Hitler Invades Russia
June 1941
- By
the fall of 1940 the invasion id Britain was not going well
- In
anger Hitler makes a critical decision to turn his attention to Russia
- Joseph
Stalin was warned that Hitler might invade but he did not believe Hitler
would backstab him
- Hitler’s
generals advise him that an invasion of Russia might be a big mistake
- Some
of the reasons are:
- The
country is too large and too cold to occupy
- Joseph
Stalin will want revenge on German people for Hitler’s betrayal
- German
forces are being spread out to the limit across Europe
and supply lines are getting longer and war materials decreasing
- German
tanks and trucks will probably breakdown in the cold or will get stuck
and frozen in deep mud
- German
trains cannot run on Russian rails because the space between each rail is
different
- Stalin
will order a Scorched Earth Policy – burn or blow up anything the Nazis
army will have , nothing will be spared
- Stalin
will use all his trains to transport food, grain, military equipment and
whole factories beyond the range of Hitler’s artillery and bombers beyond
the Ural Mountains
- Joseph
Stalin will sacrifice much of Western Russia in order to set up defenses
around the three major cities of Moscow, Leningrad and Stalingrad
- Moscow the capital and Leningrad will hold at a great cost of
lives, 1,250,000 soldiers and civilians
- The
Battle for Stalingrad
will be fierce, briefly the Germans capture but eventually the Germans
will have to surrender to Russian forces under General Zhukov
- Approximately
110,000 German soldiers surrender at Stalingrad,
representing a major turning point in the war, in favour of the allies
- The
Russians are suddenly fighting on the allied side to defeat Hitler
- By
1944, the German forces are still fighting in Russia
but will be forced to retreat back into Germany
in order to protect Berlin
- The
Russians will seek revenge for more than 20 million soldiers and civilians
killed during World War Two