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Soviet Union in World War II

After the Munich Agreement, the Soviet Union pursued a rapprochement with Nazi Germany. On 23 August 1939 the Soviet Union signed a non-aggression pact with Germany which included a secret protocol that divided Eastern Europe into German and Soviet "spheres of influence", anticipating potential "territorial and political rearrangements" of these countries.[2] Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939, starting World War II. The Soviets invaded eastern Poland on 17 September.[3] Following the Winter War with Finland, the Soviets were ceded territories by Finland. This was followed by annexations of the Baltic states and parts of Romania.

Soviet soldiers at Stalingrad during a short rest after fighting [1]
Stalin, Roosevelt and Churchill at the Tehran Conference
World War II military deaths in Europe and Asia by theatre, year

On 22 June 1941, Hitler launched Operation Barbarossa, an invasion of the Soviet Union with the largest invasion force in history, leading to some of the largest battles and most horrific atrocities. This offensive comprised three army groups. The city of Leningrad was besieged while other major cities fell to the Germans. Despite initial successes, the German offensive ground to a halt in the Battle of Moscow, and the Soviets launched a counteroffensive, pushing the Germans back. The failure of Operation Barbarossa reversed the fortunes of Germany, and Stalin was confident that the Allied war machine would eventually defeat Germany.[4] The Soviet Union repulsed Axis attacks, such as in the Battle of Stalingrad and the Battle of Kursk, which marked a turning point in the war. The Western Allies provided support to the Soviets in the form of Lend-Lease as well as air and naval support. Stalin met with Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt at the Tehran Conference and discussed a two-front war against Germany and the future of Europe after the war. The Soviets launched successful offensives to regain territorial losses and began a push to Berlin. The Germans unconditionally surrendered in May 1945 after Berlin fell.

The bulk of Soviet fighting took place on the Eastern Front—including the Continuation War with Finland—but it also invaded Iran in August 1941 with the British. The Soviets later entered the war against Japan in August 1945, which began with an invasion of Manchuria. They had border conflicts with Japan up to 1939 before signing a non-aggression pact in 1941. Stalin had agreed with the Western Allies to enter the war against Japan at the Tehran Conference in 1943 and at the Yalta Conference in February 1945 once Germany was defeated. The entry of the Soviet Union in the war against Japan along with the atomic bombings by the United States led to Japan's surrender, marking the end of World War II.

The Soviet Union suffered the greatest number of casualties in the war, losing more than 20 million citizens, about a third of all World War II casualties. The full demographic loss to the Soviet people was even greater.[5] The German Generalplan Ost aimed to create more Lebensraum (lit.'living space') for Germany through extermination. An estimated 3.5 million Soviet prisoners of war died in German captivity as a result of deliberate mistreatment and atrocities, and millions of civilians, including Soviet Jews, were killed in the Holocaust. However, at the cost of a large sacrifice, the Soviet Union emerged as a global superpower.[6] The Soviets installed dependent communist governments in Eastern Europe, and tensions with the United States and the Western allies grew to what became known as the Cold War.[7]

Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact edit

 
Stalin and Ribbentrop at the signing of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact on 23 August 1939.

During the 1930s, Soviet foreign minister Maxim Litvinov emerged as a leading voice for the official Soviet policy of collective security with the Western powers against Nazi Germany.[8] In 1935, Litvinov negotiated treaties of mutual assistance with France and with Czechoslovakia with the aim of containing Hitler's expansion.[8] After the Munich Agreement, which gave parts of Czechoslovakia to Nazi Germany, the Western democracies' policy of appeasement led the Soviet Union to reorient its foreign policy towards a rapprochement with Germany.[8] On 3 May 1939, Stalin replaced Litvinov, who was closely identified with the anti-German position,[8] with Vyacheslav Molotov.

In August 1939, Stalin accepted Hitler's proposal of a non-aggression pact with Germany, negotiated by foreign ministers Vyacheslav Molotov for the Soviets and Joachim von Ribbentrop for the Germans.[9] Although officially a non-aggression treaty only, an appended secret protocol, also reached on 23 August, divided the whole of eastern Europe into German and Soviet spheres of influence.[10][11] The USSR was promised the eastern part of Poland, then primarily populated by Ukrainians and Belarusians, in case of its dissolution, and Germany recognised Latvia, Estonia and Finland as parts of the Soviet sphere of influence,[11] with Lithuania added in a second secret protocol in September 1939.[12] Another clause of the treaty was that Bessarabia, then part of Romania, was to be joined to the Moldovan SSR, and become the Moldovan SSR under control of Moscow.[11]

The pact was reached two days after the breakdown of Soviet military talks with British and French representatives in August 1939 over a potential Franco-Anglo-Soviet alliance.[13][14] Political discussions had been suspended on 2 August, when Molotov stated that they could not be resumed until progress was made in military talks late in August,[15] after the talks had stalled over guarantees for the Baltic states,[16][17] while the military talks upon which Molotov insisted[16] started on 11 August.[13][18] At the same time, Germany, with whom the Soviets had started secret negotiations on 29 July[9][19][20][21][22] argued that it could offer the Soviets better terms than Britain and France, with Ribbentrop insisting "there was no problem between the Baltic and the Black Sea that could not be solved between the two of us."[13][23][24] German officials stated that, unlike Britain, Germany could permit the Soviets to continue their developments unmolested, and that "there is one common element in the ideology of Germany, Italy and the Soviet Union: opposition to the capitalist democracies of the West".[23][25] By that time, Molotov had obtained information regarding Anglo-German negotiations and a pessimistic report from the Soviet ambassador in France.[19]

 
Soviet cavalry on parade in Lviv (then Lwów), after the city's surrender during the 1939 Soviet invasion of Poland

After disagreement regarding Stalin's demand to move Red Army troops through Poland and Romania (which Poland and Romania opposed),[13][18] on 21 August, the Soviets proposed adjournment of military talks using the pretext that the absence of senior Soviet personnel at the talks interfered with the autumn manoeuvres of the Soviet forces, though the primary reason was the progress being made in the Soviet-German negotiations.[18] That same day, Stalin received assurance that Germany would approve secret protocols to the proposed non-aggression pact that would grant the Soviets land in Poland, the Baltic states, Finland and Romania,[26]. Stalin telegrammed Hitler that night that the Soviets were willing to sign the pact and that he would receive Ribbentrop on 23 August.[27] Regarding the larger issue of collective security, some historians believe that one reason that Stalin decided to abandon the doctrine was the shaping of his views of France and Britain by their entry into the Munich Agreement and the subsequent failure to prevent the German occupation of Czechoslovakia.[28][29][30] Stalin may also have viewed the pact as a way of gaining time in an eventual war with Hitler in order to reinforce the Soviet military and shifting Soviet borders westwards, which would be militarily beneficial in such a war.[31][32]

Stalin and Ribbentrop spent most of the night of the pact's signing trading friendly stories about world affairs and cracking jokes (a rarity for Ribbentrop) about Britain's weakness. The pair even joked about how the Anti-Comintern Pact principally scared "British shopkeepers."[33] They further traded toasts, with Stalin proposing a toast to Hitler's health and Ribbentrop proposing a toast to Stalin.[33]

The division of Eastern Europe and other invasions edit

 
German and Soviet soldiers at the parade in Brest in front of a photo of Stalin

On 1 September 1939, the German invasion of its agreed upon portion of Poland started the Second World War.[9] On 17 September the Red Army invaded eastern Poland and occupied the Polish territory assigned to it by the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, followed by co-ordination with German forces in Poland.[34][35] Eleven days later, the secret protocol of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact was modified, allotting Germany a larger part of Poland, while ceding most of Lithuania to the Soviet Union.[36] The Soviet portions lay east of the so-called Curzon Line, an ethnographic frontier between Russia and Poland drawn up by a commission of the Paris Peace Conference in 1919.[37]

 
Planned and actual territorial changes in Eastern and Central Europe 1939–1940 (click to enlarge)
 
Part of the 5 March 1940 memo from Lavrentiy Beria to Stalin proposing execution of Polish officers

After taking around 300,000 Polish prisoners in 1939 and early 1940,[38][39][40][41] NKVD officers conducted lengthy interrogations of the prisoners in camps that were, in effect, a selection process to determine who would be killed.[42] On March 5, 1940, pursuant to a note to Stalin from Lavrenty Beria, the members of the Soviet Politburo (including Stalin) signed and 22,000 military and intellectuals were executed - They were labelled "nationalists and counterrevolutionaries", kept at camps and prisons in occupied western Ukraine and Belarus. This became known as the Katyn massacre.[42][43][44] Major-General Vasili M. Blokhin, chief executioner for the NKVD, personally shot 6,000 of the captured Polish officers in 28 consecutive nights, which remains one of the most organized and protracted mass murders by a single individual on record.[45][46] During his 29-year career Blokhin shot an estimated 50,000 people,[47] making him ostensibly the most prolific official executioner in recorded world history.[45]

In August 1939, Stalin declared that he was going to "solve the Baltic problem", and thereafter, forced Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia to sign treaties for "mutual assistance".[36]

In November 1939, the Soviet Union invaded Finland. The Finnish defensive effort defied Soviet expectations, and after stiff losses, as well as the unsuccessful attempt to install a puppet government in Helsinki, Stalin settled for an interim peace granting the Soviet Union parts of Karelia and Salla (9% of Finnish territory).[48] Soviet official casualty counts in the war exceeded 200,000,[49] while Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev later claimed the casualties may have been one million.[50] After this campaign, Stalin took actions to modify training and improve propaganda efforts in the Soviet military.[51]

In mid-June 1940, when international attention was focused on the German invasion of France, Soviet NKVD troops raided border posts in the Baltic countries.[36][52] Stalin claimed that the mutual assistance treaties had been violated, and gave six-hour ultimatums for new governments to be formed in each country, including lists of persons for cabinet posts provided by the Kremlin.[36] Thereafter, state administrations were liquidated and replaced by Soviet cadres, followed by mass repression[36] in which 34,250 Latvians, 75,000 Lithuanians and almost 60,000 Estonians were deported or killed.[53] Elections for parliament and other offices were held with single candidates listed, the official results of which showed pro-Soviet candidates approval by 92.8 percent of the voters of Estonia, 97.6 percent of the voters in Latvia and 99.2 percent of the voters in Lithuania.[54] The resulting peoples' assemblies immediately requested admission into the USSR, which was granted.[54] In late June 1940, Stalin directed the Soviet annexation of Bessarabia and northern Bukovina, proclaiming this formerly Romanian territory part of the Moldavian SSR.[55] But in annexing northern Bukovina, Stalin had gone beyond the agreed limits.[55] The invasion of Bukovina violated the pact, as it went beyond the Soviet sphere of influence agreed with Germany.[56]

 
Stalin and Molotov on the signing of the Soviet–Japanese Neutrality Pact with the Empire of Japan, 1941

After the Tripartite Pact was signed by Axis Powers Germany, Japan and Italy, in October 1940, Stalin personally wrote to Ribbentrop about entering an agreement regarding a "permanent basis" for their "mutual interests."[57] Stalin sent Molotov to Berlin to negotiate the terms for the Soviet Union to join the Axis and potentially enjoy the spoils of the pact.[55] At Stalin's direction,[58] Molotov insisted on Soviet interest in Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary, Yugoslavia and Greece,[58] though Stalin had earlier unsuccessfully personally lobbied Turkish leaders to not sign a mutual assistance pact with Britain and France.[59] Ribbentrop asked Molotov to sign another secret protocol with the statement: "The focal point of the territorial aspirations of the Soviet Union would presumably be centered south of the territory of the Soviet Union in the direction of the Indian Ocean."[58] Molotov took the position that he could not take a "definite stand" on this without Stalin's agreement.[58] Stalin did not agree with the suggested protocol, and negotiations broke down.[57] In response to a later German proposal, Stalin stated that the Soviets would join the Axis if Germany foreclosed acting in the Soviet's sphere of influence.[60] Shortly thereafter, Hitler issued a secret internal directive related to his plan to invade the Soviet Union.[60]

 
Photo from 1943 exhumation of mass grave of Polish officers killed by NKVD in the Katyn Forest in 1940

In an effort to demonstrate peaceful intentions toward Germany, on 13 April 1941, Stalin oversaw the signing of a neutrality pact with Japan.[61] Since the Treaty of Portsmouth, Russia had been competing with Japan for spheres of influence in the Far East, where there was a power vacuum with the collapse of Imperial China. Although similar to the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact with the Third Reich, that Soviet Union signed Soviet–Japanese Neutrality Pact with the Empire of Japan, to maintain the national interest of Soviet's sphere of influence in the European continent as well as the Far East conquest, whilst among the few countries in the world diplomatically recognizing Manchukuo, and allowed the rise of German invasion in Europe and Japanese aggression in Asia, but the Japanese defeat of Battles of Khalkhin Gol was the forceful factor to the temporary settlement before Soviet invasion of Manchuria in 1945 as the result of Yalta Conference. While Stalin had little faith in Japan's commitment to neutrality, he felt that the pact was important for its political symbolism, to reinforce a public affection for Germany, before military confrontation when Hitler controlled Western Europe and for Soviet Union to take control Eastern Europe.[62] Stalin felt that there was a growing split in German circles about whether Germany should initiate a war with the Soviet Union, though Stalin was not aware of Hitler's further military ambition.[62]

Termination of the pact edit

During the early morning of 22 June 1941, Hitler terminated the pact by launching Operation Barbarossa, the Axis invasion of Soviet-held territories and the Soviet Union that began the war on the Eastern Front. Before the invasion, Stalin thought that Germany would not attack the Soviet Union until Germany had defeated Britain. At the same time, Soviet generals warned Stalin that Germany had concentrated forces on its borders. Two highly placed Soviet spies in Germany, "Starshina" and "Korsikanets", had sent dozens of reports to Moscow containing evidence of preparation for a German attack. Further warnings came from Richard Sorge, a Soviet spy in Tokyo working undercover as a German journalist who had penetrated deep into the German Embassy in Tokyo by seducing the wife of General Eugen Ott, the German ambassador to Japan.[63]

 
German soldiers march by a burning home in Soviet Ukraine, October 1941.

Seven days before the invasion, a Soviet spy in Berlin, part of the Rote Kapelle (Red Orchestra) spy network, warned Stalin that the movement of German divisions to the borders was to wage war on the Soviet Union.[63] Five days before the attack, Stalin received a report from a spy in the German Air Ministry that "all preparations by Germany for an armed attack on the Soviet Union have been completed, and the blow can be expected at any time."[64] In the margin, Stalin wrote to the people's commissar for state security, "you can send your 'source' from the headquarters of German aviation to his mother. This is not a 'source' but a dezinformator."[64] Although Stalin increased Soviet western border forces to 2.7 million men and ordered them to expect a possible German invasion, he did not order a full-scale mobilisation of forces to prepare for an attack.[65] Stalin felt that a mobilization might provoke Hitler to prematurely begin to wage war against the Soviet Union, which Stalin wanted to delay until 1942 in order to strengthen Soviet forces.[66]

In the initial hours after the German attack began, Stalin hesitated, wanting to ensure that the German attack was sanctioned by Hitler, rather than the unauthorized action of a rogue general.[67] Accounts by Nikita Khrushchev and Anastas Mikoyan claim that, after the invasion, Stalin retreated to his dacha in despair for several days and did not participate in leadership decisions.[68] But, some documentary evidence of orders given by Stalin contradicts these accounts, leading historians such as Roberts to speculate that Khrushchev's account is inaccurate.[69]

Stalin soon quickly made himself a Marshal of the Soviet Union, then country's highest military rank and Supreme Commander in Chief of the Soviet Armed Forces aside from being Premier and General-Secretary of the ruling Communist Party of the Soviet Union that made him the leader of the nation, as well as the People's Commissar for Defence, which is equivalent to the U.S. Secretary of War at that time and the U.K. Minister of Defence and formed the State Defense Committee to coordinate military operations with himself also as chairman. He chaired the Stavka, the highest defense organisation of the country. Meanwhile, Marshal Georgy Zhukov was named to be the Deputy Supreme Commander in Chief of the Soviet Armed Forces.

 
Soviet prisoners of war starving in the Nazi Mauthausen concentration camp.

In the first three weeks of the invasion, as the Soviet Union tried to defend itself against large German advances, it suffered 750,000 casualties, and lost 10,000 tanks and 4,000 aircraft.[70] In July 1941, Stalin completely reorganized the Soviet military, placing himself directly in charge of several military organizations. This gave him complete control of his country's entire war effort; more control than any other leader in World War II.[71]

A pattern soon emerged where Stalin embraced the Red Army's strategy of conducting multiple offensives, while the Germans overran each of the resulting small, newly gained grounds, dealing the Soviets severe casualties.[72] The most notable example of this was the Battle of Kiev, where over 600,000 Soviet troops were quickly killed, captured or missing.[72]

By the end of 1941, the Soviet military had suffered 4.3 million casualties[73] and the Germans had captured 3.0 million Soviet prisoners, 2.0 million of whom died in German captivity by February 1942.[70] German forces had advanced c. 1,700 kilometres, and maintained a linearly-measured front of 3,000 kilometres.[74] The Red Army put up fierce resistance during the war's early stages. Even so, according to Glantz, they were plagued by an ineffective defence doctrine against well-trained and experienced German forces, despite possessing some modern Soviet equipment, such as the KV-1 and T-34 tanks.

