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Decisive Battle Of World War Ii Battle

Decisive Battle Of World War Ii: Battle For Stalingrad Essay, Research Paper


The Decisive Battle of World War II:


The Battle for Stalingrad


The Battle of Stalingrad was fought between the invading forces of Nazi Germany and the forces of the Soviet Union who were defending the city. The battle was fought from August 1942 to February of 1943. This was the decisive battle of World War II because it ended the German offensive as well as destroying much of the German armies. Though the early stages of World War II focused on Europe, Hitler had diverted his attention to Russia by 1941. At first, the huge German war machine focused on Leningrad and Moscow. This attack failed; and so by the summer of 1942 Hitler wanted to invade southern Russia. Against the advice of his generals-Hitler attacked Stalingrad. The German forces took much of the city. German armies surrounded the city and so the Russians were trapped and would remain so for several months. When reinforcements arrived for the Soviets they surrounded the Germans and forced them to surrender. The Battle of Stalingrad not only destroyed much of the German army, but also ended their offensive in Russia and ultimately resulted in Germany’s defeat in the Second World War.


World War II began after years of German dominance in central Europe. Germany had annexed many nearby nations before war was finally declared in September 1939. Nazi Germany had many early successes because their military had been mobilized for a long time while the allies, who at this point were only Britain and France, were less prepared (especially the French). Hitler wisely signed a non-aggression pact with Stalin, and by doing so Germany easily overwhelmed Poland and other lands in Eastern Europe by the end of 1939. By this point, the allies were entrenched in France expecting a repeat of World War I. In the spring of 1940, the Nazi blitzkrieg continued as they occupied Denmark, Norway, and Holland. Now, Germany turned toward France and surprised the allies by invading through Belgium. Within several weeks France was occupied and the British had been driven off the continent. By July 1940, Germany dominated nearly all of continental Europe, as Italy was an ally and Russia was neutral. Germany saw Britain as its last remaining enemy and so prepared for an invasion. In order to do so Hitler recognized that air supremacy would be necessary for any successful invasion to take place. The German air force, the Luftwaffe, was met with great resistance, and by late 1940 Hitler gave up hope of an immediate invasion of Britain. At this point, the best strategy for Germany would have been to attack North Africa and the Middle East, as this would give Germany the Suez Canal and therefore would cut off Britain’s supply of oil. Instead, Hitler’s obsession with a vast Eastern European empire had already determined that his next course of action would be to invade the Soviet Union. With Western Europe secure, for the time being, Hitler decided to embark on a massive campaign through the Soviet Union. This was known as Operation Barbarossa. It would eventually be the greatest land battle in history, with over 25 million casualties from its beginning in June 1941 to its end in July 1943-when the Soviets began a counter offensive that would eventually lead to Germany’s defeat in 1945.


Operation Barbarossa was flawed from the start. First, it didn’t start until the summer of 1941 as Hitler had been occupied in the Balkans during the spring. Hitler did not think much of the lateness of the beginning of his invasion because he anticipated a quick victory before the Russian winter, which had stopped Napoleon, set in. Hitler also greatly underestimated the power of the Red Army. In the beginning, both sides had over 3 million men each. However, while the Germans had only 3300 tanks, the Soviets had 20,000, which gave them a distinct advantage even though many of their tanks were obsolete. Another problem for Germany was Hitler’s lack of tactical knowledge. This was shown when he at first pushed towards Moscow then split up his forces to attack Leningrad to the north, and the Caucasus, as well as Moscow. These factors would make it seem as though Operation Barbarossa was doomed from the start, but this was not so.


