The Allied Conspiracy to
Originate World War II
Germany’s invasion of the
Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, is widely interpreted by historians as an
unprovoked act of aggression by Germany. Adolf Hitler is typically described as
an untrustworthy liar who maliciously broke the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact he had
signed with the Soviet Union. Historians usually depict Josef Stalin as an
unprepared victim of Hitler’s aggression who was foolish to have trusted
Hitler. Many historians think the Soviet Union was lucky to have survived
Germany’s attack.
This standard version of
history does not incorporate information obtained from the Soviet archives. The
Soviet archives show that the Soviet Union had amassed the largest, most
powerful, and best equipped army in history. As we shall see in the following
discussion, the Soviet Union was on the verge of launching a massive military
offensive against all of Europe. Germany’s invasion of the Soviet Union was a
desperate preemptive attack that prevented the Soviet Union from conquering all
of Europe. Germany was totally unprepared for a prolonged war against an
opponent as powerful as the Soviet Union.
INTRODUCTION TO VIKTOR
SUVOROV
Viktor Suvorov is a former
Soviet military intelligence operative who defected to the United Kingdom in
1978. Suvorov joined the Soviet army as an 11-year-old, and for the next seven
years attended the extremely tough Military Boarding School. After graduation,
Suvorov was chosen for the Frunze High Command Army School in Kiev, where he
graduated in three years with honors. Suvorov’s work as an intelligence
operative was noticed. He was sent to the Soviet Army Academy, which was the
Soviet Union’s most secret military academy. The curriculum at the Soviet Army
Academy was extremely intense and was designed as a test; those who excelled
would get the most interesting intelligence assignments.
Suvorov had been taught to
notice strange occurrences, anomalies, and exceptions to the rules. Suvorov
noticed that no matter what happened in the Soviet Union, the government and
media always tried to conceal the negative aspects and show the positive. You
could not find any negative news about the Soviet Union. Everything was always
fine, culture was flourishing, the quality of life was getting better and
better, the Soviet Union would soon surpass the United States. A magnitude
7.3 on the Richter scale
earthquake that leveled the city of Ashkhabad was not reported; those who spoke
about the earthquake were arrested and put into prison for spreading false
rumors. Even catastrophes such as the Chernobyl disaster were not reported.
After an international investigation exposed the Chernobyl disaster, the
Soviets claimed that the Chernobyl accident was completely insignificant and no
one should pay any attention to it.1
Suvorov noticed one
exception to these rules: June 22, 1941, the day Germany attacked the Soviet
Union. All Soviet sources talk about the blatant unpreparedness of the Red Army
for military action. Soviet sources said that the Soviet army had no good
commanders, that Soviet tanks and airplanes were outdated, that the Soviet
Union was totally unprepared for war, and that Stalin was stupid to have
trusted Hitler. Suvorov was taught by his intelligence training to look for
incoherence.
This magnitude 7.3 on the
Richter scale earthquake occurred on Oct. 6, 1948 near Ashkhabad in the Soviet
Union. Soviet censorship did not allow this earthquake to be reported in the
media. The earthquake caused the collapse of brick buildings, concrete
structures and the destruction of freight trains. A correct death toll of
110,000 from this earthquake was eventually reported in 1988. PHOTO:
WWW.LIST25.COM
He asked: Why was it that
the Soviets, who would hide all other mistakes, accidents, and catastrophes,
make such a tremendous effort to emphasize the mistakes of the Soviet Union in
June 1941?
Suvorov soon realized that
Communist historians and propaganda masters had gone out of their way to hide
any details that would enable an outsider to construct the reality of what was
happening in the Soviet Union at the beginning of the German invasion. Suvorov
found a way to re-construct this reality. While a student at the Academy,
Suvorov wrote an independent research paper entitled “The Attack of Germany on
the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941.” Suvorov explained his interest in the
subject by saying to his professors that he wanted to study how Germany
prepared for the attack so that a horrible tragedy of this kind would never
happen again. The topic of Suvorov’s research was approved and he was given
access to closed archives. Suvorov was extra careful not to reveal the real
interest of his research.2
Suvorov discovered that the
Soviet version of World War II history is a lie and that it conceals the Soviet
Union’s responsibility for planning the start of the war. The Red Army in June
1941 was the largest, best equipped army in the history of the world. The
concentration of Soviet troops on the German border was frightful. If Hitler
had not invaded the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, the Soviet Union would have
easily taken over all of Europe. German intelligence correctly saw the massive
concentration of Soviet forces on the German border, but it did not see all of
the Soviet military preparedness. The real picture was much graver than Germany
realized.
Suvorov first published his
findings in English in 1990 in the book Icebreaker: Who Started the Second
World War? The book quickly sold out, but the publisher refused to print
further editions. It quickly became apparent that the Western academic
community was as reluctant as the Communists to accept Suvorov’s new
interpretation of World War II. However, with the collapse of communism and the
Soviet Union, Icebreaker and Suvorov’s later books sold in large quantities.
Beginning in 1990, Suvorov began to receive a flood of letters from all over
the world. People provided Suvorov with their unique insights and sent him copies
of documents in support of his theory. Many of these insights, as well as
evidence from newly published materials, are incorporated in Suvorov’s latest
book The Chief Culprit: Stalin’s Grand Design to Start World War II. Before
summarizing the evidence in Suvorov’s book, I want to mention that Suvorov does
not believe that traditional methods of historical science are needed to
understand the Soviet Union. Suvorov regards the Soviet Union as a criminal
conglomerate. The Soviet leaders have committed innumerable acts of atrocity
against their own people and people of other countries. This is why for Suvorov
the history of the Soviet Union should be studied using methods of criminology
and intelligence rather than classical historical research. The first rule of
intelligence is: do not believe what is demonstrated to you; seek what is
hidden. Suvorov states that Soviet leaders were demonstrating the
unpreparedness of the Soviet Union for war. What Soviet leaders were hiding was
a massive military offensive designed to take over all of Europe.3
INDUSTRIALIZATION,
COLLECTIVIZATION OF THE SOVIET ECONOMY
The Soviet Union adopted a
Five Year Plan in 1927 for developing industry. The main focus of the first
Five Year Plan was not the production of arms, but rather the creation of an
industrial base which was later used to produce armaments. The military emphasis
was not so noticeable in these first five years. The Red Army had 79
foreign-made tanks at the beginning of the first plan; at the end of the first
plan it had 4,538 tanks.4 The second Five Year Plan that began in 1932 in the
Soviet Union was a continuation of the development of the industrial base.
This meant the creation and purchase of furnaces, giant electricity plants,
coal mines, factories, and machinery and equipment. In the early 1930s,
American engineers traveled to the Soviet Union and built the largest and most
powerful enterprise in the entire world—Uralvagonzavod (the Ural Railroad Car
Factory). Uralvagonzavod was built in such a manner that it could at any moment
switch from producing railroad cars to producing tanks. In 1941, an order was
issued to produce tanks, and Uralvagonzavod without any delays began the mass
production of tanks. Uralvagonzavod produced 35,000 T-34 tanks and other
weapons during World War II.5
The third Five Year Plan
that began in 1937 had as its goal the production of military weapons of very
high quality in enormous quantities. The Soviet Union under Stalin was highly
successful in achieving its goals, and produced superior military weapons on a
grandiose scale. For example, the Chelyabinsk tractor factory was completed in
the Urals, and similar to Uralvagonzavod this factory was built in such a way
that it could begin producing tanks at any time. The Chelyabinsk tractor
factory was called Tankograd during the course of the war. It built not only
the medium T-34 tanks, but also the heavy IS and KV tank classes.6
A third gigantic factory,
Uralmash, was built not far away in Sverdlovsk. This factory is among the top
10 engineering factories in the world. The Soviet net of steel-casting
factories was greatly expanded in order to supply these three giant factories
in the Urals. Magnitogorsk, a city of metallurgists, was built in addition to a
huge plant the main output of which was steel armor. In Stalingrad, a tractor
factory was also built that in reality was primarily for producing tanks.
Automobile, motor, aviation, and artillery factories were also erected at the
same time.7
The most powerful aviation
factory in the world was built in the Russian Far East. The city
Komsomolsk-na-Amure was built in order to service this factory. Both the
factory and the city were built according to American designs and furnished
with the most modern American equipment. The American engineers sent to
Komsomolsk to install the equipment were astounded by the scope of the
construction.8
One secret of Soviet success
in building its military was the use of terror to control the Soviet
population. Communists shut down the borders of the Soviet Union, making it
impossible to leave the country. Secret police also unleashed a fight against
“saboteurs.” Any accident, breakage, or lack of success in a production line
was declared to be the result of an evil plot. The guilty and innocent alike
were sentenced to long prison terms. Those who were named “malevolent
saboteurs” were executed.
The terror improved worker
discipline and eliminated any need to fear strikes and demands for higher wages
on the part of workers. Also, the terror caused millions of people to be sent
to concentration camps. Concentration camp inmates constituted a slave labor
force that could be sent anywhere in the country without having to be paid. The
development of the remote regions of Siberia and the Far East would have been
impossible without the millions of inmates deported to work in these regions.
The Soviets planned in advance the number of prisoners that would be needed for
the next year, and would place an order in advance with the People’s
Commissariat of Internal Affairs (NKVD) to obtain the needed workers.9
The second secret of
Stalin’s industrialization success was the vast resources available in the
Soviet Union. Valuables amassed over the centuries such as paintings, statues,
icons, medals, precious books, antique furniture, furs, jewelry, gold,
platinum, and diamonds were all mercilessly confiscated and sold abroad. The
Soviet Union also had every sort of resource in almost inexhaustible
quantities. Timber exports, gold mining, coal, nickel, manganese, petroleum,
caviar and furs were all used to pay for Soviet industrialization. Western
technology was the main key to success. The Soviet Union became the world’s
biggest importer of machinery and equipment in the early 1930s.10
Stalin also sent large
numbers of prominent tank, aviation, and artillery engineers to prison,
accusing them of being spies. The task assigned to the engineers was
straightforward: create the best bomber, tank, cannon, engine, or submarine in
the world and you will receive your freedom. Fail and you will work in a gold
mine where inmates did not live too long. The engineers did not have to be paid,
but were still highly motivated to create the best weapons in the world to
obtain their freedom. Stalin’s spies also supplied these talented engineers
with the best American, German, British, and other designs in the given field.