Soviets stop the Germans edit

While the Germans made huge advances in 1941, killing millions of Soviet soldiers, at Stalin's direction the Red Army directed sizable resources to prevent the Germans from achieving one of their key strategic goals, the attempted capture of Leningrad. They held the city at the cost of more than a million Soviet soldiers in the region and more than a million civilians, many of whom died from starvation.[75]

While the Germans pressed forward, Stalin was confident of an eventual Allied victory over Germany. In September 1941, Stalin told British diplomats that he wanted two agreements: (1) a mutual assistance/aid pact and (2) a recognition that, after the war, the Soviet Union would gain the territories in countries that it had taken pursuant to its division of Eastern Europe with Hitler in the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact.[76] The British agreed to assistance but refused to agree to the territorial gains, which Stalin accepted months later as the military situation had deteriorated somewhat by mid-1942.[76] On 6 November 1941, Stalin rallied his generals in a speech given underground in Moscow, telling them that the German blitzkrieg would fail because of weaknesses in the German rear in Nazi-occupied Europe and the underestimation of the strength of the Red Army, and that the German war effort would crumble against the Anglo-American-Soviet "war engine".[77]

Correctly calculating that Hitler would direct efforts to capture Moscow, Stalin concentrated his forces to defend the city, including numerous divisions transferred from Soviet eastern sectors after he determined that Japan would not attempt an attack in those areas.[78] By December, Hitler's troops had advanced to within 25 kilometres (16 mi) of the Kremlin in Moscow.[79] On 5 December, the Soviets launched a counteroffensive, pushing German troops back c. 80 kilometres (50 mi) from Moscow in what was the first major defeat of the Wehrmacht in the war.[79]

 
Iconic photo of a Soviet officer (thought to be Ukrainian Alexei Yeryomenko) leading his soldiers into battle against the invading German army, 12 July 1942, in Soviet Ukraine

In early 1942, the Soviets began a series of offensives labelled "Stalin's First Strategic Offensives". The counteroffensive bogged down, in part due to mud from rain in the spring of 1942.[73] Stalin's attempt to retake Kharkov in the Ukraine ended in the disastrous encirclement of Soviet forces, with over 200,000 Soviet casualties suffered.[80] Stalin attacked the competence of the generals involved.[81] General Georgy Zhukov and others subsequently revealed that some of those generals had wished to remain in a defensive posture in the region, but Stalin and others had pushed for the offensive. Some historians have doubted Zhukov's account.[81]

 
Maxim Litvinov, the Soviet ambassador to the United States

At the same time, Hitler was worried about American popular support after the U.S. entry into the war following the Attack on Pearl Harbor, and a potential Anglo-American invasion on the Western Front in 1942 (which did not occur until the summer of 1944). He changed his primary goal from an immediate victory in the East, to the more long-term goal of securing the southern Soviet Union to protect oil fields vital to the long-term German war effort.[82] While Red Army generals correctly judged the evidence that Hitler would shift his efforts south, Stalin thought it a flanking move in the German attempt to take Moscow.[81]

The German southern campaign began with a push to capture the Crimea, which ended in disaster for the Red Army. Stalin publicly criticised his generals' leadership.[80] In their southern campaigns, the Germans took 625,000 Red Army prisoners in July and August 1942 alone.[83] At the same time, in a meeting in Moscow, Churchill privately told Stalin that the British and Americans were not yet prepared to make an amphibious landing against a fortified Nazi-held French coast in 1942, and would direct their efforts to invading German-held North Africa. He pledged a campaign of massive strategic bombing, to include German civilian targets.[84]

Estimating that the Russians were "finished," the Germans began another southern operation in the autumn of 1942, the Battle of Stalingrad.[83] Hitler insisted upon splitting German southern forces in a simultaneous siege of Stalingrad and an offensive against Baku on the Caspian Sea.[85] Stalin directed his generals to spare no effort to defend Stalingrad.[86] Although the Soviets suffered in excess of more than 2 million casualties at Stalingrad,[87] their victory over German forces, including the encirclement of 290,000 Axis troops, marked a turning point in the war.[88]

Within a year after Barbarossa, Stalin reopened the churches in the Soviet Union. He may have wanted to motivate the majority of the population who had Christian beliefs. By changing the official policy of the party and the state towards religion, he could engage the Church and its clergy in mobilising the war effort. On 4 September 1943, Stalin invited the metropolitans Sergius, Alexy and Nikolay to the Kremlin. He proposed to reestablish the Moscow Patriarchate, which had been suspended since 1925, and elect the Patriarch. On 8 September 1943, Metropolitan Sergius was elected Patriarch. One account said that Stalin's reversal followed a sign that he supposedly received from heaven.[89]

The Frontoviki edit

Over 75% of Red Army divisions were listed as "rifle divisions" (as infantry divisions were known in the Red Army).[90] In the Imperial Russian Army, the strelkovye (rifle) divisions were considered more prestigious than pekhotnye (infantry) divisions, and in the Red Army, all infantry divisions were labeled strelkovye divisions.[90] The Soviet rifleman was known as a peshkom ("on foot") or more frequently as a frontovik (Russian: фронтовик—front fighter; plural Russian: фронтовикиfrontoviki).[90] The term frontovik was not equivalent to the German term Landser, the American G.I Joe nor the British Tommy Atkins, all of which referred to soldiers in general, as the term frontovik applied only to those infantrymen who fought at the front.[90] All able-bodied males in the Soviet Union became eligible for conscription at the age of 19—those attending a university or a technical school were able to escape conscription, and even then could defer military service for a period ranging from 3 months to a year.[90] Deferments could be only offered three times.[90] The Soviet Union comprised 20 military districts, which corresponded with the borders of the oblasts, and were further divided into raions (counties).[91] The raions had assigned quotas specifying the number of men they had to produce for the Red Army every year.[92] The vast majority of the frontoviks had been born in the 1920s and had grown up knowing nothing other than the Soviet system.[93] Every year, men received draft notices in the mail informing to report at a collection point, usually a local school, and customarily reported to duty with a bag or suitcase carrying some spare clothes, underwear, and tobacco.[93] The conscripts then boarded a train to a military reception center where they were issued uniforms, underwent a physical test, had their heads shaven and were given a steam bath to rid them of lice.[93] A typical soldier was given ammo pouches, shelter-cape, ration bag, cooking pot, water bottle and an identity tube containing papers listing pertinent personal information.[94]

During training, conscripts woke up between 5 and 6 a.m.; training lasted for 10 to 12 hours—six days of the week.[95] Much of the training was done by rote and consisted of instruction.[96][need quotation to verify] Before 1941 training had lasted for six months, but after the war, training was shorted to a few weeks.[95] After finishing training, all men had to take the Oath of the Red Army which read:

I______, a citizen of the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics, entering into the ranks of the Red Army of the Workers and Peasants', take this oath and solemnly promise to be a honest, brave, disciplined, vigilant fighter, staunchly to protect military and state secrets, and unquestioningly to obey all military regulations and orders of commanders and superiors.

I promise conscientiously to study military affairs, in every way to protect state secrets and state property, and to my last breath to be faithful to the people, the Soviet Motherland, and the Workers-Peasants' Government. I am always prepared on order of the Workers and Peasants Government to rise to the defense of my Motherland, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics; and as a fighting man of the Red Army of Workers and Peasants', I promise to defend it bravely, skillfully, with dignity and honor, sparing neither my blood nor my life itself for the achievement of total victory over our enemies.

If by evil intent I should violate this, my solemn oath, then let the severe punishment of Soviet law and the total hatred and contempt of the working classes befall me.[97]

Tactics were based on the 1936 training manual and on the revised edition of 1942.[98] Small-unit movements and how to build defensive positions were laid out in a manner that was easy to understand and memorize.[99] The manuals had the force of law and violations of the manuals counted as legal offenses.[99] Soviet tactics always had the platoons attacking in the same way—with the platoons usually broken into four sections occupying about 100 yards (91 m) on average.[100] The only complex formation was the diamond formation—with one section advancing, two behind and one in the rear.[100] Unlike the Wehrmacht, the Red Army did not engage in leap-frogging of sections with one section providing fire support to the sections that were advancing: instead all of the sections and platoons attacked en masse.[100] The other only variation was for the sections to "seep" into a position by infiltration.[100]

 
British and Soviet servicemen over body of swastikaed dragon
 
U.S. government poster showing a friendly Red Army soldier, 1942

When the order Na shturm, marshch! (Assault, march!) was given, the Soviet infantry would charge the enemy while shouting the traditional Russian battle cry Urra! (Russian: ура  !, pronounced oo-rah), the sound of which many German veterans found terrifying.[101] During the charge, the riflemen would fire with rifles and submachine guns while throwing grenades before closing in for blizhnii boi (Russian: ближний бой—close combat—close-quarter fighting with guns, bayonets, rifle butts, knives, digging tools and fists), a type of fighting at which the Red Army excelled.[102] On the defensive, the frontoviki had a reputation for their skill at camouflaging their positions and for their discipline in withholding fire until Axis forces came within close range.[102] Before 1941 Red Army doctrine had called for opening fire at maximum range, but experience quickly taught the advantages of ambushing the enemy with surprise fire at close ranges from multiple positions.[102]

The typical frontovik during the war was an ethnic Russian aged 19–24 with an average height of 5 feet 6 inches (1.68 m).[103] Most of the men were shaven bald to prevent lice and the few who did grow their hair kept it very short.[103] The American historian Gordon Rottman describes the uniforms as "simple and functional".[103] In combat, the men wore olive-brown helmets or the pilotka (side cap).[103] Officers wore a shlem (helmet) or a furazhka [ru] (Russian: фуражкаpeaked cap), a round service-hat with a black visor and a red star.[103] Rottman described Soviet weapons as "...known for their simplicity, ruggedness and general reliability".[104] The standard rifle, a Mosin-Nagant 7.62 mm M 1891/30, although heavy, was an effective weapon that crucially was not affected by the cold.[105] Every rifle section had one or two 7.62 mm Degtyaryov DP light machine guns to provide fire support.[106] By 1944, one of every four frontoviki was armed with the 7.62 mm PPSh-41 (Pistolet-pulemet Shapagina-Pistol Automatic Shpagin), a type of submachine gun known as a "rugged and reliable weapon", if somewhat underpowered.[104]

The frontovik usually carried all he had in a simple bag.[107] Most of the frontoviki had a perevyazochny paket (wound dressing packet), a razor, a shovel and would be very lucky to have a towel and toothbrush.[108] Toothpaste, shampoo and soap were extremely rare.[108] Usually sticks with chewed ends were used for brushing teeth.[108] Latrine pits were dug, as portable toilets were rare in the Red Army.[109] Soldiers frequently slept outdoors, even during the winter.[109] Food was usually abysmal and often in short supply, especially in 1941 and 1942.[109] The frontoviki detested the rear-service troops who did not face the dangers of combat as krysy (Russian: крысы—rats; singular: Russian: крыса, romanizedkrysa).[110] The frontovik lived on a diet of black rye bread; canned meats like fish and tushonka (stewed pork); shchi (cabbage soup) and kasha (porridge).".[110] Kasha and shchi were so common that a popular slogan in the Red Army was "shchi da kasha, pisha nasha" ("schchi and kasha, that's our fare").[110] Chai (Russian: чай—hot sugared tea) was an extremely popular beverage, along with beer and vodka.[111] Makhorka, a type of cheap tobacco rolled into handmade cigarettes, was the standard for smoking.[111]

Rottmann describes medical care as "marginal".[111] A shortage of doctors, medical equipment and drugs meant those wounded often died, usually in immense pain.[111] Morphine was unknown in the Red Army.[111] Most Red Army soldiers had not received preventive inoculations, and diseases became major problems—with malaria, pneumonia, diphtheria, tuberculosis, typhus, dysentery, and meningitis in particular regularly sickening Red-Army men.[111] In the winter frostbite often sent soldiers to the medical system, while in the spring and fall rains made trench foot a common ailment.[111] The frontoviki had a pay day once every month, but often did not receive their wages.[112] All soldiers were exempt from taxes.[112] In 1943 a private was paid 600 roubles per month, a corporal 1,000 roubles, a junior sergeant 2,000 roubles and a sergeant 3,000 roubles.[112] Special pay accrued to those serving in guards units, tanks, and anti-tank units, to paratroopers and to those decorated for bravery in combat.[112] Those units that greatly distinguished themselves in combat had the prefix "Guards" (Russian: Гвардии, romanizedGvardii, lit.'of the Guard') prefixed to their unit title, a title of great respect and honor that brought better pay and rations.[113] In the Imperial Russian Army, the elite had always been the Imperial Guards regiments, and the title "Guards" when applied to a military unit in Russia still has elitist connotations.

Discipline was harsh and men could be executed, for desertion and ordering a retreat without orders.[112] To maintain morale, the men were often entertained with films shown on outdoor screens, together with musical troupes performing music, singing and dancing.[114] The balalaika—regarded as a Russian "national instrument"—often featured as part of the entertainment.[114] The Soviet regime held the position that essentially sex did not exist, and no official publications made any references to matters sexual.[114] After the Germans hanged the 18-year old partisan heroine Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya (29 November 1941), the photo of her corpse caused a sensation when published in early 1942 as she was topless, which ensured that the photo attracted much prurient interest. Unlike the German and French armies, the Red Army had no system of field brothels and the frontoviki were not issued condoms as men in the British and American armies were.[114] Venereal diseases were a major problem and those soldiers afflicted were harshly punished if discovered.[114] The widespread rapes committed by the Red Army when entering Germany had little to do with sexual desire, but were instead acts of power, in the words of Rottman "the basest form of revenge and humiliation the soldiers could inflict on the Germans".[114] It was a common practice for officers to take "campaign wives" or PPZh (Russian: походно-полевые жены, romanizedpokhodno-polevy zheny (ППЖ), lit.'field marching wives'). Women serving in the Red Army Sometimes were told that they were now the mistresses of the officers, regardless of what they felt about the matter.[115] The "campaign wives" were often nurses, signalers and clerks who wore a black beret.[116] Despite being forced to become the concubines of the officers, they were widely hated by the frontoviki, who saw the "campaign wives" as trading sex for more favorable positions.[117] The writer Vasily Grossman recorded typical remarks about the "campaign wives" in 1942: "Where's the general?" [someone asks]. "Sleeping with his whore." And these girls had once wanted to be 'Tanya',[118] or Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya.[119]

The frontoviki had to live, fight and die in small circular foxholes dug into the earth with enough room for one or two men. Slit trenches connected what the Germans called "Russian holes".[113] The soldiers were usually not issued blankets or sleeping bags, even in the winter.[120] Instead, the frontoviki slept in their coats and shelter-capes, usually on pine, evergreen needles, fir boughs, piled leaves or straw.[120] In the winter, the temperature could drop as low as -60 °F (-50 °C), making General Moroz (General Frost) as much an enemy as the Germans.[120] Spring started in April and with it came rains and snowmelt, turning the battlefields into a muddy quagmire.[120] Summers were dusty and hot while with the fall came the rasputitsa (time without roads) as heavy autumn rains once again turned the battlefields into muddy quagmires that made the spring rains look tame by comparison.[121]

The Soviet Union encompassed over 150 different languages and dialects but Russians comprised the majority of the Red Army and Russian was the language of command.[121] The Red Army had very few ethnic units, as the policy was one of sliianie (Russian: слияние, lit.'blending') in which men from the non-Russian groups were assigned to units with Russian majorities.[121] The few exceptions to this rule included the Cossack units and the troops from the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, who however were few in number.[122] The experience of combat tended to bind the men together regardless of their language or ethnicity, with one Soviet veteran recalling: "We were all bleeding the same blood.".[123] Despite a history of anti-Semitism in Russia, Jewish veterans serving in the frontovik units described anti-Semitism as rare, instead recalling a sense of belonging.[123] During the first six months of Operation Barbarossa, the Wehrmacht and the SS had a policy of shooting all of the commissars. Jews serving in the Red Army who were taken prisoner by German forces also received short shrift.[124][need quotation to verify][125][126] During the war, the Soviet authorities toned down pro-atheist propaganda, and Eastern Orthodox priests blessed units going into battle, though chaplains were not allowed.[123] Muslims from Central Asia, the Caucasus, the Volga and the Crimea were allowed to practice their religion discreetly, though—as with Eastern Orthodox—no chaplains were allowed.[123] Most soldiers carried lucky talismans.[127] Despite official Soviet atheism, many soldiers wore crosses around their necks and crossed themselves in the traditional Eastern Orthodox manner before going into battle, though the British historian Catherine Merridale interprets these actions as more "totemic" gestures meant to ensure good luck rather than expressions of "real" faith.[128] One of the most popular talismans was the poem Wait for Me by Konstantin Simonov, which he wrote in October 1941 for his fiancée Valentina Serova.[127] The popularity of Wait for Me was such that almost all ethnic Russians in the Red Army knew the poem by heart, and carried a copy of the poem—together with photographs of their girlfriends or wives back home—to reflect their desire to return to their loved ones.[127]

"Political work" done by politruks and kommissars took much of the soldiers' spare time, as at least one hour every day was given to political indoctrination into Communism for soldiers not engaged in combat.[129] The term Nazi was never used to describe the enemy, as the term was an acronym for National-Sozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (National Socialist German Workers' Party) and the politruks and kommissars found explaining why the enemy called themselves "National Socialists" to be too confusing for the frontoviki.[129] The preferred terms for the enemy were "fascists", Gitlertsy (Hitlerites), Germanskie and nemetskiye (Russian: немецкие—a Russian term for Germans).[130] The commissars had the duty of monitoring Red Army officers for any sign of disloyalty, and maintained a network of informers known as seksots (Russian: сексоты—secret collaborators) within the ranks.[130] In October 1942 the system of dual command, which dated back to the Russian Civil War, and in which the officers shared authority with the commissars, was abolished—thenceforward only officers had the power of command.[131] Many commissars after the Stalin's Decree 307 of 9 October 1942 were shocked to find how much the officers and men hated them.[132] The commissars now become the politruks or deputy commanders for political affairs.[131] The politruks no longer had the power of command, but still evaluated both officers and men for their political loyalty, carried out political indoctrination and had the power to order summary executions of anyone suspected of cowardice or treason.[131] Such executions were known as devyat gram (nine grams—a reference to the weight of a bullet), pustit v rakhod (to expend someone) or vyshka (a shortened form of vysshaya mera nakazanija—extreme penalty).[131] Despite these fearsome powers, many of the frontoviki were often openly contemptuous of the politruks if subjected to excessively long boring lectures on the finer points of Marxism–Leninism, and officers tended to win conflicts with the poltitruks as military merit started to count more in the Great Patriotic War than did political zeal.[131] Relations between the officers and men were usually good, with junior officers in particular being seen as soratniki (comrades in arms) as they lived under the same conditions and faced the same dangers as the frontoviki.[133] Officers usually had only a high-school education—very few had gone to university—and coming from the same social milieu as their men ensured that they could relate to them.[134] The frontoviki usually addressed their company commanders as Batya (father).[134]

Soviet push to Germany edit

 
The center of Stalingrad after liberation in 1943

The Soviets repulsed the important German strategic southern campaign and, although 2.5 million Soviet casualties were suffered in that effort, it permitted the Soviets to take the offensive for most of the rest of the war on the Eastern Front.[135]

 
World War II military deaths in Europe by theater and by year. The German armed forces suffered 80% of its military deaths in the Eastern Front.[136]

Stalin personally told a Polish general requesting information about missing Polish officers that all of the Poles were freed, and that not all could be accounted because the Soviets "lost track" of them in Manchuria.[137][138][139] After Polish railroad workers found the mass grave,[140] the Nazis used the massacre to attempt to drive a wedge between Stalin and the other Allies,[141] including bringing in a European commission of investigators from twelve countries to examine the graves.[142] In 1943, as the Soviets prepared to retake Poland, Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels correctly guessed that Stalin would attempt to falsely claim that the Germans massacred the victims.[143] As Goebbels predicted, the Soviets had a "commission" investigate the matter, falsely concluding that the Germans had killed the PoWs.[42] The Soviets did not admit responsibility until 1990.[144]

In 1943, Stalin ceded to his generals' call for the Soviet Union to take a defensive stance because of disappointing losses after Stalingrad, a lack of reserves for offensive measures and a prediction that the Germans would likely next attack a bulge in the Soviet front at Kursk such that defensive preparations there would more efficiently use resources.[145] The Germans did attempt an encirclement attack at Kursk, which was successfully repulsed by the Soviets[145] after Hitler cancelled the offensive, in part, because of the Allied invasion of Sicily,[146] though the Soviets suffered over 800,000 casualties.[147] Kursk also marked the beginning of a period where Stalin became more willing to listen to the advice of his generals.[148]

By the end of 1943, the Soviets occupied half of the territory taken by the Germans from 1941 to 1942.[148] Soviet military industrial output also had increased substantially from late 1941 to early 1943 after Stalin had moved factories well to the East of the front, safe from German invasion and air attack.[149] The strategy paid off, as such industrial increases were able to occur even while the Germans in late 1942 occupied more than half of European Russia, including 40 percent (80 million) of its population, and approximately 2,500,000 square kilometres (970,000 sq mi) of Soviet territory.[149] The Soviets had also prepared for war for more than a decade, including preparing 14 million civilians with some military training.[149] Accordingly, while almost all of the original 5 million men of the Soviet army had been wiped out by the end of 1941, the Soviet military had swelled to 8 million members by the end of that year.[149] Despite substantial losses in 1942 far in excess of German losses, Red Army size grew even further, to 11 million.[149] While there is substantial debate whether Stalin helped or hindered these industrial and manpower efforts, Stalin left most economic wartime management decisions in the hands of his economic experts.[150] While some scholars claim that evidence suggests that Stalin considered, and even attempted, negotiating peace with Germany in 1941 and 1942, others find this evidence unconvincing and even fabricated.[151]

 
Soviet advances from 1 August 1943 to 31 December 1944:
  to 1 December 1943
  to 30 April 1944
  to 19 August 1944
  to 31 December 1944

In November 1943, Stalin met with Churchill and Roosevelt in Tehran.[152] Roosevelt told Stalin that he hoped that Britain and America opening a second front against Germany could initially draw 30–40 German division from the Eastern Front.[153] Stalin and Roosevelt, in effect, ganged up on Churchill by emphasizing the importance of a cross-channel invasion of German-held northern France, while Churchill had always felt that Germany was more vulnerable in the "soft underbelly" of Italy (which the Allies had already invaded) and the Balkans.[153] The parties later agreed that Britain and America would launch a cross-channel invasion of France in May 1944, along with a separate invasion of Southern France.[154] Stalin insisted that, after the war, the Soviet Union should incorporate the portions of Poland it occupied pursuant to the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact with Germany, which Churchill tabled.[155]

In 1944, the Soviet Union made significant advances across Eastern Europe toward Germany,[156] including Operation Bagration, a massive offensive in Belarus against the German Army Group Centre.[157] Stalin, Roosevelt and Churchill closely coordinated, such that Bagration occurred at roughly the same time as American and British forces initiation of the invasion of German held Western Europe on France's northern coast.[157] The operation resulted in the Soviets retaking Belarus and western Ukraine, along with the successful effective destruction of the Army Group Center and 300,000 German casualties, though at the cost of more than 750,000 Soviet casualties.[157]

 
Romanians greet the Soviet army entering the city of Bucharest on 31 August 1944.

