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If you have already seen any of the images here on some other site or forum, it is very likely the source is from here. This is the original site of rare images from war and history.
--- Editors

We have been accused.....

Pro-Nazi? Partial to fascism? Sympathetic to Nazism. These are some of the comments that come up. The truth is far from that. This impression was perhaps created because we carry more pictures from German sources. There is a reason for that. The victors (Russia, America, Britain...) tend to give out only those images that show them in good light. And they are dull! Who said propaganda is entertaining? The pictures taken by Germans are very interesting because the source; Nazi Germany itself disappeared. There was no one to control which images were to be released. And they are fascinating. They show war as it was. Not the way someone wanted us to see it.

Also, images of the Wehrmacht are fascinating for the simple reason ( besides, of course, that it was a very formidable fighting force) that the German army was defeated , dismembered, and most of the best soldiers died before WW2 ended.

We repeat. WE ARE NOT PRO-NAZI.

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WAFFEN SS IN ACTION: Rare, Unseen Pictures: Part 2


"Meine Ehre heißt Treue"("My honour is loyalty")
Waffen SS Motto 

Literary it means "My honour is called loyalty" but the meaning is closer to "My honour is loyalty". The Motto comes from Hitler's letter to SS kommendant Kurt Daluegelle in 1931. There was sentence-ending "...SS-man, your loyalty is your honour" and Heinrich Himmler took that sentence from letter and came up with that motto. That motto is forbidden and punishable by law in Germany and Austria even today.
From Military-quotes.com

SS soldiers in action on the western front in 1940

SOME DOPE ON WAFFEN SS


The best Waffen SS Divisions were Liebstandarte and Das Reich, along with Totenkopf. In other words the 3 divisions that made up the II SS Panzer Korps. Up until mid 1944 they could be considered as elite status divisions and were well regarded by German commanders as 'fire brigade' formations. In other words, formations that could be reliably used to plug holes and prevent Soviet breakthroughs. 

The Totenkopf were certainly not just fancy concentration camp guards. As part of II SS Panzer Korps they formed the main offensive wedge of 4th Panzerarmee at Kursk, and along with the other two SS divisions achieved the furthest penetration of any German formation. This was mainly due to the tactics of Hausser but make no mistake, Totenkopf in 1943 were as good as any other Panzer Division in the German Army and better than a good many of them. 

Many of the other Waffen SS units you mentioned were formed towards the end of the 3rd Reich and were not of the same quality as the big 3. Hitlerjugend for example was formed by transferring a core of veteran NCO's from Liebstandarte to look after largely green troops, most of them Hitler Youth, hence the name. The Hitlerjugend did actually fight very well, but it was no elite formation.

 Milching a Dutch cow in 1940. Netherlands.


THE SPIRIT OF EQUALITY


The elite esprit de corps so commonly found in the Waffen SS compared to other Wehrmacht units was as much a product of leadership as selection. The relationship between officers and enlisted men in the Waffen SS differed greatly from the class separation found within the German Army. In the Wehrmacht, less than two percent of the officers were of ‘peasant stock', whereas 90% of the Waffen SS commanders had been brought up on the land. Waffen SS officers deliberately fostered a close relationship between themselves and their men. Expected to rise from the ranks, Waffen SS officers earned the respect and loyalty of their men by leading from the front and never asking them to do anything that they would not do themselves. For many, this bond between brothers in arms was the most memorable aspect of serving as part of the Waffen SS. "My most enduring memory of the Waffen-SS", according to SS Veteran Gerd Rommel, "was the spirit with which we were all filled. We were all just around 18 years old, and our officers just 20 to 30 years old. Our Divisional commander, SS-Brigadefuhrer Heinz Harmel was then just 38 years old. The troops never addressed him as ‘Herr General', just as ‘Brigadefuhrer'. It was this spirit of equality which made us all feel so proud."
From Militaryhistoryonline


 SS soldiers on a truck on the western front in 1940. They carry the standard Wehrmacht issue, K98k Mauser rifles

THE K98K MAUSER RIFLE


The Karabiner 98 Kurz (often abbreviated Kar98k, K98, or K98k) was a bolt action rifle chambered for the 8x57mm IS/7.92×57mm IS cartridge that was adopted as the standard service rifle in 1935 by the German Wehrmacht. It was one of the final developments in the long line of Mauser military rifles. Although supplemented by semi- and fully automatic rifles during World War II, it remained the primary German service rifle until the end of World War II in 1945.