The engineer could choose the best design, and based on it create something
even more outstanding.11
The lives of the people in
the Soviet Union were not improved with the Soviet industrialization. Basic
necessities such as pots and pans, rubber boots, plates, furniture, cheap clothing,
nails, home appliances, matches and other goods all became scarce. People had
to wait in long lines outside the stores to obtain these items. Stalin let his
people’s standard of living drop extremely low to focus practically all of the
Soviet Union’s industrial production on military expansion.12
Stalin also began his bloody
war against peasants, which was called collectivization. Units of the Red Army
would herd peasants and their families into railroad cattle cars and transport
them to Siberia, the Urals, or Kazakhstan, where they were thrown out into the
cold on the bare steppes. This operation was ordered by Stalin and executed by
his deputy Molotov. Many years later, when Molotov was asked how many people
were transferred during collectivization, Molotov answered: “Stalin said that
we relocated 10 million. In reality, we relocated 20 million.”13 The Soviet
collectivization of 1932-1933 is estimated to have resulted in 3.5 to 5 million
deaths from starvation, and another 3 million to 4 million deaths as a result
of intolerable conditions at the places of exile.14
STALIN’S PREPARATIONS FOR
WAR: TANKS
Tanks were planned to be the
spearhead for the Soviet offensive against Europe. Stalin built and
mass-produced the best tanks in the world as he built Soviet industry. The Red
Army produced the T-28 tank in 1933. Not a single German, British, American,
French, or Japanese tank from the 1930s could match the T-28 in terms of
weapons, armor, engine power, or the ability to cross water barriers underwater.15
The Germans started
producing the Pz-IVA, the most powerful German tank of the first half of World
War II, at the end of 1937. The T-28 tank was superior to the German tank in
all respects except one: the T28 fired shells with an initial speed of 381 m/s,
while the German PzIVA tank fired shells with an initial speed of 385 m/s. In
response, starting in 1938, the Soviet T-28 tanks were produced with a new L-10
gun that fired shells with an initial speed of 555 m/s. The L-10 Soviet tank
gun was unrivaled in Germany or anywhere else in the world. Despite being
outstanding in comparison with all foreign tanks, after the war Soviet
historians and generals called the T-28 tank obsolete.
On Dec. 19, 1939, the Red
Army introduced the T-34 tank. Entire volumes of rave reviews of the T-34 tank
have been published; its debut caused a sensation at the beginning of the war.
The T-34 surpassed any German tank in all parameters: speed, acceleration
ability, cross-country ability, tank gun, ideal body shape, powerful diesel
engine, and wide caterpillar tracks. In addition, unlike other tanks, the T-34
could be easily mass produced. Any large-scale automobile factory could be
converted to produce this tank. Also, the production of the T-34 tank did not
require a highly qualified workforce.16
Communist historians
acknowledge the remarkable qualities of the T-34, but attempt to show the
unpreparedness of the Soviet Union by stating that only 967 T-34s existed in
June 1941 at the time of the German invasion. However, Suvorov shows that the
Soviet Union had 1,400 T-34s at the time of invasion. During the second half of
1941, Soviet industry produced another 1,789 T-34 tanks. More importantly, in
1942 the Soviet Union produced 12,520 T-34 tanks, while in Germany
the production of an analogous tank had not begun. The mass production of
the T-34 provided the Soviet Union with major advantages over Germany in tank
warfare during World War II.
The German equivalent of the
T-34 was the Panther, which first appeared in the summer of 1943 during the
tank battle at Kursk. The Panther had design flaws compared to the T-34. First,
the T-34 had a diesel engine, while the Panther had a carburetor engine. A
diesel engine is more economical and less susceptible to fire. Second, the
Panther did not have the engine and transmission located in the rear of the
tank. As a result, the Panther was too large and weighed 44.8 tons when it was
supposed to weigh 30 tons. With its dimensions and weight, the Panther was
easier to hit, had weaker armor protection, and could not compete with the T-34
in anything related to mobility. The T-34 surpassed the Panther in
maneuverability, acceleration, and cross-country mobility, which are all
parameters needed for offense.17
The Panther’s main flaw,
however, was that its complex design made it unfit for mass production. Only
5,976 tanks of this model were produced during the war. The Soviet Union
produced nine T-34s for every Panther Germany produced. In fact, the Soviet
Union produced more T34 tanks during World War II than tanks of all types were
produced in Great Britain, Germany, and Japan put together.18
The Soviet Union was the
first country in the world to produce a heavy tank. The first Soviet heavy
tank, the T-35, was produced in series and entered the ranks of the troops in
1933. In 1941, no other tank outside the Soviet Union could even approximately
compare with the heavy T-35. The T-35 surpassed every other tank outside the
Soviet Union in terms of weapons, armor, and engine power. Moreover, the T-35
exerted much less pressure on the ground than the German tanks, which meant
that it had greater mobility and did not sink in snow, mud, or soft ground.
Despite being in a class by itself compared to all other foreign tanks, Western
and Soviet historians declared the T-35 tank to be obsolete and did not mention
it in statistics.19
The T-35 tank was replaced
by the KV-1 and KV-2 heavy tanks, which weighed 47 and 52 tons, respectively.
The KV was the first tank in the world with a true anti-shell armor. The
wide caterpillar tracks of the KV allowed it to fight on almost any terrain in
any weather condition, and its 600-horsepower diesel engine surpassed all
foreign tanks in power, reliability, and economy. The tank guns of the KV far
exceeded the capacity of any other tank produced outside the Soviet Union. The
KV later turned into the IS-1 and then the IS-2, the most powerful tank of
World War II.
Designers of the Soviet
heavy tanks accomplished a technological feat: they almost doubled the
thickness of the armor and installed a gun that was three times more powerful,
while staying in the same weight class of the heavy tank. Stalin had a
remarkable pair of tanks: the most powerful heavy tank by far in the world, and
an excellent mass-produced medium T-34 tank. The availability of tens of
thousands of T-34 tanks allowed them to be used anywhere. The availability of
the heavy tanks supported the battle capabilities of the medium T-34 tanks. The
crews of the T-34 could fight confidently, knowing that they had the support of
a powerful KV or IS tank behind them.20
The German failure to design
a good tank for mass production inevitably led to defeat in World War II. Gen.
Heinz Guderian wrote after the war: “. . . The Russians would have won the war
even without the help of their Western allies and would have occupied the whole
of Europe. No power on earth could have stopped them.”21
The German invasion of the
Soviet Union in June 1941 resulted in the destruction or abandonment of
thousands of Soviet tanks. The Communist historians explained this catastrophe
very simply: the tanks were obsolete and therefore useless. Suvorov states that
this explanation is nonsense. The “obsolete” Soviet medium T-28 and heavy T-35
tanks far surpassed every other tank outside of the Soviet Union. The Soviet
T-34 tank is widely regarded as one of the best tanks of all time. The Soviet
KV tank was the most powerful tank in the world during the first half of World
War II.22 How can tanks be obsolete when there is nothing else of comparable
quality anywhere else in the world?
The Soviet Union also built
an entire family of BT tanks—the BT-2, BT-5, BT-7, BT-7A, and BT-7M. BT stands
for bystrokhodnyi (high-speed) tank. At the beginning of World War II, the
Red Army had 6,456 BT tanks, as many as all other operational tanks in the rest
of the world. The BT tanks were well designed, heavily armed for their times,
had standard bullet-proof armor, and used a diesel engine which made the tanks
far less vulnerable to fires. The first BTs had a speed of 69 mph; today most
tanks would still be envious of such high speeds. Nevertheless, Soviet
historians categorized these tanks among the obsolete models, so obsolete that
until 1991 they were not even included in statistics.23
The disadvantage of BT tanks
is that they could only be used in aggressive warfare on good roads such as the
autobahn in Germany. The BT tank’s most important characteristic—its speed—was
achieved through the use of its wheels. The wheels of the BT tank made it
impossible to use the BT tank successfully off the roads, or on the bad roads
of the Soviet Union. In the battles fought on Soviet territory, thousands of BT
tanks were abandoned. Historians say that Stalin’s BT tanks were not ready for
war. This statement is not true. The BT tank was ready for an offensive war on
German territory, but not for a defensive war fought on its own territory.24
The Soviet Union also built
an outstanding family of amphibious tanks: the T-37A, T-38, and T-40. By June
22, 1941, the Soviet Union had over 4,000 amphibious tanks in its arsenal. By
comparison, to this day Germany has never built any amphibious tanks.
Amphibious tanks are useful in offensive operations to cross rivers and seize
bridges before the enemy can blow the bridges up when threatened with a takeover.
If there are no remaining enemy bridges, amphibious tanks allow an army to
cross the river and establish a bridgehead on the other side of the river.
Amphibious tanks are useful in offensive operations; they are of little use in
a defensive war.
When Germany invaded the
Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, it had a total of 3,350 tanks on the Eastern
Front, all of them inferior to the Soviet tanks and none of them amphibious.
Yet historians called the Soviet amphibious tanks obsolete.25 The Soviet amphibious
tanks in 1941 became unnecessary and played no role in the war. But the
question remains: Why were the amphibious tanks developed and built? Why
did Stalin need 4,000 amphibious tanks which could not be used in a
defensive war? The obvious answer is that Stalin planned to use the amphibious
tanks in a massive military invasion of Europe.
SOVIET AVIATION AND AIRBORNE
ASSAULT TROOPS
Stalin could have averted
World War II by developing large quantities of the heavy high-speed,
high-altitude TB-7 bomber. This bomber had a strong defense system consisting
of 20-mm cannons and 12.7-mm heavy machine guns. The TB-7 was the most powerful
bomber in the world; bombs of the largest caliber could fit in its large bomb
compartment. However, the TB-7’s most remarkable quality is that it could fly
at altitudes between 10,000 and 12,000 meters, where it was untouchable by
anti-aircraft artillery and could not be reached by the majority of existing
fighters. A Soviet delegation headed by Molotov in the spring of 1942 was able
to fly over Germany in a TB-7 without being detected by German anti-aircraft
defenses.26
Stalin needed only to
produce 1,000 TB-7 bombers and announce to selected countries that the Soviet
Union would use these untouchable TB-7 bombers to destroy any country that
attacked it. Suvorov says that Stalin signed the order to produce the TB-7 four
times, and four times he canceled the order. Stalin was advised to direct all
efforts of the Red Army not toward undermining the military and economic
capabilities of the enemy, but toward taking the enemy over. The Red Army’s
objective was to destroy the opponent’s armies. Soviet aviation was designed to
open the road to Soviet armies and support their rapid advancement.27
If Stalin was preparing for
a defensive war, he should have ordered his plane designers to create the best
fighters in the world, capable of defending the skies over the Soviet Union.
But fighters did not interest Stalin. Stalin ordered his fighter designer to
drop all his work on the creation of a fighter and start developing a light
bomber, named the Ivanov originally, and later the Su-2 in honor of its
creator, P.O. Sukhoi.
The ideal combat plane
Stalin developed was a light bomber de-signed to operate free of enemy
resistance. Record-breaking characteristics were not required; Stalin demanded
only simplicity, durability, and firepower. Stalin planned to create a plane
that could be produced in numbers exceeding all warplanes of all types of all
countries in the world. Literally, Stalin planned to build as many light
bombers as there were small but mobile horsemen in the hordes of Genghis Khan.
