Stalingrad: Chances for a Breakout?

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  • čas přidán 8. 10. 2018
  • Of all the debates about the Battle of Stalingrad, perhaps none causes more controversy than the question of whether or not the Sixth Army would have been able to break-out of the Soviet encirclement. Some people argue that the break-out had good chances. Yet, this is highly debatable.
    Historically, a very large number of German generals suggested an outbreak during the crisis, yet, it never happened due to objections of Hitler. Nevertheless, the question remains if a breakout could have been successful if immediate action had been taken. To properly assess this question we need to take a look at the combat power of German troops at Stalingrad, their logistics, mobility and some other factors, before the encirclement happened.
    Some thumbnail images generated by OpenAI's DALL-E.
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    » SOURCES «
    Glantz, David M.; House, Jonathan M.: Armageddon in Stalingrad. The Stalingrad Trilogy, Volume 2: September-November 1942. University Press of Kansas: United States, 2009.
    Glantz, David M.; House, Jonathan M.: Endgame at Stalingrad. The Stalingrad Trilogy, Volume 3: Book One: November 1942. University Press of Kansas: United States, 2014.
    Glantz, David M.; House, Jonathan M.: When Titans Clashed. How the Red Army stopped Hitler. Revised and Expanded Edition. University Press of Kansas: USA, 2015
    Wettstein, Adrian E.: Die Wehrmacht im Stadtkampf 1939-1943. Ferdinand Schöningh: Paderborn, 2014.
    Das Deutsche Reich und der Zweite Weltkrieg - Band 6. Der globale Krieg - Die Ausweitung zum Weltkrieg und der Wechsel der Initiative 1941 bis 1943, Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt: Stuttgart, 1990
    Germany and the Second World War - Volume 6 - The Global War
    Hartmann, Christian: Wehrmacht im Ostkrieg. Front und militärisches Hinterland 1941/42. De Gruyter Oldenbourg: 2010.
    DiNardo, R.L.: Mechanized Juggernaut or Military Anachronism. Horses and the German Army of WWII. Stackpole Books: Mechanicsburg, USA, 2009.
    Wette, Wolfram (Hrsg.); Ueberschär, Gerd R. (Hrsg.): Stalingrad - Mythos und Wirklichkeit einer Schlacht. Fischer: Frankfurt am Main, 1992.
    Ausbildungsvorschrift für die Panzertruppe - Führung und Kampf der Panzergrenadiere - Heft 1 - Das Panzergrenadier-Battaillon (gp.) - H.Dv. 298/3a (5. 8. 1944)
    Klatt, Paul: BAKALOWO - Ausbruch au seiner Einschließung - Ukraine 1944; in: Truppendienst - Gefechtsbeispiele aus dem Zweiten Weltkrieg, S. 207-2014
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    #ww2 #stalingrad #militaryhistory

Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @MilitaryHistoryVisualized
    @MilitaryHistoryVisualized  Před 5 lety +387

    Dr. Jens Wehner recently made a German video on this, that also includes some new sources, be sure to check it out here: czcams.com/video/nTQVd_u96hs/video.html
    Corrections: It was the 23rd November 1942 as written, NOT October as narrated. It was "Guards Army" not "Guards Amy".
    Video on Wehrmacht & Red Army Tactics at Stalingrad here: czcams.com/video/BEhkkzIenr0/video.html
    If you like in-depth researched videos on Military History, consider supporting me on Patreon: www.patreon.com/mhv/

    • @WildBillCox13
      @WildBillCox13 Před 5 lety +7

      Chuikov's memoir is a great read. 64th Div, and others, were ground down to nothing in the process of "Bleeding White the Hitlerite".
      The attritional perspective-easier for the historian to integrate into his or her narrative-discounts the planning of Operations and Operational strategy. As German Generalship declined through attrition, Russian Generalship advanced through experience. Even though I am making that point, I still wonder about how much direct influence the two policy makers had on troops at he front. I am still afraid of Stalin . . . and Hitler . . . and Churchill . . . and Missaloony.

    • @fanta4897
      @fanta4897 Před 5 lety +1

      Ok, we got this question out of the way so let's move to another: would attempt of breaking out of encirclement pay off more than just staying in the city? Would they inflict more damage/would the losses that happened, and would happen anyway, be less of a waste?

    • @manyinterests1961
      @manyinterests1961 Před 5 lety +23

      I would rather guard Amy too

    • @davidbros849
      @davidbros849 Před 5 lety +3

      Can you make a video assesing if Hitler gave Mainstein full control of the army in the east which he did and the front was stabilized. But then left him in control. Could have Mainstein changed the outcome of the war? If you cannot make a video can you please give your oppinion? Thank you.

    • @claudejunkers4348
      @claudejunkers4348 Před 5 lety

      Brilliant ! This video helps explain a lot. Many thanks !
      I wonder what did the Germans also find as obstacles in the eastern front (Moscow, Leningrad, Kiev...etc)

  • @LuisLopez-zh9kh
    @LuisLopez-zh9kh Před 5 lety +205

    " Where are the horses?"
    " We are the horses."

  • @danielwallace1759
    @danielwallace1759 Před 5 lety +1639

    I like how a horse had a better chance of escaping Stalingrad than a German soldier.

    • @nks406
      @nks406 Před 5 lety +178

      If it wasn't eaten

    • @danielwallace1759
      @danielwallace1759 Před 5 lety +131

      Or used as a source of fuel to cook said horse.

    • @andyl8055
      @andyl8055 Před 5 lety +66

      I would be surprised if any horses ultimately survived the eastern front. If you weren’t human you were basically fucked.

    • @danielwallace1759
      @danielwallace1759 Před 5 lety +212

      If you were a human you were also fucked tbh

    • @jackharter660
      @jackharter660 Před 5 lety +39

      @@andyl8055 horse's had value they could Pull supplies through the mud and snow if you were Russian you could always get more people.

  • @Furzkampfbomber
    @Furzkampfbomber Před 4 lety +252

    One of my grandfathers was a combat engineer. He and his unit only survived Stalingrad because of his commanding officer. When the encirclement was about to get completely closed, this man apparently decided that he loved life and his men more then the Führer. There was only one crammed road out of the encirclement left and for most cars there was no getting through, except for trucks with wounded, so my grandfathers commanding officer 'borrowed' some trucks and ordered his little convoy to stay directly behind one of the last convoys with wounded soldiers that made it out of the cauldron.
    Apparently the situation was a complete mess and the 6th Army was in a state of dissolution, so no one even really asked, not even after they got out. Sure, it was clear that this unit of combat engineers was definitely _not_ where it was supposed to be, but then again this officer continued to refer to orders never given by brass that was dead, so no one could prove him wrong and since combat engineers were quite a rare commodity for the Wehrmacht at this time, they got away with this.
    Unfortunately, my grandfathers unit got ordered back from Russia and was then transferred to the Normandy, where my grandfather got captured by the Allies. After a not too long time as prisoner of war of the Allies, he was send home. Unfortunately, the russians then dragged him out of his train, which is how he became a prisoner of war of the russians, a year or so after the war was over.

    • @yugiohguy
      @yugiohguy Před 3 lety +25

      Damn your grandpa's a Nazi

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims Před 3 lety +57

      A sad fate, surviving the most devastating war while captured by the west, and when you finally get to go home, the Russians snatch you

    • @Furzkampfbomber
      @Furzkampfbomber Před 3 lety +78

      @@yugiohguy And your grandfather was an idiot who clearly passed this specific set of genes to later generations quite successfully. We all have our cross to bear, haven't we? :)

    • @Furzkampfbomber
      @Furzkampfbomber Před 3 lety +35

      @@looinrims While most the bigwigs just got away, like so often. From 100.000 german soldiers captured at Stalingrad, only a couple of thousand ever returned.
      While Paulus, that goddamn pig who _caused_ the misery of his soldiers in the first place by having no spine at all, returned to East-Germany soon after the war and was happy to offer his services to the socialist dictatorship. Isn't it fun.

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims Před 3 lety +22

      @@Furzkampfbomber I detest the Russians on just about everything, but more subjectively I could never blame them for the treatment of German POWs, considering what the reverse situation looked like
      But yeah, it’s always the top guys who get off scot free, while the lower guys are the ones who take the beating

  • @skyboxmagee8038
    @skyboxmagee8038 Před 4 lety +429

    Stalingrad at the end of January in 1943 must have literally been one of the worst places to exist in all of history.

    • @oyuk4618
      @oyuk4618 Před 4 lety +19

      How about first day of somme

    • @bleepbleep5245
      @bleepbleep5245 Před 4 lety +76

      Still slightly better than modern days Detroit though...

    • @apoc3037
      @apoc3037 Před 4 lety +3

      How about November 23, there you have more horror in front of you

    • @michaelengel3407
      @michaelengel3407 Před 4 lety +22

      There are some places which were stigmatized during world war. Auschwitz, Dresden, Stalingrad. That places stand for all terrors and fears that war and hate can bring to the people up to our days.

    • @jmbpaz
      @jmbpaz Před 3 lety +2

      Not even close

  • @michaelolsen2760
    @michaelolsen2760 Před 5 lety +137

    My great uncle was actually part of the airlift. The conditions he described were hellish.

