Russia's War: A History of the Soviet Effort: 1941-1945 | Richard Overy | The Forgotten Front
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Russia's War: A Hi...
Russia's War: A History of the Soviet Effort: 1941-1945
Richard Overy
Penguin (Non-Classics)
, 1998 - 432 pages
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based on 37 reviews
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highly recommended
"
Russia
's
War
" is the epic account of the greatest military encounter in human
history
. In a vivid, often shocking narrative, Richard Overy describes the astounding events of
1941
-45 in which the
Soviet
Union, after initial catastrophes, destroyed Hitler's Third Reich and shaped European history for the next half Century.
Russia's War
`
Russia
's
War
' is a riveting, fact-filled
history
of the Russian experience in WW2. British historian, Richard Overy takes the reader first through the pre-war years in
Soviet
Russia, and continues with a chronological account of the war on the eastern front. This is a military as well as a political history. Not only does he thoroughly describe all the major battles such as Barbarossa, Moscow, Leningrad, Stalingrad, Kursk, and Berlin, but he also highlights the internal workings of the Soviet state from it's inception until the end of the war. The terror, collectivization, consolidation of power by Stalin and the Bolsheviks, the gulag system, the role of the NKVD, relations with the western allies, and the general plight of the average Russian under communism are all explained in detail. The book is ten years old, but the only implication would be to consider that new information is continuously being released from once secret Soviet archives, thus a few minor details could be subject to change.
I've always taken for granted the fact that the Red Army was every bit as cruel as the Wehrmacht, and that the entire Soviet state was just as "bad" as the Nazi state. The NKVD in particular, was guilty of unspeakable atrocities-on their own people as well as their enemies-that make Abu Ghraib look like a day at Disneyland. There seems to be a significant group of people who resent this comparison though, and would have us believe that Stalin, and by extension the whole Bolshevik movement, was somehow morally superior to Hitler's invading armies. Richard Overy knows better. This is not to say that the intent of `Russia's War' is to demonize the Red Army in any way; in fact it is an excellent example of objective history that duly describes the positive and negative characteristics of the Soviet war machine. In regards to fighting ability and effectiveness, Overy actually gives much more credit to the Red Army than many previously have. He's skeptical of the conclusion that the Russian victory was merely a result of more plentiful resources and numerical superiority, and describes how the Red Army dramatically improved their tactical and strategic effectiveness as the war went on. This evolution, according to Overy, together with the well-known tenacity and fanatical resistance of the Russian soldier, is what won the war on the eastern front. That being said, the American Lend-Lease program is also described as a much bigger contributor than the Soviets admit.
The book appropriately ends on the note of Stalin's legacy and his cult of personality. Although Overy praises his skill as political and military strategist, he describes the horrific consequences of his paranoid and vengeful mentality. Despite the brief glory and jubilation of the immediate post-war victory, the plight of the Russian people under Stalin became even worse after the war, as Stalin plunged the country into a "second dark age." Overy really captures the enormous sacrifice and suffering of the Russian people. As someone who has little sympathy for anything Soviet, I have to concede a grudging respect for the Russian people in this regard. He is also convincing in describing how the Red Army is primarily responsible for the defeat of Nazi Germany, a fact that the Russians felt was not properly acknowledged by their allies in the west. Overall, although some of his conclusions are certainly debatable, his general analysis and description of events is outstanding. So if you are looking for a concise, objective work on the Soviet experience in WW2, look no further than `Russia's War.' Five stars.
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The Forgotten Front
The
Soviet
defeat of the Nazi
war
machine was a vital element in the outcome of World War II. In fact, the Eastern front might have been the factor in the destruction of Nazi Germany. The majority of the German Army was deployed against the Soviets not the western allies.
The Soviets, however, have not received the credit they deserve. German Generals blamed the defeat on Hitler's strategic mistakes. This claim amounts to assertion that the Soviets did not win this war as much as Germany lost it. In the West historians adopted this argument as their own and claimed that the Soviets overwhelmed the Germans with sheer numbers. The Soviets were unwilling to refute this view since they might use tactics and strategies in a war with NATO similar to the ones they used against the Germans. They had no reason to share their secrets with the enemy.