The Luftwaffe played key roles, including the destruction of the Soviet air force. The Luftwaffe destroyed the largest air force in the world in only two days. General Rychagov, the Commander of Russian Aviation, was sentenced to death for what Stalin called “treasonable activity” (defeat in battle). Despite Hitler’s tactical incompetence, his armies quickly advanced thanks to the tactics that the German generals employed. The German army was very mobile and so could easily surround and overwhelm Russian armies (that usually surrendered soon afterwards). German tactics led to staggering defeats for the Russians–who often lost ten lives, compared with only one German life. In August of 1941 one of Hitler’s generals, Guderian, contacted him. Guderian requested that an attack be made on Moscow, but Hitler said to stick with the current strategy. Hitler was angry, but admitted to Guderian; “Had I known Russian tank strength?I would not have started this war.” Despite Hitler’s concerns, the Germans were still successful, having captured Minsk, Smolensk, and Kiev. Finally, in October, Hitler agreed to attack Moscow. In late November the attack on Moscow, known as Operation Typhoon, began. The attack failed, and at the end of 1941 Hitler wondered what could be holding Russia together. The Russians had lost 3 million men and half of its economic base. Russia still had 9 million men that were of military age and had produced 4,500 new tanks over the winter, and so a continued war favored Russia since at this point Germany could not match those numbers.


In May of 1942, Hitler began Operation BLUE, whose objective was to capture southern oil fields. Later in May, Stalin began to allow his troops to retreat, which overrode his famous earlier order, “Not one step back!” Also, by this point the Russian soldiers heard of the horrible POW camps, and now preferred to die in battle than be captured. Both of these factors reduced the number of Russian soldiers that were captured during the war. In July, the German 6th Army, led by Paulus, advanced toward Stalingrad. At the same time Russian General Chuikov also moved toward Stalingrad to help General Zhukov, who was in charge of the defenses of Stalingrad. Despite the German army’s huge losses, Hitler was determined to take Stalingrad. Stalin did not want to let it fall-especially because it was named after himself. Hitler wanted the city not only because it dominated the Caucasus and its oil fields, but also for its symbolic and propaganda value. He also believed that if he took Stalingrad it would eventually lead to the destruction of the Soviet Union.


The battle of Stalingrad began on August 23, 1942 at 6:00 P.M. when one thousand German planes dropped incendiary bombs on the city. Air raids such as these were very destructive, especially since many buildings were made out of wood. One raid of 600 planes killed an estimated 40,000 civilians. That same day the German army arrived in the suburbs of Stalingrad. The first attacks by the German Panzers were taken by a single division of troops and some workers from a nearby factory. When the German soldiers entered the city they found the ruins from their bombings. They were surprised to find any life left in the city. Many small battles erupted soon afterwards. The German army encountered fierce resistance from not only the determined soldiers of the Red Army, but also from the patriotic civilians as well. Hitler had already claimed victory just as Napoleon had in 1812, but this battle was far from over. Fighting was harsh and neither side made many gains. One German general said, “The mile, as a measure of distance, was replaced by the yard…” Even with the great efforts of the Soviet forces, they were losing ground. The fighting was still severe even though the Russians were out numbered. A hill known as Mamaev’s Mound changed sides at least eight times during the battle. Battles were even fought in the sewers. One house was defended by a single platoon of troops under the command of Russian sergeant Pavlov. That house became known as Pavlov’s house because they were surrounded, but still held out against the Germans for 59 days until they were reinforced. Pavlov would even survive the war. There were many cases of fanatical efforts by troops of both sides. A Soviet artilleryman, Aleksei Petrov, was in his first battle when he was looking for a comrade to return from patrol when he was actually lying dead on the streets. Petrov began to scream and run at a nearby house where a few Germans tried to surrender, but Petrov killed them with his submachine gun. He heard another German begging in the hallway, “Oh God, let me live.” Petrov shot him in the face and went to the second floor where he killed three more Germans. He then silently left the house and returned to his post. One German soldier and twelve of his troops charged a building and took 80 prisoners, an anti tank gun, and left dozens of Russians dead. In a factory in the city the Russians had set up a sniper school headed by Vasily Zaitsev. Zaitsev had killed 40 Germans in ten days. He become famous among both sides and a German sniper, Colonel Heinz Thorwald was flown in to fight him. The two snipers searched for each other until finally Zaitsev found a place where his comrades had been mysteriously shot. Zaitsev’s friend looked out for a split second and was shot. He now knew where his enemy was. Thorwald thought he had just killed the Russian sniper and looked out. That was when Zaitsev hit him. In the whole battle of Stalingrad Vasily Zaitsev was credited with killing 242 Germans. Ultimately, he was blinded by a land mine. Many of the tense battles were fought near the Central Train Station were Soviet guardsmen barricaded the train cars against German attackers. The German Luftwaffe was making thousands of attacks a day and their artillery bombarded the city so to neutralize this. General Chuikov ordered his forces to remain very close to the German troops so that German air strikes would endanger their own forces. The city was surrounded by German forces. For Russian reinforcements to arrive they would have to cross the Volga river while under German fire. Witnesses said that on some days the river would turn red with the blood of the dead soldiers. Fighting was continual and never stopped. Sometimes it might slow down, but minutes later it would start again with new energy. General Chuikov described one German attack, “That morning you could not hear the separate shots or explosions: the whole merged into one continuous deafening roar.” The overpowered Soviets had been driven back and Germany occupied eighty percent of the city. Because the two sides would often be very close to each other, hand to hand fighting was very common. Many battles were fought with knives and bayonets. Bodies piled up in the streets and the city became a hellhole as one German lieutenant said, “Stalingrad is no longer a town. By day it is an enormous cloud of burning, blinding smoke; it is a vast furnace lit by the reflection of the flames…Animals flee this hell; the hardest stones cannot bear it for long; only men endure.” Infantry dominated the battles because tanks had a difficult time maneuvering through the ruins. The deployment of tanks in the city was a serious error, as they were virtually useless, and they would not be available as a reserve force in case of a Soviet counterattack. After a few months of fighting, several events put pressure on Germany in Africa. On November 5, 1942 the German, General Rommel, had been defeated at El Alamein in Egypt, and on the 8th the Allies had landed in Morocco and Algeria, which threatened the Axis on a new front. These two events coincided with General Zhukov’s plan to unleash a reserve force. Secretly being built up was a force of a million men, 14,000 heavy guns, 1,000 tanks, and 1,350 aircraft. Inferior allied divisions guarded the flanks of the German force. These forces were weaker, and they d