    • @ximrade4287
      @ximrade4287 Před 4 lety +2

      @Alex English Left the chat....

    • @myrmecologistjp9228
      @myrmecologistjp9228 Před 4 lety +3

      @Alex because some one says nazi scum dosent mean they are communists, of course, the same could be said for the person you replied because they don't know if that member of family member was a nazi.

  • @buster117
    @buster117 Před 5 lety +1412

    Warning: huge wave of hoi4 players are coming to suggest opinions

    • @AlexanderSeven
      @AlexanderSeven Před 5 lety +350

      Germans could definitely break through if they used artillery only.

    • @RouGeZH
      @RouGeZH Před 5 lety +215

      Artillery only would've saved 6th army

    • @edoardodalpra4742
      @edoardodalpra4742 Před 5 lety +72

      Man, that game is so unrealistic. Hoi3 was way better IMO.

    • @Edax_Royeaux
      @Edax_Royeaux Před 5 lety +260

      Change the divisions trapped in Stalingrad to a paratrooper insignia, and paradrop them back behind your own lines!

    • @rainyvideos3684
      @rainyvideos3684 Před 5 lety +104

      Fools. I wouldn't have been encircled in the first place! I would have them surrounded from the inside!

  • @mrdodge1303
    @mrdodge1303 Před 5 lety +436

    This feeling when snake becomes schnake, Stalingrad becomes Schtalingrad and Vodka becomes Schnapps...

  • @captinobvious4705
    @captinobvious4705 Před 5 lety +118

    Evacuate the horses.
    But leave the men and tanks.
    GENIUS!!!!

    • @matteblack5805
      @matteblack5805 Před 4 lety +17

      Gotta appease PETA my dude

    • @chuckschillingvideos
      @chuckschillingvideos Před 4 lety +7

      You can grow hay and oats. Can't grow oil.

    • @o.h2202
      @o.h2202 Před 3 lety +6

      Hitler was a vegan afterall

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims Před 3 lety +1

      Horses have little combat value, the Soviet winter offensive at Stalingrad was a surprise

    • @dmitrizorkin3851
      @dmitrizorkin3851 Před 3 lety

      @@looinrims why it was a surprise? Hitler generals Become dumb overnight? German intelligence? What was doing?

  • @ianbirge8269
    @ianbirge8269 Před 5 lety +747

    Given what we know about what happened to POWs on the Eastern Front (from both sides), if I was in the 6th Army, I would have preferred the breakout, whatever the odds.

    • @edi9892
      @edi9892 Před 5 lety +112

      I thought the same about WWII in general. My grandfather has seen horrors beyond your imagination, but still I would have preferred to test my luck in combat rather than hide from constant bombing raids, starve and have to fear torture and rape...

    • @Bota367
      @Bota367 Před 5 lety +91

      So you have 2 options:
      1. Surrender and hope you, as exhausted soldier, won't freeze to death on your way to Gulag.
      2. Break out as exhausted soldier, fight the Soviet and hope you don't freeze to death or die by Soviet hand.
      So both options offers you freezing to death only 2nd one gives you chances of being killed in combat. So your chances for survival are higher if you surrender no matter how brutal the POW treatment is.
      They were in shit and maybe you would like to break out but I don't think many of them cared at that point. There is a saying the dead ones are lucky because they don't suffer anymore.

    • @orgami100
      @orgami100 Před 5 lety +50

      My father was there with the Hungarian army, not as a combative soldier as a forced slave labor...
      According to him about 800 laborers who when there less than a dozen survived. .
      He survived because exchanged his labor clothing with a dead Hungarian officer. .
      As he was walking the ice road truck came along, next thing he remembers being in a hospital in Budapest. .
      Hated Hungarians with a passion, accordingly wishes all would've been killed by the Russians. .

    • @djeieakekseki2058
      @djeieakekseki2058 Před 5 lety +3

      Jason Wilson what a story, interesting!

    • @slimchancetoo
      @slimchancetoo Před 5 lety +3

      Or by Feldgendarmarie hand. "Where is your weapon -------- you have lost it" "A bullet will perhaps teach you not to lose it again".

  • @Luca-vk8zt
    @Luca-vk8zt Před 5 lety +297

    When you encircle the whole 6th army in Hoi4
    *outstanding move meme*

    • @spleen5527
      @spleen5527 Před 5 lety +2

      owned

    • @spleen5527
      @spleen5527 Před 5 lety +2

      German troops sucked Russian wiener.

    • @biz4twobiz463
      @biz4twobiz463 Před 5 lety +1

      Luca Pinne ... totally a supply and demand issue. What's worse, is that upper command new they didn't have resources to aide the breakthrough forces...and YET they sent them anyway. Waist! Waist! Waist! Of men and supplies.

    • @biz4twobiz463
      @biz4twobiz463 Před 5 lety +1

      @Sovereign only if yours is small lol!! As a girl, that is all I can do.... haha

    • @biz4twobiz463
      @biz4twobiz463 Před 5 lety

      @Sovereign ... lmao!! You are way to silly lol

  • @ludditeneaderthal
    @ludditeneaderthal Před 5 lety +67

    What actual grand scale advantage would such a breakout deliver? Short answer is "none". The defensive stance kept a large chunk of Soviet manpower and materiel committed. The ability to hold that chunk at Bay required the entirety of the German manpower available. The losses of materiel by the Germans, the inevitable over run by the Soviets, and the depletion of the manpower that did manage to breakout, and the Haggard condition any successful units would have arrived to German lines in would, strategically, add up to the same losses as their starving to death, only sooner. A breakout had an imbalance that favored the Soviets far more than the Germans. That's why the status quo was favored, it bought more time before the inevitable happened, and had a greater chance of turn around of Fortune if something miraculous occurred. A miracle was their only chance.

    • @chuckschillingvideos
      @chuckschillingvideos Před 4 lety +5

      Yep. That was the calculus. It bought the other army groups a good 45-60 days time.

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims Před 3 lety +1

      The idea isn’t it would change the fortunes of war, it’s just a thought exercise, and considering what actually happened to the poor sods, yeah

    • @darklysm8345
      @darklysm8345 Před 3 lety +2

      No. an immidiate breakout would be a stupid idea but attacking when Mainstein"s troops tried to relief the army was a good idea. The losses during the breakout would be in the tens of thousands, but half of the german forces could have been escaped and then used against the soviets again.

  • @sevenproxies4255
    @sevenproxies4255 Před 5 lety +606

    A fighting chance with the risk of death is always preferable to certain death.

    • @subhikebbeh3490
      @subhikebbeh3490 Před 5 lety +23

      Manstein was promising Paulaus that Army group Don is coming to save him. So yeah he believed he had another chances

    • @sevenproxies4255
      @sevenproxies4255 Před 5 lety +77

      @transylvanian: What a load of crap.
      The soviets even worked their own citizens to death in gulags. Why on earth would they treat enemy troops any better?

    • @sevenproxies4255
      @sevenproxies4255 Před 5 lety +46

      @transylvanian: Sounds to me like you're thw victim of pro-soviet propaganda. It's obvious youre pining back for the days of "the glory of the soviet union" more than anything. A pinko commie in other words.

    • @sevenproxies4255
      @sevenproxies4255 Před 5 lety +38

      @transylvanian In western penal labour systems, convicts were not purposefully worked to death or put through starvation on purpose like the barbaric soviets did.
      People also weren't sent to penal labour for the mere act of disagreeing with the ruling communist party, like the vile, disugsting soviets did.
      What's next? Are you gonna tell me that the Holodomor was just "an accident"?

    • @sevenproxies4255
      @sevenproxies4255 Před 5 lety +34

      @transylvanian: Ever heard about the Katyn Massacre? The victims in that were not nazi germans, but polish officers and soldiers.
      Are you gonna claim that poles would defend or buy into a nazi narrative just because they hate the soviet union?

  • @stef1896
    @stef1896 Před 5 lety +272

    Even if the sixth army went out of Stalingrad somehow, even if the Red Army give tham a free pass in November, this wouldn't have a significant impact on the war. The thing which matter is the ultimate failure of the operation Case Blue, which would happen with or without the Battle of Stalingrad.

    • @hazzmati
      @hazzmati Před 5 lety +34

      Yeah I guess. It was just around 100k soldiers that was stuck in Stalingrad. Those extra 100k soldiers wouldn't be much help in the long run when the soviet would outnumber the german army in the millions.

    • @stef1896
      @stef1896 Před 5 lety +52

      @Hazzmati
      Agree. In the woke of the operation Barbarossa the Axis forces had about one million soldiers more than the Red Army on the Eastern Front. In November 1942. the Red Army had about 2.5 million soldiers more than the Axis forces on the Eastern Front. Initial success of the operation Case Blue was due to the Axis' concentration of forces in one sector of the front and because the Red Army expected another Wehrmacht's thrust toward Moscow. It was just a matter of time when the Axis lines will start to crumble and collapse.