Germany carried out a
preemptive strike on Soviet air bases when it invaded the Soviet Union on June
22, 1941. Hitler’s preemptive strike did not permit the Su-2 to do the work it
was primarily designed to do. The Su-2 was ineffective and not needed in a
defensive war. Production of 100,000 to 150,000 Su-2 planes had been planned
for conditions in which the Red Army would deliver the first attack, and nobody
would hinder production of the plane. Hitler’s invasion ruined Stalin’s plan.
Production of the Su-2 was stopped, but the Soviet Union produced tens of
thousands of planes later in the war that were much more complex in terms of
production than the Su-2.28
When Germany invaded the
Soviet Union it could only send 2,510 airplanes, including many outdated planes
and assorted aircraft used for transport, communications, and medical purposes.
The Soviet Union had 2,769 of the newest models Il-2, Pe-2, MiG-3, Yak-1, and
LaGG-3. The Soviet Union also had seven additional new types of planes: the
Ar2, Er-2, Su-2, Pe-8, Yak-2, Yak-4, and Il-4. Aside from the 12 newest models,
the Soviet Union also had the “obsolete” TB-3 and SB bombers, and the I-16 and
I-153 fighters.
The Soviet air force
exceeded that of Germany both in plane quantity and plane quality at the start
of the war. Suvorov asks: Why then in the first stage of the war did the Soviet
air force lose air superiority from day one? The answer is that the majority of
Soviet pilots, including fighter pilots, were not taught dogfighting. Soviet
aviation was designed to conduct one grandiose, sudden, aggressive operation to
crush the enemy’s air force on the ground in one raid and obtain air
superiority. Hitler’s preemptive strike prevented Soviet aviation from
accomplishing its planned aggressive operations of unheard-of dimensions.29
Airborne assault troops were
also part of Stalin’s plans. According to the official Communist Party
newspaper, Pravda, on Aug. 18, 1940, the Soviet Union had more than 1 million
trained parachutists at the beginning of the war. Airborne assault troops can
only be used in the course of offensive operations and only in conjunction with
regular troops advancing against the enemy. In light of declassified documents,
it is clear that Pravda lowered the number of Russian paratroopers to 1 million
to calm fears of Soviet aggression. The actual number of trained parachutists
in the Soviet Union at the beginning of the war was arguably closer to 2
million. Never before had the world seen such large-scale preparations for
offensive war.30
The Red Army needed an air
armada of transport planes and gliders to deliver hundreds of thousands of
paratroopers. Soviet factories started the mass production of cargo gliders
beginning in the spring of 1941. On April 23, 1941, Stalin and Molotov signed
an order to accelerate the production of an 11-seat glider with a deadline of
May 15, 1941, and of a 20-seat glider with a deadline of July 1, 1941. The gliders
that were produced in the spring of 1941 had to be used by the latest in the
early fall of 1941. Gliders had light and fragile bodies and wings and could
not be parked outdoors. Keeping a huge cargo glider outdoors during fall winds
and rains would harm it beyond repair. Since all available hangars were already
full with previously produced gliders, the mass production of gliders in the
spring of 1941 meant that they had to be used either in the summer of 1941 or
early fall at the latest.31
Cargo warplanes are used to
deliver assault forces with parachutists to the enemy’s rear. Soviet
war-transport aviation used the American Douglas DC-3, which was considered to
be the best cargo plane in the world at the start of World War II, as its
primary cargo plane. In 1938, the U.S. government sold to Stalin the production
license and the necessary amount of the most complex equipment for the DC-3’s
production. The Soviet Union also bought 20 DC-3s from the United States before
the war. In 1939, the Soviet Union produced six identical DC-3 aircraft; in
1940, it produced 51 DC-3 aircraft; and in 1941, it produced 237 DC-3 aircraft.
During the entire war 2,419 DC-3s or equivalent planes were produced in Soviet
factories.32
The Soviet gliders and
transport planes would be easy prey for enemy fighters if the Soviet Union did
not secure complete air superiority. The Red Army had to begin the war with a
massive air attack and invasion against the enemy’s air bases. Tens of
thousands of paratroopers could then be dropped to seize and control key bases
and strategic sites. Any other scenario was not viable. Instead, it was Hitler
who carried out a preemptive strike, and Stalin’s strategy to strike the first
blow was aborted. The Soviet Union’s carefully designed plan to mount a massive
air offensive followed by an assault of airborne troops had to be abandoned in
the desperate rush to fight a defensive war.33
Suvorov discusses what
happened to the Soviet airborne forces that could no longer be used in an
offensive war. Ten air assault corps, approximately 100,000 to 150,000 men, had
been originally sent to the trenches to help stop the German troops. The rest
of the over 1 million paratroopers were kept in reserve and used as needed as
regular infantry soldiers. These reserves were used to help stop German
advances in the direction of the Caucasus, at Stalingrad, in the violent battle
at Kursk, and in other crisis situations during the war.34
SOVIET PREPARATIONS FOR
OFFENSIVE WAR
In the years 1937-1941, the
Soviet army grew five-fold, from 1.1 million to 5.5 million.35 An additional
5.3 million people joined the ranks of the Red Army within one week of the
beginning of the war. A minimum of 34.5 million people were used by the Red
Army during the war.36 This huge increase in the size of the Soviet army was
accomplished primarily by ratification of the universal military draft in the
Soviet Union on Sept. 1, 1939. According to the new law, the draft age was
reduced from 21 to 19, and in some categories to 18. This new law also allowed
for the preparation of 18 million reservists, so that the Soviet Union
continued to fill the ranks of the Red Army with many millions of soldiers as
the war progressed.37
Several age groups were
drafted into the Red Army at the same time; in essence, all of the young men in
the country. The duration of army service for the majority of the draftees
was two years, so the Soviet Union had to enter a major war within two years.
If war did not start by then, all of the young people would have to go home on
Sept. 1, 1941, and then there would be almost nobody left to draft. It is
extremely difficult to maintain an army of this size without a war; the army
does not produce anything and consumes everything produced by the country.
Stalin knew when he established the draft that in two years, in the summer of
1941, the Soviet Union must enter into a major war.38
On Jan. 11, 1939, in
preparation for war the Soviet Union created four new People’s Commissariats:
one for the shipbuilding industry, one for weapons, one for the aviation
industry, and one for ammunition. The Shipbuilding Commissariat undertook
strictly military projects from the moment of its founding. Also, on May 25,
1940, the following numbers of civilian ships were handed over to the military:
74 to the Baltic fleet, 76 to the Black Sea fleet, 65 to the North Fleet, and
101 to the Pacific fleet. By June 22, 1941, the Soviet Union also possessed 218
submarines in its ranks and 91 more in shipyards, all of which matched up to
the best world standards.39
Stalin’s more than 200
submarines and the rest of his navy were ineffective at the start of the war
because it was an attack fleet. Stalin’s navy was built for aggressive war and
could not be used effectively in a defensive war. Entirely different ships with
entirely different characteristics are needed for defense: submarine hunters,
picket boats, minesweepers, and net-layers. The armament of the Soviet ships
was also designed exclusively for participation in a war of aggression. While
armed with powerful artillery, mine, and torpedo equipment, Soviet ships had
quite weak anti-aircraft armament and defenses.
Soviet generals had planned
to begin the war with a crushing surprise attack against the enemy’s air bases
that annihilated his aviation. When Germany attacked first, the Soviet navy’s
lack of anti-aircraft defenses was a major liability. The Soviet war effort was
also hurt by the fact that all of the navy’s reserves of shells, mines,
torpedoes, and ship fuel had been transported to the German borders and were
quickly seized by the Germans when they invaded the Soviet Union.40
The Ammunition Commissariat
was created as a separate ministry to take care exclusively of the production
of ammunition. This ministry had to determine where to locate all of the new
factories that would be producing shells, gunpowder, cartridges, missiles, and
other weapons. If Stalin had planned to conduct a defensive war, the new
ammunition factories would have been built either behind the Volga River or
even farther inland in the Ural Mountains. But no defensive options were ever
discussed. Since Stalin planned to conduct an offensive operation into a
war-devastated and weakened Europe, all of the new ammunition factories were
built near the western border regions of the Soviet Union.
The Soviet Union lost almost
all industry capable of producing new ammunition at the beginning of the war.
From August to November 1941, German troops took over 303 Soviet ammunition
factories as well as mobilization reserves of valuable raw materials located in
those factories. These factories produced 85% of all output from the Ammunition
Commissariat. All of these resources went to Germany and were used against the
Red Army. The Red Army also lost an unthinkable amount of artillery shells in
the border regions of the Soviet Union at the start of the war. However,
Stalin’s prewar potential was so great that he was able to rebuild his
ammunition factories behind the Volga River and in the Urals, and produce all
of the ammunition needed to defeat the German army.41
The seizure of Stalin’s
supplies was a tremendous benefit for Germany, but Hitler needed to shift
Germany’s own industry to a wartime regime. Hitler waited until January 1942
before he made the decision to gradually begin the shift of industry from a
peacetime to a wartime regime. Stalin, on the other hand, began setting Soviet
industry on a wartime regime back in January 1939. Despite losing 85% of the
ammunition of the Ammunition Commissariat, the Red Army used 427 million shells
and artillery mines and 17 billion cartridges during the war. To this one can
add innumerable hand grenades, land mines, and air bombs. Imagine what the
outcome of World War II would have been if Stalin had been able to use 100% of
his ammunition arsenal.42
In the summer of 1940,
Stalin brought Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania into the Soviet Union, and
concentrated his forces in that region on the border of Eastern Prussia. The
occupation of these Baltic countries by the Red Army made sense only if there
were plans for an aggressive war against Germany. The Red Army transferred its
air bases to the very front edge of the German border. From the air bases in
Lithuania the Soviet air force could support the advance of Soviet troops to
Berlin. The Soviet navy also transferred primary forces and reserves to naval
bases established in Tallinn, Riga, and Liepaja. Since it was a short distance
from Liepaja to the routes taken by German vessels carrying ore, nickel, and
wood to Germany, a strike from this area could be sudden and devastating.43
The Soviet Union annexed
Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina in 1940. From Bessarabia the Soviet air force
could keep the Romanian oil industry, which was the main supplier of oil to
Germany, under constant threat. Northern Bukovina was needed because it had a
railroad of strategic importance that had a narrow gauge track which enabled it
to be used by railroad cars from all over Europe. The Soviet Union used a broad
gauge track. Soviet locomotives and trains could therefore not be used on the
narrow gauge tracks of Central and Western Europe. In a Soviet invasion of
Europe, Stalin would need many locomotives and trains with a narrow gauge to
supply his troops that were quickly moving westward.
During the course of the
Bessarabia campaign, the Soviet Union captured 141 locomotives, 1,866 covered
train cars, 325 half-covered train cars, 45 platforms, 19 cisterns, 31
passenger cars, and two luggage cars. But this was not enough for Stalin. At
the Soviet-Romanian talks in July 1940, Soviet representatives demanded that
Romania return all captured mobile railroad units.