Successes at Operation Bagration and in the year that followed were, in large part, due to an operational improved of battle-hardened Red Army, which has learned painful lessons from previous years battling the powerful Wehrmacht: better planning of offensives, efficient use of artillery, better handling of time and space during attacks in contradiction to Stalin's order "not a step back". To a lesser degree, the success of Bagration was due to a weakened Wehrmacht that lacked the fuel and armament they needed to operate effectively,[158] growing Soviet advantages in manpower and materials, and the attacks of Allies on the Western Front.[157] In his 1944 May Day speech, Stalin praised the Western Allies for diverting German resources in the Italian Campaign, Tass published detailed lists of the large numbers of supplies coming from Western Allies, and Stalin made a speech in November 1944 stating that Allied efforts in the West had already quickly drawn 75 German divisions to defend that region, without which, the Red Army could not yet have driven the Wehrmacht from Soviet territories.[159] The weakened Wehrmacht also helped Soviet offensives because no effective German counter-offensive could be launched,[157]

 
U.K. Prime Minister Winston Churchill, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Soviet Leader Joseph Stalin in Yalta, Soviet Union in February 1945

Beginning in the summer of 1944, a reinforced German Army Centre Group did prevent the Soviets from advancing in around Warsaw for nearly half a year.[160] Some historians claim that the Soviets' failure to advance was a purposeful Soviet stall to allow the Wehrmacht to slaughter members of a Warsaw Uprising by the Polish home army in August 1944 that occurred as the Red Army approached, though others dispute the claim and cite sizable unsuccessful Red Army efforts to attempt to defeat the Wehrmacht in that region.[160] Earlier in 1944, Stalin had insisted that the Soviets would annex the portions of Poland it divided with Germany in the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, while the Polish government in exile, which the British insisted must be involved in postwar Poland, demanded that the Polish border be restored to prewar locations.[161] The rift further highlighted Stalin's blatant hostility toward the anti-communist Polish government in exile and their Polish home army, which Stalin felt threatened his plans to create a post-war Poland friendly to the Soviet Union.[160] Further exacerbating the rift was Stalin's refusal to resupply the Polish home army, and his refusal to allow American supply planes to use the necessary Soviet air bases to ferry supplies to the Polish home army, which Stalin referred to in a letter to Roosevelt and Churchill as "power-seeking criminals".[162] Worried about the possible repercussions of those actions, Stalin later began a Soviet supply airdrop to Polish rebels, though most of the supplies ended up in the hands of the Germans.[163] The uprising ended in disaster with 20,000 Polish rebels and up to 200,000 civilians killed by German forces, with Soviet forces entering the city in January 1945.[163]

 
Soviet soldiers of the 1st Baltic Front during an attack in the Latvian city of Jelgava, 16 August 1944

Other important advances occurred in late 1944, such as the invasion of Romania in August and Bulgaria.[163] The Soviet Union declared war on Bulgaria in September 1944 and invaded the country, installing a communist government.[164] Following the invasion of these Balkan countries, Stalin and Churchill met in the autumn of 1944, where they agreed upon various percentages for "spheres of influence" in several Balkan states, though the diplomats for neither leader knew what the term actually meant.[165] The Red Army also expelled German forces from Lithuania and Estonia in late 1944 at the cost of 260,000 Soviet casualties.

The Vyborg–Petrozavodsk offensive expelled Finnish forces from territory they had gained in 1941, but the Soviet advance was halted at the Battle of Tali-Ihantala. Further north, Finnish victories in the Battles of Vuosalmi and Ilomantsi halted additional Soviet attempts to break through Finnish lines. The Finns and Soviets signed the Moscow Armistice on 19 September 1944, ending the Continuation War.

In late 1944, Soviet forces battled fiercely to capture Hungary in the Budapest Offensive, but could not take it, which became a topic so sensitive to Stalin that he refused to allow his commanders to speak of it.[166] The Germans held out in the subsequent Battle of Budapest until February 1945, when the remaining Hungarians signed an armistice with the Soviet Union.[166] Victory at Budapest permitted the Red Army to launch the Vienna Offensive in April 1945. To the northeast, the taking of Belarus and western Ukraine permitted the Soviets to launch the massive Vistula–Oder Offensive, where German intelligence had incorrectly guessed the Soviets would have a 3-to-1 numerical superiority advantage that was actually 5-to-1 (over 2 million Red Army personnel attacking 450,000 German defenders), the successful culmination of which resulted in the Red Army advancing from the Vistula River in Poland to the German Oder River in Eastern Germany.[167]

Stalin's shortcomings as a strategist are frequently noted regarding the massive Soviet loss of life and early Soviet defeats. An example of it is the summer offensive of 1942, which led to even more losses by the Red Army and the recapture of initiative by the Germans. Stalin eventually recognized his lack of know-how and relied on his professional generals to conduct the war.

Additionally, Stalin was well aware that other European armies had utterly disintegrated when faced with Nazi military efficacy and responded effectively by subjecting his army to galvanizing terror and nationalist appeals to patriotism. He also appealed to the Russian Orthodox Church.

Final victory edit

 
American and Soviet troops meet east of the Elbe River, April 1945

By April 1945 Nazi Germany faced its last days, with 1.9 million German soldiers in the East fighting 6.4 million Red Army soldiers while 1 million German soldiers in the West battled 4 million Western Allied soldiers.[168] While initial talk postulated a race to Berlin by the Allies, after Stalin successfully lobbied for Eastern Germany to fall within the Soviet "sphere of influence" at Yalta in February 1945, the Western Allies made no plans to seize the city by a ground operation.[169][170] Stalin remained suspicious that western Allied forces holding at the Elbe River might move on the German capital and, even in the last days, that the Americans might employ their two airborne divisions to capture the city.[171]

Stalin directed the Red Army to move rapidly in a broad front into Germany because he did not believe the Western Allies would hand over territory they occupied, while he made capturing Berlin the overriding objective.[172] After successfully capturing Eastern Prussia, three Red Army fronts converged on the heart of eastern Germany, and the Battle of the Oder-Neisse put the Soviets at the virtual gates of Berlin.[173] By April 24 elements of two Soviet fronts had encircled Berlin.[174] On April 20 Zhukov's 1st Belorussian Front had begun a massive shelling of Berlin that would not end until the city's surrender.[175] On 30 April 1945 Hitler and Eva Braun committed suicide, after which Soviet forces found their remains, which had been burned at Hitler's directive.[176] Remaining German forces officially surrendered unconditionally on 7 May 1945. Some historians argue that Stalin delayed the last final push for Berlin by two months in order to capture other areas for political reasons, which they argue gave the Wehrmacht time to prepare and increased Soviet casualties (which exceeded 400,000); other historians contest this account.[177]

 
Mass murder of Soviet civilians near Minsk. The Nazis murdered civilians in 5,295 different localities in occupied Soviet Belarus.

Despite the Soviets' possession of Hitler's remains, Stalin did not believe that his old nemesis was actually dead, a belief that persisted for years after the war.[178][179] Stalin later directed aides to spend years researching and writing a secret book about Hitler's life for his own private reading.[180]

Fending off the German invasion and pressing to victory over Nazi Germany in the Second World War required a tremendous sacrifice by the Soviet Union (more than by any other country in human history). Soviet casualties totaled around 27 million.[181] Although figures vary, the Soviet civilian death toll probably reached 18 million.[181] Millions of Soviet soldiers and civilians disappeared into German detention camps and slave-labor factories, while millions more suffered permanent physical and mental damage.[181] Soviet economic losses, including losses in resources and manufacturing capacity in western Russia and Ukraine, were also catastrophic.[181] The war resulted in the destruction of approximately 70,000 Soviet cities, towns and villages[182] - 6 million houses, 98,000 farms, 32,000 factories, 82,000 schools, 43,000 libraries, 6,000 hospitals and thousands of kilometers of roads and railway track.[182]

On 9 August 1945 the Soviet Union invaded Japanese-controlled Manchukuo and declared war on Japan. Battle-hardened Soviet troops and their experienced commanders rapidly conquered Japanese-held territories in Manchuria, southern Sakhalin (11-25 August 1945), the Kuril Islands (18 August to 1 September 1945) and parts of Korea (14 August 1945 to 24 August 1945). The Imperial Japanese government, vacillating following the bombing of Hiroshima (6 August 1945) and Nagasaki (9 August 1945), but faced with Soviet forces fast approaching the core Japanese homeland, announced its effective surrender to the Allies on 15 August 1945 and formally capitulated on 2 September 1945.

In June 1945 the Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union conferred on Stalin for his role in the Soviet victory the newly invented rank of Generalissimus of the Soviet Union, which became the country's highest military rank (superior to Marshal). Stalin's "cult of personality" emphasised his personal military leadership after the enumeration of "Stalin's ten victories" - extracted from Stalin's 6 November 1944 speech "27th anniversary of the Great October socialist revolution" (Russian: «27-я годовщина Великой Октябрьской социалистической революции») during the 1944 meeting of the Moscow Soviet of People's Deputies.

Repressions edit

On 16 August 1941, in attempts to revive a disorganized Soviet defense system, Stalin issued Order No. 270, demanding any commanders or commissars "tearing away their insignia and deserting or surrendering" to be considered malicious deserters. The order required superiors to shoot these deserters on the spot.[183] Their family members were subjected to arrest.[184] The second provision of the order directed all units fighting in encirclements to use every possibility to fight.[184] The order also required division commanders to demote and, if necessary, even to shoot on the spot those commanders who failed to command the battle directly in the battlefield.[184] Thereafter, Stalin also conducted a purge of several military commanders that were shot for "cowardice" without a trial.[184]

In June 1941, weeks after the German invasion began, Stalin directed that the retreating Red Army also sought to deny resources to the enemy through a scorched earth policy of destroying the infrastructure and food supplies of areas before the Germans could seize them, and that partisans were to be set up in evacuated areas.[69] This, along with abuse by German troops, caused starvation and suffering among the civilian population that was left behind. Stalin feared that Hitler would use disgruntled Soviet citizens to fight his regime, particularly people imprisoned in the Gulags. He thus ordered the NKVD to handle the situation. They responded by murdering approximately 100,000 political prisoners throughout the western parts of the Soviet Union, with methods that included bayoneting people to death and tossing grenades into crowded cells.[185] Many others were simply deported east.[186][187]

 
Beria's proposal of 29 January 1942, to execute 46 Soviet generals. Stalin's resolution: "Shoot all named in the list. – J. St."

In July 1942, Stalin issued Order No. 227, directing that any commander or commissar of a regiment, battalion or army, who allowed retreat without permission from his superiors was subject to military tribunal.[188] The order called for soldiers found guilty of disciplinary infractions to be forced into "penal battalions", which were sent to the most dangerous sections of the front lines.[188] From 1942 to 1945, 427,910 soldiers were assigned to penal battalions.[189] The order also directed "blocking detachments" to shoot fleeing panicked troops at the rear.[188] In the first three months following the order 1,000 penal troops were shot by "blocking detachments, and sent 24,933 troops to penal battalions.[188] Despite having some effect initially, this measure proved to have a deteriorating effect on the troops' morale, so by October 1942 the idea of regular blocking detachments was quietly dropped[190] By 29 October 1944 the blocking detachments were officially disbanded.[189][191][192]

Soviet POWs and forced labourers who survived German captivity were sent to special "transit" or "filtration" camps meant to determine which were potential traitors.[193] Of the approximately 4 million to be repatriated, 2,660,013 were civilians and 1,539,475 were former POWs.[193] Of the total, 2,427,906 were sent home, 801,152 were reconscripted into the armed forces,[193] 608,095 were enrolled in the work battalions of the defence ministry,[193] 226,127 were transferred to the authority of the NKVD for punishment, which meant a transfer to the Gulag system[193][194][195] and 89,468 remained in the transit camps as reception personnel until the repatriation process was finally wound up in the early 1950s.[193]

Soviet war crimes edit

 
Victims of NKVD prisoner massacres in June 1941

Soviet troops reportedly raped German women and girls, with total victim estimates ranging from tens of thousands to two million.[196] During and after the occupation of Budapest, (Hungary), an estimated 50,000 women and girls were raped.[197][198] Regarding rapes that took place in Yugoslavia, Stalin responded to a Yugoslav partisan leader's complaints saying, "Can't he understand it if a soldier who has crossed thousands of kilometres through blood and fire and death has fun with a woman or takes some trifle?"[198]

In former Axis countries, such as Germany, Romania and Hungary, Red Army officers generally viewed cities, villages and farms as being open to pillaging and looting.[199] For example, Red Army soldiers and NKVD members frequently looted transport trains in 1944 and 1945 in Poland[200] and Soviet soldiers set fire to the city centre of Demmin while preventing the inhabitants from extinguishing the blaze,[201] which, along with multiple rapes, played a part in causing over 900 citizens of the city to commit suicide.[202] In the Soviet occupation zone of Germany, when members of the SED reported to Stalin that looting and rapes by Soviet soldiers could result in negative consequences for the future of socialism in post-war East Germany, Stalin reacted angrily: "I shall not tolerate anybody dragging the honour of the Red Army through the mud."[203][204] Accordingly, all evidence of looting, rapes and destruction by the Red Army was deleted from archives in the Soviet occupation zone.[205]

According to recent figures, of an estimated 4 million POWs taken by the Russians, including Germans, Japanese, Hungarians, Romanians and others, some 580,000 never returned, presumably victims of privation or the Gulags, compared with 3.5 million Soviet POW who died in German camps out of the 5.6 million taken.[206]

War crimes by Nazi Germany edit

 
Men hanged as suspected partisans somewhere in the Soviet Union
 
German Einsatzgruppen murdering Jews in Ivanhorod, Ukraine, 1942

Nazi propaganda had told Wehrmacht's soldiers the invasion of the Soviet Union was a war of extermination.[207][208][209]

British historian Ian Kershaw concludes that the Wehrmacht's duty was to ensure that the people who met Hitler's requirements of being part of the Aryan Herrenvolk ("Aryan master race") had living space. He wrote that:

The Nazi revolution was broader than just the Holocaust. Its second goal was to eliminate Slavs from central and eastern Europe and to create a Lebensraum for Aryans. ... As Bartov (The Eastern Front; Hitler's Army) shows, it barbarised the German armies on the eastern front. Most of their three million men, from generals to ordinary soldiers, helped exterminate captured Slav soldiers and civilians. This was sometimes cold and deliberate murder of individuals (as with Jews), sometimes generalised brutality and neglect. ... German soldiers' letters and memoirs reveal their terrible reasoning: Slavs were 'the Asiatic-Bolshevik' horde, an inferior but threatening race[210]

During the rapid German advances in the early months of the war, nearly reaching the cities of Moscow and Leningrad, the bulk of Soviet industry which could not be evacuated was either destroyed or lost due to German occupation. Agricultural production was interrupted, with grain harvests left standing in the fields that would later cause hunger reminiscent of the early 1930s. In one of the greatest feats of war logistics, factories were evacuated on an enormous scale, with 1523 factories dismantled and shipped eastwards along four principal routes to the Caucasus, Central Asian, Ural, and Siberian regions. In general, the tools, dies and production technology were moved, along with the blueprints and their management, engineering staffs and skilled labor.[211]

The whole of the Soviet Union became dedicated to the war effort. The population of the Soviet Union was probably better prepared than any other nation involved in the fighting of World War II to endure the material hardships of the war. This is primarily because the Soviets were so used to shortages and coping with economic crisis in the past, especially during wartime—World War I brought similar restrictions on food. Still, conditions were severe. World War II was especially devastating to Soviet citizens because it was fought on their territory and caused massive destruction. In Leningrad, under German siege, over one million people died of starvation and disease. Many factory workers were teenagers, women and the elderly. The government implemented rationing in 1941 and first applied it to bread, flour, cereal, pasta, butter, margarine, vegetable oil, meat, fish, sugar, and confectionery all across the country. The rations remained largely stable in other places during the war. Additional rations were often so expensive that they could not add substantially to a citizen's food supply unless that person was especially well-paid. Peasants received no rations and had to make do with local resources that they farmed themselves. Most rural peasants struggled and lived in unbearable poverty, but others sold any surplus they had at a high price and a few became rouble millionaires, until a currency reform two years after the end of the war wiped out their wealth.[212]

Despite harsh conditions, the war led to a spike in Soviet nationalism and unity. Soviet propaganda toned down extreme Communist rhetoric of the past as the people now rallied by a belief of protecting their Motherland against the evils of German invaders. Ethnic minorities thought to be collaborators were forced into exile. Religion, which was previously shunned, became a part of Communist Party propaganda campaign in the Soviet society in order to mobilize the religious elements.

The social composition of Soviet society changed drastically during the war. There was a burst of marriages in June and July 1941 between people about to be separated by the war and in the next few years the marriage rate dropped off steeply, with the birth rate following shortly thereafter to only about half of what it would have been in peacetime. For this reason mothers with several children during the war received substantial honours and money benefits if they had a sufficient number of children—mothers could earn around 1,300 roubles for having their fourth child and earn up to 5,000 roubles for their 10th.[213]

German soldiers used to brand the bodies of captured partisan women – and other women as well – with the words "Whore for Hitler's troops" and rape them. Following their capture some German soldiers vividly bragged about committing rape and rape-homicide. Susan Brownmiller argues that rape played a pivotal role in Nazi aim to conquer and destroy people they considered inferior, such as Jews, Russians, and Poles. An extensive list of rapes committed by German soldiers was compiled in the so-called "Molotov Note" in 1942. Brownmiller points out that Nazis used rape as a weapon of terror.[214]

Examples of mass rapes in Soviet Union committed by German soldiers include

Smolensk: German command opened a brothel for officers in which hundreds of women and girls were driven by force, often by arms and hair.

Lviv: 32 women working in a garment factory were raped and murdered by German soldiers, in a public park. A priest trying to stop the atrocity was murdered.

Lviv: Germans soldiers raped Jewish girls, who were murdered after getting pregnant.

Survival in Leningrad edit

 
Soviet soldiers on the front in Leningrad

The city of Leningrad endured more suffering and hardships than any other city in the Soviet Union during the war, as it was under siege for 872 days, from September 8, 1941, to January 27, 1944.[215] Hunger, malnutrition, disease, starvation, and even cannibalism became common during the siege of Leningrad; civilians lost weight, grew weaker, and became more vulnerable to diseases.[216] Citizens of Leningrad managed to survive through a number of methods with varying degrees of success. Since only 400,000 people were evacuated before the siege began, this left 2.5 million in Leningrad, including 400,000 children. More managed to escape the city; this was most successful when Lake Ladoga froze over and people could walk over the ice road—or "Road of Life"—to safety.[217]

 
A victim of starvation in besieged Leningrad in 1941

Most survival strategies during the siege, though, involved staying within the city and facing the problems through resourcefulness or luck. One way to do this was by securing factory employment because many factories became autonomous and possessed more of the tools of survival during the winter, such as food and heat. Workers got larger rations than regular civilians and factories were likely to have electricity if they produced crucial goods. Factories also served as mutual-support centers and had clinics and other services like cleaning crews and teams of women who would sew and repair clothes. Factory employees were still driven to desperation on occasion and people resorted to eating glue or horses in factories where food was scarce, but factory employment was the most consistently successful method of survival, and at some food production plants not a single person died.[218]

Survival opportunities open to the larger Soviet community included bartering and farming on private land. Black markets thrived as private barter and trade became more common, especially between soldiers and civilians. Soldiers, who had more food to spare, were eager to trade with Soviet citizens that had extra warm clothes to trade. Planting vegetable gardens in the spring became popular, primarily because citizens got to keep everything grown on their own plots. The campaign also had a potent psychological effect and boosted morale, a survival component almost as crucial as bread.[219]

Some of the most desperate Soviet citizens turned to crime as a way to support themselves in trying times. Most common was the theft of food and of ration cards, which could prove fatal for a malnourished person if their card was stolen more than a day or two before a new card was issued. For these reasons, the stealing of food was severely punished and a person could be shot for as little as stealing a loaf of bread. More serious crimes, such as murder and cannibalism, also occurred, and special police squads were set up to combat these crimes, though by the end of the siege, roughly 1,500 had been arrested for cannibalism.[220]

Aftermath and damages edit

 
Soviet soldiers killed during the Toropets–Kholm Offensive, January 1942

Even though it won the conflict, the war had a profound and devastating long-term effect in the Soviet Union. The financial burden was catastrophic: by one estimate, the Soviet Union spent $192 billion. The US sent around $11 billion in Lend-Lease supplies to the Soviet Union during the war.[221]

American experts estimate that the Soviet Union lost almost all the wealth it gained from the industrialization efforts during the 1930s. Its economy also shrank by 20% between 1941 and 1945 and did not recover its pre-war levels all until the 1960s. British historian Clive Ponting estimates that the war damages amounted to 25 years of the Soviet Gross National Product.[222] Forty percent of the Soviet housing was damaged or destroyed.[223] Out of 2.5 million housing dwellings in the German occupied territories, over a million were destroyed. This rendered some 25 million Soviet citizens homeless.[224] The German occupation encompassed around 85 million Soviet citizens, or almost 45% of the entire Soviet population. At least 12 million Soviets fled towards the east, away from the invading German army. The Soviet sources claim that the Axis powers destroyed 1,710 towns and 70,000 villages, as well as 65,000 km of railroad tracks.[225]

The post-Soviet government of Russia puts the Soviet war 'losses' at 26.6 million, on the basis of the 1993 study by the Russian Academy of Sciences, including people dying as a result of battle and war related exposure. This includes 8,668,400 military deaths as calculated by the Russian Ministry of Defense.[226][227]

The figures published by the Russian Ministry of Defense have been accepted by the majority of historians and academics, some historians and academics give different estimates.

