“The street is no longer measured by meters but by corpses ... Stalingrad is no longer a town. By day it is an enormous cloud of burning, blinding smoke; it is a vast furnace lit by the reflection of the flames.

The Battle of Stalingrad was a brutal military campaign between Russian forces and those of Nazi Germany and the Axis powers during World War II.

By spring 1942, the Germans had stabilized their front in a line running roughly from Leningrad in the north to Rostov in the south. There were a number of salients in the line where Soviet offensives had pushed the Germans back, notably to the northwest of Moscow and south of Kharkov, but neither was particularly threatening.

In the far south the Germans were in control of most of the Ukraine and much of the Crimean, although Sevastapol remained in Soviet hands along with a small portion of the Kerch peninsula.

The capture of Stalingrad was important to Hitler for two primary reasons. Firstly, it was a major industrial city on the Volga River -- a vital transport route between the Caspian Sea and Northern Russia. Secondly, its capture would secure the left flank of the German armies as they advanced into the oil-rich Caucasus region -- with a goal of cutting off fuel to Stalin’s war machine.

Army Group South was selected for a sprint forward through the southern Russian steppes into the Caucasus to capture the vital Soviet oil fields there. Instead of focusing his attention on the Soviet Capital of Moscow as his general staff advised, Hitler continued to send forces and supplies to the eastern Ukraine.

The planned summer offensive was code-named Fall Blau (trans.: “Case Blue”). It was to include the German Sixth Army, Seventeenth Army, Fourth Panzer Army and First Panzer Army. Army Group South had overrun the Ukrainian SSR in 1941. Poised in the Eastern Ukraine, it was to spearhead the offensive.

The battle of Stalingrad was one of the largest battles in human history. It raged for 199 days. At different times the Germans had held up to 90% of the city, yet the Soviet soldiers and officers fought on fiercely.

The Soviets first defended Stalingrad against a fierce German onslaught. So great were Soviet losses that at times, the life expectancy of a newly arrived soldier was less than a day, and the life expectancy of a Soviet officer was three days.

Their sacrifice is immortalized by a soldier of General Rodimtsev, about to die, who scratched on the wall of the main railway station (which changed hands 15 times during the battle) “Rodimtsev’s Guardsmen fought and died here for their Motherland.”


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  • star_wraith [he/him]
    ·
    4 years ago

    It pisses me off so much that Americans think WWII was all about them and that the US single-handedly won the war.

    • GVAGUY3 [he/him]
      ·
      edit-2
      4 years ago

      I just this past year learned about how much China (both KMT and CPC) gave for the war as well. Japan was basically trapped in China unable to divert forces against the US and other Allies as well as preventing them from invading the Soviet Union. We fail at teaching history.

    • Wojackhorseman2 [he/him]
      ·
      edit-2
      4 years ago

      I went to the bookstore for the first time in years today and I thought I’d see what kind of books would be in the political science and history area and the first book I picked up was like “the soviet victory over hitler was a myth and it was actually the allies helping, Stalin would have eaten shit if it wasn’t for the us.”

    • vertexarray [any]
      ·
      4 years ago

      Also the fiction that american intervention was some act of benevolent heroism rather than callously pursuing their strategic objectives. Would they even have intervened in Europe if not for to check the Soviet Union?

      • star_wraith [he/him]
        ·
        4 years ago

        Nope. And while the historical evidence is scant, I firmly believe the US only got involved in WWI because if the Allied Powers lost, Wall Street and the govt never would have gotten their loans paid back.

        • vertexarray [any]
          ·
          4 years ago

          And to begin with, the americans intervened in the russian civil war and fought the red army around Arkhangelsk in 1918-1919! It's always been a conflict of American aggression against poors getting too big for their boots. Amazing to think they're still selling the same shit trying to gin up a conflict with China.

          • star_wraith [he/him]
            ·
            4 years ago

            Literally 0.1% of Americans realize we started the cold war with a hot war - we invaded the USSR completely unprovoked.

    • snackage [he/him]
      ·
      4 years ago

      Just compare the number of combat deaths. It's obvious who did the actual work.