For example, General Eberhard von Mackensen, commander of the IIIrd panzer Corps, wrote of the Leibstandarte, "Every division wishes it had the Leibstandarte as its neighbor. They are a genuine elite formation that I am happy and proud to have under my command." The Waffen SS divisions had indeed achieved the goals set by their Fuhrer. They had proven themselves in combat and gained the prestige and confidence of the German Army. In view of this, the Leibstandarte, the Totenkopfdivision, Wiking and the Das Reich were reorganized into panzer grenadier divisions, complete with tank battalions. Hitler also authorized the creation of more SS divisions and the SS Panzer Corps. As the tide began to turn against Hitler, with the fall of Stalingrad and the loss of North Africa, he placed a greater demand upon the men of the SS who where, "an extraordinary body of men, devoted to an idea, loyal unto death."


With the German defeat at Kursk, the Soviets gained the strategic initiative for good. The subsequent Soviet offensive during the summer of 1943 proved devastating for the Wehrmacht . During the retreat, the SS formations became the "fire brigades" in the East. As motorized divisions, they were routinely rushed to the critical points on the front to seal a breach in the German lines or slow down the Soviet onslaught long enough for other formations to escape. They had in the words of General Wohler, commander of the 8th Army, "stood like a rock in the Army, while the enemy broke through in neighboring sectors."

A Waffen SS soldier hurries forward with his MG 34 machine gun. 1940





 IT WAS SAID OF THE SS TOTENKOPF....


"The SS man's ability to remain calm in the face of disaster, his willingness to fight on against impossible odds, his lust for killing Russians, and most important, his readiness to perish rather than retreat and appear weaker than his racial enemy were all qualities that proved crucial throughout the war in retrieving hopeless situations; they became hallmarks of the Totenkopf divisions's performance wherever it fought."


1944. Karl Ullrich (Center) with Kurt Franke (Right). Men of the 6th SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment Theodor Eicke



WHO WERE THESE GUYS?

Karl Ullrich was awarded the Iron Cross 1st and 2nd class for bravery during the Battle of France, then transferred to the Totenkopf on the Eastern Front in 1941. He was awarded the Knight's Cross for his leadership and bravery during the battles of the Demyansk pocket in February 1942 and in October 1944 was given command of the 6th SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment Theodor Eicke and was awarded the Oakleaves while in command. Promoted to Standartenführer (Colonel) he was given command of the 5th SS Panzer Division Wiking for the final battles of the war in Hungary. A short time before the end of the war he was promoted to Oberführer and he surrendered to the Russians in May 1945.

Kurt Franke was a Obersturmführer (First Lieutenant) in the Waffen SS during World War II who was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross, awarded to recognize extreme battlefield bravery or successful military leadership by Nazi Germany during World War II. He was also one of only 631 men to be awarded the very rare Close Combat Clasp in Gold



These guys are from the Hitler Youth (HitlerJugend) Division. One of them tends to a comrade.


 WAFFEN SS DELAYED THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE WEST


The Waffen SS divisions were once again nearly bled white during these terrible battles. They were unable to stop the advancing tide of the Allies overwhelming personnel and materiel superiority. What they did accomplish was to significantly delay the Allied advance. It is doubtful that the German defenses in France would have held as long as they did without the courage, determination, and overall combat power of the Waffen SS divisions. General Eisenhower remarked that, "while the SS elements as usual fought to annihilation, the ordinary German infantry gave themselves up in ever-increasing numbers." This reckless fanaticism in the face of defeat was exactly what Hitler needed from the troops who were to execute his planned counter offensive in the West.

 This SS man smilingly poses for the camera.


EVEN FIGHTING SPIRIT GOES ONLY SO FAR....

In describing the Ardennes offensive, one grenadier remarked that, "Three years ago we would probably have stormed forward during the night in order not to allow the enemy any time to recover. But now after nearly five years of savage fighting things move much more slowly . . . The men are all right but tanks and guns need fuel and shells and it does not matter how much fighting spirit there is, without those two things nothing much can be achieved."