Bruce Robellet Kuniholm, professor of public policy and history, estimates that the Soviet side suffered 11,000,000 military deaths and additional 7,000,000 civilian deaths, thus amounting to a total of 18 million fatalities.[228][229] American military historian Earl F. Ziemke gives a figure of 12 million dead Soviet soldiers and further seven million dead civilians—a total of 19 million dead. He also notes that from autumn 1941 until autumn 1943 the front was never less than 2,400 miles (3,900 km) long.[230] German professor Beate Fieseler estimates that 2.6 million people, or 7.46 percent of the Soviet Army, were left disabled after the war.[231]

Public opinion survey edit

A poll conducted by YouGov in 2015 found that only 11% of Americans, 15% of French, 15% of Britons, and 27% of Germans believed that the Soviet Union contributed most to the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II. In contrast, the survey conducted in May 1945 found that 57% of the French public believed the Soviet Union contributed most.[232]

Citations edit

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General and cited references edit

  • Brackman, Roman (2001), The Secret File of Joseph Stalin: A Hidden Life, Frank Cass Publishers, ISBN 0-7146-5050-1
  • Brent, Jonathan; Naumov, Vladimir (2004), Stalin's Last Crime: The Plot Against the Jewish Doctors, 1948–1953, HarperCollins, ISBN 0-06-093310-0
  • Dowling, Timothy C. (2014), Russia at War: From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan, Chechnya, and Beyond, ABC-CLIO, ISBN 9781598849486
  • Henig, Ruth Beatrice (2005), The Origins of the Second World War, 1933–41, Routledge, ISBN 0-415-33262-1
  • Kuniholm, Bruce Robellet (2014), The Origins of the Cold War in the Near East: Great Power Conflict and Diplomacy in Iran, Turkey, and Greece (revised ed.), Princeton University Press, ISBN 9781400855759
  • Lee, Lily Xiao Hong (2016), World War Two: Crucible of the Contemporary World - Commentary and Readings, Routledge, ISBN 9781315489551
  • Lewkowicz Nicolas, The German Question and the Origins of the Cold War (IPOC, Milan) (2008) ISBN 8895145275
  • Merridale, Catherine (2006). Ivan's War: Life and Death in the Red Army, 1939–1945. New York : Metropolitan Books. ISBN 978-0-312-42652-1. OCLC 60671899.
  • Murphy, David E. (2006), What Stalin Knew: The Enigma of Barbarossa, Yale University Press, ISBN 0-300-11981-X
  • Nekrich, Aleksandr Moiseevich; Ulam, Adam Bruno; Freeze, Gregory L. (1997), Pariahs, Partners, Predators: German-Soviet Relations, 1922–1941, Columbia University Press, ISBN 0-231-10676-9
  • Pauwels, Jacques (2015), The Myth of the Good War: America in the Second World War (second ed.), James Lorimer & Company, ISBN 9781459408739
  • Phillips, Sarah D. (2009). ""There Are No Invalids in the USSR!": A Missing Soviet Chapter in the New Disability History". Disability Studies Quarterly. Indiana University. 29 (3). doi:10.18061/dsq.v29i3.936.
  • Poetschke, Hubert (2008), Memoirs from the Turbulent Years and Beyond: Analysis and Consequences of the World War II, Xlibris Corporation, ISBN 9781453583401
  • Roberts, Geoffrey (2006), Stalin's Wars: From World War to Cold War, 1939–1953, Yale University Press, ISBN 0-300-11204-1
  • Roberts, Geoffrey (2002), Stalin, the Pact with Nazi Germany, and the Origins of Postwar Soviet Diplomatic Historiography, vol. 4
  • Roberts, Geoffrey (1992), "The Soviet Decision for a Pact with Nazi Germany", Soviet Studies, 55 (2): 57–78, doi:10.1080/09668139208411994, JSTOR 152247
  • Rottman, Gordon (2007), Soviet Rifleman 1941–1945, Osprey, ISBN 978-1846031274
  • Soviet Information Bureau (1948), Falsifiers of History (Historical Survey), Moscow: Foreign Languages Publishing House, 272848
  • Department of State (1948), Nazi-Soviet Relations, 1939–1941: Documents from the Archives of The German Foreign Office, Department of State
  • U.S. Government Printing Office (1971), Industrialized Building in the Soviet Union: a Report of the U.S. Delegation to the U.S.S.R., vol. 13
  • Taubert, Fritz (2003), The Myth of Munich, Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, ISBN 3-486-56673-3
  • Varga-Harris, Christine (2015), Stories of House and Home: Soviet Apartment Life During the Khrushchev Years, Cornell University Press, ISBN 9781501701849
  • Watson, Derek (2000), "Molotov's Apprenticeship in Foreign Policy: The Triple Alliance Negotiations in 1939", Europe-Asia Studies, 52 (4): 695–722, doi:10.1080/713663077, JSTOR 153322, S2CID 144385167
  • Wells, Michael; Wells, Mike (2011), History for the IB Diploma: Causes, Practices and Effects of Wars, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9780521189316
  • Wettig, Gerhard (2008), Stalin and the Cold War in Europe, Rowman & Littlefield, ISBN 978-0-7425-5542-6
  • Ziemke, Earl F. (1971). Stalingrad to Berlin: The German Defeat in the East. Government Printing Office. ISBN 9780160882746.

Home Front edit

  • Abramov, Vladimir K. "Mordovia During the Second World War," Journal of Slavic Military Studies (2008) 21#2 pp 291–363.
  • Annaorazov, Jumadurdy. "Turkmenistan during the Second World War," Journal of Slavic Military Studies (2012) 25#1 pp 53–64.
  • Barber, John, and Mark Harrison. The Soviet Home Front: A Social and Economic History of the USSR in World War II, Longman, 1991.
  • Berkhoff, Karel C. Harvest of Despair: Life and Death in Ukraine Under Nazi Rule. Harvard U. Press, 2004. 448 pp.
  • Braithwaite, Rodric. Moscow 1941: A City and Its People at War (2006)
  • Carmack, Roberto J. Kazakhstan in World War II: Mobilization and Ethnicity in the Soviet Empire (University Press of Kansas, 2019) online review
  • Dallin, Alexander. Odessa, 1941–1944: A Case Study of Soviet Territory under Foreign Rule. Portland: Int. Specialized Book Service, 1998. 296 pp.
  • Ellmana, Michael, and S. Maksudovb. "Soviet deaths in the great patriotic war: A note," Europe-Asia Studies (1994) 46#4 pp 671–680 doi:10.1080/09668139408412190
  • Glantz, David M. (2001). The Siege of Leningrad, 1941–1944: 900 Days of Terror. Zenith. ISBN 978-0-7603-0941-4.
  • Goldman, Wendy Z., and Donald Filtzer. Fortress Dark and Stern: The Soviet Home Front During World War II (Oxford University Press, 2021). online review
  • Goldman, Wendy Z., and Donald Filtzer. Hunger and War: Food Provisioning in the Soviet Union during World War II (Indiana UP, 2015)
  • Hill, Alexander. "British Lend-Lease Aid and the Soviet War Effort, June 1941 – June 1942," Journal of Military History (2007) 71#3 pp 773–808.
  • Overy, Richard. Russia's War: A History of the Soviet Effort: 1941–1945 (1998) 432pp excerpt and txt search
  • Reese, Roger R. "Motivations to Serve: The Soviet Soldier in the Second World War," Journal of Slavic Military Studies (2007) 10#2 pp 263–282.
  • Thurston, Robert W. & Bernd Bonwetsch (2000). The People's War: Responses to World War II in the Soviet Union. U. of Illinois Press. p. 84. ISBN 978-0-252-02600-3.
  • Vallin, Jacques; Meslé, France; Adamets, Serguei; and Pyrozhkov, Serhii. "A New Estimate of Ukrainian Population Losses During the Crises of the 1930s and 1940s." Population Studies (2002) 56(3): 249–264. JSTOR 3092980 Reports life expectancy at birth fell to a level as low as ten years for females and seven for males in 1933 and plateaued around 25 for females and 15 for males in the period 1941–44.

Primary sources edit

  • Bidlack, Richard; Nikita Lomagin, eds. (26 June 2012). The Leningrad Blockade, 1941–1944: A New Documentary History from the Soviet Archives. Yale U.P. ISBN 978-0300110296.
  • Hill, Alexander, ed. The Great Patriotic War of the Soviet Union, 1941–45: A Documentary Reader (2011) 368pp

Historiography edit

  • Edele, Mark. "Fighting Russia's History Wars: Vladimir Putin and the Codification of World War II". History and Memory (2017) 29#2:90-124
  • Havlat, Denis. "Western Aid for the Soviet Union During World War II: Part I". Journal of Slavic Military Studies 30.2 (2017): 290–320.
    • Havlat, Denis. "Western Aid for the Soviet Union During World War II: Part II". Journal of Slavic Military Studies 30.4 (2017): 561–601. Argues the supplies made a decisive contribution to Soviet victory, despite denials by Stalinist historians.
  • Uldricks, Teddy J. "War, Politics and Memory: Russian Historians Reevaluate the Origins of World War II". History and Memory 21#2 (2009), pp. 60–82. JSTOR 10.2979/his.2009.21.2.60. Historiography.
  • Weiner, Amir. "The making of a dominant myth: The Second World War and the construction of political identities within the Soviet polity." Russian Review 55.4 (1996): 638–660. JSTOR 131868.

