World War II began within weeks with the German invasion of Poland. The pact was broken when the Germans invaded the USSR in June, 1941.
At the start of the war Russian Aircraft were outdated and no match for the German's. They were later supplemented by British aircraft including Spitfires and Hurricanes, and also at least one American type (the P-39 Aircobra). They also designed new aircraft of their own (Yaks and MiGs).
Moscow was only 200 miles east of the city, along a road that had been taken by Napoleon in 1812.
It was liberated by Russian troops in the winter of 1942-43.
His optimism was premature, to say the least.
Guderian's tactics were extremely successful during the invasion of Poland (September 1938). The strategy was also pivotal during the German invasion of France in 1940.
Guderian was put in charge of the German invasion of Russia, known as "Operation Barbarosa".
He is known for having many disagreements with Adolph Hitler with regards to strategy.
On December 4 Guderian noted that the Second Panzer Army's drive to Moscow had been halted. The temperature had fallen to 31 below zero, and this was causing the ill-prepared German troops hardships. On December 5 the temperature had fallen another 5 degrees.
On December 6 General Georgi Zhukov unleashed 100 divisions of troops equipped and trained for the harsh conditions on the German invaders. For weeks afterwards the Germany army retreated, their front lines constantly pierced by Soviet troops.
German military leaders could not help but compare their situation to that of Napoleon's defeated Grand Army, 130 years earlier.
Amber, at first glance, looks and feels quite a bit like cheap yellow plastic. Held to the light, however, it has a rich inner glow. Hold it in the palm of your hand, and it quickly warms. It easily picks up a static charge when rubbed with cloth. It can carry away perspiration, and it is rumored that Chopin handled strings of it before a performance for just that reason.
In English "amber" is used to describe both the fossilized tree resin and the most common color. In Polish there are 200 words used to describe the different types of amber. Amber has been carved by the Baltic peoples since neolithic times, and they ground it into folk medicines. Roman soldiers wore mail studded with amber, and the "jewel" helped open direct trade between Rome and the far north.
In the early 18th century Prussian king Frederick William I presented Peter the Great with several carved amber wall panels. Constructed of thousands of interlocking pieces, the panels included mosaics of floral scrollwork, busts and heraldic symbols. Peter's descendants further embellished the panels. During the 1740's Empress Elizabeth had the panels installed in a 30 foot high room in the Catherine Palace near Leningrad.
In September 1941 German troops removed the panels and sent them by truck convoy and train to Konigsberg, a port city between Poland and Lithuania.
In 1944 the RAF bombed the city for 2 days. No remains of the panels were found in the rubble, so it is believed they were moved before the attack.
The German battle plan for 1942 moved away from Moscow towards the oil fields of the Caucasus and the warm water ports on the Caspian sea.
In early July 90 divisions of German troops set out towards Stalingrad. The Germans crossed the Don on August 22-23, but were delayed in their advance by the Soviet 1st and 62nd Armies. By the end of September, however, the Germans had a foothold in Stalingrad.
On November 23 a two-pronged Soviet counterattack surrounded the German 6th Army. Hitler forbade a German retreat, and declared that Stalingrad would become a "fortress", and would be supplied by air. Neither idea was feasible.
General Erich von Manstein assembled a panzer corps in an attempt to relieve the 6th Army in Stalingrad. The corps drove north, but by November 19 was halted by the Soviet 2nd and 51st Armies 20 miles from Stalingrad.
By this time theGerman 6th Army was in no condition to retreat in any case.
The troops were frozen and starved, and their vehicles only had fuel for 20 miles.
Germany held Stalingrad for another 6 weeks, until Field Marshall Friedreich von Paulus surrendered with his whole army on February 2, 1943. During the battle the 6th Army lost approximately 150,000 troops. Of the 91,000 Germans who became prisoners of war only a few returned to Germany.
During the Russian push towards Berlin in the latter days of the war there were a number of massive tank battles, at times involving hundreds of Russian and German tanks. Eye witness accounts of some of these battles speak of the hulks of tanks burning like torches.
Eisenhower informed Stalin on April 12 that US troops were going to make advances on Leipzig. Eisenhower believed that Hitler would make his last stand there, so that was where US efforts were centered. Berlin was to be left pretty much to the Soviets. Systematic bombing by Soviet and British forces reduced the city to rubble. The Luftwaffe, suffering from the depletion of its pilot corps and destruction of its airfields could not protect the city.
On April 13, 1945 Russian troops had conquered Vienna.
On April 16, Zhukov launched a final attack on Berlin. By the end of the month they had reached the center of the city. German civilians and troops, expecting revenge from the Soviets, rushed to surrender to American and British troops in the city.
On April 25 patrols of the US 69th Infantry Division met with elements of the Russian 58th Guards Division at Torgau on the Elbe, cutting off Berlin.
On April 26 Russian shells began falling on the Chancellery in Berlin.
Hitler committed suicide in his bunker on April 30, 1945.
The German surrender was signed on May 7, 1945.
Some 5,750,000 Russians were taken prisoner during the war. Barely 1 million were found alive at the end. Two million died in captivity from starvation, exposure and disease. A million were released during the war, some of them to serve in collaborator units set up by the German Army.
Another million were never accounted for. According to the Germans 67,000 were executed, although it is believed that the actual number is far higher.
Author
Kim Dyer (kimbis@aol.com)
Last updated: May 24, 1995