Barbarossa

Front Cover
Harper Collins, Jun 25, 1985 - History - 560 pages

On June 22, 1941, before dawn, German tanks and guns began firing across the Russian border. It was the beginning of Hitler's Operation Barbarossa, one of the most brutal campaigns in the history of warfare. Four years later, the victorious Red Army has suffered a loss of seven million lives. Alan Clark's incisive analysis succeeds in explaining how a fighting force that in one two-month period lost two million men was nevertheless able to rally to defeat the Wehrmacht. The Barbarossa campaign included some of the greatest episodes in military history: the futile attack on Moscow in the winter of 1941-42, the siege of Stalingrad, the great Russian offensive beginning in 1944 that would lead the Red Army to the historic meeting with the Americans at the Elbe and on to victory in Berlin.

Barbarossa is a classic of miltary history. This paperback edition contains a new preface by the author.

 

Contents

Mother Russia
28
The Clash of Arms
44
The First Crisis
77
The Lötzen Decision
98
Hypothesis and Reality
114
Slaughter in the Ukraine
129
The Start of the Moscow Offensive
145
The Battle of Moscow
158
Zitadelle
275
The Consolidation Period
303
The Greatest Tank Battle in History
322
The Aftermath
339
BOOK IV Nemesis
367
The Wehrmacht in a decline Russian weapons output soaring
380
Eastern Europe Changes Hands
384
Black January
415

Stalingrad
185
The Wehrmacht at High Tide
204
Verdun on the Volga
220
The Entombment of the 6th Army
239
The Advent of General von Manstein
249
The Fall of Berlin
440
BIBLIOGRAPHY
485
NOTE ON SOURCES
491
INDEX
499
Copyright

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About the author (1985)

Alan Clark, the noted historian, entered poilitics in 1972. He was Secretary of State in Margaret Thatcher's cabinet.

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