Much has changed since the end of the Cold War. Historians have gotten access in part to Soviet records. Richard Overy, one of the leading historians of World War II, has written an impressive summary of the new findings of the last ten years. Overy gives his readers a well-written account that manages to cover its broad subject in clear fashion. One of the strengths of this text is that the author is able to give the reader an understanding of the savage nature of combat in this theater without being overwhelming.
The
Russia
ns won this war and the Communist system and its leader, Josef Stalin, were vital elements in the victory. The Soviet Union survived the Nazi invasion and went on to win because the USSR kept control of its industrial resources, kept factories in operation, found competent military leaders and reformed its armed services. Overy is on solid ground when he notes that had the Communists failed in these endeavors, there would have been no way for them to have resisted the Nazis. The Red Army became a competent, professional military during this war. The prewar purges hurt the Soviet military, but under the strains of repeated defeat, Stalin reduced his own involvement in military affairs and the command authority of political officers. Stalin was also smart enough to invoke traditional Russian values during the crisis of war. Religion flourished. Propaganda rarely mentioned Communism but instead called on the people to defend Mother Russia. The army brought back old military honors and decorations from the days of the Czars.
Overy has some interesting new points to make. Stalingrad was not the turning point in the war that so many others have seen. The Germans were able to make good the loss of men, and launch new offensives after this defeat. The Russians used their own weapons, but needed U.S. items like telephone wires, trucks, and radio equipment to fight their war. These items are hardly sexy or exciting, but they allowed the Red Army to become a mechanized force that could use firepower and mobility to destroy its enemy.
People interested in learning more about an important aspect of World War II will really like this book.
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Excellent overview
It could have used a little bit more meat, but considering the epic scale of the conflict, understandable. Overall a great reference source for an overview.
German Officers make Bad Food Choices and Blew It
Buy this book
The only reason Germany lost on the Eastern Front was that four German Field Marshalls (Jodl, Bormann, Keitel, and Goldstein) had become lacto-ovo-vegetarians.
Vegetarianism is an outstanding moral principle and healthy life-style but in the harsh conditions of the
Russia
n Winter, it resulted in protein-starved German brains and pizzischka poor tactical and stratedgic decisions.
This book leaves out this important fact that accounts virtually totally why the Germans lost and completely understanding these matters accomplishes this. which is why four starts does it get only!!
But other than that the book gives an excellent account of the eastern german front (where if i had died on you may have guessed where buried be I might?)
Oh, Goldstein ended up being a traitor code-named "Lucy" and gave all the German battle plans to the russians -- that hurt too and this book (for its credit) notes that important (though not as importnat as tha lactose-oveo-veggie one) connection and reason for defeat.
ciao // gurkha
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Foremost Cause of Soviet Victory: Stalin
Once the
Soviet
Union fell in 1991 and the era of Glasnost arrived it was inevitable that western historians would seek to re-appraise the eastern front in the Second World
War
. One of the early
effort
s was
Russia
's War, written by British historian Richard Overy. He used some of the early released information to re-examine our knowledge of the Russo-German War and to attempt to explain just how the Soviet Union was able to defeat what appeared to be the strongest military power on earth. Readers should be aware that this book is not a blow-by-blow campaign
history
but rather, a book that uses thematic-based chapters to chart the course of Soviet victory. Furthermore, this book has already been dated by further research into Soviet wartime records by historians such as the prodigious David M. Glantz; for example, there is no mention of the disastrous 1942 Operation `Mars.' Overall, this book is a useful supplement to Glantz's own one-volume summary of the war, When Titans Clash, since it touches on elements affecting Soviet power that Glantz (who is strictly focused on military issues) omits.
