What's new

On This Day: Battle of Stalingrad begins

Aka123

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Apr 5, 2013
Messages
2,050
Reaction score
1
Country
India
Location
United States
The bloodiest fight of World War II saw 1,000 Luftwaffe planes drop bombs on the Soviet city

AUGUST 23, 1942: The Battle of Stalingrad – the bloodiest fight of World War II - began on this day in 1942 after Nazi Germany attacked the Soviet city bearing its dictator’s name.

The Wehrmacht’s 6th Army, from which only 6,000 of its 330,000 soldiers survived the epic clash, quickly encircled the metropolis on a vital trade river near oil fields.

On the same day 1,000 Luftwaffe planes dropped bombs on Stalingrad, which means “Stalin’s town” in Russian, and reduced much of the symbolic city to rubble.

The Red Army remained inside after transferring the city’s grain and cattle stocks - but not evacuating its 850,000 civilians – to the western banks of the Volga.

But the Germans, who began fighting for the city two years to the day after the Nazi-Soviet non-aggression pact was signed, became encircled themselves as winter set in.

The battle lasted five months and led to two million casualties – including the deaths of 478,741 Soviet soldiers and 40,000 civilians – before the Germans capitulated.

The Soviet victory represented the turning point of the war for the Allies, with the Germans finally being forced back in the East and withdrawing troops in the West.

To the USSR it also embodied the triumph of communism over fascism and deeply humiliated Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, who ordered his soldiers to fight to their deaths.

Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, who was shamed by the Nazi’s June 1941 invasion and 600-mile advance of four million troops, also made Stalingrad his top priority.

8b92f003-a661-4fec-a16e-ce60725f6ac7_PA-7572430.jpg


An aerial image shows the devastation over Stalingrad in September 1942.

So air-equipped Germans and Soviet troops were forced to fight from house to house as civilians starved amid temperatures as low as –30C and outside bombardment.

A British Pathé newsreel reporting the later liberation of the city provides a terrifying glimpse of the city, including hundreds of thousands of bodies imbedded in ice.
It also shows the twisted remains of some of the invaders’ 1,500 tanks and 6,000 artillery pieces destroyed by the Soviets, who lost three times as much weaponry.


Yet, despite being ordered not to surrender, German commander Friedrich Paulus, whose troops were massively outnumbered, capitulated on February 2, 1943.

The career soldier defied Hitler despite being promoted to field marshal three days earlier – and having been told that no German so senior had ever been taken prisoner.


3ac05e61-9c70-4989-9805-019d0a52d1d0_PA-1680354.jpg



Two German Wehrmacht NCOs take cover in a crater during the bitter fighting in Stalingrad.


He hoped to save the lives of his remaining 107,800 soldiers, who were filmed surrendering en masse and being marched out of Stalingrad.

But unlike Paulus, who the Soviets allowed to resettle in communist East Germany after the war, only 6,000 of his men ever returned home.

Around half are believed have died while being marched to labour camps in Siberia, where 50,000 others were worked to death.


http://uk.news.**********/on-this-day--battle-of-stalingrad-begins-155424654.html#xWGS8LN
 
Stalingrad - Grandfather of all battles in Modern times
The bloodiest fight of World War II saw 1,000 Luftwaffe planes drop bombs on the Soviet city

AUGUST 23, 1942: The Battle of Stalingrad – the bloodiest fight of World War II - began on this day in 1942 after Nazi Germany attacked the Soviet city bearing its dictator’s name.

The Wehrmacht’s 6th Army, from which only 6,000 of its 330,000 soldiers survived the epic clash, quickly encircled the metropolis on a vital trade river near oil fields.

On the same day 1,000 Luftwaffe planes dropped bombs on Stalingrad, which means “Stalin’s town” in Russian, and reduced much of the symbolic city to rubble.

The Red Army remained inside after transferring the city’s grain and cattle stocks - but not evacuating its 850,000 civilians – to the western banks of the Volga.