On July 31, 1940, Romania
agreed to transfer 175 locomotives and 4,375 cars to the Soviet Union by Aug.
25, 1940. None of these trains would have been needed in a defensive war.
Stalin needed these trains seized in Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina in an
offensive war designed to take over all of Europe.44
In the summer of 1941, the
Red Army began using the new multiple-launcher rocket weapons BM-8 and BM-13.
These unusual weapons were called “Stalin’s Pipe Organs” or “Katyusha.” In
August 1941, the Red Army added the BM-8-36 multiple-launcher rocket artillery
system, and in the summer of 1942, the BM-8-48 rocket artillery system was added.
A salvo from one BM-13 was 16 rocket-propelled rounds of 132mm caliber, while a
salvo from the BM-8 was 36 rocket-propelled rounds of 82-mm caliber. One
battery consisted of four to six BM-8s or BM-13s. Usually one target was fired
upon by a group of batteries or regiments. Hundreds or even thousands of
missiles covered a huge territory almost simultaneously, creating an avalanche
of fire accompanied by a wild roar and noise. The devastating psychological
impact of these terrible weapons was a highly unpleasant memory for any German
soldier who was on the Eastern Front.45
Despite losses sustained in
the German invasion of the Soviet Union, the Red Army continued to expand its
use of the multiple-launcher rocket weapons BM-8 and BM-13 during the war. On
June 1, 1941, the Red Army had seven BM-13 rocket launcher vehicles. By Sept.
1, 1941, the Red Army had 49 of these weapons. By Oct. 1, 1941, the Red Army
had 406 BM-8s and BM-13s. The count would eventually mount into the thousands,
and this weapon became a weapon of mass destruction. The Soviet Union managed
to quickly supply its army with the new system of multiple-launcher rocket
weapons despite heavy losses in its industrial and raw material bases.46
The Soviet Union in 1941 was
preparing for an offensive war against Europe. In the first half of June 1941,
the Soviet 9th Army was the most powerful army in the world. The 9th Army
appeared on the Romanian border on June 14, 1941, in the exact place where a
year ago it had “liberated” Bessarabia. If the Soviet 9th Army had been allowed
to attack Romania, Germany’s main source of oil would have been lost and
Germany would have been defeated. Hitler’s attack on the Soviet Union prevented
this from happening. The unjustified concentration of Soviet troops on Romanian
borders presented a clear danger to Germany, and was a major reason for the
German invasion of the Soviet Union.47
On May 5, 1941, Stalin made
it clear to his generals that the SovietUnion would be the aggressor in a war
with Germany. At a banquet a Soviet general toasted Stalin’s peaceful foreign
policy. Stalin intervened:
“Allow me to make a
correction. A peaceful foreign policy secured peace in our country. A peaceful
foreign policy is a good thing. For a while, we drew a line of defenses until
we rearmed our army [and] supplied it with modern means of combat. Now, when
our army has been rebuilt, our technology modernized, [now that we are] strong
[enough] for combat, now we must shift from defense to offense. In conducting
the defense of our country, we are compelled to act in an aggressive manner.
From defense we have to shift to a military policy of offense. It is
indispensable that we reform our training, our propaganda, our press to a
mindset of offense. The Red Army is a modern army, and the modern army is an
army of offense.”
The general who made the
toast to Stalin’s peaceful foreign policy was discharged a few days after the
banquet.48
On June 13, 1941, TASS
broadcast that “Germany was following the conditions of the Soviet-German pact
as flawlessly as the Soviet Union,” and that rumors of an impending German
attack on the USSR “were clumsily fabricated propaganda by the enemies of
Germany and the USSR, interested in broadening and prolonging the war.” The
TASS announcement also stated, “Rumors that the USSR is preparing for war
against Germany are false and provocative ” However, the reality is that
Soviet troops were already traveling to the western border. June 13, 1941,
marked the beginning of the biggest organized movement of troops, arms,
ammunition, and other military supplies in history.
For example, the First
Strategic Echelon of the Red Army had 170 tank, motorized, cavalry, and rifle
divisions. Fifty-six of them were already located right on the border and could
not move any farther ahead. All of the remaining 114 divisions began to move
toward the border in the wake of the reassuring TASS announcement on June 13,
1941.
This massive troop movement
could not have been defensive. Troops preparing for defense dig themselves into
the ground, close off roads, establish barbwire barriers, dig anti-tank
trenches, and prepare covers behind the barricades. The Red Army did none of
these things. Instead, the additional Soviet divisions began to hide in the
border forests just like the German troops preparing for invasion. The TASS
announcement was made solely in an attempt to falsely allay German fears of a
pending Soviet invasion of Europe.49
Suvorov also dismisses
claims that the Soviet Union did not have qualified military leaders in 1941.
Stalin did conduct a purge of the military from 1937-1938, but reports that
40,000 military commanders were executed are an exaggeration. Soviet documents
show that 1,654 military commanders were either executed or died in prison
while awaiting trial during 1937-1938. Since the officer corps of the Red Army
in February 1937 numbered 206,000, less than 1% of the Soviet Union’s officers
died in Stalin’s purge. Soviet military commanders in 1941 were well-qualified
to lead Stalin’s war of aggression against Europe.50
Suvorov also mentions that
Soviet soldiers and officers were issued Russian-German and Russian-Romanian
phrase books as part of their preparations for an invasion of Europe. Thousands
of Soviet troops did not think to get rid of this compromising evidence when
they were captured in the German invasion of the Soviet Union. The
Russian-German phrase books were composed very simply: a question in Russian,
followed by the same question in German written in Russian letters, then in
German in Latin letters. If the Soviet soldier did not know how to pronounce
the needed German phrase, he could point to the corresponding lines in the book
and the Germans could read the lines themselves. The phrases indicated that the
Soviets were planning to conduct an offensive war in Europe. For example, some
phrases asked: “Where is the burgermeister? Is there an observation point on
the steeple?” There were no burgermeisters or steeples in the Soviet Union.
These questions are relevant only if the Soviet soldiers were in Germany. Here
are other examples: “Where is the fuel? Where is the garage? Where are the
stores? Where is the water? Gather and bring here [so many] horses [farm
animals], we will pay!” These questions and phrases would not be relevant on
Soviet soil. Other revealing phrases are the following: “You do not need
to be afraid. The Red Army will come soon!” These phrases are also not relevant
for a war conducted on Soviet soil.51
SOVIET MILITARY OPERATIONS
PRIOR TO JUNE 22, 1941
The Soviet Union engaged in
a number of military operations prior to Germany’s invasion on June 22, 1941.
All of these operations showed substantial military strength that the Soviet
Union was able to hide from most of the world.
In the beginning of May
1939, an armed conflict occurred between Soviet and Japanese troops on the
border between Mongolia and China near the river Khalkhin-Gol. The Soviet Union
controlled Mongolia. Japan occupied the adjoining Chinese territory. Nobody
declared war, but the conflict escalated into battles fought with the use of
aviation, artillery, and tanks. On June 1, 1939, the Soviet Union officially
declared, “We will defend the borders of the Mongolian People’s Republic as we
defend our own.” The next day Gen. Zhukov flew from Moscow to Mongolia to take
command of the Soviet and Mongolian troops.52
Stalin armed Soviet troops
in Mongolia with the most modern weapons, including the BT-5 and BT-7 tanks all
armed with the most powerful tank cannon of that time. Soviet armored
automobiles were also armed with the same powerful cannon. Some of the best
Soviet pilots were sent to Mongolia and established air superiority above the
theater of operations. The Red Army used long-range bombers, and for the first
time I-16 fighters successfully used air-to-air RS-82 rocket missiles. The Red
Army also had the newest and best artillery, howitzers, and mortars in the
world.53
During the course of endless
exhausting battles, Zhukov decided to end the conflict with a sudden and
crushing defeat of the Japanese army. On Aug. 20, 1939, at 5:45 AM, 153 Soviet
bombers under the cover of a corresponding number of fighters carried out a
surprise raid over Japanese air bases and command posts. An extremely intense
and powerful artillery barrage joined in immediately and lasted almost three hours.
Soviet aviation carried out a second raid during the course of
the artillery action, and at 9:00 AM Soviet tank units broke through
Japanese defenses. Zhukov had conducted a classic encirclement operation. On
the fourth day of the attack, the circle drawn around Japanese troops was
tightened and the rout of the Japanese army began. There had never been such a
crushing military defeat in all of Japanese history.54
The Soviet operation at
Khalkhin-Gol, which is sometimes referred to as the Nomonhan Incident, was
brilliant in its planning and execution. It totally surprised the
Japanese—during the first hour and a half of battle, the Japanese artillery did
not fire a single shot and not a single Japanese plane rose into the air.
Khalkhin-Gol was the first blitzkrieg of the 20th century. It was the first
time in human history that large masses of tanks were used correctly to strike
in depth, and it was a prime example of the use of unseen concentration of
artillery in tight areas of the front. The defeat of the Japanese army on the
Khalkhin-Gol thwarted Japanese aggression in the direction of Mongolia and the
Soviet Union. In the fall of 1941, during months critical for the Soviet Union,
the Japanese remembered Khalkhin-Gol and did not dare attack the Soviet
Union.55
For obvious reasons, the
Japanese did not report their defeat in Mongolia to the world. Since there were
no international observers and journalists in Mongolia, few people knew about
the operation at the time. Stalin also ordered silence concerning the
impressive Soviet defeat of the Japanese army. Stalin ordered silence because
he was preparing the same sort of defeat on a much grander scale for all of
Europe. Stalin’s interest lay in concealing the might of the Red Army, and
making the world believe that the Soviet army was not able to conduct modern
warfare. Stalin wanted to catch Hitler and the rest of Europe off-guard and not
scare them.56
On Aug. 23, 1939, Germany
and the Soviet Union signed a nonaggression agreement called the Molotov-Ribbentrop
Pact. This agreement guaranteed that Hitler would not have to fight the Soviet
Union if Germany invaded Poland. A secret agreement also discussed the division
of Poland between Germany and the Soviet Union in the event of war.57 Hitler
attacked Poland on Sept. 1, 1939, and Great Britain and France declared
war on Germany on Sept. 3, 1939. The Soviet Union waited until Sept. 17, 1939,
to attack Poland from the east. Stalin’s troops committed similar or worse
atrocities in Poland than Germany, but Great Britain and France did not declare
war on the Soviet Union. The fault for beginning the war fell upon Germany, and
world opinion considered the Soviet Union to be innocent in starting the war.