Russia's War is divided into ten chapters, consisting of 330 pages of text and 36 pages of endnotes. The author also provides 11 sketch maps and 3 tables, as well as 32 very dark and blurry B/W photos. The author states his hypothesis up front when he says that, "material explanations of Soviet victory are never quite convincing" and opines that one cannot account for Soviet victory without addressing the idea of a Russian soul or spirit. Instead, he seeks to demolish the stereotype that Soviet victory was simply the product of overwhelming numerical superiority.
The first chapter deals with the creation of the Stalinist state in the USSR during the interwar period and Stalin's pre-occupation with building up the Soviet Union against both internal and external attack. Overy notes that Stalin's forced collectivization - always condemned outright in the West - made a huge demographic shift from rural areas to the cities, which made possible the industrial programs of the 1930s. In short order, Stalin transformed Russia from a primarily agrarian economy to a nation of heavy industries, which provided the basis for industrial mobilization in
1941
-45. The author concludes that, "without the economic transformation, the Red Army would have been a feeble force in 1941, relying on a vast base of peasant manpower." Although Overy also discusses the impact of Stalinist purges on the Soviet military, he believes that they have been exaggerated and that, the Red Army `had severe weaknesses both before and after the purges," such as very weak command and control due to lack of radios and the interference of political commissars.
The next several chapters are rather disappointing. Chapter two deals with the lead-up to war in 1937-41 but skims over Soviet military modernization efforts as well as Khalkin-Gol and the Russo-Finnish War. Chapters three and four deal with Operation Barbarossa and Soviet efforts to defend Leningrad and Moscow but really don't offer any new material. Overy does conclude that, "it was not the tough winter conditions that halted the German army but the remarkable revival of Soviet military manpower after the terrible maulings of the summer and autumn," but contends that these actions were not decisive. In the fifth chapter, on terror and resistance, Overy crosses over an old `taboo' line by mentioning the active cooperation of thousands of Cossacks with the invading Germans and states that, "an estimated one million Soviet soldiers ended up fighting against their country." These comments are important but exaggerated, since Vlasov's army was not formed until
1945
and most other units formed from eastern volunteers were only battalion or regiment-sized. The author also assails the cherished icon of Soviet partisans, stating that their role was fairly limited and describes them as "the kamikazes of the Soviet war effort."
On a number of issues, Overy seems unable to drag himself out of the morass of Soviet wartime propaganda. For example, he claims that virtually all of the German troops involved in the Korsun Pocket breakout in February 1944 were `massacred' - essentially parotting Soviet wartime claims - while fresh research reveals that 35,000 out of 45,000 Germans escaped the pocket. Similarly, Overy's treatment of Soviet inactivity during the uprising of the Polish Home Army is August 1944 is as insulting as it is faulty.
In the sixth and seventh chapters, the author covers the critical battles of Stalingrad and Kursk, considered the decisive actions. He notes that the combination of Stalin's `not-a-step-backward' order and ferocious Soviet propaganda brought Soviet society "to a fever pitch of hatred and vengeance" in 1942, which contributed to the Red Army's victory at Stalingrad. In the Kursk chapter, he cites Stalin's willingness to gradually give more decision-making authority to his military professionals, which contrasted greatly with Hitler's move in the opposite direction and that this, "created a central team of military managers and thinkers which radically altered Soviet fighting power." With Soviet industry churning out large numbers of modern tanks, artillery and aircraft, a revitalized Soviet military elite was allowed to plan and conduct its campaigns based on military rather than political logic. Overy also cites other factors that contributed to Soviet victory: two thirds of women were drafted to work in factories while most German women stayed at home; Western Lend-Lease provided the Soviets with vital non-combat gear (radios, trucks, boots), allowing Soviet industry to concentrate on weapons production; and the role of slave-labor in the Soviet Gulgag, which produced 15 percent of all ammunition. Overall, Professor Overy concludes that Soviet victory was based on a combination of factors, but the foremost were the series of brutal policies enacted by Stalin that made the Soviet Union a far more militarized state than the old Tsarist Russia. While this book made an important contribution when it first appeared over a decade ago, it is becoming obsolete and should be used with care.
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