    • @pingun96
      @pingun96 Před 5 lety +46

      The Germans and Soviets werent actually in a "one verses a million" situation, the soviets were bleed severly in the war and at many times, they were tied in manpower. 100k men is a very large amount, as its enough to hold a large area.
      What would be the issue, is that once they got out, they'd have a hard time establishing a defense, but they could have at least helped to stabelize the front in the region a wee bit. The 6th army falling was a major 'buttfuck' in the German lines, as it was afterall an army.
      But tbh the german industrial and fuel situation was more of an issue. They were hand crafting tanks up untill 1943 if i recall, and still had a major issue with fuel supplies. If the 6th army would have broken out, they might have held some ground or aided in holding the front one way or the other, but they wouldnt be able to push past stalingrad, or around it. And that was what Case Blue needed, secure oil fields to keep the German war machine operating. And that war machine was thirsty.

    • @stef1896
      @stef1896 Před 5 lety +18

      @pingun96
      In the last paragraph you are pretty much saying 'even if the sixth army broken out that wouldn't have a significant impact on the war', something which is the main thesis in my comment. Nevertheless, by November of 1942 the Red Army had about 2.5 million soldiers more than the Axis and far more firepower. With the battle of Stalingrad or not, with the Case Blue or not, with the Lend-Lease or not, by the Spring of 1942 the Wehrmacht is doomed on the Eastern Front. In the Operation Barbarossa the Wehrmacht failed to knock out the USSR out of war, before the USSR start to mobilize reserves and consolidate industries in the rear. After that failure the Wehrmacht is doomed on the Eastern Front. The battle of Smolensk is probably the most critical point in the war. After this battle the Wehrmacht will still have huge successes, but the USSR already establish the platform for the attrition which, in the long run, lead the Wehrmacht into defeat.

    • @hjalmar4565
      @hjalmar4565 Před 5 lety +28

      "with the Lend-Lease or not". I agree with most you wrote, but I am not sure if this would be the case without the allied supplies. Could the soviets supply their armies and feed their citizens without the trucks and the food which the allies were sending?

  • @adrikubel
    @adrikubel Před 5 lety +19

    One of the reasons so much fuel was required is that the planes had to fly fuel in for the return trip given the distances involved.

  • @hawksrob1961
    @hawksrob1961 Před 4 lety +13

    I love listening to smart people talk, matters little what the subject is, so long as it’s passionate and ethical

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims Před 2 lety

      You’d deny what smart people would say on the basis of ethics (assuming what they’re saying is factual)? How’s that work?

  • @echoofhistory7583
    @echoofhistory7583 Před 5 lety +144

    First of all, very good video. But some parts of 6th Army manage to breakout from Stalingrad. There were two 7th and 6th Lithuanian Auxiliary Police Battalions which were lead by major Jonas Semaška. Which got permission from 6th Army HQ to retreat with the rest of his men separately from the main forces. And they managed to breakthrough from "Stalingrad Pocket". 400 Lithuanian soldiers reached Lithuania out of more than 700. As a side note these men were conscripted to German army against there will. Only source of this story is in Lithuanian language in book called ''Priesaika, Jonas Semaška-Liepa ir bendražygiai''. Also I made short video about it in English.

    • @alganhar1
      @alganhar1 Před 5 lety +60

      There is a big difference between 400 men breaking out and 200,000. While I do not know the story I will make the assumption that those Lithuanians did not in fact 'break' out, but for the most part 'infiltrated' out, in other words relied on stealth more than combat power to affect their withdrawal. You simply cannot do that with 200,000 men, especially considering so many of them were in effective direct contact with the enemy, thus any withdrawal would have been immediately noticed.
      I would not be surprised to hear similar stories of small numbers of men being able to extricate themselves from the Stalingrad pocket, but I will make a bet that pretty much all of those that managed it successfully did so by relying on stealth rather than combat/

    • @echoofhistory7583
      @echoofhistory7583 Před 5 lety +9

      @@alganhar1 Thank you for your response.
      To start with, I was not talking about possibility of major breakout of 6th army. It was Unthinkable, and I completely agree with information in this video. However, I just wanted to tell that history is not just black and white.
      Secondly, you made a logical assumption that was mostly stealthy sneak out from Stalingrad rather than breakout. Well at least from my source it seems that there was fierce fighting involved. Sometimes even hand to hand combat. Also, there is information about that battalions got into artillery fire in some occasions. So, combat was real. You can see that from numbers. Around 700 started and approximately 400 survived. Of course, stealth tactics were used because units moved through swamps and forests avoiding strong points but losses were still high.
      Another piece of information is that some of battalion’s men got military awards. In my opinion, this should prove that if even Germans consider award worth achievement it sure seems like a quite big accomplishment.

    • @matteoorlandi856
      @matteoorlandi856 Před 5 lety +5

      Well the italians tryed to break trough and they did It at the end. And we are talking about an entire army, even if the losses where really heavy

    • @alganhar1
      @alganhar1 Před 5 lety +9

      Perhaps I should have been a bit clearer and said that they would have relied *mostly* on stealth, fighting only when it was absolutely neccessary. My mistake. An interesting story however, one I intend to look up. I have heard of a few scattered groups escaping Stalingrad, but they would have numbered a few thousand at best if you add them all up. Even the best encirclement will have enough small gaps that will allow small, determined, and skilled groups to escape.

    • @fuzzydunlop7928
      @fuzzydunlop7928 Před 5 lety +2

      @@echoofhistory7583 I think you just wanted to bring an anecdote to the table - there's nothing wrong with that but you don't need to put on airs about it.

  • @cannonfodder4376
    @cannonfodder4376 Před 5 lety +6

    15:51"Unless you have the reaction time of a stone."
    A quote I am going to be using from now on, thanks. And a fantastic and informative video as always.

  • @LiberRaider
    @LiberRaider Před 3 lety

    I just wanted to say thank you for making these videos. They get me through long shifts at work. I appreciate your hard work and professionalism.

  • @vincentstella5131
    @vincentstella5131 Před 5 lety

    Sir, as always, another incredibly awesome video. I appreciate the research and thought provoking analysis you do on all your subjects. Your even handed approach to the question of the success or failure of a German breakout from Stalingrad is commendable. Keep up the great work.

  • @stalkingtiger777
    @stalkingtiger777 Před 5 lety +83

    I would be interested to know how many Soviet formations were tied down encircling Stalingrad that would have been freed up to join the main front of there had been a breakout. In other words was it more beneficial for the Germans that the pocket held to tie down Soviet assets or would it have been more beneficial to alleviate the beleaguered German supply chain from supplying the pocket and potentially recovering a part of the manpower of the 6th army for future operations.

    • @cpob2013
      @cpob2013 Před 5 lety +6

      eh a german army was a nice trophy to mount on the wall. dont forget about the political aspects of warfare.

    • @Vlad79500
      @Vlad79500 Před 5 lety +14

      @@arjunvardhan8134
      "More than a 100 formations"
      Why not 200?
      "After the front, which had come to chaotic movement as a result of the Russian breakthrough, finally stabilized, the intelligence department of the headquarters of our corps gradually managed to get a more or less complete picture of the situation from the enemy. Now, when the entire 6th Army was concentrated in a relatively small area inside the ring, we tried to identify and strike on the cards all enemy strike formations operating against the 6th Army. Only large *Russian formations here at first numbered about 60* - these were mainly rifle divisions and tank brigades, combined into seven armies. To this should be added some of the compounds in reserve, whose presence was not easy to detect. The main forces of the enemy, and above all his artillery, were concentrated in the western sector of the ring, which was defended by parts of our corps. We calculated that enemy formations that surrounded us with a steel ring possess at least threefold numerical superiority and have an awesome amount of heavy weaponry.
      Our army, however, the number of which before the entourage was about 330 thousand people, now after the losses suffered as a result of the Russian breakthrough, according to our data, there were about 280 thousand people, including Romanians, as well as some units that were not previously part of the army, but trapped with us in the pot. Among the surrounded were representatives of absolutely all German lands (one of the army corps was formed in Vienna). All of them were henceforth bound by one unkind fate. They were addressed the words of the order, promised salvation: “Hold on! The Fuhrer will rescue you! ”
      Wieder I. "The Catastrophe on the Volga"
      This Wieder data is not far from the truth. By that time, not three, but two fronts acted against the encircled ones, as the Southwestern acted on the outer ring of the encirclement, and the 51st Army of the Stalingrad Front acted here. On November 27, up to 10 rifle divisions, one tank division and three cavalry corps acted on the external front of the encirclement.
      The 62, 64, 57th armies of the Stalingrad Front and the 65th, 66th, 21st and 24th armies of the Don Front were active on the inner ring. It should be borne in mind here that they all suffered losses, especially the army of the Stalingrad Front, the composition of each of them, as Wieder himself points out, is not
      exceeded the composition of the German army corps, and for the most part was inferior to it. Therefore, the final conclusion about the threefold superiority of the Russians is an exaggeration. By December 1, the Stalingrad direction as a whole had the following ratio: Soviet
      divisions - 68.5, German - 48 (ratio 1.45: 1); 854,776 from the Soviet side, 846,000 from the German side (1: 1); soviet tanks - 797, German - 770 (1: 1); Artillery and aviation ratio was about the same. Triple pre-rise Soviet the side had only large-caliber mortars. The enemy, however, had a qualitative superiority in the field artillery.
      *Directly against the encircled forces there were 43.5 Soviet divisions* consisting of 479,672 men (1.45: 1 ratio); 465 tanks against 340 (1.3: 1); Cannons and mortars 8491 against 5230 (1.6: 1).