Men from the SS Division 'Deutschland'. The sergeant in the front carries a Schmeisser MP 28.II machine gun

FRENCHMEN IN WAFFEN SS: FOUGHT TO THE LAST IN BERLIN
 (Source)


Three other members of the Assault Battalion Charlemagne would receive the Knight's Cross, on the evening of April 29. By this time, 108 Soviet tanks had been destroyed in the city's center; 62 of them by Charlemagne soldiers. These French survivors spent April 30 repelling flame-throwing Soviet tanks, which kept lumbering toward the Führer Bunker. 

Adolf Hitler may have been surprised to learn that not all of his last personal defenders were Germans. In addition to the Frenchmen, a few Danes, Norwegians, Latvians, Swedes, Spaniards and Balkan ethnic Germans, along with Hitler Youth, policemen and middle aged to elderly Volkssturm (People's Militia) were among those who fatefully joined in the final scenes of bravery and pathos. 

To the north of Berlin, SS Battalion 58 and other Charlemagne troopers who had not gone into the city conducted a fighting withdrawal to Schleswig-Holstein. Their objective was to reach Denmark and link up with the remains of Leon Degrelle's 28th SS Division Wallonien. But the British Army got in the way, and on May 2 the last Charlemagne commander, Stubaf. Boudet-Gheusi, attempted to surrender his command. 

Under a white flag, Boudet-Gheusi and his adjutant, (2nd Lieutenant) Radici crossed the Allied lines to speak with a British officer. The officer flatly rejected any official surrender, stating that the Frenchmen had to be turned over to the Russians for "punishment." At that point the two French SS junior officers were disarmed and taken into custody. They were then placed on an armored personnel carrier and driven to the Soviet lines. Both managed to jump off en route and escape. Subsequently, Boudet-Gheusi would be forced to serve a long prison sentence in France. Radici was executed by France's postwar government.

Part of the Charlemagne Wildflecken Regiment had been incorporated into the new SS-Panzergrenadier Division "Nibelungen" in Bavaria. This division had been formed late in the war from all sorts of available personnel. There were many French SS officer candidates and other European volunteers in its ranks. These were probably the only French SS troops to fight against the western Allies; in late April and early May, 1945. The Nibelungen Division surrendered to the Americans on May 9, two days after Germany's unconditional surrender at Reims, France. One would think this a much more preferable alternative for Waffen-SS volunteers than capitulation to the Red Army. But such was not necessarily the case. The Nibelungen POWs were severely abused by their captors. Many were beaten and even murdered in captivity. The bulk of the Nibelungen survivors would go into the cruel and infamous "open air" POW camps described in detail in James Bacque's book Other Losses. They definitely were not treated according to the rules of the Geneva Convention. 

The soldiers of the Charlemagne Division had marched into history. Of the more than 10,000 French volunteers in the Waffen-SS, more than half had been killed or missing at the front, or would die in captivity. Like tens of thousands of their European SS comrades, the French volunteers were drawn from all walks of life, from laborers to aristocrats. They strongly believed they were fighting for the preservation of European civilization, national integrity and the destruction of Communism. They literally fought to the last bullet, with few survivors having any regret about the course they took.


 Waffen SS soldiers in France, 1940 gingerly try and cross the small stream.

THE ALLIED SOLDIERS FEARED AND RESPECTED THE WAFFEN SS...
(Source)

Allied casualties were generally much higher whenever they were thrown into combat opposite seasoned SS troops. Consequently the SS were both feared and admired for their military prowess. The allies feared that the SS would continue to offer armed underground resistance to the occupational authorities, therefore they determined to thoroughly disband and discredit this able military force before the eyes of not only the world, but of the German people as well. Consequently, the members of the SS received the most brutal treatment at the hands of the allied forces. Often accused of war crimes and crimes against humanity, the allies sought to expunge the very memory of this elite Nazi formation. The truth of the matter is that the Waffen SS was no more criminal than any other fighting unit, allied OR axis, and the treatment it’s members received at the hands of the allies was unjust and often criminal. Since SS members were stationed at concentration camps as guards, the allies took advantage of this fact and used it to condemn the members of the SS as a whole. Of course it should go without saying that simply because someone was a guard at a camp does not mean he or she was a criminal.

