Soviet Union in World War II

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Heinrich Himmler locks eyes with a Soviet prisoner of war in Russia or Belarus, c. 1941.

Soviet POWs massacred by Germans in April 1945 in the face of Soviet advance. This image apparently shows the bodies being reburied.

Soviet tanks near Odessa, c. April 1944, during the liberation of Ukraine.

Churchill, FDR, and Stalin discuss the future of postwar Europe at the Yalta Conference in Crimea, February 1945.

A Soviet soldier raises the flag of the Soviet Union over the Reichstag building, 2 May 1945.

The Soviet Union was an integral part of the causes, nature, and outcome of the Second World War.

Background

Anti-communism

The Second World War was in many ways a confrontation between fascism, liberal capitalism, and communism, and the latter had no better representative than the Soviet Union.

The 1917 Russian Revolution brought about the first successful proletarian government. Bourgeois forces, including the United Kingdom, the United States, France, and Japan, failed in their attempts to suppress this government during the Russian Civil War, allowing the Russian communists to consolidate their territory into the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, later known as the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. The USSR's support for communist and socialist movements throughout Eurasia posed a threat to the capitalist-imperialist state of affairs, triggering finance capitalists in Germany, Italy, and elsewhere to support the installation of fascists and fascistic groups as the only effective opponent to the communist threat. In addition, non-fascist capitalist states implicitly tolerated or even supported the growth of fascist movements in Europe. Prince Edward of the UK, for example, had good relations with the National Socialist leadership into the late 1930s and spoke privately of his strong sympathies with their cause, and there is evidence that the Nazi government intended to reinstall him as king upon a Nazi invasion of Great Britain.[1]Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag

Neutral phase (1939–1941)

Invasion of Poland

Katyn affair

Baltic states

German invasion

Operation Barbarossa

Fall Blau

Final phase

Invasion of Germany

Soviet invasion of Manchuria

Aftermath

Reconstruction

Fate of POWs

Economy and society

Industrial output

Propaganda

Military

The Soviet Union quickly adapted its military doctrine and strategy to changing conditions as the Germans carried out the largest land invasion in human history.

Myths abound in non-Russian speaking cultures, especially in the Anglophone world, which portray excessive brutality on the part of Red Army leadership. Practices such as shooting retreating soldiers en masse and the use of one rifle for every two soldiers are portrayed in historical fiction such as the 2001 film Enemy at the Gates and video games in the Call of Duty series.[2]

Postwar historiography relied heavily on the memoirs of Wehrmacht general Kurt von Tippelskirch[citation needed] which claimed that the Soviets had outnumbered the Nazis 7 to 1 and had a loss ratio of 10 to 1.[citation needed] In fact, the loss ratio was much closer.[citation needed]

Tactics

Logistics

Soviet logistics were instrumental in winning the war against Germany. While logistical support did break down in rare cases, especially during the chaotic early months of the war, most Red Army regulars were well-equipped by the end of the German incursion and did not typically lack rifles or other basic supplies. Supply deficiencies also occurred among the irregular and quickly-formed Narodnoe Opolcheniye, or "People's Militias".[citation needed] Fighters at Stalingrad and elsewhere did not face such supply shortages and in fact, the USSR outproduced Germany: in aircraft by a factor of 1.3, tanks by 1.7, machine guns by 2.2, artillery by 3.2 and mortars by 5.5.[3]

Blocking detachments

The Soviet Army instituted blocking detachments (zagraditelnye otriady) in certain penal battalions and rarely executed retreating soldiers, typically after a trial.[citation needed]

Military executions

German POWs

Rape

Notes

References

  1. Burack, Emily (5 Jan 2023). "The British Royal Family's Connection to the Nazis". Town & Country. Retrieved 24 Sep 2023.
  2. For instance, "Not One Step Back", from Call of Duty: Finest Hour.
  3. Richard Overy, Why the Allies Won; Chris Chant, Small Arms