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims Před 3 lety

      Look up Eastory, he has mapping videos of the nazi Soviet war, it was a lot of units

    • @CarrotConsumer
      @CarrotConsumer Před 3 lety

      All of Army Group South was a mess at this time. So yes the longer 6th Army held out the better the strategic situation was.

    • @stevenwolfe7101
      @stevenwolfe7101 Před 2 lety +1

      Several authors on the topic have written that at any given moment after December 7, 1941, at least two-thirds of Wehrmacht soldiers were on the Eastern front.

  • @mensch1066
    @mensch1066 Před 5 lety +87

    Not sure that I'm understanding the criticism of Manstein by the "semi-official history" other than on humanitarian grounds. It sounds as though leaving the 6th Army to its fate was the more rational decision (at least in November and December) than attempting a breakout. The chances of a breakout succeeding seem very low, and even if it succeeded, the survivors would not bear much resemblance to an organized fighting force, and the German front line they reached would have still been a horribly improvised patchwork that STAVKA could easily punch through. Perhaps Army Group A in the Caucasus would have been destroyed along with the forces around Stalingrad.
    For once, blaming Hitler seems to be appropriate, but only after mid-December, when the German front lines further west had stabilized and the relief attempt had clearly failed. Paulus and his men should have been allowed to surrender, since their fate was totally sealed and any further resistance was just prolonging their suffering.

    • @MilitaryHistoryVisualized
      @MilitaryHistoryVisualized  Před 5 lety +50

      Well, he assumed the Sixth Army could hold out and this was not the case. If he argued, well, we need to sacrifice them in order to hold the lines elsewhere, it would have been a different matter.

    • @torbenjohansen6955
      @torbenjohansen6955 Před 5 lety +8

      if you want to know what happened there watch TIK he has a few ( many ) in depth videos about stalingrad. and manstains role

    • @eevee1023
      @eevee1023 Před 5 lety +1

      Military History Visualized one possibol faktor you did not mention in this video: could the forces from the main german line attack to help the boket to break out or where they not suited for offensive operation? let's say they had pusht in from the outher side 1/4 of the way suddenly the chance of a breaktrow would be much higger because 1: less distance to cross for the forces in and around stalingrad 2: less time for the soviets to react, because less distance to cross quiet obvious 3: i would belive that the longer they would attack the weaker the units would get because they already have supply problem and the longer they fight the more ammunition, fuel and food they lose. (talking about the forces in the poket)

    • @torbenjohansen6955
      @torbenjohansen6955 Před 5 lety +2

      they did try but failed the attatck was led by Guderian

    • @ryangrider9607
      @ryangrider9607 Před 5 lety +6

      Eevee there were not sufficient forces available for a "break-in" attack. The German front lines were a hodge podge of thrown together unattached units.

  • @jeffm1463
    @jeffm1463 Před 5 lety +1

    Mein Freunde und Oberst, sehr gut Video. Your English has significantly improved since I started watching your videos two years ago, BRAVO!!

  • @noahconard5348
    @noahconard5348 Před 5 lety

    Great videos!! Keep up the good work!

  • @heathen2487
    @heathen2487 Před 4 lety +12

    I've read Stalingrad by Antony Beevor and Victory at Stalingrad by Geoffrey Roberts. This video fills in lots of questions i had from the books.

    • @cowgoesmoo3850
      @cowgoesmoo3850 Před 3 lety +1

      Those were good books. I listened to the audio versions of both. Also Tigers in the Mud. How the described the Eastern front was insane, couldn't even imagine something like that, and various other "Eastern Front" books.

    • @daveyboy_
      @daveyboy_ Před rokem

      Beevor's book was awesome

  • @BIAWorldofWarships
    @BIAWorldofWarships Před 5 lety +18

    Your english is spot on mate, I love watching your videos :) Danke Schon!!

  • @TheLSK4ever
    @TheLSK4ever Před 5 lety +58

    Ein sehr gutes Video. Ich wünschte meine Dozenten wären mehr wie du

    • @MilitaryHistoryVisualized
      @MilitaryHistoryVisualized  Před 5 lety +10

      danke, wie sind die denn?

    • @TheLSK4ever
      @TheLSK4ever Před 5 lety +9

      @@MilitaryHistoryVisualized
      Es fällt mir schwer die negativen Eigenheiten meiner Dozenten aufzuzählen. Aber bei dir erkenne ich immer ein Struktur der ich sehr gut folgen kann.

    • @MilitaryHistoryVisualized
      @MilitaryHistoryVisualized  Před 5 lety +7

      lol, danke, ja, Struktur ist sehr wichtig und darauf lege ich auch großen Wert. Jedes meiner Skripte hat klare Unterteilungen, in diesem Fall hab ich 2 Ebenen benutzt, selten gibt es drei. Hier findest du nen Screenshot zur Struktur des Skripts: twitter.com/MilHiVisualized/status/1049740609517424640

    • @darkostanisavljevic1105
      @darkostanisavljevic1105 Před 4 lety

      try again please lol

  • @derkach7907
    @derkach7907 Před 3 lety +15

    Every russian after hearing your pronunciation of Stalingrad : *dies

  • @TMZlifestyle
    @TMZlifestyle Před 5 lety +8

    Your videos are very grounding. I used to criticize a lot of Hitler's military decisions, but you highlight very realistically the Wehrmacht's limitations almost making me agree with those decisions. Great research, congratulations!

  • @orgami100
    @orgami100 Před 5 lety +97

    My father was there with the Hungarian army, not as a combative soldier, as a forced slave labor...
    According to him about 800 laborers who where rounded up on the streets in summer clothes less than a dozen survived. . Some of those men where concert musicians even a olympic quality weightlifting champions..
    He survived because exchanged his clothing with a frozen Hungarian officer found in a field as he was walking on some ice road, truck came along, next thing he remembers being in a hospital in Budapest, after recovering somewhat he snuck out before they discovered who he really was
    Hates Hungarians with a passion, accordingly to his vengeance all should've been killed by the Russians.
    His hands have Frost bites all over...
    Yes it's true. ..takin a crappie and never get up again. .
    Happy birthday Dad.. October 12..1911-1994

    • @christianhoffmann8607
      @christianhoffmann8607 Před 5 lety +3

      was he one of the jewish forced labourers the Germans rounded up prior to Fall Blau? :o

    • @vigigejmer9813
      @vigigejmer9813 Před 5 lety +11

      so he survived thanks to Hungarian people. What was his problem? Bolsheviks were the better? Like NKWD soldiers?

    • @rohitrai6187
      @rohitrai6187 Před 5 lety +10

      @@vigigejmer9813 he was enslaved and put in death's way

    • @vigigejmer9813
      @vigigejmer9813 Před 5 lety +1

      @@rohitrai6187 enslaved by Who? What was that death's way? You don't write clearly.

    • @rohitrai6187
      @rohitrai6187 Před 5 lety +4

      @@vigigejmer9813 I believe @JasonWilson might clarify it better

  • @gies1714
    @gies1714 Před 5 lety

    Good video as always!

  • @iiNeedSkins
    @iiNeedSkins Před 5 lety

    Love your videos my man.

  • @jackray1337
    @jackray1337 Před 5 lety +63

    I see some questions on things not directly related to the video. If you support MHV through Patreon, you can get those questions answered via Q&A videos. If you are very interested in learning more about military history, support the channel more and get Discord access. The MHV Discord channel has a good community of helpful people including MHV!

  • @VT-mw2zb
    @VT-mw2zb Před 5 lety +20

    Note that Stalingrad was an anomaly, even for the Red Army itself. The Red Army's own Field Regulations and reality before Stalingrad dictated that it should defend cities by digging defensive belts OUTSIDE the city proper. Even in long, drawn out affairs like Sevastopol or Leningrad, the Red Army defended outside the city proper. At Sevastopol, Manstein got some very heavy mortars which helped reducing the fortification substantially. Paulus did not have the same amount of artillery. Furthermore, according to Glantz, several Soviet counterattacks and counterstrokes on Paulus' way to Stalingrad meant that a lot his Panzer divisions were tied up protecting his flanks instead of rolling into the city. He was short on infantry anyway since they had to scrape together even combat engineers to serve as infantry to capture the city. Regiments became battalion-sized, battalions became companies, and companies down to squad-size.
    Infantry alone or tanks alone can not take any build up area without heavy casualties. Mogadishu proved that light infantry without mechanised armors resistant to bullets would be heavily mauled. They had somewhat bulletproofed Humvees; but the bullet proof glass are not "that" durable, and the tires are easily punctured by the smallest bullet or shell fragments on the ground. Tanks and armoured vehicles without dismounted infantry also suffer heavily in urban fighting, ala Grozny. The Army suffered heavily, too, since they could not ferry much tanks across the Volga and had to make do with mostly infantry.
    Part of the reason why the Army Group South was so weak and had inadequate replacement was the reinforcement had to be sent to Army Group Centre, who were enduring relentless Soviet attacks. The attacks were not that successful, but it definitely bled the Army Group Centre white. The sister operation to Operation Uranus, Operation Mars, had equal priority and allocation of men and material. However, it ran straight into some very good German divisions and stalled. Zhukov called it, in his memoirs, a diversionary attack. Glantz judged it as: if it were a diversionary attack, it was one of the most costly one. Uranus was a lot more successful since it managed to slam into the weaker satellite troops who were inadequately armed and armoured. It also explained why Manstein could not get anymore troops from elsewhere. I believe he demanded "all the forces in South Russia" for a decisive battle; then Hitler can get all the oil he wants after that. In hindsight, Army Group A had already stalled at Ordzhonikidze. Its lead Panzer Division (23rd) was stopped and surrounded by 2 Soviet Rifle Corps, which between them had only around 10000 men or so. The 23rd Panzer managed to break out but it was mostly the soldiers: they had to leave the vehicles behind. Army Group A simply did not have enough fuel, vehicles, or strength to make the long journey back to Manstein and break Paulus out of Stalingrad. That does not even mention the Red Army who would have exploited the retreat to the full.