 Western Front. 1940. Peer cautiously round a corner.

 A little chat after fighting

 This man is waiting for an order to move

Preparing to fire a Pak 35/36 anti-tank gun. 1940


 A rare moment of respite for these fighting men

 SS machine gunners take up position

 The one on the left is an Unterscharführer SS (in camouflage shirt)

This soldier rushes with a box of ammo

 Waffen SS men report on the situation

 Machine gunners from the Waffen SS 'Deutschland' Division

 1940. Western front. SS soldiers fire away with their MG 34

1940. Western Front. SS men on motorcycles wait for orders.

 Sepp Dietrich with his charcoal-painted boys from the Hitler Youth Division

 SS soldiera about to cross the river on a rubber dingy. The man second from left carries a range-finder

 These men relaxedly sprawled on the tank are from the 12th SS Panzer Hitler
Jugend Division

 Conference with maps by officers and men of the Waffen SS

 These guys are from the Hitler Youth Division

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1 Comment:

Anonymous said...

amazing photos and i believe you are right that there is still this huge facenation with the Waffen SS that wi not be dieing anytime soon.

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"STALINGRAD"

It's tempting to call this harrowing picture a World War II version of All Quiet on the Western Front: both films take the perspective of ordinary German soldiers at ground level. Stalingrad surveys the misery of the battle of Stalingrad, the winter siege that cost the lives of almost one and a half million people, Russian defenders and German invaders alike. Not unlike Spielberg's approach to Saving Private Ryan, German director Joseph Vilsmaier rarely steps outside the action to comment on the higher purpose of the war, assuming the audience is aware of the evil of the Nazi regime. Instead, we simply follow a group of soldiers as they endure a series of gut-wrenching episodes, events which have the tang of authenticity and horror. Vilsmaier has a taste for symbolism and surreal touches, which only add to the unsettling sense of insanity this movie conjures up so well.

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Some Must-Reads On The Eastern Front (WW2)

Written by Alan Clark. Published by Perennial in 1985.

ISBN No: 0688042686.

BUY THIS BOOK :LOWEST PRICES

This book tells the story of the war on the Eastern Front. It covers the lead up to Operation Barbarossa and ends with the aftermath of the fall of Germany. It is an amazing account of the most brutal of all campaigns. The scale of the Eastern Front battles is beyond comprehension, as is the loss of life on both sides. This is a fascinating read. Clark manages to convey the battles so as not to get bogged down with details, but still tells us all we need to know. I highly recommend this book.


Written by Paul Carell. Published by Schiffer Publishing in 1994.

ISBN No: 0887405983.

This new edition of Paul Carrell's eastern front study picks up where 'Hitler Moves East' left off. Beginning with the battle of Kursk in July 1943, Carell traverses the vast expanse of the Russian War, from the siege of Leningrad and the fierce battles of the northern front, to the fourth battle of Kharkov, and the evacuation of the Crimea. The book ends in June 1944 when the Soviet Armies reach the East Prussian frontier. Hundreds of photographs, situation and campaign maps, a complete index and a comprehensive bibliography, add to this impressive account.


Written by David Glantz. Published by University Press of Kansas in 1998.

ISBN No: 0700608990.

Until now the Soviet-German conflict of WW2 has been told largely from the German point of view. This authoritative account, based on newly released Soviet studies, emphasizes the Russian version of events. It reveals, to a greater degree than previously known, how unprepared the Red Army initially was and how the leadership gradually gained in competence during the Moscow and Stalingrad campaigns. The author describes how the Werhmacht eventually lost the ability to conduct a general offensive on a wide front while the Soviets learned to focus overwhelming force on a narrow front such as the Kursk salient. The book conveys the colossal scope and scale of the five-year struggle and puts the military aspect in a wider perspective.


Written by David Glantz. Published by Sarpedon Publishers in 1998.

ISBN No: 1885119542.

Kharkov was one of the last German victories on the Russian Front. This is a detailed examination of Soviet command decisions and German battlefield innovations in an important but neglected battle. In this eagerly anticipated book, America's foremost expert in Russian military studies addresses this neglect. Sandwiched as it is between more famous battles, every military history reader knows about Kharkov, but there has never been a book that focused exclusively on that campaign. David Glantz has now filled the gap.


