
The war between Nazi Germany and Stalin's Soviet Union that raged between 1941 and 1945 was unprecedented in the scale of the destruction that it wrought and the deep scars that it left behind. The invasion of the Soviet Union was the conflict that Hitler had always ultimately planned for in his dream of creating a 'Thousand Year Reich'. From the beginning it was a struggle for survival, conducted with great bitterness and savagery by opponents who knew that defeat meant the destruction of everything they stood for.By 1945 a huge swathe of Europe between Berlin and Moscow had been reduced to a devastated wasteland in which whole societies had been erased from the face of the earth. Over 26 million Soviets and between four and five million Germans lay dead. The eventual victory of the Red Army transformed the Soviet Union into one of the world's two superpowers. It also saw the complete destruction of Hitler's megalomaniac vision for the East, the division of the German Reich, and the Soviet domination of Eastern Europe for a generation.Enriched by a wealth of eye-witness testimony from both the Soviet and the German sides, Operation Barbarossa paints a masterly overview of these momentous four years and their human consequences - one that is both gripping and deeply moving.
This work investigates the strategic, ideological, and human dimensions of the German invasion of the Soviet Union, questioning how a conflict of such unprecedented scale reshaped the geopolitical landscape of the twentieth century. Christian Hartmann, a historian specializing in the Wehrmacht and the Eastern Front, utilizes a synthesis of archival records and personal accounts to analyze the progression of the war from 1941 to 1945. The text argues that the conflict was fundamentally an existential struggle driven by Nazi racial ideology and Soviet defensive necessity, resulting in total societal devastation across Eastern Europe.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians and readers frequently note the book's ability to balance high-level strategic analysis with the visceral reality of the human cost of the war. Experts highlight this as a concise yet comprehensive overview suitable for those seeking to understand the ideological and structural drivers of the conflict on the Eastern Front.
Page Count:
208
Publication Date:
2013-01-01
Publisher:
Oup Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191636533
ISBN-13:
9780191636530
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