soviet, union, world, additional, information, military, history, soviet, union, world, eastern, front, world, after, munich, agreement, soviet, union, pursued, rapprochement, with, nazi, germany, august, 1939, soviet, union, signed, aggression, pact, with, ge. For additional information see Military history of the Soviet Union World War II Eastern Front World War II After the Munich Agreement the Soviet Union pursued a rapprochement with Nazi Germany On 23 August 1939 the Soviet Union signed a non aggression pact with Germany which included a secret protocol that divided Eastern Europe into German and Soviet spheres of influence anticipating potential territorial and political rearrangements of these countries 2 Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939 starting World War II The Soviets invaded eastern Poland on 17 September 3 Following the Winter War with Finland the Soviets were ceded territories by Finland This was followed by annexations of the Baltic states and parts of Romania Soviet soldiers at Stalingrad during a short rest after fighting 1 Stalin Roosevelt and Churchill at the Tehran ConferenceWorld War II military deaths in Europe and Asia by theatre yearOn 22 June 1941 Hitler launched Operation Barbarossa an invasion of the Soviet Union with the largest invasion force in history leading to some of the largest battles and most horrific atrocities This offensive comprised three army groups The city of Leningrad was besieged while other major cities fell to the Germans Despite initial successes the German offensive ground to a halt in the Battle of Moscow and the Soviets launched a counteroffensive pushing the Germans back The failure of Operation Barbarossa reversed the fortunes of Germany and Stalin was confident that the Allied war machine would eventually defeat Germany 4 The Soviet Union repulsed Axis attacks such as in the Battle of Stalingrad and the Battle of Kursk which marked a turning point in the war The Western Allies provided support to the Soviets in the form of Lend Lease as well as air and naval support Stalin met with Winston Churchill and Franklin D Roosevelt at the Tehran Conference and discussed a two front war against Germany and the future of Europe after the war The Soviets launched successful offensives to regain territorial losses and began a push to Berlin The Germans unconditionally surrendered in May 1945 after Berlin fell The bulk of Soviet fighting took place on the Eastern Front including the Continuation War with Finland but it also invaded Iran in August 1941 with the British The Soviets later entered the war against Japan in August 1945 which began with an invasion of Manchuria They had border conflicts with Japan up to 1939 before signing a non aggression pact in 1941 Stalin had agreed with the Western Allies to enter the war against Japan at the Tehran Conference in 1943 and at the Yalta Conference in February 1945 once Germany was defeated The entry of the Soviet Union in the war against Japan along with the atomic bombings by the United States led to Japan s surrender marking the end of World War II The Soviet Union suffered the greatest number of casualties in the war losing more than 20 million citizens about a third of all World War II casualties The full demographic loss to the Soviet people was even greater 5 The German Generalplan Ost aimed to create more Lebensraum lit living space for Germany through extermination An estimated 3 5 million Soviet prisoners of war died in German captivity as a result of deliberate mistreatment and atrocities and millions of civilians including Soviet Jews were killed in the Holocaust However at the cost of a large sacrifice the Soviet Union emerged as a global superpower 6 The Soviets installed dependent communist governments in Eastern Europe and tensions with the United States and the Western allies grew to what became known as the Cold War 7 Contents 1 Molotov Ribbentrop Pact 2 The division of Eastern Europe and other invasions 3 Termination of the pact 4 Soviets stop the Germans 5 The Frontoviki 6 Soviet push to Germany 7 Final victory 8 Repressions 9 Soviet war crimes 10 War crimes by Nazi Germany 11 Survival in Leningrad 12 Aftermath and damages 13 Public opinion survey 14 Citations 15 General and cited references 15 1 Home Front 15 1 1 Primary sources 15 2 HistoriographyMolotov Ribbentrop Pact editMain articles Molotov Ribbentrop Pact and Soviet German relations before 1941 nbsp Stalin and Ribbentrop at the signing of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact on 23 August 1939 During the 1930s Soviet foreign minister Maxim Litvinov emerged as a leading voice for the official Soviet policy of collective security with the Western powers against Nazi Germany 8 In 1935 Litvinov negotiated treaties of mutual assistance with France and with Czechoslovakia with the aim of containing Hitler s expansion 8 After the Munich Agreement which gave parts of Czechoslovakia to Nazi Germany the Western democracies policy of appeasement led the Soviet Union to reorient its foreign policy towards a rapprochement with Germany 8 On 3 May 1939 Stalin replaced Litvinov who was closely identified with the anti German position 8 with Vyacheslav Molotov In August 1939 Stalin accepted Hitler s proposal of a non aggression pact with Germany negotiated by foreign ministers Vyacheslav Molotov for the Soviets and Joachim von Ribbentrop for the Germans 9 Although officially a non aggression treaty only an appended secret protocol also reached on 23 August divided the whole of eastern Europe into German and Soviet spheres of influence 10 11 The USSR was promised the eastern part of Poland then primarily populated by Ukrainians and Belarusians in case of its dissolution and Germany recognised Latvia Estonia and Finland as parts of the Soviet sphere of influence 11 with Lithuania added in a second secret protocol in September 1939 12 Another clause of the treaty was that Bessarabia then part of Romania was to be joined to the Moldovan SSR and become the Moldovan SSR under control of Moscow 11 The pact was reached two days after the breakdown of Soviet military talks with British and French representatives in August 1939 over a potential Franco Anglo Soviet alliance 13 14 Political discussions had been suspended on 2 August when Molotov stated that they could not be resumed until progress was made in military talks late in August 15 after the talks had stalled over guarantees for the Baltic states 16 17 while the military talks upon which Molotov insisted 16 started on 11 August 13 18 At the same time Germany with whom the Soviets had started secret negotiations on 29 July 9 19 20 21 22 argued that it could offer the Soviets better terms than Britain and France with Ribbentrop insisting there was no problem between the Baltic and the Black Sea that could not be solved between the two of us 13 23 24 German officials stated that unlike Britain Germany could permit the Soviets to continue their developments unmolested and that there is one common element in the ideology of Germany Italy and the Soviet Union opposition to the capitalist democracies of the West 23 25 By that time Molotov had obtained information regarding Anglo German negotiations and a pessimistic report from the Soviet ambassador in France 19 nbsp Soviet cavalry on parade in Lviv then Lwow after the city s surrender during the 1939 Soviet invasion of PolandAfter disagreement regarding Stalin s demand to move Red Army troops through Poland and Romania which Poland and Romania opposed 13 18 on 21 August the Soviets proposed adjournment of military talks using the pretext that the absence of senior Soviet personnel at the talks interfered with the autumn manoeuvres of the Soviet forces though the primary reason was the progress being made in the Soviet German negotiations 18 That same day Stalin received assurance that Germany would approve secret protocols to the proposed non aggression pact that would grant the Soviets land in Poland the Baltic states Finland and Romania 26 Stalin telegrammed Hitler that night that the Soviets were willing to sign the pact and that he would receive Ribbentrop on 23 August 27 Regarding the larger issue of collective security some historians believe that one reason that Stalin decided to abandon the doctrine was the shaping of his views of France and Britain by their entry into the Munich Agreement and the subsequent failure to prevent the German occupation of Czechoslovakia 28 29 30 Stalin may also have viewed the pact as a way of gaining time in an eventual war with Hitler in order to reinforce the Soviet military and shifting Soviet borders westwards which would be militarily beneficial in such a war 31 32 Stalin and Ribbentrop spent most of the night of the pact s signing trading friendly stories about world affairs and cracking jokes a rarity for Ribbentrop about Britain s weakness The pair even joked about how the Anti Comintern Pact principally scared British shopkeepers 33 They further traded toasts with Stalin proposing a toast to Hitler s health and Ribbentrop proposing a toast to Stalin 33 The division of Eastern Europe and other invasions edit nbsp German and Soviet soldiers at the parade in Brest in front of a photo of StalinOn 1 September 1939 the German invasion of its agreed upon portion of Poland started the Second World War 9 On 17 September the Red Army invaded eastern Poland and occupied the Polish territory assigned to it by the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact followed by co ordination with German forces in Poland 34 35 Eleven days later the secret protocol of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact was modified allotting Germany a larger part of Poland while ceding most of Lithuania to the Soviet Union 36 The Soviet portions lay east of the so called Curzon Line an ethnographic frontier between Russia and Poland drawn up by a commission of the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 37 nbsp Planned and actual territorial changes in Eastern and Central Europe 1939 1940 click to enlarge nbsp Part of the 5 March 1940 memo from Lavrentiy Beria to Stalin proposing execution of Polish officersAfter taking around 300 000 Polish prisoners in 1939 and early 1940 38 39 40 41 NKVD officers conducted lengthy interrogations of the prisoners in camps that were in effect a selection process to determine who would be killed 42 On March 5 1940 pursuant to a note to Stalin from Lavrenty Beria the members of the Soviet Politburo including Stalin signed and 22 000 military and intellectuals were executed They were labelled nationalists and counterrevolutionaries kept at camps and prisons in occupied western Ukraine and Belarus This became known as the Katyn massacre 42 43 44 Major General Vasili M Blokhin chief executioner for the NKVD personally shot 6 000 of the captured Polish officers in 28 consecutive nights which remains one of the most organized and protracted mass murders by a single individual on record 45 46 During his 29 year career Blokhin shot an estimated 50 000 people 47 making him ostensibly the most prolific official executioner in recorded world history 45 In August 1939 Stalin declared that he was going to solve the Baltic problem and thereafter forced Lithuania Latvia and Estonia to sign treaties for mutual assistance 36 In November 1939 the Soviet Union invaded Finland The Finnish defensive effort defied Soviet expectations and after stiff losses as well as the unsuccessful attempt to install a puppet government in Helsinki Stalin settled for an interim peace granting the Soviet Union parts of Karelia and Salla 9 of Finnish territory 48 Soviet official casualty counts in the war exceeded 200 000 49 while Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev later claimed the casualties may have been one million 50 After this campaign Stalin took actions to modify training and improve propaganda efforts in the Soviet military 51 In mid June 1940 when international attention was focused on the German invasion of France Soviet NKVD troops raided border posts in the Baltic countries 36 52 Stalin claimed that the mutual assistance treaties had been violated and gave six hour ultimatums for new governments to be formed in each country including lists of persons for cabinet posts provided by the Kremlin 36 Thereafter state administrations were liquidated and replaced by Soviet cadres followed by mass repression 36 in which 34 250 Latvians 75 000 Lithuanians and almost 60 000 Estonians were deported or killed 53 Elections for parliament and other offices were held with single candidates listed the official results of which showed pro Soviet candidates approval by 92 8 percent of the voters of Estonia 97 6 percent of the voters in Latvia and 99 2 percent of the voters in Lithuania 54 The resulting peoples assemblies immediately requested admission into the USSR which was granted 54 In late June 1940 Stalin directed the Soviet annexation of Bessarabia and northern Bukovina proclaiming this formerly Romanian territory part of the Moldavian SSR 55 But in annexing northern Bukovina Stalin had gone beyond the agreed limits 55 The invasion of Bukovina violated the pact as it went beyond the Soviet sphere of influence agreed with Germany 56 nbsp Stalin and Molotov on the signing of the Soviet Japanese Neutrality Pact with the Empire of Japan 1941After the Tripartite Pact was signed by Axis Powers Germany Japan and Italy in October 1940 Stalin personally wrote to Ribbentrop about entering an agreement regarding a permanent basis for their mutual interests 57 Stalin sent Molotov to Berlin to negotiate the terms for the Soviet Union to join the Axis and potentially enjoy the spoils of the pact 55 At Stalin s direction 58 Molotov insisted on Soviet interest in Turkey Bulgaria Romania Hungary Yugoslavia and Greece 58 though Stalin had earlier unsuccessfully personally lobbied Turkish leaders to not sign a mutual assistance pact with Britain and France 59 Ribbentrop asked Molotov to sign another secret protocol with the statement The focal point of the territorial aspirations of the Soviet Union would presumably be centered south of the territory of the Soviet Union in the direction of the Indian Ocean 58 Molotov took the position that he could not take a definite stand on this without Stalin s agreement 58 Stalin did not agree with the suggested protocol and negotiations broke down 57 In response to a later German proposal Stalin stated that the Soviets would join the Axis if Germany foreclosed acting in the Soviet s sphere of influence 60 Shortly thereafter Hitler issued a secret internal directive related to his plan to invade the Soviet Union 60 nbsp Photo from 1943 exhumation of mass grave of Polish officers killed by NKVD in the Katyn Forest in 1940In an effort to demonstrate peaceful intentions toward Germany on 13 April 1941 Stalin oversaw the signing of a neutrality pact with Japan 61 Since the Treaty of Portsmouth Russia had been competing with Japan for spheres of influence in the Far East where there was a power vacuum with the collapse of Imperial China Although similar to the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact with the Third Reich that Soviet Union signed Soviet Japanese Neutrality Pact with the Empire of Japan to maintain the national interest of Soviet s sphere of influence in the European continent as well as the Far East conquest whilst among the few countries in the world diplomatically recognizing Manchukuo and allowed the rise of German invasion in Europe and Japanese aggression in Asia but the Japanese defeat of Battles of Khalkhin Gol was the forceful factor to the temporary settlement before Soviet invasion of Manchuria in 1945 as the result of Yalta Conference While Stalin had little faith in Japan s commitment to neutrality he felt that the pact was important for its political symbolism to reinforce a public affection for Germany before military confrontation when Hitler controlled Western Europe and for Soviet Union to take control Eastern Europe 62 Stalin felt that there was a growing split in German circles about whether Germany should initiate a war with the Soviet Union though Stalin was not aware of Hitler s further military ambition 62 Termination of the pact editFurther information Operation Barbarossa and Continuation War During the early morning of 22 June 1941 Hitler terminated the pact by launching Operation Barbarossa the Axis invasion of Soviet held territories and the Soviet Union that began the war on the Eastern Front Before the invasion Stalin thought that Germany would not attack the Soviet Union until Germany had defeated Britain At the same time Soviet generals warned Stalin that Germany had concentrated forces on its borders Two highly placed Soviet spies in Germany Starshina and Korsikanets had sent dozens of reports to Moscow containing evidence of preparation for a German attack Further warnings came from Richard Sorge a Soviet spy in Tokyo working undercover as a German journalist who had penetrated deep into the German Embassy in Tokyo by seducing the wife of General Eugen Ott the German ambassador to Japan 63 nbsp German soldiers march by a burning home in Soviet Ukraine October 1941 Seven days before the invasion a Soviet spy in Berlin part of the Rote Kapelle Red Orchestra spy network warned Stalin that the movement of German divisions to the borders was to wage war on the Soviet Union 63 Five days before the attack Stalin received a report from a spy in the German Air Ministry that all preparations by Germany for an armed attack on the Soviet Union have been completed and the blow can be expected at any time 64 In the margin Stalin wrote to the people s commissar for state security you can send your source from the headquarters of German aviation to his mother This is not a source but a dezinformator 64 Although Stalin increased Soviet western border forces to 2 7 million men and ordered them to expect a possible German invasion he did not order a full scale mobilisation of forces to prepare for an attack 65 Stalin felt that a mobilization might provoke Hitler to prematurely begin to wage war against the Soviet Union which Stalin wanted to delay until 1942 in order to strengthen Soviet forces 66 In the initial hours after the German attack began Stalin hesitated wanting to ensure that the German attack was sanctioned by Hitler rather than the unauthorized action of a rogue general 67 Accounts by Nikita Khrushchev and Anastas Mikoyan claim that after the invasion Stalin retreated to his dacha in despair for several days and did not participate in leadership decisions 68 But some documentary evidence of orders given by Stalin contradicts these accounts leading historians such as Roberts to speculate that Khrushchev s account is inaccurate 69 Stalin soon quickly made himself a Marshal of the Soviet Union then country s highest military rank and Supreme Commander in Chief of the Soviet Armed Forces aside from being Premier and General Secretary of the ruling Communist Party of the Soviet Union that made him the leader of the nation as well as the People s Commissar for Defence which is equivalent to the U S Secretary of War at that time and the U K Minister of Defence and formed the State Defense Committee to coordinate military operations with himself also as chairman He chaired the Stavka the highest defense organisation of the country Meanwhile Marshal Georgy Zhukov was named to be the Deputy Supreme Commander in Chief of the Soviet Armed Forces nbsp Soviet prisoners of war starving in the Nazi Mauthausen concentration camp In the first three weeks of the invasion as the Soviet Union tried to defend itself against large German advances it suffered 750 000 casualties and lost 10 000 tanks and 4 000 aircraft 70 In July 1941 Stalin completely reorganized the Soviet military placing himself directly in charge of several military organizations This gave him complete control of his country s entire war effort more control than any other leader in World War II 71 A pattern soon emerged where Stalin embraced the Red Army s strategy of conducting multiple offensives while the Germans overran each of the resulting small newly gained grounds dealing the Soviets severe casualties 72 The most notable example of this was the Battle of Kiev where over 600 000 Soviet troops were quickly killed captured or missing 72 By the end of 1941 the Soviet military had suffered 4 3 million casualties 73 and the Germans had captured 3 0 million Soviet prisoners 2 0 million of whom died in German captivity by February 1942 70 German forces had advanced c 1 700 kilometres and maintained a linearly measured front of 3 000 kilometres 74 The Red Army put up fierce resistance during the war s early stages Even so according to Glantz they were plagued by an ineffective defence doctrine against well trained and experienced German forces despite possessing some modern Soviet equipment such as the KV 1 and T 34 tanks Soviets stop the Germans editFurther information Eastern Front World War II Battle of Moscow Battle of Stalingrad and Azerbaijan in World War II While the Germans made huge advances in 1941 killing millions of Soviet soldiers at Stalin s direction the Red Army directed sizable resources to prevent the Germans from achieving one of their key strategic goals the attempted capture of Leningrad They held the city at the cost of more than a million Soviet soldiers in the region and more than a million civilians many of whom died from starvation 75 While the Germans pressed forward Stalin was confident of an eventual Allied victory over Germany In September 1941 Stalin told British diplomats that he wanted two agreements 1 a mutual assistance aid pact and 2 a recognition that after the war the Soviet Union would gain the territories in countries that it had taken pursuant to its division of Eastern Europe with Hitler in the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact 76 The British agreed to assistance but refused to agree to the territorial gains which Stalin accepted months later as the military situation had deteriorated somewhat by mid 1942 76 On 6 November 1941 Stalin rallied his generals in a speech given underground in Moscow telling them that the German blitzkrieg would fail because of weaknesses in the German rear in Nazi occupied Europe and the underestimation of the strength of the Red Army and that the German war effort would crumble against the Anglo American Soviet war engine 77 Correctly calculating that Hitler would direct efforts to capture Moscow Stalin concentrated his forces to defend the city including numerous divisions transferred from Soviet eastern sectors after he determined that Japan would not attempt an attack in those areas 78 By December Hitler s troops had advanced to within 25 kilometres 16 mi of the Kremlin in Moscow 79 On 5 December the Soviets launched a counteroffensive pushing German troops back c 80 kilometres 50 mi from Moscow in what was the first major defeat of the Wehrmacht in the war 79 nbsp Iconic photo of a Soviet officer thought to be Ukrainian Alexei Yeryomenko leading his soldiers into battle against the invading German army 12 July 1942 in Soviet UkraineIn early 1942 the Soviets began a series of offensives labelled Stalin s First Strategic Offensives The counteroffensive bogged down in part due to mud from rain in the spring of 1942 73 Stalin s attempt to retake Kharkov in the Ukraine ended in the disastrous encirclement of Soviet forces with over 200 000 Soviet casualties suffered 80 Stalin attacked the competence of the generals involved 81 General Georgy Zhukov and others subsequently revealed that some of those generals had wished to remain in a defensive posture in the region but Stalin and others had pushed for the offensive Some historians have doubted Zhukov s account 81 nbsp Maxim Litvinov the Soviet ambassador to the United StatesAt the same time Hitler was worried about American popular support after the U S entry into the war following the Attack on Pearl Harbor and a potential Anglo American invasion on the Western Front in 1942 which did not occur until the summer of 1944 He changed his primary goal from an immediate victory in the East to the more long term goal of securing the southern Soviet Union to protect oil fields vital to the long term German war effort 82 While Red Army generals correctly judged the evidence that Hitler would shift his efforts south Stalin thought it a flanking move in the German attempt to take Moscow 81 The German southern campaign began with a push to capture the Crimea which ended in disaster for the Red Army Stalin publicly criticised his generals leadership 80 In their southern campaigns the Germans took 625 000 Red Army prisoners in July and August 1942 alone 83 At the same time in a meeting in Moscow Churchill privately told Stalin that the British and Americans were not yet prepared to make an amphibious landing against a fortified Nazi held French coast in 1942 and would direct their efforts to invading German held North Africa He pledged a campaign of massive strategic bombing to include German civilian targets 84 Estimating that the Russians were finished the Germans began another southern operation in the autumn of 1942 the Battle of Stalingrad 83 Hitler insisted upon splitting German southern forces in a simultaneous siege of Stalingrad and an offensive against Baku on the Caspian Sea 85 Stalin directed his generals to spare no effort to defend Stalingrad 86 Although the Soviets suffered in excess of more than 2 million casualties at Stalingrad 87 their victory over German forces including the encirclement of 290 000 Axis troops marked a turning point in the war 88 Within a year after Barbarossa Stalin reopened the churches in the Soviet Union He may have wanted to motivate the majority of the population who had Christian beliefs By changing the official policy of the party and the state towards religion he could engage the Church and its clergy in mobilising the war effort On 4 September 1943 Stalin invited the metropolitans Sergius Alexy and Nikolay to the Kremlin He proposed to reestablish the Moscow