Written by David Glantz. Published by University Press of Kansas in 1999.

ISBN No: 070060944X.

Forgotten by history and virtually denied by the Soviet Union, the disastrous Russian defeat of 1942, in 'Operation Mars', is finally exposed in Glantz's exhaustive study of this massive battle on the Eastern Front. Glantz, a prominent historian specializing in Russian military operations, uses memoirs, official reports, and previously hidden archival sources to create a comprehensive view of this gigantic Soviet operation against the Germans just west of Moscow. Operation 'Mars' was commanded by Zhukov, one of Stalin's most trusted generals. Zhukov threw hundreds of thousands of soldiers and thousands of tanks against the entrenched Germans but was utterly crushed. Glantz explores the Soviets strategic, operational, and tactical planning and execution of this offensive, with particular attention to Zhukov and his subordinates. The numerous maps and orders of battle are essential for a clear understanding of the scope of this major offensive and its complete failure.


Written by David Glantz. Published by Frank Cass Publishers in 1991.

ISBN No: 0714640646.

In mid-December 1942, after encircling the German Sixth Army at Stalingrad, Russian forces began a series of offensive operations which continued unabated into February 1943. In these offensives the Russian High Command attempted to smash German resistance and encircle the bulk of two German army groups. For two months the German forces struck back. In a well co-ordinated counterstroke they inflicted a major operational defeat on the Soviets and stabilized the front until the summer. The two-month period of offensive activity during the winter of 1942-1943 saw the Red Army test new operational and tactical techniques and experiment with forces and methods for conducting mobile armoured warfare. Through victory and defeat the Red Army learnt its lesson well. Out of this period, and the three month period of relative calm that followed, emerged the new Red Army, which would defeat blitzkreig at Kursk and would achieve two years of virtually uninterrupted battlefield success, culminating in their defeat of Nazi Germany.


Written by David Glantz. Published by Tempus Publishing Limited in 2001.

ISBN No: 0752426923.

Glantz is one of the leading historians to write about the Eastern Front and his work is solidly based on both Russian and German material. He has been at the forefront of a new generation of authors. Following the collapse of communism, an abundance of new archives and sources have come to light for the western historian interested on the Eastern Fromt. However, until recently his works have been limited to a specific place and time during the Nazi-Soviet War. These earlier works were also usually extremely detailed, technical and not at all edited for the general military-history reader.
Glantz's Before Stalingrad, covers the fighting in 1941, from Hitler's invasion on 22 June through Stalin's counter-offensives that December. The book is more accessible and is written and edited for a more general audience than the bulk of Glantz's work. However, Before Stalingrad could serve as one's first book on Operation Barbarossa without losing the reader in minutia.
The book begins with a background chapter on armies, equipment, plans and doctrine. Glantz then breaks down the fighting according to major operations and where appropriate, strategic machinations in the headquarters of both dictators. Each chapter is brought to a close with thorough endnotes. Appendices include Fuehrer Directives plus some Russian planning documents and an excellent order of battle of forces.


Written by David Glantz. Published by Frank Cass Publishers in 1997

ISBN: 0714642983


This volume begins with an investigation of Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941. It draws upon eye-witness German accounts of what occurred, and supplements these with German archival and detailed Soviet materials. The Soviet government has released extensive amounts of formerly classified archival materials from the period. This material has been incorporated into the maps and text.


Written by Joachim Wieder. Published by Cassell military in 2002

ISBN: 0304363383

Stalingrad in the Second World War has become a by-word for misplaced military endeavour - and courage, endurance, heroism beyond all human belief. Joachim Wieder survived the German collapse, and the subsequent years in Soviet captivity, to write his memoir of the battle in 1962. It was no routine account; he found it necessary to re-examine what motives drove the Germans on in the face of hopeless odds, why orders were issued that could only lead to certain death, the lies promulgated by high command, the whole morass of unjustified and pointless conflict. This is an absorbing evaluation of war, revised in 1993 in the light of later information on the battle, and available now in English for the first time. It was the first German book on Stalingrad to be published in the Soviet Union.


Written by Bryan Fugate and Lev Dvoretsky. Published by Presidio Press in 2001.

ISBN No: 0891417311.

