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(Greg DeLong) #1

152 THE WIDENING WAR 1942


SOVIET VICTORY


AT STALINGRAD


In November 1942, the Soviets launched an unexpected


counteroffensive at Stalingrad—not pushing through the front line


in the city itself, but encircling the city to cut off, then annihilate, the


German army within. Following this victory, the Soviets went on


to push the Germans out of the Caucasus and the Don River basin.


The Germans disregarded what limited
intelligence they had about a major
Soviet counteroffensive, believing that
the Soviets could not have the men or
equipment to mount such an attack.
As a result, the speed and success of
the Red Army assault in November
1942 came as a shock to them. The
Soviets’ plan was ingenious: they
targeted Germany’s allies, the weaker
Romanian, Italian, and Hungarian
armies that flanked the German
6th Army in Stalingrad and held the
front line along the Don River. By
November 23, the 6th Army was
isolated from the stronger German
forces to the west and south.

“18,000 wounded without any supplies or dressings or


drugs. Further defense senseless. Collapse inevitable.”


GENERAL PAULUS, MESSAGE TO ADOLF HITLER, JANUARY 24, 1943

The Soviets then launched a series
of operations to clear the Don basin
and Caucasus. By the time the Red
Army launched its final assault on
Stalingrad in mid-January 1943, it had
decimated the Germans’ allies and
retaken much of the territory lost to the
German advance of 1942 (see pp.148–
149). Hitler only averted further disaster
by allowing Army Group A to retreat
from the Caucasus. It had seemed as
if the German retreat might turn into
a rout, but by February the Soviet
army was overstretched. A successful
counterattack at Kharkov boosted
German morale as they planned their
next offensive (see pp.178–179).

GERMAN ALLIES AT STALINGRAD


The Italian, Hungarian, and Romanian
armies at Stalingrad were expected
to protect the Germans’ flanks and
stabilize the front, but they were fatally
overstretched and—as the Soviet
marshal Zhukov noted—less well
armed, less experienced, and less
efficient at defense than the Germans.
Having neglected to reinforce their
positions along the Don River,
Germany’s allies provided an easy
target for the Soviet counterattack.

Romanian POWs at Stalingrad

THE AXIS IN RETREAT
Between November 1942 and
March 1943, the Red Army
executed a well-planned
counterattack to retake much of
the territory lost to Germany’s
Operation Blue (see pp.148–149).

TIMELINE

NOV 1942 DEC JAN 1943 FEB MAR APR

2
3
4
5

1

6
7

KEY
Soviet forces

Soviet-held territory, Nov 18, 1942

Soviet gains by Mar 31, 1943

Axis forces

Front line, Mar 31, 1943

△ Red Army victory
A soldier of the Red Army raises the Soviet flag on
the roof of a Stalingrad department store that had
housed the staff of German General Paulus.

Black


Sea


Kalmuk

Steppe

Sea of


Azov


Dn
iep
er

Kuban

La
ba

Volg

a

D
on

D

on

Done
ts

D
one
ts

Don

Chir

Ma
nyc
h C a u c a s u s M o u

n
t
a
i n
s

CR
IM
EA

U


S


S


U R
K
R
A
I N
E

Soviet Bryansk
Front

Soviet Voronezh
Front

Soviet
South-West Front

German Army
Group B

German Army
Group A

German Army
Group Don

German Army
Group South

Soviet Don
Front

Soviet Stalingrad Front
(Later South Front)

Soviet North
Caucasus Front

Soviet Trans-
Caucasus Front

Italian
8th Army

German
17th Army

Hungarian
2nd Army

German
2nd Army

Romanian
3rd Army

Romanian
4th Army

German
6th Army

German 4th
Panzer Army

Kamensk

Novoshakhtinsk

Nevinnomyssk

Novorossiysk

Budyonnovsk

Slavyansk

Volgodonsk

Kotelnikovo

Timashevsk

Lysychansk

Tikhoretsk

Cherkessk

Volchansk

Krasnodar

Berdyansk

Pyatigorsk

Stalingrad

Makiivka

Voronezh

Ostrogozhsk

Stavropol

Izyum

Chertkovo

Millerovo

Taganrog

Kalach

Belgorod

Mariupol

Horlivka

Sukhumi

Nalchik

Mozdok

Maikop

Kharkov

Krasnograd

Pavlograd

Labinsk

Alagir

Poltava

Tuapse

Valuyki
Rossosh

Rostov

Yelets

Kastornoye

Kerch

Kursk

Yeysk

Sochi

Livny

Elista

Proletarskaya

Lgov

Orel

Kremenchuk

Kerch
Peninsula

M
ius
GERMANS ENTRAPPED NOVEMBER 19–23, 1942
On November 19, the Soviets launched Operation
Uranus, aimed at destroying the Axis forces in and
around Stalingrad. Attacking far behind the city, they
drove from the north and south through the Romanian
armies guarding the German 6th Army’s flanks. As the
Soviet South-West and Stalingrad Fronts linked up at
Kalach, the Romanian 3rd Army was destroyed, the
4th Army was in retreat, and more than 290,000 Axis
troops were encircled in Stalingrad.

1


Soviet advances Encircled Germans

RESCUE ATTEMPT DECEMBER 13–23, 1942
In mid-December, Field Marshal von Manstein began
an operation to relieve the 6th Army, named Winter
Storm. General Hoth’s 4th Panzer Army, which had only
partly escaped encirclement in the city, tried to create a
corridor from Kotelnikovo to Stalingrad. The Soviets
were surprised by the assault but quickly bedded into
defensive positions south-west of Stalingrad; Hoth
could not break through and halted his advance.

2


German advance, Operation Winter Storm

US_152-153_Russian_counter-offensive.indd 152 20/03/19 2:18 PM

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