Suvorov states that even the
German blitzkrieg in Poland failed. On Sept. 15, 1939, two weeks after the
start of World War II, the activity of the German air force dropped
substantially, and the German army was almost completely out of fuel. The
Soviet army attacked Poland on Sept. 17, 1939, to save the German blitzkrieg
and allow the partition of Poland between Germany and the Soviet Union.58
Another reason the Soviets
waited until Sept. 17, 1939, to invade Poland is that the ceasefire with Japan
ending the Nomonhan Incident was not signed until Sept. 15, 1939. The Soviets
wanted to ensure that they no longer had to fight Japan before they invaded
Poland.59
In October 1939, Stalin’s
diplomats continued the Soviet Union’s territorial aggression by demanding the
cession of the Karelian Isthmus from Finland in exchange for a territory twice
the size of the isthmus. Stalin’s demands were rejected because the Karelian
Isthmus is a direct gateway to the capital of Finland. The geographical
disposition of Finland is such that any aggression against Finland from the
Soviet Union could come only through the Karelian Isthmus. For this reason,
starting in 1918, Finland began an extensive buildup of defensive
fortifications and obstructions on the Karelian Isthmus known as the Mannerheim
Line. Finland spent practically all of her military budget for the 10 years
preceding the war on the completion of the Mannerheim Line. Stalin’s diplomats
in essence had demanded that Finland hand over to the Red Army all of her
heavily fortified defenses in exchange for swampland and marshy woods no one
needed.60
Stalin issued an order to
crush Finland when Stalin’s demands were rejected. After a brief but intense
artillery softening-up, the Red Army crossed the Finnish border on Nov. 30,
1939. The Red Army first encountered a security pale full of traps, barricades,
obstacles, and minefields. The entire space was filled with granite boulders,
concrete blocks, forest blockages, scarps and counterscarps, anti-tank
trenches, and bridges wired with explosives ready to be blown up by the Finnish
border patrol. Finnish snipers and light mobile squads were fully active and
operating to the best of their capacity. The Red Army took two weeks and
suffered heavy casualties before it passed through the security pale. After
overcoming the security pale, the Red Army reached Finland’s main line of
defense—the Mannerheim Line. The line was a brilliantly camouflaged defense
structure, well integrated into the surroundings, and stretching up to 30
kilometers in depth. In addition to innumerable minefields and anti-tank
trenches, the Mannerheim Line contained 2,311 concrete, ironclad, and wooden
defense structures, as well as granite boulders and hundreds of rows of thick
barbwire on metal stakes connected to mines. The fighting on the Mannerheim
Line was especially tenacious. The Red Army finally broke through the
Mannerheim Line on March 12, 1940, after suffering colossal casualties: 126,875
soldiers and officers killed, 188,671 wounded, 58,370 ill, and 17,867
frostbitten.61
All military experts prior
to Finland’s war with the Soviet Union had declared that breaking through the
Mannerheim Line could not be done by any army. The Red Army had done the
impossible. Furthermore, the Red Army broke through the Mannerheim Line
impromptu in winter without any preparation for such limiting conditions. The
military experts of the West should have recognized the amazing warfare
capabilities of the Red Army. If the Red Army could break through the
Mannerheim Line in the winter, then it was capable of crushing Europe and
whoever else got in its way. Instead, military experts of the West declared the
Red Army to be unfit and unprepared for war.62
Only three months after the
Soviet Union ended military operations in Finland, the three Baltic nations,
Estonia, Lithuania, and Latvia, surrendered to Stalin and became republics of
the Soviet Union. The governments and military leadership of these three Baltic
countries had carefully watched the war in Finland. They correctly concluded
that the Red Army could not be stopped by any number of casualties, and
that resistance to the Soviet Union was futile. Therefore, the three
Baltic nations surrendered without firing a shot. With the addition of these
three neutral countries, the Soviet Union advanced its borders to the west and
made it easier for the Soviet Union to conduct an offensive operation against
Europe.63
Stalin also issued an
ultimatum to the government of Romania to give up Bessarabia. Realizing that
resistance was futile, Romania handed over both Bessarabia and Northern
Bukovina to the Soviet Union without even organizing lengthy talks.64 Thus,
within less than a year, the Soviet Union destroyed a Japanese army in
Mongolia, took over the eastern part of Poland by military force, conducted an
extremely difficult and successful invasion of Finland, forced the Baltic
nations of Estonia, Lithuania, and Latvia to join the Soviet Union against
their will, and took possession of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina from
Romania. These Soviet military conquests and ultimatums expanded the Soviet
Union’s territory by 426,000 square kilometers, approximately equal to the
surface area of the German Reich in 1919.65 These Soviet military operations
prove that the Soviet Union was extremely powerful and aggressive. The Soviet
Union was well-positioned to launch a massive offensive against all of Europe
after these military conquests.
STALIN REMOVES DEFENSIVE
BARRIERS; PLANS OFFENSIVE WAR
After the division of Poland
by the Soviet Union and Germany, Soviet troops could have created a powerful
barrier on the new Soviet-German border. In 1939 conditions for defense along
the Soviet-German border were highly favorable: forests, rivers, swamps, few
roads, and lots of time. However, instead of making the area impassable, it was
quickly made more penetrable. The Red Army tore down previously existing
fortifications and buried them under mounds of ground. The Soviet Union also
stopped producing anti-tank and anti-aircraft cannon. The Soviet Union had huge
land mine production that could have been used for defense, but after the new
borders with Germany were established this production was curbed.66
The Red Army also dismantled
the security pale created earlier on the old western borders, and failed to
create a new security pale on the Polish territory annexed to the Soviet Union.
The Red Army in Finland learned the hard way that a security pale could ease
the position of the defense and complicate the position of the aggressor. All
Soviet commanders expressed their awe at the Finnish line of defense. The
Soviet Union had to expend a huge amount of time, strength, resources, and blood
to cross the Finnish security pale. However, the Soviet Union dismantled its
security pale in 1940 because it was not interested in conducting a defensive
war.67
The Soviet Union also
constructed new railroads and railroad bridges in the western border regions.
Almost all railroad troops were concentrated in the western border regions. The
railroad troops worked intensively to modernize old railroads and build new
ones right up to the border. Simultaneously with the construction of railroads,
automobile roads were built in the western regions. The Red Army was building
railroads and roads from east to west, which is usually done when preparing for
advance, for a quick transfer of reserves, and for further supplying the troops
after they crossed the borders. All of this work was designed for offense and
hurt the Soviet Union in a defensive war. When Germany attacked the Soviet
Union, German troops used the roads, bridges, supplies, rails, and sectional
bridges constructed by the Soviets in the western regions to aid their advance
into Soviet territory.68
The Soviet Union also
destroyed its partisan movement in the late 1930s. Soviet leaders knew that
partisan tactics could win a war against any aggressor. With the largest
territory of any country in the world, Soviet territory naturally facilitated
partisan warfare. In the 1920s, Stalin created light mobile units and stationed
them in the woods in the event of a German attack. These partisan units were
comprised only of commanders, organizers, and specialists that acted as a
nucleus. At the very beginning of a war, each peacetime partisan unit would
expand into a powerful formation numbering thousands of people.69
The Soviet peacetime
partisan groups had secret bases created in impenetrable forests and islets amid
the swamps. In an emergency, the partisans could easily disappear from any
attackers into the mined forests and swamps, which were impassable to the
enemy. Soviet partisan units were formed in the Soviet security pale, where
during retreat of Soviet troops all bridges would be blown up, tunnels buried,
and railroads and communication channels destroyed. The partisan groups were
trained to prevent the enemy from restoring the destroyed infrastructure. In
addition, some partisans were trained for undercover activities. These
partisans did not retreat to the forests, but stayed in the cities and towns
with the task of “gaining the trust of the enemy” and “offering him
assistance.”
In the Soviet Union’s
invasion of Finland, the Red Army encountered the Mannerheim Line, a security
pale before it, and light squads of partisan fighters within. The light ski
units of Finnish partisans carried out sudden strikes and then immediately
disappeared into the forests. The Red Army suffered tremendous casualties from
these strikes. All of the Red Army’s modern technology was useless in a fight
against an enemy that evaded open battle.
However, having learned a
cruel lesson in Finland, Stalin did not change his mind and create partisan
units in the western regions of the Soviet Union. As the Soviet Union’s
industrial and military might grew, Stalin planned to fight enemies on their
soil rather than on Soviet land. In the second half of the 1930s, defense
systems and partisan units became unnecessary for the Soviet Union.70 Stalin
reestablished partisan units only after Germany had invaded the Soviet Union.
From 1926 to 1937, the
Soviet Union constructed 13 fortified regions along its western borders known
unofficially as “the Stalin Line.” There were many differences between the
Soviet Stalin Line and the French Maginot Line. Unlike the French Maginot Line,
the Stalin Line was built in secrecy and not publicized. The Stalin Line was
much deeper and was built not only to stop infantry, but mostly to stop tanks.
The Soviets also used huge quantities of steel and granite boulders in addition
to concrete. The Stalin Line was built from the Baltic Sea in the north to the
Black Sea in the south and could not be bypassed. Finally, unlike the Maginot
Line, the Stalin Line was not built at the very border, but farther into Soviet
territory.71
The 13 fortified regions on
the Stalin Line were built for defense and came at a tremendous cost in effort
and money. Each fortified region was also a military formation that could
independently conduct military operations during a long period of time and in
isolated conditions. In 1938 it was decided to strengthen all 13 regions by
building heavy artillery installations within them. The Soviet Union also
started construction of eight more fortified regions. Then, when the
MolotovRibbentrop Pact created a common border between Germany and the Soviet
Union, Stalin ordered further construction of the fortified regions to stop.
The existing fortified regions were disarmed, and everything connected with defense
was dismantled and destroyed.72
The construction of a new
line of fortified regions began during the summer of 1940 on the new
Soviet-German border. These new regions were unofficially referred to as the
Molotov Line, but they were never finished. The defense buildup on the new
borders proceeded very slowly, while the destruction of the Stalin Line was
surprisingly fast. When Germany attacked the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, the
Molotov Line was not yet built. Soviet generals and marshals after Stalin’s
death unanimously expressed their anger. They asked: How could Stalin liquidate
and disarm the fortified regions on the old borders without building the
necessary defenses on the new western borders? The answer is that Stalin was
not planning to fight on his territory; Stalin was planning an offensive war
against all of Europe.73
Another defense system of
the Soviet Union was the Dnepr military flotilla. All Dnepr river bridges were
mined before 1939 and could be thoroughly demolished so that nothing would be
left to restore. The Dnepr military flotilla was created in the early 1930s to
prevent the establishment and crossing of temporary bridges across the river.
The flotilla included 120 warships and motorboats, as well as its own air force
with shoreline and air defense batteries. The Dnepr flotilla could securely
close off the roads to the industrial regions in the south of Ukraine and to
the Black Sea bases of the Soviet navy. A German attack could be stopped on the
Dnepr line, or at least held up for several months. However, when Hitler
attacked France, Stalin ordered the removal of mines from the Dnepr river
bridges and disbanded the military flotilla. The Dnepr flotilla could only be
used in a defensive war on Soviet territory, and Stalin did not believe he
needed it.74
Stalin divided the defensive
Dnepr flotilla into two flotillas: the Danube flotilla and the Pinsk flotilla.
