
Three huge army groups spearheaded the German invasion plan; north through the Baltic States towards Leningrad; south and east into Ukraine; and a central thrust towards Moscow
Some of Hitler’s senior advisers wanted all forces to be concentrated on the central drive in Moscow, but he overruled them
What were the aims behind Barbarossa?
Not just military victory - it was an attempt to seize control over the entire soviet economy, and to eradicate communism
Hitler also believed that many Soviet citizens would welcome the German invaders as ‘liberators’
What had left the SU unprepared for war in June 1941?
Stalin’s miscalculation about the effectiveness of the Nazi-Soviet Pact - even when foreign sources warned Stalin that a German invasion was imminent, he took no action, partly as he preferred not to believe them and partly as he didn’t want to take any visible steps against invasion in case those steps provoked Hitler into launching it
How was the weakness of the Soviet position in June 1941 reflected in Stalin’s actions?
He shrank away from making a radio broadcast to the people (he left it to Molotov)
Stalin seemed to have lost his nerve, expecting that the people and the party leadership would blame him and turn against him
When did Stalin eventually make a radio speech to the nation and what did he say?
On the 3rd July - there was a significant change in tone from the terror in the 1930’s, Stalin appealed to Patriotism and religion and to unity among nationalities
‘Friendship’ with Nazi Germany was replaced by ideological hatred- Stalin’s new friend was the British prime minister - Churchill
What was the new tone?
A great patriotic war, linked to national struggles of the Russian past, was to be a lasting feature of Soviet war propaganda
What else had contributed to Soviet unpreparedness for war?
Soviet military strength had been undermined by the army purges of 1937 to 1939, as had been shown by the poor performance of the Red army in the Winter War against Finland
Soviet resources were also stretched by the need to keep substantial forces in the far east after the 1939 war against Japan
Despite the total size of the Soviet armed forces being greatly increased 1939- June 1941, what was the problem and what was the problem with the territorial expansion?
The forces lagged well behind Germany in efficiency, equipment and leadership
Extensive territories in Eastern Poland and the Baltic States that have been seized in 1939 and 1940 to provide a ‘buffer zone’ against attack - provided no defence and were overrun in a matter of weeks
In what ways was Stalin guilty of errors and pool leadership in the early stages of war?
He had a panic attack after the invasion and failed to give leadership in the first weeks - he prepared to move the government away from Moscow to Samara on the Volga and only decided last minute to stay in Moscow
He relied for far too long on many inferior commanders, who had been promoted for political reasons after the purge of the army
In September 1941, he helped to cause a massive defeat of his southern armies at Kiev by refusing to allow them to retreat until it was too late - he also showed no urgency in defending Leningrad after it was besieged
What happened only after a long series of defeats and disasters?
Stalin’s ‘war cabinet’, Stavka, became an effective mechanism to run the war
What key factors was Stalin saved by?
The size of Russia, with it’s huge population and vast distances
The severity of the Russian winter
The patriotism of the soviet people
He also learned from his mistakes and was eventually to receive accolades as ‘the great war hero’
How was Stalin helped by advanced information?
Received advanced information about the intentions of Japan - provided by master spy ‘Richard Sorge’ and as a result Stalin was saved from having to fight a two-front war.
When Japan attacked the US naval base at Pearl Harbour in Hawaii in December, this brought the US into the Grand Alliance against the Axis Powers (G, I and J)
Define Stavka?
The top-level military command of the USSR in the Great Patriotic War, the name originated in Tsarist times, but Stavka was formed under Stalin on 23rd June 1930
Comprised key generals such as Zhukov as we;; as key politicians like Molotov
It was subordinate only to GKO (the State Defence Committee), which was the supreme political war cabinet
What made it possible to avoid war with Japan?
The USSR had fought a major war against them in 1939 and feared that Japan (allied to Hitler in the ‘axis’) would invade the USSR in 1941.
But Stalin was tipped off by Richard Sorge, (soviet double agent who ran a spy ring in Japan), that the target of Japanese aggression would be the US, not Russia
This enabled Stalin to transfer high quality troops from Siberia in time to strengthen the defence in Moscow.
Who was Sorge?
He was a Comintern agent, active in Germany from 1929, and in Japan from 1933 - he was executed in Tokyo in 1944
What were the three distinct phases in the Great Patriotic War?
1) June 1941 to summer 1942/October: Soviet Russia struggled to survive against successive German offensives, suffering massive losses of people and territory - fighting for survival
2) 1942 to summer 1943: Soviet Russia established its war effort, built a powerhouse war economy and halted German advances - turning the tide
3) 1943 to summer 1945: Soviet armies moved on to the offensive, recaptured vast areas that had been occupied, and achieved total victory - the road to Berlin
Who was the USSR part of a grand alliance with and why is this significant ?
Britain (from June 1941 after the German invasion of Russia) and with the US (from December 1941 after the Japanese attack on Hawaii)
Significant as western allies played a massive role in defeat of Germany and Japan as well as supplying crucial supplies to aid USSR’s war effort
Who suffered the worst from war?
The SU with enormous human and material losses, and years of brutal occupation = defining experience of the Soviet people under Stalin
During the first stage (struggle for survival June 41 to October 42) what was astounding and what is an example of it?
The speed of the German advance, vast distances were covered in day. Huge soviet armies were encircled and defeated
At Minsk and Smolensk, (central front) near Kiev, 665,000 Soviet troops were captured.
Soviet forces also rapidly expelled from Baltic States - on all fronts catastrophic losses of Soviet aircraft