But the Germans, who began fighting for the city two years to the day after the Nazi-Soviet non-aggression pact was signed, became encircled themselves as winter set in.

The battle lasted five months and led to two million casualties – including the deaths of 478,741 Soviet soldiers and 40,000 civilians – before the Germans capitulated.

The Soviet victory represented the turning point of the war for the Allies, with the Germans finally being forced back in the East and withdrawing troops in the West.

To the USSR it also embodied the triumph of communism over fascism and deeply humiliated Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, who ordered his soldiers to fight to their deaths.

Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, who was shamed by the Nazi’s June 1941 invasion and 600-mile advance of four million troops, also made Stalingrad his top priority.

8b92f003-a661-4fec-a16e-ce60725f6ac7_PA-7572430.jpg


An aerial image shows the devastation over Stalingrad in September 1942.

So air-equipped Germans and Soviet troops were forced to fight from house to house as civilians starved amid temperatures as low as –30C and outside bombardment.

A British Pathé newsreel reporting the later liberation of the city provides a terrifying glimpse of the city, including hundreds of thousands of bodies imbedded in ice.
It also shows the twisted remains of some of the invaders’ 1,500 tanks and 6,000 artillery pieces destroyed by the Soviets, who lost three times as much weaponry.


Yet, despite being ordered not to surrender, German commander Friedrich Paulus, whose troops were massively outnumbered, capitulated on February 2, 1943.

The career soldier defied Hitler despite being promoted to field marshal three days earlier – and having been told that no German so senior had ever been taken prisoner.


3ac05e61-9c70-4989-9805-019d0a52d1d0_PA-1680354.jpg



Two German Wehrmacht NCOs take cover in a crater during the bitter fighting in Stalingrad.


He hoped to save the lives of his remaining 107,800 soldiers, who were filmed surrendering en masse and being marched out of Stalingrad.

But unlike Paulus, who the Soviets allowed to resettle in communist East Germany after the war, only 6,000 of his men ever returned home.

Around half are believed have died while being marched to labour camps in Siberia, where 50,000 others were worked to death.


http://uk.news.**********/on-this-day--battle-of-stalingrad-begins-155424654.html#xWGS8LN
 
You got to see it
Hitler spoke of the 6th Army of Paulus, that it is possible to storm the heavens.
Maybe he would have won the heavens - but not Stalingrad!!!
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Hats off to the Russian snipers especially Vasili Zaytsev

images
 
Here is partisan oath:
" I am, a citizen of the Great Soviet Union, a faithful son of the heroic Russian people, I swear I will not release the weapon from the hands of until the last fascist bastard in our land will not be destroyed.

I undertake to unconditionally fulfill all orders of the commanders and chiefs, to comply strictly with military discipline.

For the burned cities and villages, the death of women and children of our own, for torture, abuse and humiliation of my people, I swear to take revenge on the enemy ferociously, ruthlessly and relentlessly.

Blood for blood, death for death!

I swear by all means to help the Red Army to destroy Hitler's rabid dogs, not sparing my blood and my life.

I swear I would rather die in a fierce battle with the enemy, than give myself, my family and all the Soviet people in the bloody fascist slavery.

If, however, because of my weakness, difficulty or ill will I break this my oath and I will betray the interests of the people, then I will die a shameful death on the hands of my comrades."
 
The Russo - German campaign provided the max topics for study in Military History.

The defence of Stalingrad is one among them. The major characters that were prominent were ; Von Bock, Von Leeb , Von Rundstead, Zhukov to name a few. Each great in their own way - producing the impossible against tremendous odds.

For a student of mechanised warfare this is best campaign to study - better than North Africa.
 
When German prisoners of war were taken out of Stalingrad, the guard guy stopped them with a fury pointed to the ruins of the city and shouted: "That's what will be in Berlin!"
 
Back
Top Bottom