Patriarchate which had been suspended since 1925 and elect the Patriarch On 8 September 1943 Metropolitan Sergius was elected Patriarch One account said that Stalin s reversal followed a sign that he supposedly received from heaven 89 The Frontoviki editOver 75 of Red Army divisions were listed as rifle divisions as infantry divisions were known in the Red Army 90 In the Imperial Russian Army the strelkovye rifle divisions were considered more prestigious than pekhotnye infantry divisions and in the Red Army all infantry divisions were labeled strelkovye divisions 90 The Soviet rifleman was known as a peshkom on foot or more frequently as a frontovik Russian frontovik front fighter plural Russian frontoviki frontoviki 90 The term frontovik was not equivalent to the German term Landser the American G I Joe nor the British Tommy Atkins all of which referred to soldiers in general as the term frontovik applied only to those infantrymen who fought at the front 90 All able bodied males in the Soviet Union became eligible for conscription at the age of 19 those attending a university or a technical school were able to escape conscription and even then could defer military service for a period ranging from 3 months to a year 90 Deferments could be only offered three times 90 The Soviet Union comprised 20 military districts which corresponded with the borders of the oblasts and were further divided into raions counties 91 The raions had assigned quotas specifying the number of men they had to produce for the Red Army every year 92 The vast majority of the frontoviks had been born in the 1920s and had grown up knowing nothing other than the Soviet system 93 Every year men received draft notices in the mail informing to report at a collection point usually a local school and customarily reported to duty with a bag or suitcase carrying some spare clothes underwear and tobacco 93 The conscripts then boarded a train to a military reception center where they were issued uniforms underwent a physical test had their heads shaven and were given a steam bath to rid them of lice 93 A typical soldier was given ammo pouches shelter cape ration bag cooking pot water bottle and an identity tube containing papers listing pertinent personal information 94 During training conscripts woke up between 5 and 6 a m training lasted for 10 to 12 hours six days of the week 95 Much of the training was done by rote and consisted of instruction 96 need quotation to verify Before 1941 training had lasted for six months but after the war training was shorted to a few weeks 95 After finishing training all men had to take the Oath of the Red Army which read I a citizen of the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics entering into the ranks of the Red Army of the Workers and Peasants take this oath and solemnly promise to be a honest brave disciplined vigilant fighter staunchly to protect military and state secrets and unquestioningly to obey all military regulations and orders of commanders and superiors I promise conscientiously to study military affairs in every way to protect state secrets and state property and to my last breath to be faithful to the people the Soviet Motherland and the Workers Peasants Government I am always prepared on order of the Workers and Peasants Government to rise to the defense of my Motherland the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and as a fighting man of the Red Army of Workers and Peasants I promise to defend it bravely skillfully with dignity and honor sparing neither my blood nor my life itself for the achievement of total victory over our enemies If by evil intent I should violate this my solemn oath then let the severe punishment of Soviet law and the total hatred and contempt of the working classes befall me 97 Tactics were based on the 1936 training manual and on the revised edition of 1942 98 Small unit movements and how to build defensive positions were laid out in a manner that was easy to understand and memorize 99 The manuals had the force of law and violations of the manuals counted as legal offenses 99 Soviet tactics always had the platoons attacking in the same way with the platoons usually broken into four sections occupying about 100 yards 91 m on average 100 The only complex formation was the diamond formation with one section advancing two behind and one in the rear 100 Unlike the Wehrmacht the Red Army did not engage in leap frogging of sections with one section providing fire support to the sections that were advancing instead all of the sections and platoons attacked en masse 100 The other only variation was for the sections to seep into a position by infiltration 100 nbsp British and Soviet servicemen over body of swastikaed dragon nbsp U S government poster showing a friendly Red Army soldier 1942When the order Na shturm marshch Assault march was given the Soviet infantry would charge the enemy while shouting the traditional Russian battle cry Urra Russian ura pronounced oo rah the sound of which many German veterans found terrifying 101 During the charge the riflemen would fire with rifles and submachine guns while throwing grenades before closing in for blizhnii boi Russian blizhnij boj close combat close quarter fighting with guns bayonets rifle butts knives digging tools and fists a type of fighting at which the Red Army excelled 102 On the defensive the frontoviki had a reputation for their skill at camouflaging their positions and for their discipline in withholding fire until Axis forces came within close range 102 Before 1941 Red Army doctrine had called for opening fire at maximum range but experience quickly taught the advantages of ambushing the enemy with surprise fire at close ranges from multiple positions 102 The typical frontovik during the war was an ethnic Russian aged 19 24 with an average height of 5 feet 6 inches 1 68 m 103 Most of the men were shaven bald to prevent lice and the few who did grow their hair kept it very short 103 The American historian Gordon Rottman describes the uniforms as simple and functional 103 In combat the men wore olive brown helmets or the pilotka side cap 103 Officers wore a shlem helmet or a furazhka ru Russian furazhka peaked cap a round service hat with a black visor and a red star 103 Rottman described Soviet weapons as known for their simplicity ruggedness and general reliability 104 The standard rifle a Mosin Nagant 7 62 mm M 1891 30 although heavy was an effective weapon that crucially was not affected by the cold 105 Every rifle section had one or two 7 62 mm Degtyaryov DP light machine guns to provide fire support 106 By 1944 one of every four frontoviki was armed with the 7 62 mm PPSh 41 Pistolet pulemet Shapagina Pistol Automatic Shpagin a type of submachine gun known as a rugged and reliable weapon if somewhat underpowered 104 The frontovik usually carried all he had in a simple bag 107 Most of the frontoviki had a perevyazochny paket wound dressing packet a razor a shovel and would be very lucky to have a towel and toothbrush 108 Toothpaste shampoo and soap were extremely rare 108 Usually sticks with chewed ends were used for brushing teeth 108 Latrine pits were dug as portable toilets were rare in the Red Army 109 Soldiers frequently slept outdoors even during the winter 109 Food was usually abysmal and often in short supply especially in 1941 and 1942 109 The frontoviki detested the rear service troops who did not face the dangers of combat as krysy Russian krysy rats singular Russian krysa romanized krysa 110 The frontovik lived on a diet of black rye bread canned meats like fish and tushonka stewed pork shchi cabbage soup and kasha porridge 110 Kasha and shchi were so common that a popular slogan in the Red Army was shchi da kasha pisha nasha schchi and kasha that s our fare 110 Chai Russian chaj hot sugared tea was an extremely popular beverage along with beer and vodka 111 Makhorka a type of cheap tobacco rolled into handmade cigarettes was the standard for smoking 111 Rottmann describes medical care as marginal 111 A shortage of doctors medical equipment and drugs meant those wounded often died usually in immense pain 111 Morphine was unknown in the Red Army 111 Most Red Army soldiers had not received preventive inoculations and diseases became major problems with malaria pneumonia diphtheria tuberculosis typhus dysentery and meningitis in particular regularly sickening Red Army men 111 In the winter frostbite often sent soldiers to the medical system while in the spring and fall rains made trench foot a common ailment 111 The frontoviki had a pay day once every month but often did not receive their wages 112 All soldiers were exempt from taxes 112 In 1943 a private was paid 600 roubles per month a corporal 1 000 roubles a junior sergeant 2 000 roubles and a sergeant 3 000 roubles 112 Special pay accrued to those serving in guards units tanks and anti tank units to paratroopers and to those decorated for bravery in combat 112 Those units that greatly distinguished themselves in combat had the prefix Guards Russian Gvardii romanized Gvardii lit of the Guard prefixed to their unit title a title of great respect and honor that brought better pay and rations 113 In the Imperial Russian Army the elite had always been the Imperial Guards regiments and the title Guards when applied to a military unit in Russia still has elitist connotations Discipline was harsh and men could be executed for desertion and ordering a retreat without orders 112 To maintain morale the men were often entertained with films shown on outdoor screens together with musical troupes performing music singing and dancing 114 The balalaika regarded as a Russian national instrument often featured as part of the entertainment 114 The Soviet regime held the position that essentially sex did not exist and no official publications made any references to matters sexual 114 After the Germans hanged the 18 year old partisan heroine Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya 29 November 1941 the photo of her corpse caused a sensation when published in early 1942 as she was topless which ensured that the photo attracted much prurient interest Unlike the German and French armies the Red Army had no system of field brothels and the frontoviki were not issued condoms as men in the British and American armies were 114 Venereal diseases were a major problem and those soldiers afflicted were harshly punished if discovered 114 The widespread rapes committed by the Red Army when entering Germany had little to do with sexual desire but were instead acts of power in the words of Rottman the basest form of revenge and humiliation the soldiers could inflict on the Germans 114 It was a common practice for officers to take campaign wives or PPZh Russian pohodno polevye zheny romanized pokhodno polevy zheny PPZh lit field marching wives Women serving in the Red Army Sometimes were told that they were now the mistresses of the officers regardless of what they felt about the matter 115 The campaign wives were often nurses signalers and clerks who wore a black beret 116 Despite being forced to become the concubines of the officers they were widely hated by the frontoviki who saw the campaign wives as trading sex for more favorable positions 117 The writer Vasily Grossman recorded typical remarks about the campaign wives in 1942 Where s the general someone asks Sleeping with his whore And these girls had once wanted to be Tanya 118 or Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya 119 The frontoviki had to live fight and die in small circular foxholes dug into the earth with enough room for one or two men Slit trenches connected what the Germans called Russian holes 113 The soldiers were usually not issued blankets or sleeping bags even in the winter 120 Instead the frontoviki slept in their coats and shelter capes usually on pine evergreen needles fir boughs piled leaves or straw 120 In the winter the temperature could drop as low as 60 F 50 C making General Moroz General Frost as much an enemy as the Germans 120 Spring started in April and with it came rains and snowmelt turning the battlefields into a muddy quagmire 120 Summers were dusty and hot while with the fall came the rasputitsa time without roads as heavy autumn rains once again turned the battlefields into muddy quagmires that made the spring rains look tame by comparison 121 The Soviet Union encompassed over 150 different languages and dialects but Russians comprised the majority of the Red Army and Russian was the language of command 121 The Red Army had very few ethnic units as the policy was one of sliianie Russian sliyanie lit blending in which men from the non Russian groups were assigned to units with Russian majorities 121 The few exceptions to this rule included the Cossack units and the troops from the Baltic states of Estonia Latvia and Lithuania who however were few in number 122 The experience of combat tended to bind the men together regardless of their language or ethnicity with one Soviet veteran recalling We were all bleeding the same blood 123 Despite a history of anti Semitism in Russia Jewish veterans serving in the frontovik units described anti Semitism as rare instead recalling a sense of belonging 123 During the first six months of Operation Barbarossa the Wehrmacht and the SS had a policy of shooting all of the commissars Jews serving in the Red Army who were taken prisoner by German forces also received short shrift 124 need quotation to verify 125 126 During the war the Soviet authorities toned down pro atheist propaganda and Eastern Orthodox priests blessed units going into battle though chaplains were not allowed 123 Muslims from Central Asia the Caucasus the Volga and the Crimea were allowed to practice their religion discreetly though as with Eastern Orthodox no chaplains were allowed 123 Most soldiers carried lucky talismans 127 Despite official Soviet atheism many soldiers wore crosses around their necks and crossed themselves in the traditional Eastern Orthodox manner before going into battle though the British historian Catherine Merridale interprets these actions as more totemic gestures meant to ensure good luck rather than expressions of real faith 128 One of the most popular talismans was the poem Wait for Me by Konstantin Simonov which he wrote in October 1941 for his fiancee Valentina Serova 127 The popularity of Wait for Me was such that almost all ethnic Russians in the Red Army knew the poem by heart and carried a copy of the poem together with photographs of their girlfriends or wives back home to reflect their desire to return to their loved ones 127 Political work done by politruks and kommissars took much of the soldiers spare time as at least one hour every day was given to political indoctrination into Communism for soldiers not engaged in combat 129 The term Nazi was never used to describe the enemy as the term was an acronym for National Sozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei National Socialist German Workers Party and the politruks and kommissars found explaining why the enemy called themselves National Socialists to be too confusing for the frontoviki 129 The preferred terms for the enemy were fascists Gitlertsy Hitlerites Germanskie and nemetskiye Russian nemeckie a Russian term for Germans 130 The commissars had the duty of monitoring Red Army officers for any sign of disloyalty and maintained a network of informers known as seksots Russian seksoty secret collaborators within the ranks 130 In October 1942 the system of dual command which dated back to the Russian Civil War and in which the officers shared authority with the commissars was abolished thenceforward only officers had the power of command 131 Many commissars after the Stalin s Decree 307 of 9 October 1942 were shocked to find how much the officers and men hated them 132 The commissars now become the politruks or deputy commanders for political affairs 131 The politruks no longer had the power of command but still evaluated both officers and men for their political loyalty carried out political indoctrination and had the power to order summary executions of anyone suspected of cowardice or treason 131 Such executions were known as devyat gram nine grams a reference to the weight of a bullet pustit v rakhod to expend someone or vyshka a shortened form of vysshaya mera nakazanija extreme penalty 131 Despite these fearsome powers many of the frontoviki were often openly contemptuous of the politruks if subjected to excessively long boring lectures on the finer points of Marxism Leninism and officers tended to win conflicts with the poltitruks as military merit started to count more in the Great Patriotic War than did political zeal 131 Relations between the officers and men were usually good with junior officers in particular being seen as soratniki comrades in arms as they lived under the same conditions and faced the same dangers as the frontoviki 133 Officers usually had only a high school education very few had gone to university and coming from the same social milieu as their men ensured that they could relate to them 134 The frontoviki usually addressed their company commanders as Batya father 134 Soviet push to Germany editFurther information Eastern Front World War II Battle of the Caucasus Battle of Kursk Operation Bagration Battle of Warsaw 1944 and Vistula Oder Offensive nbsp The center of Stalingrad after liberation in 1943The Soviets repulsed the important German strategic southern campaign and although 2 5 million Soviet casualties were suffered in that effort it permitted the Soviets to take the offensive for most of the rest of the war on the Eastern Front 135 nbsp World War II military deaths in Europe by theater and by year The German armed forces suffered 80 of its military deaths in the Eastern Front 136 Stalin personally told a Polish general requesting information about missing Polish officers that all of the Poles were freed and that not all could be accounted because the Soviets lost track of them in Manchuria 137 138 139 After Polish railroad workers found the mass grave 140 the Nazis used the massacre to attempt to drive a wedge between Stalin and the other Allies 141 including bringing in a European commission of investigators from twelve countries to examine the graves 142 In 1943 as the Soviets prepared to retake Poland Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels correctly guessed that Stalin would attempt to falsely claim that the Germans massacred the victims 143 As Goebbels predicted the Soviets had a commission investigate the matter falsely concluding that the Germans had killed the PoWs 42 The Soviets did not admit responsibility until 1990 144 In 1943 Stalin ceded to his generals call for the Soviet Union to take a defensive stance because of disappointing losses after Stalingrad a lack of reserves for offensive measures and a prediction that the Germans would likely next attack a bulge in the Soviet front at Kursk such that defensive preparations there would more efficiently use resources 145 The Germans did attempt an encirclement attack at Kursk which was successfully repulsed by the Soviets 145 after Hitler cancelled the offensive in part because of the Allied invasion of Sicily 146 though the Soviets suffered over 800 000 casualties 147 Kursk also marked the beginning of a period where Stalin became more willing to listen to the advice of his generals 148 By the end of 1943 the Soviets occupied half of the territory taken by the Germans from 1941 to 1942 148 Soviet military industrial output also had increased substantially from late 1941 to early 1943 after Stalin had moved factories well to the East of the front safe from German invasion and air attack 149 The strategy paid off as such industrial increases were able to occur even while the Germans in late 1942 occupied more than half of European Russia including 40 percent 80 million of its population and approximately 2 500 000 square kilometres 970 000 sq mi of Soviet territory 149 The Soviets had also prepared for war for more than a decade including preparing 14 million civilians with some military training 149 Accordingly while almost all of the original 5 million men of the Soviet army had been wiped out by the end of 1941 the Soviet military had swelled to 8 million members by the end of that year 149 Despite substantial losses in 1942 far in excess of German losses Red Army size grew even further to 11 million 149 While there is substantial debate whether Stalin helped or hindered these industrial and manpower efforts Stalin left most economic wartime management decisions in the hands of his economic experts 150 While some scholars claim that evidence suggests that Stalin considered and even attempted negotiating peace with Germany in 1941 and 1942 others find this evidence unconvincing and even fabricated 151 nbsp Soviet advances from 1 August 1943 to 31 December 1944 to 1 December 1943 to 30 April 1944 to 19 August 1944 to 31 December 1944In November 1943 Stalin met with Churchill and Roosevelt in Tehran 152 Roosevelt told Stalin that he hoped that Britain and America opening a second front against Germany could initially draw 30 40 German division from the Eastern Front 153 Stalin and Roosevelt in effect ganged up on Churchill by emphasizing the importance of a cross channel invasion of German held northern France while Churchill had always felt that Germany was more vulnerable in the soft underbelly of Italy which the Allies had already invaded and the Balkans 153 The parties later agreed that Britain and America would launch a cross channel invasion of France in May 1944 along with a separate invasion of Southern France 154 Stalin insisted that after the war the Soviet Union should incorporate the portions of Poland it occupied pursuant to the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact with Germany which Churchill tabled 155 In 1944 the Soviet Union made significant advances across Eastern Europe toward Germany 156 including Operation Bagration a massive offensive in Belarus against the German Army Group Centre 157 Stalin Roosevelt and Churchill closely coordinated such that Bagration occurred at roughly the same time as American and British forces initiation of the invasion of German held Western Europe on France s northern coast 157 The operation resulted in the Soviets retaking Belarus and western Ukraine along with the successful effective destruction of the Army Group Center and 300 000 German casualties though at the cost of more than 750 000 Soviet casualties 157 nbsp Romanians greet the Soviet army entering the city of Bucharest on 31 August 1944 Successes at Operation Bagration and in the year that followed were in large part due to an operational improved of battle hardened Red Army which has learned painful lessons from previous years battling the powerful Wehrmacht better planning of offensives efficient use of artillery better handling of time and space during attacks in contradiction to Stalin s order not a step back To a lesser degree the success of Bagration was due to a weakened Wehrmacht that lacked the fuel and armament they needed to operate effectively 158 growing Soviet advantages in manpower and materials and the attacks of Allies on the Western Front 157 In his 1944 May Day speech Stalin praised the Western Allies for diverting German resources in the Italian Campaign Tass published detailed lists of the large numbers of supplies coming from Western Allies and Stalin made a speech in November 1944 stating that Allied efforts in the West had already quickly drawn 75 German divisions to defend that region without which the Red Army could not yet have driven the Wehrmacht from Soviet territories 159 The weakened Wehrmacht also helped Soviet offensives because no effective German counter offensive could be launched 157 nbsp U K Prime Minister Winston Churchill U S President Franklin D Roosevelt and the Soviet Leader Joseph Stalin in Yalta Soviet Union in February 1945Beginning in the summer of 1944 a reinforced German Army Centre Group did prevent the Soviets from advancing in around Warsaw for nearly half a year 160 Some historians claim that the Soviets failure to advance was a purposeful Soviet stall to allow the Wehrmacht to slaughter members of a Warsaw Uprising by the Polish home army in August 1944 that occurred as the Red Army approached though others dispute the claim and cite sizable unsuccessful Red Army efforts to attempt to defeat the Wehrmacht in that region 160 Earlier in 1944 Stalin had insisted that the Soviets would annex the portions of Poland it divided with Germany in the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact while the Polish government in exile which the British insisted must be involved in postwar Poland demanded that the Polish border be restored to prewar locations 161 The rift further highlighted Stalin s blatant hostility toward the anti communist Polish government in exile and their Polish home army which Stalin felt threatened his plans to create a post war Poland friendly to the Soviet Union 160 Further exacerbating the rift was Stalin s refusal to resupply the Polish home army and his refusal to allow American supply planes to use the necessary Soviet air bases to ferry supplies to the Polish home army which Stalin referred to in a letter to Roosevelt and Churchill as power seeking criminals 162 Worried about the possible repercussions of those actions Stalin later began a Soviet supply airdrop to Polish rebels though most of the supplies ended up in the hands of the Germans 163 The uprising ended in disaster with 20 000 Polish rebels and up to 200 000 civilians killed by German forces with Soviet forces entering the city in January 1945 163 nbsp Soviet soldiers of the 1st Baltic Front during an attack in the Latvian city of Jelgava 16 August 1944Other important advances occurred in late 1944 such as the invasion of Romania in August and Bulgaria 163 The Soviet Union declared war on Bulgaria in September 1944 and invaded the country installing a communist government 164 Following the invasion of these Balkan countries Stalin and Churchill met