The Danube flotilla would be useless in a defensive war. In an offensive war,
however, the Danube flotilla could be deadly for Germany. It only had to sail
300 or 400 kilometers up the river to the strategically important bridge at
Chernavoda, where it could disrupt the petroleum supply from Ploiesti to the
port of Constanza. The entire German war machine could be stopped simply
because German tanks, planes, and warships would be out of fuel. However, when
Germany attacked the Soviet Union, the Danube flotilla found itself cut off
from Soviet troops without the possibility of retreat. Most of its ships had to
be sunk, while gigantic supplies were either destroyed or left behind.75
The Pinsk flotilla would
also be difficult to use for defense. The Pinsk flotilla had 66 river warships
and cutters, a squadron of airplanes, a company of marines, and other units. In
the defensive war of 1941, the Soviets had to blow up and abandon all of the
ships of the Pinsk flotilla. However, in a war of aggression, the Pinsk
flotilla could have used the newly constructed canal from Pinsk to Kobrin,
which would then allow its ships to reach the Vistula basin and head further
west to the German rivers. In 1945, a Soviet admiral reached Berlin with his
flotilla.76
The records of a conference
of the Soviet High Command held in Moscow from Dec. 23, 1940, through the
evening of Dec. 31, 1940, also indicate that the Soviet Union was planning a
massive offensive against Europe. This extremely secret meeting was attended by
274 of the highest-ranking leaders of the Red Army. Most of the speakers
discussed the importance of the new tactics of sudden surprise attack. Defense
at the primary locations of attack was not foreseen, even theoretically. The
Soviet military leaders made it clear at the conference that they had no
established contemporary defense theory. Soviet military leaders also did not
work on questions of defense after the conference. The
goal of the
THE STALIN LINE: German
soldiers inspect a bunker on the Stalin Line during Operation Barbarossa in
1941. The Stalin Line was largely disarmed after the signing of the
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. Stalin ignored defensive fortifications in his plan to
invade and conquer all of Europe.
Red Army was to conduct
grandiose, sudden, offensive operations that overwhelmed the enemy on its own
territory.77
During the German invasion
of the Soviet Union in June 1941, Yakov Iosifovich Dzhugashvili, the son of
Stalin, was taken prisoner by the Germans. Stalin’s son was searched and
questioned. A letter dated June 11, 1941, was found in his pockets from another
officer stating: “I am at the training camps. I would like to be home by fall,
but the planned walk to Berlin might hinder this.” German intelligence officers
asked Yakov Dzhugashvili to clarify the statement about the “planned walk to
Berlin.” Stalin’s son read the letter and quietly muttered: “Damn it!”
Obviously, the letter indicates that Soviet forces were planning to invade
Germany later that year.78
German intelligence officers
also asked Stalin’s son why the Soviet artillery, which had the best cannon and
howitzers in the world, fired so poorly. Stalin’s son truthfully answered: “The
maps let the Red Army down, because the war, contrary to expectations,
unfolded to the east of the state border.” The Soviet maps were of territories
in which the Red Army planned to advance, and were useless for defending the
country. Storages of topographic maps located unreasonably close to the border
were either destroyed by the advancing German army or by the retreating Soviet
forces. In 1941, the Red Army fought without maps, and the Soviet artillery
could not fire accurately without maps.79
Every Soviet commander,
starting with regiment level and higher, had in his safe a so-called “Red
Packet,” which contained the plans for war. When Germany invaded, the
commanders opened their “Red Packets,” but they did not find in them anything
useful for defense. The Red Army had neither prepared for defense nor conducted
any training in defensive operations. The defensive operations of the Red Army
in the summer of 1941 were pure improvisation.80
The actions of the Red Army
during the first days of the war speak best about Soviet intentions to conduct
an offensive war. Up until June 30, 1941, Gen. Zhukov insisted on advance and
demanded that commanders of Soviet forces aimed at Romania and Hungary exclusively
attack. Zhukov stopped the attack only when he and his colleagues concluded
that his armies could no longer advance. On June 22, 1941, several other Soviet
commanders also followed prewar plans without awaiting orders from Moscow, and
attacked the following regions: the Rava-Russkaya region, Tilzit in Eastern
Prussia, and the Polish city of Suvalki.
The actions of the Soviet
fleet during the first days of the war also show with sufficient clarity its
plans for offense. On June 22, 1941, the submarines of the Baltic Fleet sailed
toward the shores of Germany with the objective of sinking all enemy ships and
vessels according to the rules of unrestricted warfare. No exceptions were
made, not even for medical vessels sailing under the Red Cross flag. Soviet
submarines from the Black Sea Fleet immediately sailed into the sea toward the
shores of Romania, Bulgaria, and Turkey. On June 25 and 26, 1941, the Black Sea
fleet’s cruisers carried out an intensive artillery raid in the vicinity of the
Romanian port of Constanta. At the same time, the Danube military flotilla
began an assault in the Danube river delta. The garrison of the Soviet naval
base Hanko also conducted intensive assault operations during the beginning of
the war, taking over 19 Finnish islands in the course of several days.81
The Soviet air force also
acted in an aggressive manner at the start of the war. On June 25, 1941,
despite losses suffered during the first days of the war, Soviet air forces
bombed all known air fields of the southern part of Finland. On June 23, 1941,
acting according to plans, the Soviet long-range bomber air force carried out a
massive attack against military targets in Koenigsberg and Danzig. Soviet
long-range bombers also began to bomb the Ploiesti oil fields in Romania on
June 26, 1941. After a few days of raids, the amount of oil Germany obtained in
Romania was reduced almost in half. If Hitler had not attacked first, the
Soviet air force would have been much more dangerous, and could have totally
paralyzed the entire German war effort through its strikes against the
oil-producing regions.82
Further evidence that the
Soviet Union was planning to attack Germany is provided by Andrei Vlasov, a
Soviet general who had been captured by the Germans. During a conversation in
1942 with SS Gen. Richard Hildebrandt, Vlasov was asked if and when Stalin had
intended to attack Germany. Hildebrandt later stated: “Vlasov responded by
saying that the attack was planned for August-September 1941. The Russians had
been preparing the attack since the beginning of the year, which took quite a
while because of the poor Russian railroad network. Hitler had sized up the
situation entirely correctly, and had struck directly into the Russian buildup.
This, said Vlasov, is the reason for the tremendous initial German
successes.”83
STALIN’S ROLE IN ELEVATING
HITLER TO POWER & CREATING WAR
Suvorov states that Stalin
paved the way for Adolf Hitler to come to power. Stalin read Mein Kampf and
realized that Hitler’s main goal was to liberate Germany from the chains of the
Versailles Treaty. Stalin understood that if Hitler tried to free Germany from
the Versailles Treaty, both France and Great Britain would interfere, because
France imposed the treaty in alliance with Great Britain. Stalin’s tactic
relied on eliminating one enemy with the hands of another. If Germany entered
into a war with Great Britain and France, other countries would be pulled into
the war and great destruction would follow. The Soviet Union could then invade
Europe and easily take over the entire continent.84
In 1925 Stalin declared that
World War II was inevitable. Stalin’s goal was not to start the war or be a
participant at the start of the war, but to enter the war last and tip the
scale in the Soviet Union’s favor. Stalin thought that Hitler, who made enemies
with the French and the Jews, would be the perfect vehicle to start a war in
Europe. In the German parliamentary elections of Nov. 6, 1932, neither Hitler’s
party (NSDAP), the Social Democrats, or the Communist Party obtained a majority
of the votes. At the end of 1932, the NSDAP was out of money and facing
bankruptcy. It looked as if Hitler’s time would be up, and that he would be
finished as a politician. However, Stalin ordered the German Communist Party to
go against the Social Democrats and open the way for Hitler to take power in
Germany.85
Suvorov agrees with Hitler
that the Versailles Treaty was extremely unfair and degrading to Germany. The
Versailles Treaty demanded from Germany virtually complete disarmament. The
number of armed forces was fixed at 100,000, all military drafts were abolished
in Germany, the General Staff and all academies were disbanded, and the
creation of a new General Staff and academies were not allowed by the treaty.
Germany lost the right to have heavy artillery, tanks, and aviation (including
blimps). The submarine fleet was completely abolished, and the surface naval
fleet was cut drastically. Germany was forbidden to have chemical weapons and
supplies of poisonous gas. The majority of German fortifications were blown up,
and the treaty forbade all import into Germany of any weaponry or war materiel.
The treaty required arms production to be under international control.86
Central and Western Europe
was in such a debilitated state after World War I that a major war could not
arise because no nation was capable of starting one. To avert war in Europe,
all the Kremlin leaders had to do was to make sure that the Versailles Treaty
was not breached so that Germany would stay disarmed and weak militarily. But
the Kremlin leaders did the opposite. The Soviet Union helped Germany secretly
reorganize its army. The German government was allowed to create secret design
bureaus and training centers on Soviet territory. Germany was provided access
to Soviet factories that produced tanks and airplanes so that the Germans could
look, memorize, and copy the designs. The Soviet government eventually gave
German commanders all that was forbidden by the Versailles Treaty such as
tanks, heavy artillery, war planes, training classes, and weapons testing and
shooting ranges.
On April 15, 1925, an
agreement was signed to create a secret air force center for training German
military pilots in the Russian city of Lipetsk. Germans who went to the German
aviation school in Lipetsk had their names changed and were formally discharged
from the Reichswehr. Planes designed for training and testing secretly arrived
at Lipetsk by non-stop flights at high altitudes. By the end of 1933, the
school in Lipetsk had trained 450 German pilots and air force personnel, many
of whom later entered the core of the Luftwaffe command staff. Over the years,
numerous German airplane models were also secretly developed and tested for
Germany in the Soviet Union. The Luftwaffe was born in the Soviet city of
Lipetsk as part of Stalin’s plan to prepare Germany for a new world war.
In 1926 Stalin also created
a tank school for the Reichswehr near the Soviet city of Kazan. In Kazan future
German generals mastered the art of modern tank warfare. Stalin also made sure
that German engineers and designers did not fall behind other European nations
in technological and scientific advancement. Stalin ensured that all amassed
scientific and technological knowledge and experience were made available to newly
starting German creators of military weapons. An agreement was also worked out
in the 1920s creating production facilities in the Soviet Union for the German
war industry, masked as Soviet-German enterprises. Germany could not have armed
itself for a second world war without Stalin’s help.87
Stalin’s first attempt to
start a major war in Europe occurred in July 1936, when Gen. Francisco Franco
led a militant uprising against the Spanish Republic. Gen. Franco was provided
military aid by the dictators of Germany, Italy, and Portugal—Hitler, Benito
Mussolini, and Antonio Salazar. Stalin sent to the Spanish Republic 2,065
military commanders of various rank as well as 648 warplanes, 347 tanks, 60
armored cars, 1,186 artillery weapons, 20,486 machine guns, 497,813 rifles, and
numerous supplies. After almost three years of fighting, Gen. Franco won the
war and Soviet military advisers were evacuated.
