![]() ![]() Manstein had wanted to attack in March – as well as favouring a more flexible plan – and though the delay meant more tanks were available, all surprise had been lost and the Soviets had had the time to construct deep defences. ![]() ![]() So the attack was not launched until 5 July. The offensive was delayed by Hitler’s hesitation, by the decision to await the arrival of the latest models of tanks, and by disagreements in the High Command, with Guderian opposed and Model wanting further reinforcement. Former general and then historian Friedrich von Mellenthin has called it a ‘veritable death- ride’. It was a desperate venture, for it drew on the greater part of the German operational reserve. The Soviet counter-offensive through the rest of the year rolled all the way to Kiev. The main campaign opened in early July 1943 with the German double-pincer offensive against the Kursk Salient. Map showing the strategic situation on the Eastern Front in the summer of 1943. ‘Operation Citadel’, ordered by Hitler in March, was an attempt to cut off the Kursk salient with two giant pincers from north and south. The Russian post-Stalingrad advance had created a vast bulge (or salient) around the town of Kursk, jutting some 90 miles into the German lines, which, at once, provided a spearhead for the Soviet Army, or a trap should a German pincer movement succeed. In Frieser’s words, it was ‘only a preventive attack with limited aims within an overall defensive strategy.’ Hitler and the German High Command now recognised that the best that could be hoped for on the Eastern Front was stabilisation. The German Kursk offensive was not, compared with previous operations, ambitious. But it was failure to prevent the subsequent Soviet advance at Kursk that threatened German hopes of holding on to the bulk of their conquests. The battle took place some six months after the surrender of German forces at Stalingrad had dealt a massive blow to Hitler’s aim of complete victory on the Eastern Front. Was Prokhorovka really a bloody stalemate or, as has recently been argued by German historian Karl-Heinz Frieser, a clear German victory – a conclusion backed by British historian Ben Wheatley in his analysis of the photographs taken immediately after the battle by the Luftwaffe? The strategic context Both have argued that the Battle of Brody, in June 1941, involved more tanks, and was of greater importance, putting an end to Hitler’s hopes of defeating the Soviet Union in a short war. It was certainly one of the greatest tank battles of the war, but the claim that it was the greatest has been challenged by American historian David Glantz and Russian historian Valeriy Zamulin. The war would not have been won without the millions of Russian soldiers who gave their lives.A rare aerial colour photo of German armour moving into action on the first morning of the Battle of Kursk. The Red Army launches offensives and reclaims the territory. German troops learn that Hitler died and prepare for a final battle at the Reichstag Building World War II ends in Europe on May 9th, 1945. The sheer number of T-34s causes the Wehrmacht to become short of ammunition, men, and equipment Hitler terminates Operation Citadel the next day. Soviet tanks are mass produced Germany's are of higher quality but fewer in number. German generals are convinced that Russia is on the brink of surrendering. ![]() Erich von Manstein creates the military strategy for Operation Citadel. Fake airfields and artillery positions are built to trick the Luftwaffe. The Red Army prepares for the Wehrmacht attacks by enlisting citizens to dig trenches and anti-tank ditches. General Georgy Zhukov anticipates the battle and creates a solid defense. Hitler hopes that Operation Citadel will drive out the Red Army, but delays its strike. Soviet soldiers stand up to the German troops, who are not used to the cold Russian winter. Field Marshall Friedrich Paulus surrenders at Stalingrad on January 31, 1943. The French army is starved very few soldiers return home. Memory of Humanity (02:56)Ĭompare Operation Barbarossa to the Russian invasion led by Napoleon Bonaparte. Minsk falls in one week by the end of December, the USSR loses 3 million men. The Wehrmacht invades the Soviet Union with the goal of conquering the country before the start of winter. Operation Barbarossa (03:35)Īdolf Hitler enters the "wolf's lair" in East Prussia for the first time on June 23rd, 1941. Key moments in the fall of the Third Reich include the beginning of Operation Barbarossa, Soviets fortifying the Kursk Region, and the Red Army battles Nazis in Berlin. Imagine if the Axis Forces won the battle of Kursk and Europe fell to Germany during the Normandy Invasion. The USSR Strikes Back (02:17) FREE PREVIEW ![]()
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