id not have anti-tank defenses or armored units. The Russians planned to exploit this weakness in an offensive known as Operation Uranus. The Soviets did an excellent job of concealing their plans, and the Axis forces were caught totally off guard. Only Romanian units suspected anything, but the German command ignored them. On November 19,1942 a massive Russian attack surprised and overran the Romanian Third Army which exposed the left flank of the German Sixth Army. A day later another attack destroyed a mixed force composed of Germans and Romanians, that protected the right flank of the German Sixth Army. Four days later Russian assault groups joined up, and now General Paulus and his army, the same one that had taken Paris in 1940, was cut off from supply lines. The Russians had surrounded 330,000 German troops in only a few days. The German Army High Command begged Hitler to allow Paulus to retreat while he still could. The Luftwaffe Chief, Herman Goering, claimed that he could fly in 500 tons of supplies a day to the surrounded Sixth Army-which would be enough to keep it going. Hitler agreed to this and on November 22, 1942 he ordered Paulus to fortify his position and wait for reinforcements to arrive. General Manstein arrived with reinforcements and told Paulus to join up with him. Paulus refused because he did not have a direct order from Hitler to do so. Manstein’s force was driven off and now Paulus and his army were alone, surrounded, and at the mercy of the Russians and the cold winter. Since Hitler had believed that this offensive would not take too long, and since it was started in the summer, the soldiers were not provided with winter clothes. They were running low on supplies thanks to the lack of supplies being delivered by the Luftwaffe. (The Luftwaffe could only fly in about 100 tons a day while they needed over 500.) Only one day did the airlift provide enough supplies. The planes brought wounded soldiers home and they also brought mail from the soldiers bidding farewell to the people they knew in Germany, because they knew they would die. When General Paulus saw the miserable conditions his soldiers were in, he sent someone to plead with Hitler. In response, Hitler told him to hold out and that reinforcements would arrive. Conditions were miserable. Temperatures dropped to negative thirty degrees Celsius. Because of the lack of supplies the daily ration for soldiers was dropped from an already low 100 grams of bread a day, to 50 grams a day. One German soldier described the misery that they faced, “Only the toe of jackboot or an arm frozen to stone could remind you that what was now an elongated white hummock had quite recently been a human being.” German soldiers had to slaughter their horses for food and then later they had to dig up the horses’ bones to eat.


