Absolute War: Soviet Russia in the Second World WarKnopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 2008/11/26 - 880 ページ In Absolute War, acclaimed historian and journalist Chris Bellamy crafts the first full account since the fall of the Soviet Union of World War II's battle on the Eastern Front, one of the deadliest conflicts in history. The conflict on the Eastern Front, fought between the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany between 1941 and 1945, was the greatest, most costly, and most brutal conflict on land in human history. It was arguably the single most decisive factor of the war, and shaped the postwar world as we know it. In this magisterial work, Bellamy outlines the lead-up to the war, in which the fragile alliance between the two dictators was unceremoniously broken, and examines its far-reaching consequences, arguing that the cost of victory was ultimately too much for the Soviet Union to bear. With breadth of scope and a surfeit of new information, this is the definitive history of a conflict whose reverberations are still felt today. |
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... prisoner in the frontier battles, 1941, (BA-MA Koblenz ) 12 Bewildered Soviet soldiers surrender 1941. (BA-MA Koblenz) 13 The moral and physical components, shattered. Defeat ... prisoners taken in the renewed German drive, operation fx I.
Soviet Russia in the Second World War Chris Bellamy. 14 Russian prisoners taken in the renewed German drive, operation Biau, 1942. This photograph could equally have been taken in 1941. (BA-MA Koblenz) 15 Russian prisoners, the Crimea ...
... prisoners being marched through the streets of' Moscow. (Rodina) 42 Rokossovskiy in the new, post- 13 January 1943, uniform. : Rod i n,i : 43 The cruiser Paris Commune firing in defence of Sevastopol, 1941. (Rodina) 44 Churchill and ...
... prisoners who did not return.2" David Giant/ successfully identified a great battle - the Soviet Operation Mars - that took place at the same time as Stalingrad and was comparable to it in size, but was simply written out ot the Soviet ...
... prisons and camps and how many to the famine.22 Stalin did the obvious thing, and on 26 September 1937 Praviia, the offical Soviet newspaper, denounced the results as 'extremely crude violations of the elementary principles of ...