This superb campaign history shatters a long-held myth and suggests that the Red Army turned the tide not at Stalingrad, but much earlier at Yelnia. It was at Yelnia that the Red Army first slowed the German drive east, ambushing Army Group Centre, taking Guderian and Halder by surprise and announcing the start of the Soviet defence in depth which culminated in the battle for Moscow. The mastermind behind this key operation was General Zhukov and it was during the crucial fighting around Yelnia that Zhukov and the Russians first dulled the cutting edge of German blitzkrieg and smashed the myth of invincibility of the vaunted panzers. Fugate and Dvoretsky's work is well-researched and draws on both German and Russian sources. It stresses not only the careful preparations of Russian commanders but also the importance of this long-neglected episode and its impact on the defeat of the Wehrmacht.


Written by Rolf Hinze. Published by Helion & Company in 2005.

ISBN number: 1874622361.

This is a penetrating and detailed account of the climactic battles of the German forces in Slovakia, the Carpathians, parts of Poland, Silesia and Saxony, from autumn 1944 until the end of the war. The author provides excellent detail on the movements and actions of numerous German units, and the text covers all major actions including the battle for the Vistula bridgeheads, the epic siege of Breslau, and the final desperate actions around Bautzen and Dresden. Appendices include comprehensive orders-of-battle. A large number of detailed battle maps are also included.


Written by Nick Cornish. Published by Ian Allan Ltd in 2006.

ISBN number: 0711030367.

This book examines in detail the final six months of the war on the Eastern Front. It records the gradual and inexorable march of the Red Army towards the ultimate victory. With a narrative drawn from a variety of sources, including first-hand accounts from those who actually fought in the war, the book records the advance of the Red Army through Poland, Hungary and the Balkans and into Germany itself, and is a sobering account of the destruction of this final phase of the war in the East.


Written by Albert Seaton. Published by Presidio Press in 1993.

ISBN No: 0891414916.

This study of the war on the Eastern Front is an interesting mix of fine detail and an overview of the strategy employed by the Russians and Germans during WW2. This book is not a light read, but it is punctuated by some fascinating insights into military and diplomatic stategy. The author examines each of the major battles in turn, providing details of the armies, their commanders and the terrain over which the war in the East was fought. The detail can be unrelenting at times, and if this book has a weakness, it is that it needs to be punctuated by pictures (of which there are none), more biogaphical details about the commanders (of which there is some excellent coverage) and more maps (with better graphics) to help the reader get a clear understanding that the mass of information on its own fails to provide. This book is propably required reading in military academies around the world, as it brings out the strenghts and weaknesses of the tactics and stategies employed by both sides.


Written by Albert Seaton. Published by Spellmount Publishers in 1993.

ISBN No: 096276132X.

Reasonably competent retelling of one of the major battles of WW2 and how the Wehrmacht, for the first time, failed in a land offensive. This book is a history of the Russo-German conflict but is based mainly on German sources.


Written by Antony Beever. Published by Penguin Books Ltd in 1999.

ISBN No: 0140249850.

Stalingrad is a momentous and monumental book. It is effortlessly translated into a highly readable narrative. The author has raided the archives to bring an honest account of the titanic tussle between Hitler and Stalin in battle for the symbolic and strategic stronghold of Stalingrad. What Beevor truly achieves is an accessible and neat balance between the complexities of the war map with its myriad names of armies, officers, places, battles and mobilisation and the personal recounts recovered from letters and documents. Stalingrad is a big history book, and an important one, but it is never just academic, dry or dull. What it does do is read as an epic drama. It just deserves to be read.


Written by David Glantz. Published by University Press of Kansas 1999.

ISBN No: 0700609784

This is the definitive book on the battle of Kursk. It is by far the most complete assessment of the battle that has yet been offered. The authors do an excellent and thorough job of establishing the context of the battle. Glantz offers a very detailed description of the fighting, often identifying regimental or battalion-level units. The description of combat is not particularly vivid or exciting, but if the reader is looking to find out where a particular regiment was and what enemy unit it was fighting, the book is likely to have the answer. In this sense, the sheer volume of detail and factual material is enough to allow me to judge the book a success. It contains information that could otherwise be gained only by consulting many different sources.