On January 8, 1943 the Russians demanded that the Germans surrender, but they refused and two days later the Russians attacked. Paulus radioed to Hitler that it was hopeless, but Hitler insisted that Paulus would not surrender. By the 25th of January 1943 the Russians took the last German airfield; thus totally cutting off the flow of supplies. By this point the German army was almost out of food and ammunition. Thousands of soldiers were wounded but could not be helped because there were no medical supplies. On January 31, 1943 Hitler promoted Paulus to field marshal and reminded Paulus that never in Germany’ s history had a field marshal surrendered. Hitler urged Paulus to commit suicide to avoid the dishonor of having to surrender from happening, but instead Paulus finally surrendered on February 2, 1943. The Russians took over 110,000 prisoners including 24 generals. In the whole Battle of Stalingrad over 800,000 German soldiers died. The defeat at Stalingrad went further than casualties and captured soldiers, but it also ended the German campaign in Russia. It also showed that the Germans could be beaten at their own game.


The Battle for Stalingrad was the first major victory for the Soviets and set the stage for a counter offensive that would not only reclaim all of their lost land, but would eventually bring them to Berlin. When Hitler heard of Paulus’ surrender he said, “The God of war has gone over to the other side.” Less than a week after the Battle of Stalingrad was over, Soviet forces reached the Sea of Azov, which cut off one of the three German armies deployed in Russia. In March, the Russian Army began to push westwards. In response the Germans began to amass Panzer units behind the front lines. German command debated about how to proceed. General Manstein suggested that the Soviets be allowed to advance greatly; then the Germans would cut them off and surround them. Hitler refused to follow this plan on the basis that it was politically risky-because it gave ground to the Soviets. Instead, Hitler decided to gather nearly all of his tank forces for an attack at the Kursk salient (a bulge in the front lines). Hitler wanted to attack Kursk because it was a crossroads for many railroads. Again, Hitler ignored the advice of General Manstein by delaying the attack until the new Panther and Tiger tanks were ready. This delay in the attack gave the Soviets time to prepare for the battle. Hitler wanted to wait for the new tanks because he wanted to do everything possible to ensure victory. He hoped that a victory at Kursk would demonstrate that even after the decisive defeat at Stalingrad the German armies were still the most powerful in the world. Hitler was so obsessed with winning at Kursk that for the battle he drew on reserves from as far away as France. When Soviet Intelligence confirmed the German plans for Kursk, General Zhukov began preparations for a huge defense. There were three defense lines, each of which had its own line of reserves. 400,000 land mines and many anti-tank guns protected these troops. By July 4, 1943 both sides had put over 2 million troops, 6,000 tanks, 5,000 planes, and 30,000 heavy guns into an area of less than 9,000 square miles. The defending Soviet forces had 1.3 million troops, 3,000 planes, 3,400 tanks, and 20,000 heavy guns, while the Germans only had 900,000 troops, 2,000 planes, 2,700 tanks, and 10,000 heavy guns. Fighting began on July 5, 1943. Since there were so many troops in such a small space the fighting was very intense, as Guy Sajer, a German soldier said: “Daylight turned to darkness and was interrupted by brilliant flashes of nearby explosions. The earth trembled and bushes and trees exploded into flame by spontaneous combustion from the intense heat. The German troops were frozen with fear, unable to move or even scream at times and at other times driven to howling like animals while desperately trying to bury themselves deeper to escape the terror, while clutching one another like children. Those who peered out were thrown back into the shelter in pieces.” The new Tiger tank, as well as the assault guns, called Ferdinands, dominated the battle. The Tiger had an 88mm gun with a thousand-yard range. The Ferdinand guns were even more powerful and could out range any Soviet guns. The Germans planned to use the Tigers and the Ferdinands to weaken the Soviet defenses to allow infantry and light tanks to advance. Unfortunately, for the Germans this was not enough, and so the Germans were forced to engage in battle. The new German tanks were so much better that it was very common for the fanatical drivers of the Russian T-34 tanks to intentionally crash into the German tanks so as to destroy them.