  • @davidmiller-qh8op
    @davidmiller-qh8op Před 5 lety

    I saw this channel when a good mate suggested we watched some of the Bovington tank videos. Bovo, well FMD, there’s a fair dinkum shit hot place. So any-ol’-hoo as they reckon in Canadia, I copped a squiz at this little ripper vid and strewth, by the end of it I was happier than wombat comin’ across a brand spankin’ new 200m earthen walled dam just beggin’ fer a right royal burrowin’.
    Whatta absolute bloody hoot! Truly sensational stuff mate.
    Hadda perve at cha other titles and you’ve been busier than a blue arsed fly. Youse blokes are legends.

  • @jeroenstrompf5064
    @jeroenstrompf5064 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you for this amazingly thorough video! I especially enjoyed the "But..." section (which included my favourite "but, namely Operation Winterwetter)

  • @jeffmoore9487
    @jeffmoore9487 Před 5 lety +23

    Wasn't the continued German resistance in Stalingrad necessary to keep the Soviets tied up in order that the failed German offensive in the South could retreat from the Caucasas? I don't know its true but I've read this being the reason that Hitler demanded Paulus stay put in Stalingrad. In other words sacrificing the 6th army to buy time for the Southern army.

    • @mikearmbruster2171
      @mikearmbruster2171 Před 5 lety

      I've read that also

    • @thinkingagain5966
      @thinkingagain5966 Před 5 lety +4

      That is true. The 6th army tied down a massive amount of Soviet troops that could have otherwise been used to trap the retreating army group B coming up from the south. Sixth Army was aware of this and they knew they were being sacrificed.

    • @Waterflux
      @Waterflux Před 4 lety +3

      In fact, I believe that 7 Soviet armies (equivalent to 7 Western corps in strength) under Rokossovsky's Don Front were allocated to encircle and destroy Paulus' 6th Army. If there were no Stalingrad pocket, then Don Front would have been sent westward and quite possibly collapsed the southern half of the German front in which Manstein would not have been able to do much.

    • @psilvakimo
      @psilvakimo Před 4 lety +3

      The Soviets demanded a surrender on Jan 9, 1943. This would've entrapped many more Germans in the Caucasus creating a "super Stalingrad". The delay in surrendering allowed von Manstein to remove those troops.

  • @eff_gee321
    @eff_gee321 Před 3 lety +4

    Imagine the terror of being encircled by an enemy which you've been commiting war crimes against for months.

  • @SantiFiore
    @SantiFiore Před 5 lety +29

    I could not have thought of a better birthday present, MHV. You had my heart before, but now you have my soul. /s

  • @aussieboy77
    @aussieboy77 Před 5 lety +14

    I watched a documentary on Stalingrad and when the order came for the Germans to remain in Stalingrad, they (the Germans) couldn't believe it. They desperately wanted to break out and they were ready and willing to do it. Whether it was possible was another matter.
    Great video BTW. You obviously did your research.

  • @sevenproxies4255
    @sevenproxies4255 Před 5 lety +75

    Who needs high defensive walls, when your cities and factories are surrounded by huge stretches of muddy land for an invasion force to exhaust themselves on the road to their objectives?
    All you need to do is set up artillery and keep the QRF on stand-by.

    • @Feffdc
      @Feffdc Před 5 lety +6

      Seven Proxies Except kursk which was like maginot line

    • @mexicoball2529
      @mexicoball2529 Před 5 lety +12

      "mobile maginot line"

    • @Feffdc
      @Feffdc Před 5 lety

      Mexico ball Im not talking about tanks but fortifications wise

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims Před 3 lety

      Even the communists couldn’t drain Russia of mud

  • @sorinfluturica9537
    @sorinfluturica9537 Před 5 lety +33

    I like the way he says "Stalingrad"

    • @Igyzone
      @Igyzone Před 5 lety +6

      Germans like to pronounce the letter S as "Sch" or should I say the letter S with caron, known as "Š"

    • @Tarik360
      @Tarik360 Před 5 lety +1

      @@Igyzone so that's why their ß or "SS" letter is their regular "s" sound. Thanks for reminding.

    • @nirfz
      @nirfz Před 5 lety +1

      Don't russian people also pronounce it the same?
      St or Sp are usually pronounced sh-t or sh-p in german (some folk in the north of germany refuse to do so, but the rest does) As long as theese letter don't belong to seperate words which are combined into one (like in Hausputz)

    • @anderskorsback4104
      @anderskorsback4104 Před 5 lety +2

      Schtalin. Just like in the Hitler Rants meme.

    • @Sike12
      @Sike12 Před 5 lety +1

      @@Igyzone actually it's the "st" combination that in some regions in Germany is pronounced as "scht" (like "Stalingrad" in the video)

  • @JHei10
    @JHei10 Před 5 lety

    Excellent video mate! will subscribe your channel!

  • @waltinco51
    @waltinco51 Před 3 lety

    Superanalyse! Sehr aufschlussreich! Danke.

  • @3johansendaniel
    @3johansendaniel Před 5 lety +19

    Could you do a video on german fuel production comparet with the other powers and then do a breakdown on german fuel distribution between her allies, navy and different fronts. It would also be great if you could do a general breakdown of german resources and there they were investet steel, workforce, capital and so on. A comparison in soft area production like trucks, radio, ammunition would also be great since most only look at tanks,ships, guns and so on. It would also be interesting to look at german AA, antitank guns and artilleri production both total and the ratio of AA to the other two relative to the other powers.

    • @MilitaryHistoryVisualized
      @MilitaryHistoryVisualized  Před 5 lety +9

      can yes, will unlikely. Just for the German side I would need to read around 1000 pages, for the others I would have to find proper books, what you are asking for is basically something along a phd or even more.

    • @3johansendaniel
      @3johansendaniel Před 5 lety

      @@MilitaryHistoryVisualized Could you please do a video on german antiaircraftgun production both total and ratio compered to artilleri and antitankguns relative to the other powers or a video on german fuel production and distribution(germany seem to have a lot of diesel and soviet fuel production look very low) please conside my request it has been very defficult to find anything and the numbers I did finf look odd thank you.

    • @RU-zm7wj
      @RU-zm7wj Před 5 lety +4

      Could you also calculate Pi to 2 billion places while you're at it?

    • @MilitaryHistoryVisualized
      @MilitaryHistoryVisualized  Před 5 lety +1

      @daniel: for questions may I refer you to the Oberst rank: www.patreon.com/mhv

  • @callumdavis8307
    @callumdavis8307 Před 5 lety +22

    If Paulus was replaced by tommykay they would have never been encircled in the first place

  • @ericcook1201
    @ericcook1201 Před 5 lety

    Just fantastic!
    MHV does it again!!!

  • @patrickomalley4115
    @patrickomalley4115 Před 4 lety +1

    these are great videos

  • @packmule_
    @packmule_ Před 3 lety +4

    Ive always felt that the sheer motivation of "hey we might live" would push them out with crazy casualties. Maybe even motivating the outside force alittle more to try and save there comrades as well, but those are things that can't be predicted. Just feel that the choice of fight or die is a huge motivation to put your head down and go no matter what.

  • @Marvel66666
    @Marvel66666 Před 5 lety +19

    SS General "papa" Hausser disobey Hitler's explicit orders withdrew his troops from ukrain "Kharkov" to avoid encirclement. Hitler not punished him for this disobey. Also Rommel, when he was outnumbered in Egypt, disobeying direct order by Hitler, to stand firm and “not to yield even a yard of ground”. Rommel disobeyed the order and sound the alarm for retreat. He also wasn't punished .

    • @tiernanwearen8096
      @tiernanwearen8096 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah Paulus was a complete toddy

    • @hajime2k
      @hajime2k Před 2 lety

      Hitler did not consider North Africa to be an important front. Rommel was not getting additional men and tanks. Rommel pitted Mussolini and Hitler against each other just so he could attack the British. The Italian navy was low on fuel, so they didn't help with transporting and protecting supplies.
      Hitler was not fond of Manstein. Manstein gambled on a strategic withdrawal to recapture Kharkov which was successful. The same Manstein that could have ordered Paulus to break out of Stalingrad.... only to refuse and then make a half-hearted effort. Manstein blamed everyone for his own failures.

