SMK-at-work
Posts: 3396
Joined: 8/28/2000 From: New Zealand Status: offline
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Wartime KV production: http://rkkaww2.armchairgeneral.com/weapons/afv_production.htm#KV Wartime T34 production: http://rkkaww2.armchairgeneral.com/weapons/afv_production.htm#T34 There's a lot of myth and misinformation about the Soviet production - they only evacuated TWO tank factories - plant 183 from Kharkov (It made 220-260/month until only 40 in October 41, and came back into production with 25 in the Urals in December and 75 in January 1942) and 185 from Lenningrad (production started slowing in September 41 (180 down to 80, 30 in October), TchZK production in Chelyabinsk was 24-27/month until September then 62 in October, 156 in November) Targul you said 100 T34's - not "just" 1000 tanks. I said that 100 tanks from "Siberia" would likely be mostly T26's - I'm not arguing over hte numbers, just the type. Zhukov's possibly personality flaws have little or no bearing on the accuracy of his memoirs. Or would you also discount Patton as an arrogant jerk, and Montogommery as an officious twit? Support for Communism is harly a surprise from a Marshal of the Soviet Union!! However we are also now in the forunate position of have historians such as Glantz getting access to Soviet official records of the era, and confirming what he said about the "Siberians". It is no longer tenable to repeat the "history" that was accepted in the 70's and 80's as correct and anyone interested i what actually happened really needs to get to amazon and improve their library!! I recommend starting with: Slaughterhouse: The Handbook of the Eastern Front Zhukov's Greatest Defeat: The Red Army's Epic Disaster in Operation Mars, 1942 When Titans Clashed: How the Red Army Stopped Hitler Before Stalingrad: Barbarossa, Hitler's Invasion of Russia 1941 Stumbling Colossus: the Red Army on hte eve of WWII Black Cross Red Star: The air war over the Eastern Front, Vol's 1, 2 and 3 are out, although vol 1 is as rare as hen's teeth & people are asking a fortune for it!! don't get me wrong - I was bought up on Siberians and the Russian winter, and human waves, etc as the story of the Eastern front too, and it's only in the last couple of years I've come to realise that those were one-sided accounts - from the Germans. Adding soviet accounts gives a much better picture. So to summarise the "Siberians": 1/ There was no mass arrival of combat ready veterans to the Moscow front in December of 1941. 2/ Siberian troops were sent to the west, but as individual divisions spread out among various armies, and they weer not particularly more veteran than anyone else. 3/ The troops that attacked that winter were "normal" Soviet formations, albeit reasonably trained and equipped, that had been held in reserve by STAVKA 4/ The Germans were halted anyway - they had reached the end of their abilities due to only planning for a short war 5/ The perception of "new" troops by the Germans is quite correct - but only insofar as the Russians had kept reserves and trained and equipped them better than the rest of the army had been for 1941. the appearance of reasonably well trained soviets in decent clothing was a hell of a shock to them because they had no intelligence information that the Soviets had such a reserve. Of course CEAW still gets it wrong, as do other games of the type, but I look forward to better efforts in the future now there is better info available. PS: Telumar using Wiki as a source is...um.....fraught with problems. It can be really useful, but I find it is best used as a starting point to look up better information. After all anyone can goin in and alter it - if I went there now and changed it to the above would you still quote it??!!
< Message edited by SMK-at-work -- 7/4/2007 2:54:04 AM >
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