Suvorov states that Stalin
did not count on victory in the Spanish war. Stalin’s goal was to start a major
war in Europe by drawing Great Britain and France into the war in Spain against
Germany, Italy, and Portugal. Soviet propaganda screamed in outrage that
children were dying in Spain while Great Britain and France did nothing.
Stalin’s agents asked: How can Great Britain and France show such heartless
indifference to the death and suffering of so many Spanish children? However,
Stalin’s political agents, diplomats, and spies were not able to spread the war
in Spain beyond its borders. Stalin executed many of his spies and diplomats
for their failure. By the end of 1938, Stalin dropped all of his anti-Hitler
propaganda to calm Hitler and encourage him to attack Poland.88
On Aug. 11, 1939, British
and French delegations arrived in Moscow to discuss joint action against
Germany. During the course of the talks, British and French delegates told the
Soviets that they were very serious in their guarantees to Poland. If Germany
attacked Poland, Great Britain and France would declare war against Germany.
This was the information that Stalin needed to know.
On Aug. 19, 1939, Stalin
stopped the talks with Great Britain and France, and told the German ambassador
in Moscow that he wanted to reach an agreement with Germany.89 On that same
day, Aug. 19, 1939, a secret meeting of the Politburo took place. The following
are some excerpts from Stalin’s speech:
“If we accept Germany’s
proposal about the conclusion of a pact regarding invasion, she will of course
attack Poland, and France and England’s involvement in this war will be inevitable.
Western Europe will be subjected to serious disorders and disturbances. Under
these conditions, we will have many chances to stay on the sidelines of the
conflict, and we will be able to count on our advantageous entrance into the
war. It is in the interest of the USSR—the motherland of workers—that the war
unfolds between the Reich and the capitalist Anglo-French bloc. It is necessary
to do everything within our powers to make this war last as long as possible,
in order to exhaust the two sides. It is precisely for this reason that we must
agree to signing the pact, proposed by Germany, and work on making this war,
once declared, last a maximum amount of time.”90
On Aug. 23, 1939, Germany
and the Soviet Union signed the Molotov-Ribbentrop agreement which led to the
destruction and division of Poland and the beginning of World War II. The
Molotov-Ribbentrop agreement instigated the war in Europe that Stalin had long
planned and prepared for. The nations of Western Europe became mired in a
destructive war while the Soviet Union remained neutral. Stalin’s role in
unleashing World War II was quickly and thoroughly forgotten. Stalin even
received substantial aid from the United States and Great Britain after
Germany’s invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941. Ultimately, at the end of the
war, Poland did not gain her independence, but was given over to the Soviet
Union along with all of Central Europe and part of Germany.91
The Molotov-Ribbentrop pact
began to unravel when Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov arrived in Berlin on Nov.
12, 1940. Molotov presented to Hitler a long list of ridiculous territorial
claims on behalf of the Soviet Union. Molotov demanded strongholds in
Yugoslavia, in the Adriatic Sea, in Greece, in the Bosporus and Dardanelles, in
the Persian Gulf; he demanded that countries south of the Baku-Batumi line, in
the direction of the Persian Gulf, be given over to Soviet control, including
eastern Turkey, northern Iran, and Iraq.92
These territorial claims
were repeated on Nov. 25, 1940, when the Soviet Union proposed a peace pact
between Germany, Italy, Japan, and the Soviet Union. Molotov also demanded
naval bases on the Danish side of the straits of Kattegat and Skagerrak, and
from Japan the renunciation of its oil concessions in the province of Northern
Sakhalin. The German ambassador to Moscow was told on Nov. 25, 1940, that
Germany had to withdraw its troops from Finnish territory immediately. Molotov
repeatedly reminded Hitler that without Soviet raw materials German victories
in Europe would have been impossible. Hitler and his officials were surprised
by such extraordinary demands and did not respond.
Hitler stated to Molotov in
their talks that the Soviet Union’s takeover of Northern Bukovina violated
their pact about the division of spheres of influence. Molotov replied that the
Soviet Union did indeed violate the previously reached agreement with Germany,
but that it would not give up what it got from Romania. Moreover, Stalin wanted
Southern Bukovina and Bulgaria. Hitler again reminded Molotov that they had
agreed about the division of Europe back in August 1939. Molotov replied that
it was now time for a new division of Europe that would give an advantage to
the Soviet Union. Hitler brought up questions of safety from a Soviet invasion of
Germany’s oil supply in Romania and other territory crucial to Germany. Molotov
did not give a satisfactory reply, and further discussions were in the same
tone.93
Hitler had been preparing
for an invasion of Great Britain when Stalin demanded new territories in
Europe—territories on which Germany’s economy and armed forces depended
completely. After Molotov’s departure, Hitler gathered his most trusted
subordinates and clearly let them understand that he planned to invade the
Soviet Union. On June 21, 1941, Hitler wrote a letter to Mussolini: “Russia is
trying to destroy the Romania oil field The task for our armies is eliminating
this threat as soon as
possible.” The Soviet threat to the Romanian oil fields is a major reason why
Hitler invaded the Soviet Union. Hitler’s invasion of the Soviet Union was not
at all a struggle for Lebensraum (living space).94
WHY HITLER’S INVASION OF THE
SOVIET UNION SURPRISED STALIN
Stalin had three separate
independent espionage agencies working for him. The total power of these
agencies was colossal, and testimonies abound about the might of Stalin’s
espionage. These Soviet espionage services had penetrated into leading German
military and political circles. Soviet military intelligence managed to gain
access in Germany to the most secret information from the highest levels of
power. Given these facts, the question is: “How could Hitler have surprised
Stalin with his invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941?”
Suvorov says that Hitler
knew that it had become impossible to conceal his preparations to invade the
Soviet Union. Therefore, Hitler said in secret, in a way that Stalin could
hear, “Yes, I want to attack Stalin after I have finished the war in the west.”
The Main Intelligence Directorate of the General Staff of the Soviet Armed
Forces (GRU) also made extensive studies of all the economic, political, and
military aspects of the situation and concluded that Germany could not win a
war on two fronts. The GRU concluded that Hitler would not begin a war in the
east without first finishing the war in the west. The head of the GRU submitted
a detailed report to Stalin on March 20, 1941, which concluded that “the
earliest possible date on which operations against the USSR may begin is the
moment following victory over England or after an honorable peace for Germany
has been achieved.”95
Soviet intelligence knew
about the massive concentration of German troops on Soviet borders, the
locations of all German divisions, the huge ammunition supplies, the movements
of the German air force, and many other things. Soviet GRU agents knew many important
secrets, including the name of Operation Barbarossa and the time of its
inception. Yet on the eve of the German invasion, Soviet intelligence reported
that preparations for invasion had not yet begun, and without these
preparations it was impossible for Germany to begin the war.96
Soviet intelligence
believed, with good reason, that a country needed serious preparations to fight
the Soviet Union. One of the vital things Germany would need to fight the
Soviet Union was sheepskin coats so that its troops could survive the
Russian winter. All GRU agents in Europe gathered and analyzed information on
sheep in Europe, and on the main sheep-breeding centers and slaughterhouses. As
soon as Hitler decided to attack the Soviet Union, Soviet intelligence thought
that Germany would order industry to begin producing millions of sheepskin
coats. This would be reflected in rising sheepskin prices, and sheepskin coats
would be delivered to German divisions. However, sheepskin coats were never
delivered to any divisions of the German army.
Soviet intelligence also
reasoned that the German army would have to use a new type of lubricating oil
for its weaponry and motor fuel for its vehicles for the extremely cold Russian
winters. The lubricating oil Germany usually used would congeal in the frost,
component parts would freeze together, and the weapons would not work. The
normal German motor fuel broke down into incombustible components in heavy
frost. The quantities and type of liquid fuels possessed by Germany were not sufficient
to conduct deep offensive operations in the Soviet Union. Germany was not even
conducting research in the field of creating frost-resistant fuels and oils.
The GRU closely followed
many other indicators for warning signals of a German invasion. German soldiers
needed boots, warm underwear, sweaters, special tents, hats, heaters, skis, ski
wax, masking robes, devices for heating water, and frost-resistant batteries.
The German army also needed tanks with broad caterpillar tracks, thousands of
cars that could drive in poor road conditions, and so on. The German army had
none of these. Outside of a great buildup of German troops on the Soviet
border, Germany had made no preparations for war against the Soviet Union.
Since the German army had not taken reasonable actions to prepare for war,
Stalin and his agents did not believe that Germany would invade the Soviet
Union.97
However, Hitler launched his
invasion of the Soviet Union without making reasonable preparations. Hitler
realized that he had no choice but to invade the Soviet Union. If Hitler had
waited for Stalin to attack, all of Europe would have been lost.
Suvorov states in The Chief
Culprit that both German and Soviet forces were positioned for attack on
June 22, 1941. The position of the divisions of the Red Army and the German
army on the border mirrored each other. The airfields of both armies were moved
all the way up to the border. From the defensive point of view, this kind of
deployment of troops and airfields by both armies was stupid and suicidal.
Whichever army attacked first would be able to easily encircle the troops of
the other army. Hitler attacked first to enable German troops to trap and
encircle the best units of the Red Army.98
HITLER’S DECISION TO INVADE
THE USSR & OTHER COMMENTS
Suvorov’s book The
Chief Culprit fails to mention Adolf Hitler’s speech on Dec. 11, 1941,
declaring war on the United States. This speech provides important
corroborating evidence why Hitler attacked the Soviet Union. Hitler states in
this speech:
“When I became aware of the
possibility of a threat to the east of the Reich in 1940 through reports from
the British House of Commons and by observations of Soviet Russian troop
movements on our frontiers, I immediately ordered the formation of many new armored,
motorized and infantry divisions. The human and material resources for them
were abundantly available. . . .
“We realized very clearly
that under no circumstances could we allow the enemy the opportunity to strike
first into our heart. Nevertheless, the decision in this case was a very
difficult one. When the writers for the democratic newspapers now declare that
I would have thought twice before attacking if I had known the strength of the
Bolshevik adversaries, they show that they do not understand either the
situation or me.
“I have not sought war. To
the contrary, I have done everything to avoid conflict. But I would forget my
duty and my conscience if I were to do nothing in spite of the realization that
a conflict had become unavoidable. Because I regarded Soviet Russia as a danger
not only for the German Reich but for all of Europe, I decided, if possible, to
give the order myself to attack a few days before the outbreak of this
conflict.
“A truly impressive amount
of authentic material is now available that confirms that a Soviet Russian
attack was intended. We are also sure about when this attack was to take place.
In view of this danger, the extent of which we are perhaps only now truly
aware, I can only thank the Lord God that He enlightened me in time and has
given me the strength to do what must be done. Millions of German soldiers may
thank Him for their lives, and all of Europe for its existence.