Written by Robin Cross. Published by Penguin Books in 1993.

ISBN No: 014139109X

This book was first published in hardback in 1993, at a time when the 'Ostfront' was rather less well known in the West. This is the first book to be written on what was probably one of the decisive battles of the war. Like Napoleon, Hitler only understood offensive warfare, and Operation Citadel was a huge gamble, coming so soon after the defeat at Stalingrad. Of special interest is the chronical of the repeated delays in getting the offensive started. The climax of the battle, around the village of Prokhorovka, gets a full chapter in itself.


Written by Paul Adair. Published by Cassell Military in 2000.

ISBN No: 030435449X

Hitler's Greatest Defeat is an amazing in-depth study into one of Hitler's greatest mistakes. With the world following the progress of the Normandy landings, the dramatic happenings on the distant Russian front were for many years destined to be ignored. Now 50 years later, a full length study of the defeat of Army Group Centre shows that a disaster greater even than the Allied invasion in France was inflicted upon the Germans many miles to the east. In this fine example of succinct analysis and accurate description, Paul Adair leads the reader through the build up to the campaign with studies of the German Army and its command structure and of the Soviet forces under Stalin.


Written by Tony Le Tissier. Published by Frank Cass in 1999.

ISBN No: 0714649295

The soldiers of the Red Army identified the Reichstag as the victor's prize to be taken in Berlin. Stalin had promised Berlin to Marshal Zhukov, but the latter's blundering in the preliminary breakthrough battle threw his timetable and forced a complete change of plan for reducing the city. Stalin used the opportunity to chasten his subordinates by allowing Marshal Koniev, Zhukov's rival, to introduce one of his tank armies into the competition unknown to Zhukov. Abandoning the rest of his army group, Koniev personally directed this army in the hope of grabbing the prize. Meanwhile, the Germans improvised a defence with inadequate resources. The remains of General Weidling's 56th Panzer Corps were reluctantly dragged into the city in a futile attempt to prolong the life of the Third Reich, whose leaders squabbled and schemed in their underground shelters, a world apart from the reality outside, where their subjects suffered and died unheeded. Ten days later, after the successive suicides of Hitler and Goebbels, the survivors chose between breakout and surrender. This account of the battle lays the many myths created by Soviet propaganda after the event and details what exactly happened as the Red Army and the Allies raced to be the first to the Reichstag.


Written by General Erhard Raus. Published by Greenhill Books in 2006.

ISBN No: 1853676829

Written soon after World War II, this work details the tactics of the Germans and their Soviet opponents. It also tells the secrets of panzer tactics. General Erhard Raus was one of the German Army's finest panzer generals and a leading exponent of blitzkrieg in the east. German panzers were witnesses to the incredible onslaught that was the first few months of Barbarossa, then the gradual strengthening of Russian resistance, counterattack and, ultimately, the long and drawn-out German retreat. Raus and his panzers were tested in every conceivable tactical situation and, inevitably, Raus became highly versed in all aspects of mobilised warfare. This account by Erhard Raus, edited by leading Eastern Front expert Peter G. Tsouras, concentrates on German efforts to relieve Stalingrad. Raus, as commander of 6th Panzer Division, was in the thick of this bitter action, urging his panzers forward in a massive effort to break the Soviet strangle-hold. These journals were originally written to brief the US Army at the height of the Cold War.


Reference Titles

Written by Steven Zaloga and Leland Ness. Published by Sutton Publishing in 2003.

ISBN No: 0750932090

During a desperate war of attrition, which stretched over four years, the Red Army defeated the German army on the Eastern Front and won lasting fame and glory in 1945 by eclipsing the military might of the Wehrmacht. From the army's development prior to the outbreak of war in 1939, to it's peak in 1945, every aspect is examined here. The organizational structures, armour and mechanized forces, cavalry, airbourne and special forces, along with a technical overview of infantry weapons, armoured vehicles and artillery, and support equipment. Fully illustrated with a comprehensive selection of archive photographs, charts and tables of organization, this is a useful source of reference for anyone interested in the Red Army during WW2.


Written by Joseph Page and Tim Bean. Published by Motorbooks International in 2002.

ISBN No: 0760313024.