in the autumn of 1944 where they agreed upon various percentages for spheres of influence in several Balkan states though the diplomats for neither leader knew what the term actually meant 165 The Red Army also expelled German forces from Lithuania and Estonia in late 1944 at the cost of 260 000 Soviet casualties The Vyborg Petrozavodsk offensive expelled Finnish forces from territory they had gained in 1941 but the Soviet advance was halted at the Battle of Tali Ihantala Further north Finnish victories in the Battles of Vuosalmi and Ilomantsi halted additional Soviet attempts to break through Finnish lines The Finns and Soviets signed the Moscow Armistice on 19 September 1944 ending the Continuation War In late 1944 Soviet forces battled fiercely to capture Hungary in the Budapest Offensive but could not take it which became a topic so sensitive to Stalin that he refused to allow his commanders to speak of it 166 The Germans held out in the subsequent Battle of Budapest until February 1945 when the remaining Hungarians signed an armistice with the Soviet Union 166 Victory at Budapest permitted the Red Army to launch the Vienna Offensive in April 1945 To the northeast the taking of Belarus and western Ukraine permitted the Soviets to launch the massive Vistula Oder Offensive where German intelligence had incorrectly guessed the Soviets would have a 3 to 1 numerical superiority advantage that was actually 5 to 1 over 2 million Red Army personnel attacking 450 000 German defenders the successful culmination of which resulted in the Red Army advancing from the Vistula River in Poland to the German Oder River in Eastern Germany 167 Stalin s shortcomings as a strategist are frequently noted regarding the massive Soviet loss of life and early Soviet defeats An example of it is the summer offensive of 1942 which led to even more losses by the Red Army and the recapture of initiative by the Germans Stalin eventually recognized his lack of know how and relied on his professional generals to conduct the war Additionally Stalin was well aware that other European armies had utterly disintegrated when faced with Nazi military efficacy and responded effectively by subjecting his army to galvanizing terror and nationalist appeals to patriotism He also appealed to the Russian Orthodox Church Final victory editFurther information Battle of Berlin East Prussian Offensive and Battle of the Oder Neisse nbsp American and Soviet troops meet east of the Elbe River April 1945By April 1945 Nazi Germany faced its last days with 1 9 million German soldiers in the East fighting 6 4 million Red Army soldiers while 1 million German soldiers in the West battled 4 million Western Allied soldiers 168 While initial talk postulated a race to Berlin by the Allies after Stalin successfully lobbied for Eastern Germany to fall within the Soviet sphere of influence at Yalta in February 1945 the Western Allies made no plans to seize the city by a ground operation 169 170 Stalin remained suspicious that western Allied forces holding at the Elbe River might move on the German capital and even in the last days that the Americans might employ their two airborne divisions to capture the city 171 Stalin directed the Red Army to move rapidly in a broad front into Germany because he did not believe the Western Allies would hand over territory they occupied while he made capturing Berlin the overriding objective 172 After successfully capturing Eastern Prussia three Red Army fronts converged on the heart of eastern Germany and the Battle of the Oder Neisse put the Soviets at the virtual gates of Berlin 173 By April 24 elements of two Soviet fronts had encircled Berlin 174 On April 20 Zhukov s 1st Belorussian Front had begun a massive shelling of Berlin that would not end until the city s surrender 175 On 30 April 1945 Hitler and Eva Braun committed suicide after which Soviet forces found their remains which had been burned at Hitler s directive 176 Remaining German forces officially surrendered unconditionally on 7 May 1945 Some historians argue that Stalin delayed the last final push for Berlin by two months in order to capture other areas for political reasons which they argue gave the Wehrmacht time to prepare and increased Soviet casualties which exceeded 400 000 other historians contest this account 177 nbsp Mass murder of Soviet civilians near Minsk The Nazis murdered civilians in 5 295 different localities in occupied Soviet Belarus Despite the Soviets possession of Hitler s remains Stalin did not believe that his old nemesis was actually dead a belief that persisted for years after the war 178 179 Stalin later directed aides to spend years researching and writing a secret book about Hitler s life for his own private reading 180 Fending off the German invasion and pressing to victory over Nazi Germany in the Second World War required a tremendous sacrifice by the Soviet Union more than by any other country in human history Soviet casualties totaled around 27 million 181 Although figures vary the Soviet civilian death toll probably reached 18 million 181 Millions of Soviet soldiers and civilians disappeared into German detention camps and slave labor factories while millions more suffered permanent physical and mental damage 181 Soviet economic losses including losses in resources and manufacturing capacity in western Russia and Ukraine were also catastrophic 181 The war resulted in the destruction of approximately 70 000 Soviet cities towns and villages 182 6 million houses 98 000 farms 32 000 factories 82 000 schools 43 000 libraries 6 000 hospitals and thousands of kilometers of roads and railway track 182 On 9 August 1945 the Soviet Union invaded Japanese controlled Manchukuo and declared war on Japan Battle hardened Soviet troops and their experienced commanders rapidly conquered Japanese held territories in Manchuria southern Sakhalin 11 25 August 1945 the Kuril Islands 18 August to 1 September 1945 and parts of Korea 14 August 1945 to 24 August 1945 The Imperial Japanese government vacillating following the bombing of Hiroshima 6 August 1945 and Nagasaki 9 August 1945 but faced with Soviet forces fast approaching the core Japanese homeland announced its effective surrender to the Allies on 15 August 1945 and formally capitulated on 2 September 1945 In June 1945 the Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union conferred on Stalin for his role in the Soviet victory the newly invented rank of Generalissimus of the Soviet Union which became the country s highest military rank superior to Marshal Stalin s cult of personality emphasised his personal military leadership after the enumeration of Stalin s ten victories extracted from Stalin s 6 November 1944 speech 27th anniversary of the Great October socialist revolution Russian 27 ya godovshina Velikoj Oktyabrskoj socialisticheskoj revolyucii during the 1944 meeting of the Moscow Soviet of People s Deputies Repressions editOn 16 August 1941 in attempts to revive a disorganized Soviet defense system Stalin issued Order No 270 demanding any commanders or commissars tearing away their insignia and deserting or surrendering to be considered malicious deserters The order required superiors to shoot these deserters on the spot 183 Their family members were subjected to arrest 184 The second provision of the order directed all units fighting in encirclements to use every possibility to fight 184 The order also required division commanders to demote and if necessary even to shoot on the spot those commanders who failed to command the battle directly in the battlefield 184 Thereafter Stalin also conducted a purge of several military commanders that were shot for cowardice without a trial 184 In June 1941 weeks after the German invasion began Stalin directed that the retreating Red Army also sought to deny resources to the enemy through a scorched earth policy of destroying the infrastructure and food supplies of areas before the Germans could seize them and that partisans were to be set up in evacuated areas 69 This along with abuse by German troops caused starvation and suffering among the civilian population that was left behind Stalin feared that Hitler would use disgruntled Soviet citizens to fight his regime particularly people imprisoned in the Gulags He thus ordered the NKVD to handle the situation They responded by murdering approximately 100 000 political prisoners throughout the western parts of the Soviet Union with methods that included bayoneting people to death and tossing grenades into crowded cells 185 Many others were simply deported east 186 187 nbsp Beria s proposal of 29 January 1942 to execute 46 Soviet generals Stalin s resolution Shoot all named in the list J St In July 1942 Stalin issued Order No 227 directing that any commander or commissar of a regiment battalion or army who allowed retreat without permission from his superiors was subject to military tribunal 188 The order called for soldiers found guilty of disciplinary infractions to be forced into penal battalions which were sent to the most dangerous sections of the front lines 188 From 1942 to 1945 427 910 soldiers were assigned to penal battalions 189 The order also directed blocking detachments to shoot fleeing panicked troops at the rear 188 In the first three months following the order 1 000 penal troops were shot by blocking detachments and sent 24 933 troops to penal battalions 188 Despite having some effect initially this measure proved to have a deteriorating effect on the troops morale so by October 1942 the idea of regular blocking detachments was quietly dropped 190 By 29 October 1944 the blocking detachments were officially disbanded 189 191 192 Soviet POWs and forced labourers who survived German captivity were sent to special transit or filtration camps meant to determine which were potential traitors 193 Of the approximately 4 million to be repatriated 2 660 013 were civilians and 1 539 475 were former POWs 193 Of the total 2 427 906 were sent home 801 152 were reconscripted into the armed forces 193 608 095 were enrolled in the work battalions of the defence ministry 193 226 127 were transferred to the authority of the NKVD for punishment which meant a transfer to the Gulag system 193 194 195 and 89 468 remained in the transit camps as reception personnel until the repatriation process was finally wound up in the early 1950s 193 Soviet war crimes editMain articles Soviet war crimes and Rape during the occupation of Germany nbsp Victims of NKVD prisoner massacres in June 1941Soviet troops reportedly raped German women and girls with total victim estimates ranging from tens of thousands to two million 196 During and after the occupation of Budapest Hungary an estimated 50 000 women and girls were raped 197 198 Regarding rapes that took place in Yugoslavia Stalin responded to a Yugoslav partisan leader s complaints saying Can t he understand it if a soldier who has crossed thousands of kilometres through blood and fire and death has fun with a woman or takes some trifle 198 In former Axis countries such as Germany Romania and Hungary Red Army officers generally viewed cities villages and farms as being open to pillaging and looting 199 For example Red Army soldiers and NKVD members frequently looted transport trains in 1944 and 1945 in Poland 200 and Soviet soldiers set fire to the city centre of Demmin while preventing the inhabitants from extinguishing the blaze 201 which along with multiple rapes played a part in causing over 900 citizens of the city to commit suicide 202 In the Soviet occupation zone of Germany when members of the SED reported to Stalin that looting and rapes by Soviet soldiers could result in negative consequences for the future of socialism in post war East Germany Stalin reacted angrily I shall not tolerate anybody dragging the honour of the Red Army through the mud 203 204 Accordingly all evidence of looting rapes and destruction by the Red Army was deleted from archives in the Soviet occupation zone 205 According to recent figures of an estimated 4 million POWs taken by the Russians including Germans Japanese Hungarians Romanians and others some 580 000 never returned presumably victims of privation or the Gulags compared with 3 5 million Soviet POW who died in German camps out of the 5 6 million taken 206 War crimes by Nazi Germany edit nbsp Men hanged as suspected partisans somewhere in the Soviet UnionFurther information War crimes of the Wehrmacht Clean Wehrmacht Generalplan Ost and German mistreatment of Soviet prisoners of war nbsp German Einsatzgruppen murdering Jews in Ivanhorod Ukraine 1942Nazi propaganda had told Wehrmacht s soldiers the invasion of the Soviet Union was a war of extermination 207 208 209 British historian Ian Kershaw concludes that the Wehrmacht s duty was to ensure that the people who met Hitler s requirements of being part of the Aryan Herrenvolk Aryan master race had living space He wrote that The Nazi revolution was broader than just the Holocaust Its second goal was to eliminate Slavs from central and eastern Europe and to create a Lebensraum for Aryans As Bartov The Eastern Front Hitler s Army shows it barbarised the German armies on the eastern front Most of their three million men from generals to ordinary soldiers helped exterminate captured Slav soldiers and civilians This was sometimes cold and deliberate murder of individuals as with Jews sometimes generalised brutality and neglect German soldiers letters and memoirs reveal their terrible reasoning Slavs were the Asiatic Bolshevik horde an inferior but threatening race 210 During the rapid German advances in the early months of the war nearly reaching the cities of Moscow and Leningrad the bulk of Soviet industry which could not be evacuated was either destroyed or lost due to German occupation Agricultural production was interrupted with grain harvests left standing in the fields that would later cause hunger reminiscent of the early 1930s In one of the greatest feats of war logistics factories were evacuated on an enormous scale with 1523 factories dismantled and shipped eastwards along four principal routes to the Caucasus Central Asian Ural and Siberian regions In general the tools dies and production technology were moved along with the blueprints and their management engineering staffs and skilled labor 211 The whole of the Soviet Union became dedicated to the war effort The population of the Soviet Union was probably better prepared than any other nation involved in the fighting of World War II to endure the material hardships of the war This is primarily because the Soviets were so used to shortages and coping with economic crisis in the past especially during wartime World War I brought similar restrictions on food Still conditions were severe World War II was especially devastating to Soviet citizens because it was fought on their territory and caused massive destruction In Leningrad under German siege over one million people died of starvation and disease Many factory workers were teenagers women and the elderly The government implemented rationing in 1941 and first applied it to bread flour cereal pasta butter margarine vegetable oil meat fish sugar and confectionery all across the country The rations remained largely stable in other places during the war Additional rations were often so expensive that they could not add substantially to a citizen s food supply unless that person was especially well paid Peasants received no rations and had to make do with local resources that they farmed themselves Most rural peasants struggled and lived in unbearable poverty but others sold any surplus they had at a high price and a few became rouble millionaires until a currency reform two years after the end of the war wiped out their wealth 212 Despite harsh conditions the war led to a spike in Soviet nationalism and unity Soviet propaganda toned down extreme Communist rhetoric of the past as the people now rallied by a belief of protecting their Motherland against the evils of German invaders Ethnic minorities thought to be collaborators were forced into exile Religion which was previously shunned became a part of Communist Party propaganda campaign in the Soviet society in order to mobilize the religious elements The social composition of Soviet society changed drastically during the war There was a burst of marriages in June and July 1941 between people about to be separated by the war and in the next few years the marriage rate dropped off steeply with the birth rate following shortly thereafter to only about half of what it would have been in peacetime For this reason mothers with several children during the war received substantial honours and money benefits if they had a sufficient number of children mothers could earn around 1 300 roubles for having their fourth child and earn up to 5 000 roubles for their 10th 213 German soldiers used to brand the bodies of captured partisan women and other women as well with the words Whore for Hitler s troops and rape them Following their capture some German soldiers vividly bragged about committing rape and rape homicide Susan Brownmiller argues that rape played a pivotal role in Nazi aim to conquer and destroy people they considered inferior such as Jews Russians and Poles An extensive list of rapes committed by German soldiers was compiled in the so called Molotov Note in 1942 Brownmiller points out that Nazis used rape as a weapon of terror 214 Examples of mass rapes in Soviet Union committed by German soldiers includeSmolensk German command opened a brothel for officers in which hundreds of women and girls were driven by force often by arms and hair Lviv 32 women working in a garment factory were raped and murdered by German soldiers in a public park A priest trying to stop the atrocity was murdered Lviv Germans soldiers raped Jewish girls who were murdered after getting pregnant Survival in Leningrad editMain article Siege of Leningrad nbsp Soviet soldiers on the front in LeningradThe city of Leningrad endured more suffering and hardships than any other city in the Soviet Union during the war as it was under siege for 872 days from September 8 1941 to January 27 1944 215 Hunger malnutrition disease starvation and even cannibalism became common during the siege of Leningrad civilians lost weight grew weaker and became more vulnerable to diseases 216 Citizens of Leningrad managed to survive through a number of methods with varying degrees of success Since only 400 000 people were evacuated before the siege began this left 2 5 million in Leningrad including 400 000 children More managed to escape the city this was most successful when Lake Ladoga froze over and people could walk over the ice road or Road of Life to safety 217 nbsp A victim of starvation in besieged Leningrad in 1941Most survival strategies during the siege though involved staying within the city and facing the problems through resourcefulness or luck One way to do this was by securing factory employment because many factories became autonomous and possessed more of the tools of survival during the winter such as food and heat Workers got larger rations than regular civilians and factories were likely to have electricity if they produced crucial goods Factories also served as mutual support centers and had clinics and other services like cleaning crews and teams of women who would sew and repair clothes Factory employees were still driven to desperation on occasion and people resorted to eating glue or horses in factories where food was scarce but factory employment was the most consistently successful method of survival and at some food production plants not a single person died 218 Survival opportunities open to the larger Soviet community included bartering and farming on private land Black markets thrived as private barter and trade became more common especially between soldiers and civilians Soldiers who had more food to spare were eager to trade with Soviet citizens that had extra warm clothes to trade Planting vegetable gardens in the spring became popular primarily because citizens got to keep everything grown on their own plots The campaign also had a potent psychological effect and boosted morale a survival component almost as crucial as bread 219 Some of the most desperate Soviet citizens turned to crime as a way to support themselves in trying times Most common was the theft of food and of ration cards which could prove fatal for a malnourished person if their card was stolen more than a day or two before a new card was issued For these reasons the stealing of food was severely punished and a person could be shot for as little as stealing a loaf of bread More serious crimes such as murder and cannibalism also occurred and special police squads were set up to combat these crimes though by the end of the siege roughly 1 500 had been arrested for cannibalism 220 Aftermath and damages editMain article World War II casualties of the Soviet Union nbsp Soviet soldiers killed during the Toropets Kholm Offensive January 1942Even though it won the conflict the war had a profound and devastating long term effect in the Soviet Union The financial burden was catastrophic by one estimate the Soviet Union spent 192 billion The US sent around 11 billion in Lend Lease supplies to the Soviet Union during the war 221 American experts estimate that the Soviet Union lost almost all the wealth it gained from the industrialization efforts during the 1930s Its economy also shrank by 20 between 1941 and 1945 and did not recover its pre war levels all until the 1960s British historian Clive Ponting estimates that the war damages amounted to 25 years of the Soviet Gross National Product 222 Forty percent of the Soviet housing was damaged or destroyed 223 Out of 2 5 million housing dwellings in the German occupied territories over a million were destroyed This rendered some 25 million Soviet citizens homeless 224 The German occupation encompassed around 85 million Soviet citizens or almost 45 of the entire Soviet population At least 12 million Soviets fled towards the east away from the invading German army The Soviet sources claim that the Axis powers destroyed 1 710 towns and 70 000 villages as well as 65 000 km of railroad tracks 225 The post Soviet government of Russia puts the Soviet war losses at 26 6 million on the basis of the 1993 study by the Russian Academy of Sciences including people dying as a result of battle and war related exposure This includes 8 668 400 military deaths as calculated by the Russian Ministry of Defense 226 227 The figures published by the Russian Ministry of Defense have been accepted by the majority of historians and academics some historians and academics give different estimates Bruce Robellet Kuniholm professor of public policy and history estimates that the Soviet side suffered 11 000 000 military deaths and additional 7 000 000 civilian deaths thus amounting to a total of 18 million fatalities 228 229 American military historian Earl F Ziemke gives a figure of 12 million dead Soviet soldiers and further seven million dead civilians a total of 19 million dead He also notes that from autumn 1941 until autumn 1943 the front was never less than 2 400 miles 3 900 km long 230 German professor Beate Fieseler estimates that 2 6 million people or 7 46 percent of the Soviet Army were left disabled after the war 231 Public opinion survey editA poll conducted by YouGov in 2015 found that only 11 of Americans 15 of French 15 of Britons and 27 of Germans believed that the Soviet Union contributed most to the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II In contrast the survey conducted in May 1945 found that 57 of the French public believed the Soviet Union contributed most 232 Citations edit McNab Chris 2017 German Soldier vs Soviet Soldier Stalingrad 1942 43 Osprey PUBLISHING p 66 ISBN 978 1472824561 chathamhouse org 2011 Goldman 2012 pp 163 64 sfn error no target CITEREFGoldman2012 help Pearson Clive December 2008 Stalin as War Leader History Review 62 History Today Retrieved 5 December 2017 Geoffrey A Hosking 2006 Rulers and victims the Russians in the Soviet Union Harvard University Press p 242 ISBN 0 674 02178 9 Reiman Michael 2016 The USSR as the New World Superpower About Russia Its Revolutions Its Development and Its Present Peter Lang pp 169 176 ISBN 978 3 631 67136 8 JSTOR j ctv2t4dn7 14 Bunce Valerie 1985 The Empire Strikes Back The Evolution of the Eastern Bloc from a Soviet Asset to a Soviet Liability International Organization The MIT Press 39 1 1 46 doi 10 1017 S0020818300004859 JSTOR 2706633 S2CID 154309589 a b c d Maksim Litvinov Encyclopaedia Britannica a b c Roberts 1992 pp 57 78 Encyclopaedia Britannica German Soviet Nonaggression Pact 2008 a b c Text of the Nazi Soviet Non Aggression Pact executed 23 August 1939 Christie Kenneth Historical Injustice and Democratic Transition in Eastern Asia and Northern Europe Ghosts at the Table of Democracy RoutledgeCurzon 2002 ISBN 0 7007 1599 1 a b c d Roberts 2006 pp 30 32 Lionel Kochan The Struggle For Germany 1914 1945 New York 1963 Shirer William L 1990 The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich A History of Nazi Germany Simon and Schuster p 504 ISBN 0 671 72868 7 a b Watson 2000 p 709 Michael Jabara Carley 1993 End of the Low Dishonest Decade Failure of the Anglo Franco Soviet Alliance in 1939 Europe Asia Studies 45 2 303 341 JSTOR 152863 a b c Watson 2000 p 715 a b Watson 2000 p 713 Fest Joachim C Hitler Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2002 ISBN 0 15 602754 2 page 588 Ulam Adam Bruno Stalin The Man and His Era Beacon Press 1989 ISBN 0 8070 7005 X page 509 10 Shirer William L The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich A History of Nazi Germany Simon and Schuster 1990 ISBN 0 671 72868 7 page 503 a b Fest Joachim C Hitler Harcourt Brace Publishing 2002 ISBN 0 15 602754 2 page 589 90 Vehvilainen Olli Finland in the Second World War Between Germany and Russia Macmillan 2002 ISBN 0 333 80149 0 page 30 Bertriko Jean Jacques Subrenat A and David Cousins Estonia Identity and Independence Rodopi 2004 ISBN 90 420 0890 3 page 131 Murphy 2006 p 