  • @godofblitzkrieg5466
    @godofblitzkrieg5466 Před 5 lety

    Congrations,you make good videos for the people who loves WW2 and military history so I want you to give a hearth.

  • @henryrhu7457
    @henryrhu7457 Před 5 lety +1

    Let me tell you, honorable sir, no channel in this world had ever taught me so much about the Second World War, your videos helped me understand every aspect and details including the tactics, the logistics and how the war is not as simple as the war games I played on Steam.
    Going through many paradigm shifts, I finally know the truth behind the many decisions that the generals made, I thought they were fools that refuse to go with the obvious "solutions", but now you have led me out of my blind and naive mind, you have opened my mind. I thank you for all that you have done to educate others!

  • @TheReaper569
    @TheReaper569 Před 5 lety +3

    I loved that wolf in sheep image. Also you missed an important opportunity to use your classic pony instead of a horse while talking about evacuated horses.

  • @Bota367
    @Bota367 Před 5 lety +122

    15:51 ?? I am stone and I find this offensive :D

  • @gavinplunkett977
    @gavinplunkett977 Před 5 lety

    Well put.

  • @kirillavitch
    @kirillavitch Před 2 lety +1

    I respect this channel so much. Thank you so much for providing actual educational material on the subject as opposed to conjecture and propaganda garbage

  • @ieuanhunt552
    @ieuanhunt552 Před 5 lety +114

    The 6th army should never have entered stalingrad. And Army group South should have had more support. The push to Moscow was pointless and pulled attention from the real goal of invading. Resources, the whole reason they were there was for Ukrainian Grain and Caucasian Oil

    • @sevenproxies4255
      @sevenproxies4255 Před 5 lety +19

      Aye. But like Napoleon, Hitler seemed to believe that taking an enemy capital was somehow important.
      But unless the capital is also a main producer of oil, tanks and planes, taking it is meaningless.

    • @ignacejespers8201
      @ignacejespers8201 Před 5 lety +17

      Barbarossa itself was pointless. There is no possible scenario where Germany could have won

    • @sevenproxies4255
      @sevenproxies4255 Před 5 lety +41

      @@ignacejespers8201: I would argue that capturing and securing the Caucasus oil fields was not only NOT pointless, but absolutely necessary for the german war effort to continue the war.
      So saying that all of Operation Barbarossa was meaningless isn't entirely true.
      That said, too much emphasis was placed by Hitler and the german high command on capturing strategically irrelevant cities like Stalingrad. All that manpower and resources would've been better used in capturing the oil fields and get them running to serve the german war effort rather than the soviet war effort.

    • @Talashaoriginal
      @Talashaoriginal Před 5 lety +22

      STalingrad was not that irrelevant, it was a stronghold on the major line of soviet fuel-supply, the volga.

    • @redbaron2829
      @redbaron2829 Před 5 lety +26

      Ieuan Hunt Moscow was a massive railway center. Look at any railroad map and you’ll see Moscow is the hub of Eastern Europe. This would have helped to German supply lines, along with Moscow falling, the morale boost to the Germans would be immense and would severely hurt soviet troop management and be a damaging PR situation. Moscow was not pointless. It was symbolic and a situational bonus to the invading force.

  • @WildBillCox13
    @WildBillCox13 Před 5 lety +10

    A lot of that fuel fraction was to turnaround transports. That means it was lost to the troops on the ground. Airplanes are fuel hogs.

  • @khaledzartal2112
    @khaledzartal2112 Před 5 lety +1

    Best explanation ever...thanks a lot...

  • @dingus153
    @dingus153 Před 5 lety

    I'd really like to see a video similar to this regarding the winter war

  • @Dlw-bz3wj
    @Dlw-bz3wj Před 5 lety +38

    In actuality Hitler declined a breakout because he was re assured by his commanders the city could hold and the encirclement lifted. We can see multiple examples of where hitlers stand and fight orders not only helped for example, in the battle of moscow but would have proved helpful in other cirumstances, thus I believe Hitler is not given due credit, even though he made mistakes his commanders often supported is decisions.

    • @Zorro9129
      @Zorro9129 Před 5 lety +26

      It's easy to blame your boss for your own mistakes when he's dead.

    • @Dlw-bz3wj
      @Dlw-bz3wj Před 5 lety +4

      true, manstein did this a lot

    • @Adonnus100
      @Adonnus100 Před 5 lety +3

      He was assured by Göring that the Luftwaffe could supply the city, and both believing Göring or coming to any independent conclusion that the Luftwaffe could have met the supply needs of the 6th Army with transport planes was stupid. It had been done before at Demyansk but on a much smaller scale and the situation had changed dramatically by Stalingrad in regards to the Luftwaffe-Soviet Air Force power gap. The Soviets also had anti-air guns all around Stalingrad which guaranteed a high rate of attrition.
      The stand and fight order worked for Moscow but later on it was just done everywhere. So-called "fortress cities" in 1945 like Breslau just abandoned more troops behind the lines and left the way to Berlin more easily open. He also refused to evacuate the Kurland pocket, Crete or Norway when it was clear those troops were needed more in Germany. So Hitler was not a smart commander and no one should be under any illusion he was.

    • @orclover2353
      @orclover2353 Před 5 lety +3

      nein, hitler denied breakout because he refused to give up ground that had been taken. He had the foreknowledge that any loss of ground would equate to defeat and would turn the tide. He lied directly to the troops in promising he could get them out when there was no chance or indication that this was reality. He was told multiple times that they could not provide enough calories and fuel through the air drop and that there were not forces to breakthrough from the south. Also the Russians had a secondary offensive going on as Manstein came to the rescue. If you read a scholarly work you would realize that the german leadership was obsessed with creating the appearance of being control while hedging bets and preparing for defeats. You, and many on this board have more positive feelings about Hitler than his own troops had...they knew he was a politician who promised things he couldn't fulfill and they would be sacrificed in order for him to save face. They didn't care to live in russia, they just wanted to go home to their children and families. They used to jokingly call him "the greatest warlord in history" because they knew he took credit for their successes.

  • @Snagabott
    @Snagabott Před 5 lety +17

    I must say that when you say that a breakout might still have been possible (albeit difficult), the decision to just leave the army to its fate cannot be defended either on a military, humanitarian or from a morale point of view. A chance of recovering some > 100% chance of losing all of them.
    Even if the soldiers could not see the future, they probably had a good hunch that their chances of suriving as a Soviet POW were grim (as would indeed be shown to be the case). They would have been quite ready to make great sacrifices in a push to have a chance at a breakout. The generals of the time seemed to think that it would have been possible. Consider that even if Soviet strenght was theoretically hugely superior in the Stalingrad area as a whole, they would have had to move an absolutely enormous amout of men, weapons and supplies locally in order to turn around the attacking troops being conducted west of Stalingrad and bring all of that to bear on the sallying Germans within the space of 3 days.
    None of that excuses, ofc, that Germany didn't start the withdrawal _before_ encirclement was complete. They had pragmatically conceided defeat before when an attack turned out to not work they way they wanted, and this should not have been different. The string of defeats on the flanks and the time that had passed since Germany more or less showed its hand in that area (mid summer 1942) should have cued them into the idea that the Soviet counterattacks meant business.

    • @hjalmar4565
      @hjalmar4565 Před 5 lety +8

      But what would have happen if the breakout would fail and Stalingrad was taken by the Soviets much earlier? Maybe the 6th army bought just enough time for the Axis to stabilize the front, so the Soviets couldn't attack the lines again and encircle Army group A.

  • @seegurke93
    @seegurke93 Před 5 lety +2

    Tik did great videos on that :) I like how your videos and his add up together. would love to see a coop !

  • @ethans6539
    @ethans6539 Před 5 lety

    Love the new visuals

  • @CarstenOepping
    @CarstenOepping Před 5 lety +4

    read the book of Colonel Adam (1C-Officer of the 6th Army) "with Paulus in Stalingrad"
    in german: "der schwere Entschluss"

  • @StephenFarthing
    @StephenFarthing Před 5 lety +10

    Thanks for a great video. I once attended a lecture given by a military historian who was trying to explain the post WW2 psyche of the Soviets and the roots of the Cold War. I wish I could remember his name. His main point was that at Stalingrad the Russians fought soldiers from over 20 different nationalities. Whilst the Germans were most numerous there were armies from Romania, Croatia, Hungary and Italy and smaller units from Belgium, the Baltic states, Norway, Denmark and if I remember rightly, from “liberated” parts of the USSR, such as the Ukraine. There were also units made from Russian POWs. Some of these took really heavy losses, for example the Hungarian Army had 80,000 killed.
    His point was that, from the USSR’s viewpoint, Stalingrad was viewed as not just a fight with the Germans, but a fight against most of Europe. So post war the Soviets “ occupied” Hungary, Poland, Romania and the Baltic states partly to make sure they wouldn’t have to fight them again. And the effect on the “psyche” was for the USSR to think of itself alone against the rest of the world, which contributed to the Cold War, and is still the attitude of many Russians today.
    I’m sure you are very busy but if you have the time I would welcome a video on the battle of Budapest in 1944. It’s not widely known about but the Red Army didn’t have things its own way there and Stalins plan to knock Hungary out of the war failed. However Hitler unwisely diverted reserves to Hungary which hastened the fall of Berlin. Or so the conventional view goes.