This authoritative history of Russian tank forces during World War II reveals their development from the early post-revolutionary era right through to the ultimate victory in Berlin in May 1945. The book contains some 200 contemporary photographs, many of which have never been seen before. The photographs include images of tank training in the 1920's and 1930's and many compelling pictures from some of the major tank battles of the day.


Written by Harold Shukman. Published by Weidenfeld & Nicholson history in 2001.

ISBN No: 1842125133.

How could Russia's generals, whose independent judgement was essential to success, stand up to a bloodthirsty dictator who was ignorant of military skill? This work portrays some 25 generals (including a final chapter on those who were imprisoned or executed during the 1937-38 purges ("Stalin's Ghosts"). The book also throws light on the relations between the new military elite and their totalitarian leader, at a time when the very existence of the Soviet state was in the balance

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WW2 SPECIALS

Von Stauffenberg: The Man Who Almost Killed HITLER
After several unsuccessful tries by Stauffenberg to meet Hitler, Göring and Himmler when they were together, he went ahead with the attempt at Wolfsschanze on 20 July, 1944. Stauffenberg entered the briefing room carrying a briefcase containing two small bombs. The location had unexpectedly been changed from the subterranean Führerbunker to Speer's wooden barrack/hut. He left the room to arm the first bomb with specially-adapted pliers, a task made difficult because he had lost his right hand and had only three fingers on his left. A guard knocked and opened the door, urging him to hurry as the meeting was about to begin. As a result, Stauffenberg was able to arm only one of the bombs. He left the second bomb with his aide-de-camp, Werner von Haeften, and returned to the briefing room, where he placed the briefcase under the conference table, as close as he could to Hitler. Some minutes later, he excused himself and left the room.
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This Day in History

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Please note...

In articles related to the Eastern Front of WW2, the Soviet Union has been commonly referred to as Russia. This is because the Soviet Union was mainly Russia. Other states like Ukraine, Georgia, Byelorussia were in comparision very small.

Recent Comments......

Quotes about War...

"I'm fed up to the ears with old men dreaming up wars for young men to die in."
--George McGovern

Recent....

Men of Wehrmacht: German soldiers, Part 2 - Many of the German officers in charge of the Army were from the German aristocracy and forged a different path to military service compared to the politically aligned SS. Resentment often arose between the groups due to the nature of the SS's unwillingness to surrender and desire to fight to the death regardless of circumstance.


Rare pictures from Battle of Stalingrad - The Germans were running out of supplies. The Luftwaffe tried heroically to keep it going but that too stopped when the last airstrip under German control fell.




American soldiers in WW1 - Almost 400,000 black American soldiers served in Europe - a fact that is stashed away in American history

Quotes about War....

'Politics is war without bloodshed while war is politics with bloodshed."
--Mao Tse-Tung (1893 - 1976)

Quotes about War....

"We have failed to grasp the fact that mankind is becoming a single unit, and that for a unit to fight against itself is suicide."
--Havelock Ellis

Quotes about war....

"War grows out of the desire of the individual to gain advantage at the expense of his fellow man."
--Napoleon Hill

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Love in the Third Reich: Goebbels and Lida Baarova- At one stage Goebbels wanted to leave his wife Magda for Lida Baarova. But Hitler intervened and broke the love affair. The Third Reich could not afford such scandals. Here is the story of love and lust in Nazi Germany. The affair between actress Lida Baarova and Joseph Goebbels.



Why Did the Germans lose in Russia? - The Germans were ill-prepared for the Russian winter. The Russians lived there so it was just another winter for them. For the Germans it was a nightmare. They were ill-clothed.



Rare pictures of Adolph Hitler - The existence of Eva Braun - Adolph Hitler's mistress for more than 12 years and, in the end, his wife - was one of the most successfully guarded secrets of Nazi Germany. According to Hitler's chauffeur Erich Kempka Eva Braun was "the unhappiest woman in Germany. She spent most of her time waiting for Hitler." He had always kept her out of sight - as soon as guests arrived, he almost invariably banished her to her room.







Fall of Austria: 1945, Russians in Vienna - Once " a Russian soldier took a liking to my date. He motioned for me to give my date over to him but I refused. Then he pulled out a pistol and waved it at me, but my answer was still 'Nyet.' Luckily, he walked away with a disgusted look on his face."