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On 22 June 1941 the Wehrmacht might have looked like the ‘strongest and bestequipped army in the world’, as Dirk Frotscher notes in his Foreword (p. xix), but this was not necessarily the case when qualitative and quantitative factors are both considered.
1 Νοε 2018 · Sunday, June 22, 1941: three million German soldiers invaded the Soviet Union as part of Hitler’s long-planned Operation Barbarossa, which aimed to destroy the Soviet Union, secure its land...
667.8M. 322 pages ; 22 cm. Translation of 1941, 22 ii͡uni͡a. Includes bibliographical references. Prologue / by V. Petrov -- The book: June 22, 1941 / by A.M. Nekrich, translated by V. Petrov (p. 24-245) -- The discussion: A meeting of the Division of History of the Great Patriotic War of the Institute of Marxism-Leninism of the CC CPSU ...
Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union, began the largest and most costly campaign in military history. Its failure was a key turning point of the Second World War. The operation was planned as a blitzkrieg to win Germany its Lebensraum in the east, and the summer of 1941 is well known for the German army’s ...
Sunday, June 22, 1941: three million German soldiers invaded the Soviet Union as part of Hitler’s long-planned Operation Barbarossa, which aimed to destroy the Soviet Union, secure its land as
Operation Barbarossa. “We have only to kick in the door and the whole rotten structure will come crashing down.” – Adolf Hitler In the warm predawn darkness of June 22, 1941, 3 million men waited along a front hundreds of miles long, stretching from the Baltic coast of Poland to the Balkans.
Operation Barbarossa [g] was the invasion of the Soviet Union by Nazi Germany and many of its Axis allies, starting on Sunday, 22 June 1941, during World War II. It was the largest and costliest land offensive in human history, with around 10 million combatants taking part, [ 26 ] and over 8 million casualties by the end of the operation.