    • @davethompson3326
      @davethompson3326 Před 5 lety +1

      Since the Mongols, every threat to Russia came from the West, Poland, Teutonic Knights, Sweden, Prussia, France, Britain & France, Germany-Prussiax3

    • @Celebmacil
      @Celebmacil Před 5 lety

      That might well have been how things were seen from the Soviet standpoint, indeed. Of course it was also an utterly "created" narrative on their part, given their history with various nations and groups within that force involved against them. So while it was how they saw things from their point of view, it certainly wasn't "true", aside from "a certain point of view".

    • @StephenFarthing
      @StephenFarthing Před 5 lety +1

      Celebmacil But it was true. The facts are that at Stalingrad, the Red Army alone faced the Germans, Italians, Romanians, Hungarians and Croatians as well as minor units from other countries.

    • @Celebmacil
      @Celebmacil Před 5 lety

      Oh, I'm aware. I'm just stating the mindset of "having to fight them again" as if they were somehow an innocent and unfairly aggrieved party in many of the cases is an... interesting... view to take for the Soviets (or Russians), in context of what they'd been doing to some of those nations for centuries, or even as recently as two years previously, or what they then went on to do once more in the next two to twenty and more years.
      It's like repeatedly kicking the crap out of all the neighborhood dogs for a decade and then being amazed that they come hunt you down and gang up on you, and feeling like "well, I guess I'd better REALLY kick the crap out of them this time so I don't have to kick the crap out of them again!".

    • @Vlad79500
      @Vlad79500 Před 5 lety

      @@Celebmacil
      "in context of what they'd been doing to some of those nations for centuries,"
      What about examples?

  • @makinapacal
    @makinapacal Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you! What you have demonstrated was that the decision to not try to break out was under the circumstances at the time and with the knowledge they had a reasonable decision.

  • @QED_
    @QED_ Před 5 lety +1

    Some days you wake up . . . and you feel like fighting loss historical battles all over again. Thank heaven for CZcams (!)

  • @MJKarkoska
    @MJKarkoska Před 5 lety +3

    The main thing people fail to understand, at least among those with whom I debate military history, is that even had the 6th and 4th Pz broken out, the entire southern sector of the Eastern Front would have collapsed in short order. The encirclement was just tying down too many Soviet formations, and were they all suddenly freed, the Germans would have been faced with a disparity of forces in the southern sector for which they were not prepared. It is debatable I suppose, since those forces were eventually freed, but at a later date, giving the Germans more time. Personally I think a breakout could have succeeded relatively easy early on, given that the encirclement was very loose behind the German positions. The later they waited, the less chance they had of success, and the more equipment they would have to abandon.

    • @ineednochannelyoutube5384
      @ineednochannelyoutube5384 Před 5 lety

      Thing is, those units were freed up in rather short order, and the Voronyez front absolutely shattered armygroup south. If the Soviet counteroffensive came during the summer, the axis might have even faired better considering a big part of their weakness was the low motorization of theirtransport capacity was very ineffective in the winter.

  • @mpriymak
    @mpriymak Před 5 lety +3

    It is necessary to point out that whatever force was fortunate enough in successfully escaping the encirclement at Stalingrad would do so without most of its heavy equipment/tanks/artillery/etc... and after suffering incredible casualties during such escape. Such a decimated force would need to be shipped back to Germany for reorganization and re-equipment and would not be able to participate in meaningful defensive operations against the Soviet "Little Saturn" operation (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Little_Saturn). Essentially, after the successful encirclement at Stalingrad, Case Blue was doomed no matter how you look at it.

  • @fishyc150
    @fishyc150 Před 3 lety +1

    My great uncle was a flying instructor who died in Yugoslavia in 1943. In late 1942 early 1943 he had been moved to assist in the airlift. Not sure if he flew but he certainly assisted with "blind flying" teaching at night or cloud/ poor visability...

  • @GeorgeHutchins
    @GeorgeHutchins Před 5 lety

    I would like to see a video of yours about the May 1-3, 1945, breakout of Berlin, which began at the TIER GARTEN to reach the Spandau Berlin Bridge which crossed the Haven River, and the dangers the evacuees faced while on route. Plus, other routes which were taken, once their services were no longer required in Berlin.

  • @ME-hm7zm
    @ME-hm7zm Před 5 lety +46

    My take away from this is that the 6th Army basically had no business being in Stalingrad in the first place.

    • @fragmaster101
      @fragmaster101 Před 5 lety +13

      That is very much the case, in fact securing Stalingrad was originally a secondary objective. Hitler became obsessed in securing the city for propaganda purposes and forced his generals to divert valuable units that were supposed to secure the Caucasus and it's oil fields, which was the main reason why Fall Blau began in the first place.

    • @lesliefranklin1870
      @lesliefranklin1870 Před 5 lety +4

      Another reason to attack Stalingrad was that they had a large tank factory there.

    • @toneysebits8458
      @toneysebits8458 Před 5 lety +2

      @transylvanian Well, Russia was not supposed to be able to put up much of a fight according to the Germans.

    • @psilvakimo
      @psilvakimo Před 5 lety +2

      Ever hear of the Caucus oil fields?

    • @Joesolo13
      @Joesolo13 Před 5 lety

      @@psilvakimo Even if the Germans could have taken them, the Soviets would have burned them as soon as they got near

  • @Whitpusmc
    @Whitpusmc Před 5 lety +5

    This begs the question, why was an army (the 6th) that was so unfit for offensive operations still trying to push forward? Was the lure of Stalingrad so bright that the Wehrmacht ignored the condition of its forces and kept going forward? Why were the offensive forces so low on materials (assume it’s the length of the logistics train). Why was German intelligence not more aware of the disparity of forces facing it?

    • @jamestang1227
      @jamestang1227 Před 5 lety +1

      I am in no way and expert on this topic but as stated in this video, the Germans felt perhaps not "superior" but felt the Soviets were incapable of mounting real determined resistance against them, secondly IIRC German intelligence on the Eastern front was bad in general. The Germans were also firm believers in bewegunskrieg, war of movement, and the initial Fall Blau plan wanted to take Stalingrad to cut off the Soviets from the Volga and Caspian. Suffice it to say, Fall Ball was not a good plan and heavily overstretched limited German resources.

  • @c-4po298
    @c-4po298 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for your assessment of the situation. Could you please go one step further and hypothesize what YOU would do if you were in command of the German forces attempting a breakout. When, where and how (troop formations, mechanized unit formations, what roads!). Using the historical information in this video do you think you could achieve it? Knowing all these facts would be a best-case scenario for you as a German-commander but I would be curious to know if you could make it out of Stalingrad and what kind of losses you would expect to have along the way. As always, thanks for the historical summery!

  • @AlexanderSeven
    @AlexanderSeven Před 5 lety +1

    Nice backgrounds!

  • @WildBillCox13
    @WildBillCox13 Před 5 lety +3

    Where else, but a tank, can five men effectively use a 5cm gun, two or three MGs, and stay behind bullet-proof armor all the while? Nobody EVER says that Germany had enough tanks to absorb converting a bunch into infanterie halbgruppen.
    Further, armor is the wrong tool for any job in towns and other built up areas. Like Leningrad, the idea was to reduce fortifications through artillery and air close support. There was siege artillery available, but planes could be transferred between fronts (and rear areas) much more quickly than giant cannon and howitzers.

  • @22steve5150
    @22steve5150 Před 5 lety +8

    not impossible....just "next to impossible", and arguably doing the Red Army a favor if they tried it.

  • @markymark3075
    @markymark3075 Před 4 lety

    Thanks!

  • @sudgun3507
    @sudgun3507 Před 5 lety

    Welche Musik verwendest Du im Abspann des Videos?

  • @Hamsterdami
    @Hamsterdami Před 5 lety +4

    Just use some command power for forced attack, it's not that hard

  • @HeilLoki
    @HeilLoki Před 5 lety +3

    Here is what one of my relatives had to say in Stalingrad before trying to engage a soviet sniper. These are his actual final words before getting headshot by said sniper according to a letter written by his comrades adressed to his wife:
    "Und jetzt leckt's mich am Arsch!" (literally: "And now lick my ass!", meaning "Fuck off!")
    I think that sums up Stalingrad pretty well. And I still think to this day that these are probably the best final words, I've ever heard (read) anyone saying.

  • @simonbreckon7975
    @simonbreckon7975 Před 4 lety

    i love your videos, its great for me as i play Bolt Action and it helps with understanding tactics too also i love history. will you be doing anything on El Alamain / Tobruk good sir :)

  • @Oscuros
    @Oscuros Před 3 lety +1

    It's always great fun to try, like with Market Garden. Paulus was known to be a delayer from his Kriegakademie wargaming, that was noted about his style. That's why in books like Hitler's Generals they style him as a cunctator. Meyer boasting that he could supply the entire Sixth and barely managing 10% of the minimum needed was kind of understandably demoralising for Paulus as much as being left there to just inconvenience the enemy, something we all do all the time in gaming, but the Stalingrad story tells us how that feels and should be instructive.
    I agree with your Clausewitzian argument of "friction", though. Like with the logistics, it's hard to tell what lesson to draw from this, like with the unique logistical problems to that front that don't seem to apply in Europe or North America, for example.