“I may say this today: If
this wave of more than 20,000 tanks, hundreds of divisions, tens of thousands
of artillery pieces, along with more than 10,000 airplanes, had not been kept
from being set into motion against the Reich, Europe would have been lost.
“Several nations have been
destined to prevent or parry this blow through the sacrifice of their blood. If
Finland had not immediately decided, for the second time, to take up weapons,
then the comfortable bourgeois life of the other Nordic countries would have
been quickly ended.
“If the German Reich, with
its soldiers and weapons, had not stood against this opponent, a storm would
have burned over Europe that would have eliminated once and for all time the
laughable British idea of the European balance of power in all its intellectual
paucity and traditional stupidity.
“If the Slovaks, Hungarians
and Romanians had not also acted to defend this European world, then the
Bolshevik hordes would have poured over the Danube countries as did once the
swarms of Attila’s Huns, and [Soviet] Tatars and Mongols would [then] force a
revision of the Treaty of Montreux on the open country by the Ionian Sea.
“If Italy, Spain and Croatia
had not sent their divisions, then a European defense front would not have
arisen that proclaims the concept of a new Europe and thereby effectively
inspires all other nations as well. Because of this awareness of danger,
volunteers have come from northern and western Europe: Norwegians, Danes,
Dutch, Flemish, Belgians and even French. They have all given the struggle of
the allied forces of the Axis the character of a European crusade, in the
truest sense of the word.”99
Hitler’s speech confirms
Suvorov’s thesis that the German invasion of the Soviet Union was for
preemptive purposes. Hitler’s attack was not for Lebensraum or any other
malicious reason.
Hitler’s speech also
mentions an important point not discussed in The Chief Culprit: numerous brave
men from northern and western Europe volunteered to join Germany in its fight
against the Soviet Union. Volunteers from 30 nations enlisted to fight in the
German armed forces during World War II.100 These volunteers knew that the
Soviet Union, which Suvorov calls “the most criminal and most bloody empire in
human history,”101 could not be allowed to conquer all of Europe.
Suvorov states in The Chief
Culprit that by exposing Stalin’s aggressive endeavors, he is not attempting to
exonerate Hitler. For Suvorov, Hitler still remains a “heinous criminal.”102
However, Suvorov does make it clear that Hitler’s preemptive attack of the
Soviet Union prevented Stalin from conquering all of Europe (page 103). Suvorov
also clearly shows that it was Stalin and not Hitler who broke the
Molotov-Ribbentrop agreement. As Frederick the Great of Prussia once stated,
“The attacker is the one who forces his adversary to attack”(104).
As brilliant as Suvorov is in
exposing the historical lies of the corrupt Soviet regimes, his book contains a
major contradiction. Throughout The Chief Culprit, Suvorov states that Germany
did not have the strategic resources needed to successfully conduct a sustained
military conflict. Furthermore, many of Germany’s strategic resources came from
militarily vulnerable sources. Germany’s iron ore came mostly from northern
Sweden, its lumber from Finland and Sweden, and its nickel supplies from
Finland.105 Germany’s primary source of oil came from Romania, and this
Romanian supply of oil was never enough for Germany to effectively conduct a
sustained military campaign.106 All of these raw materials were vulnerable to
attack from the Soviet Union. Suvorov states that Germany’s lack of raw
materials not only prohibited it from conducting a two-front war, but also from
conducting a prolonged single-front war. Germany’s only hope for victory was a
blitzkrieg—the quick defeat of an enemy.107
Despite Germany’s inability
to successfully fight a prolonged war, Suvorov makes statements in his book as
if Germany was attempting to conquer the world. Suvorov states: “In that same
year, 1939, Hitler began his war for global domination,”(page 108) and “Hitler
went after world domination in September 1939 with just six tank
divisions.”(109) Hitler never had the resources or military to obtain world
domination. Hitler was not even aware that his attack of Poland on Sept. 1,
1939, would turn into anything more than a local conflict. If Hitler had known
that his invasion of Poland would result in a major world war, he never would
have invaded Poland.
Suvorov also implies that
Hitler attacked Poland because Poland refused to satisfy Hitler’s aggressive
demands. Suvorov states: “Hitler demanded a review of the Versailles Treaty. In
accordance with this treaty, Eastern Prussia was separated from the main part
of Germany, and the city of Danzig was declared a free city. Hitler demanded to
be given a corridor through Polish territory to build a highway and a railroad
between East Prussia and mainland Germany. Additionally, the city of Danzig was
to become a part of Germany. The Polish government refused to satisfy Hitler’s
demands.”110
This analysis is simplistic
and misleading. As we will discuss in Chapter Three, it would be more accurate
to state that Poland, with the backing of Great Britain, refused to negotiate
with Germany and adopted policies that forced war between Germany and Poland.
CHAPTER NOTES:
1 Suvorov, Viktor, The Chief
Culprit: Stalin’s Grand Design to Start World War II, Annapolis, MD: Naval
Institute Press, 2008, Introduction, pp. xv-xvii.
2 Ibid., pp. xviii-xix. 3
Ibid., pp. xxi-xxii. 4 Ibid., p. 23.
5 Ibid., p. 25.
6 Ibid., pp. 25-26.
7 Ibid., p. 26.
8 Ibid., p. 26.
9 Ibid., pp. 23-24.
10 Ibid., pp. 23-25.
11 Ibid., p. 26.
12 Ibid., pp. 26-27.
13 Chuev, Felix, Molotov:
Master of Half a Do-
main, Moscow: Olma-Press,
2002, p. 458.
14 Suvorov, Viktor, The
Chief Culprit: Stalin’s Grand Design to Start World War II, Annapolis, MD:
Naval Institute Press, 2008, p. 27.
15 Ibid., p. 41.
16 Ibid., pp. 42-44.
17 Ibid., pp. 44-45.
18 Ibid., p. 45.
19 Ibid., pp. 46-47.
20 Ibid., pp. 48-49.
21 Guderian, Heinz, Panzer
Leader, New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc., 1952, p. 283.
22 Suvorov, Viktor, The
Chief Culprit: Stalin’s Grand Design to Start World War II, Annapolis, MD:
Naval Institute Press, 2008, pp. 50, 56.
23 Ibid., pp. 51-52.
24 Ibid., pp. 52-53.
25 Ibid., pp. 55-57.
26 Ibid., pp. 32-33.
27 Ibid., pp. 34, 38, 40.
28 Ibid., pp. 64-65.
29 Ibid., pp. 69-72.
30 Ibid., p. 73.
31 Ibid., p. 76.
32 Ibid., p. 77.
33 Ibid., pp. 77-78.
34 Ibid., pp. 79-80.
35 Ibid., p. 94.
36 Ibid., p. 239.
37 Ibid., pp. 125-126.
38 Ibid., pp. 123-126.
39 Ibid., pp. 127-128.
40 Ibid., pp. 128-129.
41 Ibid., pp. 131-132.
42 Ibid., pp. 133-135.
43 Ibid., pp. 150-152.
44 Ibid., pp. 156-157.
45 Ibid., pp. 58-59.
46 Ibid., p. 59.
47 Ibid., pp. 196-197.
48 Ibid., p. 205.
49 Ibid., pp. 207-217.
50 Ibid., pp. 92-97.
51 Ibid., pp. 257-258.
52 Ibid., p. 105.
53 Ibid., pp. 105, 116-117.
54 Ibid., pp. 114-115.
55 Ibid.
56 Ibid., p. 116.
57 Ibid., pp. 282-284.
58 Ibid., p. 118.
59 Koster, John, Operation
Snow, Washington, D.C.: Regnery Publishing, Inc., 2012, pp. 34-35.
60 Suvorov, Viktor, The
Chief Culprit: Stalin’s Grand Design to Start World War II, Annapolis, MD:
Naval Institute Press, 2008, pp. 136-137.
61 Ibid., pp. 137-140.
62 Ibid., p. 144.
63 Ibid., pp. 144-145.
64 Ibid., p. 145.
65 Hoffmann, Joachim,
Stalin’s War of Extermination, 1941-1945: Planning, Realization, and
Documentation, Capshaw, AL: Theses & Dissertations Press, 2001, p. 31.
66 Suvorov, Viktor, The
Chief Culprit: Stalin’s Grand Design to Start World War II, Annapolis, MD:
Naval Institute Press, 2008, p. 162.
67 Ibid., p. 165.
68 Ibid., pp. 166-167.
69 Ibid., p. 168.
70 Ibid., pp. 168-169.
71 Ibid., pp. 171-172.
72 Ibid., pp. 171-173.
73 Ibid., pp. 173-176.
74 Ibid., pp. 190-191.
75 Ibid., pp. 191-192.
76 Ibid., pp. 193-194.
77 Ibid., pp. 184-186.
78 Ibid., p. 258.
79 Ibid., pp. 258-259.
80 Ibid., pp. 252-253.
81 Ibid., pp. 253-256.
82 Ibid., p. 254.
83 Michaels, Daniel W., “New
Evidence on the 1941 ‘Barbarossa’ Attack: Why Hitler Attacked Soviet Russia
When He Did,” The Journal of Historical Review, Vol. 18, No. 3, May/June 1999,
p. 41.
84 Suvorov, Viktor, The
Chief Culprit: Stalin’s Grand Design to Start World War II, Annapolis, MD:
Naval Institute Press, 2008, pp. 20-22.
85 Ibid., pp. 29-31.
86 Ibid., p. 7.
87 Ibid., pp. 17-18.
88
Ibid., pp. 98-104.
89 Ibid., pp. 106-108.
90 Ibid., p. 109.
91 Ibid., pp. 111-112.
92 Ibid., p. 278.
93 Ibid., pp. 181-183.
94 Ibid., pp. 159, 183.
95 Ibid., pp. 244-247.
96 Ibid., p. 248.
97 Ibid., pp. 248-250.
98 Ibid., p. xx.
99 “The Reichstag Speech of
11 December 1941: Hitler’s Declaration of War Against the United States,” The
Journal of Historical Review, Vol. 8, No. 4, Winter 1988-1989, pp. 395-396.
100 Tedor, Richard, Hitler’s
Revolution, Chicago: 2013, p. 7.
101 Suvorov, Viktor, The
Chief Culprit: Stalin’s Grand Design to Start World War II, Annapolis, MD:
Naval Institute Press, 2008, p. 58.
102
Ibid., p. xi. 103 Ibid., p. 159.
104 Franz-Willing, Georg,
“The Origins of the Second World War,” The Journal of Historical Review,
Torrance, CA: Vol. 7, No. 1, Spring 1986, p. 108.
105 Suvorov, Viktor, The
Chief Culprit: Stalin’s Grand Design to Start World War II, Annapolis, MD:
Naval Institute Press, 2008, pp. 146-149.
106 Ibid., pp. 158-159.
107 Ibid., p. 112.
108 Ibid., p. 65.
109
Ibid., p. 87.
110
Ibid., p. 106.
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