The fighting reached its peak on July 12, 1943 when both forces were very close to each other. The air forces and artillery guns stopped firing so that they would not hit their own men. Hundreds of tanks were lost that day and Hitler realized that defeat was inevitable; so on July 13, 1943 he ordered a withdrawal. This was not only because of the situation at Kursk, but also because the Soviets were advancing elsewhere. Also, at the same time the British and Americans had just landed in Sicily. The Battle of Kursk was the biggest tank battle in history. The defeat there, in addition to the defeat at Stalingrad, crippled the German military. This, as well as the fact that Soviet production overtook German production, led to the success of the Russian counter offensive, which led to Allied victory in World War II. The Soviet victory at Stalingrad, and as a result, their successful defense against the German Operation Barbarossa, was definitely the decisive factor in the outcome of World War II. Because the Battle of Stalingrad gave the Soviets the initiative, the Red Army regained Russia’s lost land and afterwards invaded Germany’s land in a relatively short time. Russia gained more than just its former territory; it also gave the Soviet Union control of virtually every Eastern European country (with the notable exception of Greece).


The victory at Stalingrad was celebrated with the construction of a statue of Mother Russia. The fifty-two meter statue was built to remember the more than one million Soviet troops that died defending the city. The great success of the Russian counter offensive gave the rest of the world fear of the Soviet Union and its leader-Stalin. This was due to the fact that Soviet forces had fought against impossible odds and had won in the end. Stalin and the Soviets faced Hitler more boldly than the Western allies had. This was shown by how the Soviets sacrificed nearly everything in the war while Britain and the United States were very hesitant about opening up a second front-which happened nearly two years after Germany invaded Russia when the allies invaded Italy. The delaying in opening up the second front in Europe led Stalin to believe that his Western allies wanted Russia to win, but that they wanted the victory to be as costly for the Soviets as possible.


When the leaders of the Soviet Union, the United States, and Great Britain-Stalin, Roosevelt, and Churchill met in Yalta in February of 1945 there was a great deal of rivalry and resentment between the western allies. Stalin refused to give up any of the territory that the Soviet Union had conquered from Germany. The three allies did agree on how Germany was to be split up. The Soviet Union would receive the eastern half while Britain, France, and the U.S. would split up the west. The allies agreed to have a trial for Nazi war criminals as well as determine what reparation Germany owed and to what countries. The meeting at Yalta was the last meeting between the leaders of the three major allies; and its outcome was the Cold War, which lasted for over 40 years. During this time the former allies were split, and instead of in World War II where fascism was seen as the common enemy, capitalism and communism became enemies.


The Battle of Stalingrad was fought from August 1942 to February of 1943. Over two million soldiers died in this battle, most of who were Soviets. The battle ended the German invasion of the Soviet Union-this began the Soviet counter offensive, which would eventually capture Berlin in 1945. The early part of World War II focused on Western Europe, but by 1941 Hitler was ready to invade the Soviet Union. Though the blitzkrieg tactic worked at first, it failed when the Germans attacked Stalingrad. Here, the German army had to enter the city and fight a long and vicious battle with the Soviets. The intense cold, stubborn Soviet resistance, and eventually the lack of supplies all contributed to the eventual defeat of the German army. The Soviets responded with their own offensive, which eventually led to Germany’s defeat in World War II. The Soviets won by using the same tactic that the Germans had successfully used against them: they attacked the flanks and surrounded them. The victory at Stalingrad proved to be the end of Nazi Germany’s peak and the beginning of its rapid decline until its final destruction in 1945. Hitler and his short-lived empire collapsed as a result of the Battle of Stalingrad because it destroyed much of the German forces and also ended the offensive in Russia. This eventually turned the tide and led to not only the destruction of Germany but also ushered in a new era of global politics. Never again would a war of such magnitude ever be forced upon the world.

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