  • @billbob654321
    @billbob654321 Před 5 lety +19

    Ich cannot even believe people talk about a Breakout!!! That wasnt the point... OKH absolutely didn't want a breakout. They needed those men to stay put there. Sure, for civility they thought about it and discussed it but they Knew it was of Strategic importance for the 6th army to remain in Stalingrad. 6th army was sacrificed to hold the front and free up the Caucasus Area. So no, a breakout wasnt even really considered, expect maybe by Paulus. Poor Paulus always getting the blame. I dont agree with that either. Anyways they were doomed from the Start logistically Speaking.

    • @CarlosSempereChen
      @CarlosSempereChen Před 5 lety

      fruler I’ve heard that argument before and it makes some sense. The 6th Army pinned a large concentration of Soviet troops by staying there.

    • @billbob654321
      @billbob654321 Před 5 lety +5

      @@CarlosSempereChen i think it is pretty clear from retrospect that they were there in Stalingrad to keep the Caucasus safe, for it oil resources. They didnt even manage to do that. If they wanted they could've probably broke out in November... But that would've caused a collapse of the southern front... Where the oil was. It just turned out to be the most horrific battle in all of german history, possibly world history. THe suffering on all sides was insurmountable, indescribably horrific and brutal. I dont blame Paulus, he had his orders and he followed them like a good general would. He wasn't weak like people described, i would say hes strong for what he did and went through. I think he was a smart highly intelligent man in a bad, no way of winning the battle situation. Hopefully people will have more respect for him in the future and hopefully historians will agree that a breakout wasnt even on the table... 6 armee was to hold the line.

    • @Mies78
      @Mies78 Před 5 lety

      I think you nailed it.
      The 6th was sacrificed.

    • @billbob654321
      @billbob654321 Před 5 lety

      Michel van Dijk I agree

    • @billbob654321
      @billbob654321 Před 5 lety +2

      Michel van Dijk and sacrificed at a high cost too. Man power is more valuable than technological advancement. Soviets realized this more than the Germans did. Wehrmacht was highly trained, highly advanced. They had 20 years of post ww1 to study their loss and they did and learned from their mistakes more than any other Nation

  • @thenoobinator3508
    @thenoobinator3508 Před 5 lety +3

    So basically 6th Army had a weak pull out game?

    • @leechristy7003
      @leechristy7003 Před 5 lety +1

      The climax, oil in the hole, seemed so near.... They could not stop, it was so tempting..... Worse yet, uranus was unprotected. Flanks destroyed.

  • @Zajuts149
    @Zajuts149 Před 5 lety

    was expecting to see an asterisk in one of your visualization symbols as you put up the words Operation Uranus:)

  • @irakli667
    @irakli667 Před 4 lety +1

    Military history visualized Great video! Insightful and detail oriented. At the same time, have you tried to pronounce STalingrad, instead of SHTalingrad? After all, how do you pronounce SebaSTian?) Just a quick remark.

  • @roberthan3908
    @roberthan3908 Před 5 lety +3

    If the 6th Army did manage to break out, the Soviets would have trapped the entire Army Group A in the Caucasus

  • @JagerLange
    @JagerLange Před 5 lety +6

    Red Army At Stalingrad: It Came In Uranus.

  • @spring-jo8xv
    @spring-jo8xv Před 4 lety

    Very well done,well argued facts that tell us, that the entire sixt army had no chance to break out completely

  • @willbell7651
    @willbell7651 Před rokem +1

    11:00 Another advantage for Soviet troops within urban combat were the guns used, such as the PPSH41, a SMG with an amazing firerate for CQB and a 70 drum mag, while Paulus's army mostly had MP40s, which while being reliable, was not suited for cold weather (unlike the PPSH series), and had a rather slow firerate.

  • @abdullahmahathi
    @abdullahmahathi Před 5 lety +6

    23 October or 23 November 1942 is the real one

  • @EL20078
    @EL20078 Před 5 lety +13

    Case Blue was quite a silly undertaking and overly ambitious. If you ask me it was a logistical nightmare run on a shoe string, as your great video shows. Looking at Stalingrad, the failure to assemble enough anti-freeze material in October 1942 shows how absurd the logistical situation was. The Germans should have hit Moscow in the summer of 1942.Firstly, Army Group Centre had ,by 1942, a stable logistical frame work including several double gauged rail lines. Secondly, the Wehrmacht was in a way better position qualitatively vis-a-vis its Red Army counterpart. Thirdly, even though the Moscow region was well fortified, this advantage would have been nullified by the Wehrmachts' qualitative advantage; take Kursk for instance, at Kursk the Wehrmacht inflicted a casualty ratio of of more than 4:1 on the Red Army and that was against the much better equipped Red Army of 1943. Finally, capturing Moscow was the Wehrmachts only hope for forcing the Soviets to come to the peace table. The fall of the Red capital may have led to a collapse in Soviet morale, a long shot but the only shot. A video on a hypothetical attack on Moscow would be great, think about it, had it happened it would have been the mother of all battles and in my opinion remains one of the biggest "what ifs' of the Second World War. Anyway, good video and great job!

    • @ineednochannelyoutube5384
      @ineednochannelyoutube5384 Před 5 lety +1

      Three quarters of Heersgruppe Sud was made up of second rate units of Axis minors.That alone shows it was not a viable offensive.

    • @Waterflux
      @Waterflux Před 4 lety +4

      The capture of Moscow takes a backseat compared to the capture of the Caucasus. There is just no way around it, due to Germany's chronic fuel shortage. Furthermore, there is not much time left; the Americans are coming which would make the German strategic situation even worse after 1942. In this instance, Hitler was correct in prioritizing the southern sector, although he could not muster enough forces and supplies to make Operation Blau to work as intended.
      By contrast, the Soviets were able to incessantly pressure the Germans since the summer of 1942, despite the initial disasters. Although the Soviets did not make any immediate gains from launching one suicidal attack after another west of Moscow and northwest of Stalingrad, they kept the Germans off-balanced and bled German units. The fact that the Germans lacked any significant operational reserves upon Operation Uranus is quite telling.

  • @thesolution1225
    @thesolution1225 Před 5 lety

    Fucking super high quality content. Simply amazing

  • @elrjames7799
    @elrjames7799 Před 4 lety

    "As so often there are many arguments that can be made, yet a German breakout at Stalingrad was definitely not easy, nor was it without risk: yet at least it would've given the men a fighting chance instead of starving to death." Absolutely brilliant summation! The MHV's allusion to FM Manstein is indicative. According to Ziemke & Bauer, 'Moscow to Stalingrad (Decision in the East) NY 1988 page 475: on 24th Nov 42 FM Manstein reported to O.K.H that "he could not concur at present with Army Group B’s stand in favour of breakout.” However, by 19th December he had changed his mind and informed Hitler that because LVII Pz Corps probably could not achieve contact with 6th Army, he believed the only answer was to order it to break out. He maintained that this would, at least, save most of the troops and whatever equipment could still be moved. To Paulus, he sent advanced notice of a breakout order, but the message ended that 6th Army was merely to get ready but not start until ordered. Hitler, encouraged by LVII Pz Corp's recent success, refused to approve. Instead he ordered Pz GrD Viking from Army Group A to 4th Pz Army and insisted that 6th Army was to hold out until firm contact was established, so that a complete, orderly withdrawal could be accomplished. Note Hitler was ready to evacuate Stalingrad on 19th Dec but wanted to play 'safe': fatal in this fluid situation.

  • @averagejacobinsubscriber
    @averagejacobinsubscriber Před 5 lety +4

  • @joshb7300
    @joshb7300 Před 3 lety +3

    Had Stalingrad not continued to resist huge Russian forces would have been freed to destroy the whole Southern flank in Russia.

    • @stevenwolfe7101
      @stevenwolfe7101 Před 2 lety

      Stalin was fully committed to the defense of the city which bore his name. Before the battle, he learned from Sorge, a highly successful spy, that Japan was going to abide by the Russo-Japanese Treaty and was not going to mount an invasion of Russia in the far East. Armed with this knowledge he was able to move a tremendous number of troops from the far East to Stalingrad. Previously, Sorge had advised Stalin of the exact date of the planned invasion of Russia by Germany. He was also advised of this by the West but ignored it believing it to be merely a "provocation". Despite his paranoia, Stalin refused to believe that Hitler would violate the Russo-German Non-Aggressive Pact and invade Russia. His shock at the event caused him to escape reality for about a week, with some close to him describing him later as having suffered a breakdown. He made no radio announcements during the first 6 or 7 days after June 22, 1941. His inaction resulted in the loss of thousands of Russian planes while on the ground during this time.

  • @crazywarriorscatfan9061

    Amazing!

  • @HD.Beamer
    @HD.Beamer Před 5 lety

    Good job