23 Shirer William L The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich A History of Nazi Germany Simon and Schuster 1990 ISBN 0 671 72868 7 pages 528 Max Beloff The Foreign Policy of Soviet Russia vol II I936 41 Oxford University Press 1949 p 166 211 For example in his article From Munich to Moscow Edward Hallett Carr explains the reasons behind signing a non aggression pact between USSR and Germany as follows Since 1934 the U S S R had firmly believed that Hitler would start a war somewhere in Europe the bugbear of Soviet policy was that it might be a war between Hitler and the U S S R with the western powers neutral or tacitly favourable to Hitler In order to conjure this bugbear one of three alternatives had to be envisaged i a war against Germany in which the western powers would be allied with the U S S R this was the first choice and the principal aim of Soviet policy from 1934 38 2 a war between Germany and the western powers in which the U S S R would be neutral this was clearly hinted at in the Pravda article of 21 September 1938 and Molotov s speech of 6 November 1938 and became an alternative policy to i after March 1939 though the choice was not finally made till August 1939 and 3 a war between Germany and the western powers with Germany allied to the U S S R this never became a specific aim of Soviet policy though the discovery that a price could be obtained from Hitler for Soviet neutrality made the U S S R a de facto though non belligerent partner of Germany from August 1939 till at any rate the summer of 1940 see E H Carr From Munich to Moscow I Soviet Studies Vol 1 No 1 June 1949 pp 3 17 Taylor amp Francis Ltd This view is disputed by Werner Maser and Dmitri Volkogonov Yuly Kvitsinsky Russia Germany memoirs of the future Moscow 2008 ISBN 5 89935 087 3 p 95 Watson 2000 pp 695 722 a b Shirer William L The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich A History of Nazi Germany Simon and Schuster 1990 ISBN 0 671 72868 7 pages 541 Roberts 2006 p 43 Sanford George 2005 Katyn and the Soviet Massacre Of 1940 Truth Justice And Memory London New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 33873 5 a b c d e Wettig 2008 p 20 Roberts 2006 p 37 in Polish obozy jenieckie zolnierzy polskich Archived 4 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine Prison camps for Polish soldiers Encyklopedia PWN Last accessed on 28 November 2006 in Polish Edukacja Humanistyczna w wojsku Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine 1 2005 Dom wydawniczy Wojska Polskiego ISSN 1734 6584 Official publication of the Polish Army in Russian Molotov na V sessii Verhovnogo Soveta 31 oktyabrya cifra primerno 250 tys Please provide translation of the reference title and publication data and means in Russian Otchyot Ukrainskogo i Belorusskogo frontov Krasnoj Armii Meltyuhov s 367 1 permanent dead link Please provide translation of the reference title and publication data and means a b c Fischer Benjamin B The Katyn Controversy Stalin s Killing Field Studies in Intelligence Winter 1999 2000 Sanford Google Books p 20 24 Stalin s Killing Field PDF Archived from the original PDF on 13 June 2007 Retrieved 19 July 2008 a b Parrish Michael 1996 The Lesser Terror Soviet state security 1939 1953 Westport CT Praeger Press pp 324 325 ISBN 0 275 95113 8 Montefiore Simon Sebag 13 September 2005 Stalin The Court of the Red Tsar New York Vintage Books pp 197 8 332 4 ISBN 978 1 4000 7678 9 Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Katyn executioners named Gazeta Wyborcza December 15 2008 Kennedy Pipe Caroline Stalin s Cold War New York Manchester University Press 1995 ISBN 0 7190 4201 1 Roberts 2006 p 52 Mosier John The Blitzkrieg Myth How Hitler and the Allies Misread the Strategic Realities of World War II HarperCollins 2004 ISBN 0 06 000977 2 page 88 Roberts 2006 p 53 Senn Alfred Erich Lithuania 1940 revolution from above Amsterdam New York Rodopi 2007 ISBN 978 90 420 2225 6 Simon Sebag Montefiore Stalin The Court of the Red Tsar p 334 a b Wettig 2008 p 21 a b c Brackman 2001 p 341 Brackman Roman The Secret File of Joseph Stalin A Hidden Life Psychology Press 2001 p 341 ISBN 978 0 71465 050 0 a b Roberts 2006 p 58 a b c d Brackman 2001 p 343 Roberts 2006 p 45 a b Roberts 2006 p 59 Roberts 2006 p 63 a b Roberts 2006 p 66 a b Roberts 2006 p 68 a b Murphy 2006 p xv Roberts 2006 p 69 Roberts 2006 p 70 Simon Sebag Montefiore Stalin The Court of the Red Tsar Knopf 2004 ISBN 1 4000 4230 5 Roberts 2006 p 89 a b Roberts 2006 p 90 a b Roberts 2006 p 85 Roberts 2006 p 97 a b Roberts 2006 pp 99 100 a b Roberts 2006 pp 116 7 Glantz David The Soviet German War 1941 45 Myths and Realities A Survey Essay October 11 2001 page 7 Roberts 2006 p 106 a b Roberts 2006 pp 114 115 Roberts 2006 p 110 Roberts 2006 p 108 a b Roberts 2006 p 88 a b Roberts 2006 p 122 a b c Roberts 2006 pp 124 5 Roberts 2006 pp 117 8 a b Roberts 2006 p 126 Roberts 2006 pp 135 140 Roberts 2006 p 128 Roberts 2006 p 134 Stalingradskaya bitva Roberts 2006 p 154 Radzinsky 1996 p 472 3 a b c d e f Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 5 Rottman Gordon L 2007 Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 Bloomsbury USA pp 6 7 ISBN 9781846031274 Retrieved 7 January 2019 Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 7 a b c Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 8 Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 9 a b Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 10 Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 11 Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 pp 11 12 Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 12 a b Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 13 a b c d Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 16 Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 pages 16 17 a b c Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 17 a b c d e Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 18 a b Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 23 Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 24 Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 25 Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 31 a b c Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 32 a b c Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 41 a b c Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 42 a b c d e f g Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 43 a b c d e Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 44 a b Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 47 a b c d e f Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 45 Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 46 Grossman Vasily Semyonovich 2005 Beevor Antony Vinogradova Luba eds A Writer at War Vasily Grossman with the Red Army 1941 1945 Translated by Beevor Antony Vinogradova Luba reprint ed London Random House published 2006 p 120 ISBN 9781845950156 Retrieved 7 January 2019 The PPZh was the slang term for a campaign wife because the full term pokhodno polevaya zhena was similar to PPSh the standard Red Army sub machine gun Campaign wives were toung nurses and women soldiers from a headquarters such as signallers and clerks who usually wore a beret on the back of the head rather than the fore and aft pilotka cap They found themselves virtually forced to become the concubines of senior officers Beevor Antony amp Vinogradova Luba A Writer at War Vasily Grossman With the Red Army 1941 1945 New York Alfred Knopf 2005 page 120 The name Tanya came into use as a pseudonym of Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya Beevor Antony amp Vinogradova Luba A Writer at War Vasily Grossman With the Red Army 1941 1945 New York Alfred Knopf 2005 page 121 a b c d Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 48 a b c Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 49 Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 pages 49 50 a b c d Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 50 Shirer William The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich New York Viking page 953 Compare North Jonathan 12 June 2006 Soviet Prisoners of War Forgotten Nazi Victims of World War II History net Retrieved 1 February 2015 As a reflection of the racial nature of the war Jewish prisoners were often held for execution by mobile SD squads or by Wehrmacht commanders Longerich Peter 2010 Holocaust The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews reprint ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 247 ISBN 9780192804365 Retrieved 7 January 2019 From the very earliest stages the policies for annihilating the Jewish population of the Soviet Union particularly affected the Jewish soldiers of the Red Army They were amongst those groups of prisoners who were separated out in the camps and liquidated as a matter of course In Deployment Order no 8 from 17 July 1941 Heydrich instructed the commanders of the Security police in the General Government and the Gestapo in East Prussia to comb the prisoner of war camps in those areas These commandos were to conduct a political monitoring of all inmates and separate out certain groups of prisoners including state and Party functionaries Red Army commissars leading economic figures members of the intelligentsia agitators and quite specifically all Jews a b c Merridale Catherine Ivan s War The Red Army 1939 1945 London Faber and Faber 2005 page 168 Merridale Catherine Ivan s War The Red Army 1939 1945 London Faber and Faber 2005 pages 168 169 a b Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 pages 50 51 a b Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 51 a b c d e Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 52 Beevor Antony amp Vinogradova Luba A Writer at War Vasily Grossman With the Red Army 1941 1945 New York Alfred Knopf 2005 page 219 Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 53 a b Rottman Gordon Soviet Rifleman 1941 45 London Osprey 2007 page 53 Roberts 2006 p 155 Duiker William J 2015 The Crisis Deepens The Outbreak of World War II Contemporary World History sixth ed Cengage Learning p 138 ISBN 978 1 285 44790 2 in Polish Various authors Biuletyn Kombatant nr specjalny 148 czerwiec 2003 Archived 17 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Special Edition of Kombatant Bulletin No 148 6 2003 on the occasion of the Year of General Sikorski Official publication of the Polish government Agency of Combatants and Repressed Romuald Svyatek Katynskij les Voenno istoricheskij zhurnal 1991 9 ISSN 0042 9058 Brackman 2001 Barbara Polak 2005 Zbrodnia katynska pdf Biuletyn IPN in Polish 4 21 Retrieved 22 September 2007 Engel David Facing a Holocaust The Polish Government In Exile and the Jews 1943 1945 1993 ISBN 0 8078 2069 5 Bauer Eddy The Marshall Cavendish Illustrated Encyclopedia of World War II Marshall Cavendish 1985 Goebbels Joseph The Goebbels Diaries 1942 1943 Translated by Louis P Lochner Doubleday amp Company 1948 CHRONOLOGY 1990 The Soviet Union and Eastern Europe Foreign Affairs 1990 pp 212 a b Roberts 2006 pp 156 7 McCarthy Peter Panzerkrieg The Rise and Fall of Hitler s Tank Divisions Carroll amp Graf Publishers 2003 ISBN 0 7867 1264 3 page 196 Russian Central Military Archive TsAMO f 16 VA f 320 op 4196 d 27 f 370 op 6476 d 102 ll 6 41 docs from the Russian Military Archive in Podolsk Loss records for 17 VA are incomplete It records 201 losses for 5 8 July From 1 31 July it reported the loss of 244 64 in air to air combat 68 to AAA fire It reports a further 108 missing on operations and four lost on the ground 2 VA lost 515 aircraft missing or due to unknown unrecorded reasons a further 41 in aerial combat and a further 31 to AAA fire between 5 18 July 1943 Furthermore another 1 104 Soviet aircraft were lost between 12 July and 18 August Bergstrom Christer 2007 Kursk The Air Battle July 1943 Chevron Ian Allan ISBN 978 1 903223 88 8 page 221 a b Roberts 2006 p 159 a b c d e Roberts 2006 p 163 Roberts 2006 pp 164 5 Roberts 2006 pp 165 7 Roberts 2006 p 180 a b Roberts 2006 p 181 Roberts 2006 p 185 Roberts 2006 pp 186 7 Roberts 2006 pp 194 5 a b c d e Roberts 2006 pp 199 201 Williams Andrew D Day to Berlin Hodder 2005 ISBN 0 340 83397 1 page 213 Roberts 2006 pp 202 3 a b c Roberts 2006 pp 205 7 Roberts 2006 pp 208 9 Roberts 2006 pp 214 5 a b c Roberts 2006 pp 216 7 Wettig 2008 p 49 Roberts 2006 pp 218 21 a b Erickson John The Road to Berlin Yale University Press 1999 ISBN 0 300 07813 7 page 396 7 Duffy C Red Storm on the Reich The Soviet March on Germany 1945 Routledge 1991 ISBN 0 415 22829 8 Glantz David The Soviet German War 1941 45 Myths and Realities A Survey Essay October 11 2001 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 17 June 2011 Retrieved 17 June 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Beevor Antony Berlin The Downfall 1945 Viking Penguin Books 2005 ISBN 0 670 88695 5 page 194 Williams Andrew 2005 D Day to Berlin Hodder ISBN 0 340 83397 1 page 310 1 Erickson John The Road to Berlin Yale University Press 1999 ISBN 0 300 07813 7 page 554 Beevor Antony Berlin The Downfall 1945 Viking Penguin Books 2005 ISBN 0 670 88695 5 page 219 Ziemke Earl F 1969 Battle for Berlin End of the Third Reich Ballantine s Illustrated History of World War II Battle Book 6 Ballantine Books page 71 Ziemke Earl F Battle For Berlin End Of The Third Reich NY Ballantine Books London Macdonald amp Co 1969 pages 92 94 Beevor Antony Revealed Hitler s Secret Bunkers 2008 Bullock Alan Hitler A Study in Tyranny Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 013564 2 1962 pages 799 800 Glantz David The Soviet German War 1941 45 Myths and Realities A Survey Essay October 11 2001 pages 91 93 Kershaw Ian Hitler 1936 1945 Nemesis W W Norton amp Company 2001 ISBN 0 393 32252 1 pages 1038 39 Dolezal Robert Truth about History How New Evidence Is Transforming the Story of the Past Reader s Digest 2004 ISBN 0 7621 0523 2 page 185 6 Eberle Henrik Matthias Uhl and Giles MacDonogh The Hitler Book The Secret Dossier Prepared for Stalin from the Interrogations of Hitler s Personal Aides PublicAffairs 2006 ISBN 1 58648 456 7 A reprint of one of only two existing copies This copy belonging to Nikita Khrushchev and deposited in the Moscow Party archives where Henrik Eberle and Matthias Uhl later found it was made public for the first time in 2006 As of 2006 update Vladimir Putin retained the only other known copy in a safe citation needed a b c d Glantz David The Soviet German War 1941 45 Myths and Realities A Survey Essay October 11 2001 page 13 a b Roberts 2006 pp 4 5 Text of Order No 270 Archived 17 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine a b c d Roberts 2006 p 98 Robert Gellately Lenin Stalin and Hitler The Age of Social Catastrophe Knopf 2007 ISBN 1 4000 4005 1 p 391 Anne Applebaum Gulag A History Doubleday 2003 ISBN 0 7679 0056 1 Richard Rhodes 2002 Masters of Death The SS Einsatzgruppen and the Invention of the Holocaust New York Alfred A Knopf pp 46 47 ISBN 0 375 40900 9 See also Allen Paul Katyn Stalin s Massacre and the Seeds of Polish Resurrection Naval Institute Press 1996 ISBN 1 55750 670 1 p 155 a b c d Roberts 2006 p 132 a b G I Krivosheev Soviet Casualties and Combat Losses Greenhill 1997 ISBN 1 85367 280 7 Catherine Merridale Ivan s War Life and Death in the Red Army 1939 1945 Page 158 Macmillan 2006 ISBN 0 8050 7455 4 Reese Roger 2011 Why Stalin s Soldiers Fought The Red Army s Military Effectiveness in World War II University Press of Kansas p 164 ISBN 9780700617760 PRIKAZ O RASFORMIROVANII OTDELNYH ZAGRADITELNYH OTRYaDOV bdsa ru Retrieved 8 March 2019 a b c d e f Roberts 2006 p 202 Voenno istoricheskij zhurnal Military Historical Magazine 1997 No 5 page 32 Zemskoe V N K voprosu o repatriacii sovetskih grazhdan 1944 1951 gody Istoriya SSSR 1990 No 4 Zemskov V N On repatriation of Soviet citizens Istoriya SSSR 1990 No 4 Schissler Hanna The Miracle Years A Cultural History of West Germany 1949 1968 Mark James Remembering Rape Divided Social Memory and the Red Army in Hungary 1944 1945 Past amp Present Number 188 August 2005 page 133 a b Naimark Norman M The Russians in Germany A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation 1945 1949 Cambridge Belknap 1995 ISBN 0 674 78405 7 pages 70 71 Beevor Antony Berlin The Downfall 1945 Penguin Books 2002 ISBN 0 670 88695 5 Specific reports also include Report of the Swiss legation in Budapest of 1945 Archived 16 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine and Hubertus Knabe Tag der Befreiung Das Kriegsende in Ostdeutschland A day of liberation The end of war in Eastern Germany Propylaen 2005 ISBN 3 549 07245 7 German Urban Thomas Der Verlust Verlag C H Beck 2004 ISBN 3 406 54156 9 page 145 Beevor Antony Berlin The Downfall 1945 Viking Penguin Books 2005 ISBN 0 670 88695 5 Buske Norbert Hg Das Kriegsende in Demmin 1945 Berichte Erinnerungen Dokumente Landeszentrale fur politische Bildung Mecklenburg Vorpommern Landeskundliche Hefte Schwerin 1995 Wolfgang Leonhard Child of the Revolution Pathfinder Press 1979 ISBN 0 906133 26 2 Norman M Naimark The Russians in Germany A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation 1945 1949 Harvard University Press 1995 ISBN 0 674 78405 7 Wolfgang Leonhard Child of the Revolution Pathfinder Press 1979 ISBN 0 906133 26 2 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p 568 569 The German Military and the Holocaust encyclopedia ushmm org Retrieved 7 March 2019 Invasion of the Soviet Union June 1941 encyclopedia ushmm org Retrieved 7 March 2019 Nazi Persecution of Soviet Prisoners of War encyclopedia ushmm org Retrieved 7 March 2019 Kershaw Professor of Modern History Ian Kershaw Ian Lewin Moshe 1997 Stalinism and Nazism Dictatorships in Comparison Cambridge University Press p 150 ISBN 9780521565219 Walter Scott Dunn 1995 The Soviet Economy and the Red Army 1930 1945 Greenwood p 34 ISBN 9780275948931 John Barber and Mark Harrison The Soviet Home Front 1941 1945 a social and economic history of the USSR in World War II Longman 1991 77 81 85 6 Barber and Harrison The Soviet Home Front 1941 1945 91 93 Henry Nicola 20 January 2011 War and Rape Law Memory and Justice Routledge pp 30 32 ISBN 978 0415564731 Robert Forczyk 2009 Leningrad 1941 44 The epic siege Osprey ISBN 9781846034411 Barber and Harrison The Soviet Home Front 1941 1945 pp 86 7 Richard Bidlack Nikita Lomagin 26 June 2012 The Leningrad Blockade 1941 1944 A New Documentary History from the Soviet Archives Yale U P p 406 ISBN 978 0300110296 Bidlack Survival Strategies in Leningrad pp 90 94 Bidlack Survival Strategies in Leningrad p 97 Bidlack Survival Strategies in Leningrad p 98 Wells amp Wells 2011 p 122 Pauwels 2015 p 377 U S Government Printing Office 1971 p 9 Varga Harris 2015 p 4 Lee 2016 p 307 war dead encyclopedia mil ru Retrieved 25 February 2019 soviet war losses PDF Kuniholm 2014 p 206 Poetschke 2008 p 78 Ziemke 1971 p 500 Phillips 2009 Suffering Victors Disability and the Second World War People in Britain and the U S disagree on who did more to beat the Nazis YouGov 1 May 2015 General and cited references editBrackman Roman 2001 The Secret File of Joseph Stalin A Hidden Life Frank Cass Publishers ISBN 0 7146 5050 1 Brent Jonathan Naumov Vladimir 2004 Stalin s Last Crime The Plot Against the Jewish Doctors 1948 1953 HarperCollins ISBN 0 06 093310 0 Dowling Timothy C 2014 Russia at War From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan Chechnya and Beyond ABC CLIO ISBN 9781598849486 Henig Ruth Beatrice 2005 The Origins of the Second World War 1933 41 Routledge ISBN 0 415 33262 1 Kuniholm Bruce Robellet 2014 The Origins of the Cold War in the Near East Great Power Conflict and Diplomacy in Iran Turkey and Greece revised ed Princeton University Press ISBN 9781400855759 Lee Lily Xiao Hong 2016 World War Two Crucible of the Contemporary World Commentary and Readings Routledge ISBN 9781315489551 Lewkowicz Nicolas The German Question and the Origins of the Cold War IPOC Milan 2008 ISBN 8895145275 Merridale Catherine 2006 Ivan s War Life and Death in the Red Army 1939 1945 New York Metropolitan Books ISBN 978 0 312 42652 1 OCLC 60671899 Murphy David E 2006 What Stalin Knew The Enigma of Barbarossa Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 11981 X Nekrich Aleksandr Moiseevich Ulam Adam Bruno Freeze Gregory L 1997 Pariahs Partners Predators German Soviet Relations 1922 1941 Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 10676 9 Pauwels Jacques 2015 The Myth of the Good War America in the Second World War second ed James Lorimer amp Company ISBN 9781459408739 Phillips Sarah D 2009 There Are No Invalids in the USSR A Missing Soviet Chapter in the New Disability History Disability Studies Quarterly Indiana University 29 3 doi 10 18061 dsq v29i3 936 Poetschke Hubert 2008 Memoirs from the Turbulent Years and Beyond Analysis and Consequences of the World War II Xlibris Corporation ISBN 9781453583401 Roberts Geoffrey 2006 Stalin s Wars From World War to Cold War 1939 1953 Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 11204 1 Roberts Geoffrey 2002 Stalin the Pact with Nazi Germany and the Origins of Postwar Soviet Diplomatic Historiography vol 4 Roberts Geoffrey 1992 The Soviet Decision for a Pact with Nazi Germany Soviet Studies 55 2 57 78 doi 10 1080 09668139208411994 JSTOR 152247 Rottman Gordon 2007 Soviet Rifleman 1941 1945 Osprey ISBN 978 1846031274 Soviet Information Bureau 1948 Falsifiers of History Historical Survey Moscow Foreign Languages Publishing House 272848 Department of State 1948 Nazi Soviet Relations 1939 1941 Documents from the Archives of The German Foreign Office Department of State U S Government Printing Office 1971 Industrialized Building in the Soviet Union a Report of the U S Delegation to the U S S R vol 13 Taubert Fritz 2003 The Myth of Munich Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag ISBN 3 486 56673 3 Varga Harris Christine 2015 Stories of House and Home Soviet Apartment Life During the Khrushchev Years Cornell University Press ISBN 9781501701849 Watson Derek 2000 Molotov s Apprenticeship in Foreign Policy The Triple Alliance Negotiations in 1939 Europe Asia Studies 52 4 695 722 doi 10 1080 713663077 JSTOR 153322 S2CID 144385167 Wells Michael Wells Mike 2011 History for the IB Diploma Causes Practices and Effects of Wars Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521189316 Wettig Gerhard 2008 Stalin and the Cold War in Europe Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7425 5542 6 Ziemke Earl F 1971 Stalingrad to Berlin The German Defeat in the East Government Printing Office ISBN 9780160882746 Home Front edit Abramov Vladimir K Mordovia During the Second World War Journal of Slavic Military Studies 2008 21 2 pp 291 363 Annaorazov Jumadurdy Turkmenistan during the Second World War Journal of Slavic Military Studies 2012 25 1 pp 53 64 Barber John and Mark Harrison The Soviet Home Front A Social and Economic History of the USSR in World War II Longman 1991 Berkhoff Karel C Harvest of Despair Life and Death in Ukraine Under Nazi Rule Harvard U Press 2004 448 pp Braithwaite Rodric Moscow 1941 A City and Its People at War 2006 Carmack Roberto J Kazakhstan in World War II Mobilization and Ethnicity in the Soviet Empire University Press of Kansas 2019 online review Dallin Alexander Odessa 1941 1944 A Case Study of Soviet Territory under Foreign Rule Portland Int Specialized Book Service 1998 296 pp Ellmana Michael and S Maksudovb Soviet deaths in the great patriotic war A note Europe Asia Studies 1994 46 4 pp 671 680 doi 10 1080 09668139408412190 Glantz David M 2001 The Siege of Leningrad 1941 1944 900 Days of Terror Zenith ISBN 978 0 7603 0941 4 Goldman Wendy Z and Donald Filtzer Fortress Dark and Stern The Soviet Home Front During World War II Oxford University Press 2021 online review Goldman Wendy Z and Donald Filtzer Hunger and War Food Provisioning in the Soviet Union during World War II Indiana UP 2015 Hill Alexander British Lend Lease Aid and the Soviet War Effort June 1941 June 1942 Journal of Military History 2007 71 3 pp 773 808 Overy Richard Russia s War A History of the Soviet Effort 1941 1945 1998 432pp excerpt and txt search Reese Roger R Motivations to Serve The Soviet Soldier in the Second World War Journal of Slavic Military Studies 2007 10 2 pp 263 282 Thurston Robert W amp Bernd Bonwetsch 2000 The People s War Responses to World War II in the Soviet Union U of Illinois Press p 84 ISBN 978 0 252 02600 3 Vallin Jacques Mesle France Adamets Serguei and Pyrozhkov Serhii A New Estimate of Ukrainian Population Losses During the Crises of the 1930s and 1940s Population Studies 2002 56 3 249 264 JSTOR 3092980 Reports life expectancy at birth fell to a level as low as ten years for females and seven for males in 1933 and plateaued around 25 for females and 15 for males in the period 1941 44 Primary sources edit Bidlack Richard Nikita Lomagin eds 26 June 2012 The Leningrad Blockade 1941 1944 A New Documentary History from the Soviet Archives Yale U P ISBN 978 0300110296 Hill Alexander ed The Great Patriotic War of the Soviet Union 1941 45 A Documentary Reader 2011 368ppHistoriography edit Edele Mark Fighting Russia s History Wars Vladimir Putin and the Codification of World War II History and Memory 2017 29 2 90 124 Havlat Denis Western Aid for the Soviet Union During World War II Part I Journal of Slavic Military Studies 30 2 2017 290 320 Havlat Denis Western Aid for the Soviet Union During World War II Part II Journal of Slavic Military Studies 30 4 2017 561 601 Argues the supplies made a decisive contribution to Soviet victory despite denials by Stalinist historians Uldricks Teddy J War Politics and Memory Russian Historians Reevaluate the Origins of World War II History and Memory 21 2 2009 pp 60 82 JSTOR 10 2979 his 2009 21 2 60 Historiography Weiner Amir The making of a dominant myth The Second World War and the construction of political identities within the Soviet polity Russian Review 55 4 1996 638 660 JSTOR 131868 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Soviet Union in World War II amp oldid 1200511722, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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