wosung
Posts: 692
Joined: 7/18/2005 Status: offline
|
Germany and the Second World War: Volume VII: The Strategic Air War in Europe and the War in the West and East Asia, 1943-1944/5: 7 (Germany and the Second World War) von Horst Boog, Gerhard Krebs, und Detlef Vogel von Oxford Univ Pr (Gebundene Ausgabe - 29. Juni 2006) Germany and the 2nd World War: The Attack on the Soviet Union/With Maps: 4 (Germany and the Second World War) von Jurgen Forster, Joachim Hoffmann, Ernst Klink, und Rolf-Dieter Muller von Clarendon Press (Gebundene Ausgabe - August 1998) I also have to recommend this series of some 12 or 14 volumes (at least two volumes contain to books each). It’s a 25 year long project of MGFA, the German official Research Centre of Military History, formerly Freiburg, now Potsdam. It’s mainly written based on archive files, not sampled from retrospective apologetic memoires of Nazi generals, like many ww2 histories popular on the American print market. Thus, this is a piece of historical writing as solid as it can be. Like a very bright american scholar wrote: “collapsed states are the historians best friends”: The 3rd Reich and the DDR probably offer the most open archive repertoire of all states in the 20th century.The authors of the said series used them to the full extend, including the Federal German Military Archive in Freiburg, the Federal Archive in Berlin, Russian Special Archives, American, British Italian and Japanese Archives. It is also to mention: These are really expensive books. The series is an academic enterprise, thus sometimes perhaps written a bit dry for sake of presenting facts, lots of facts. The title of the series is its program. That means, it’s not a complete overview of WW2, but centered on the German war effort. Nevertheless there are also some chapters about Japan and all papers about the War in Europe naturally also are concerned to quite an extend with the other participants of the war. The series comes more or less in chronological order, starting with diplomatics in the 1930s endig with the collaps and foreign occupation in 1945. But there are also a couple of volumes about wartime economy, and wartime society. Because it was started in the 1980s, it also, to some extend, does reflect the changing focus of German historiography, thus being a historical artefact itself. The last volumes completing the series were published in 2008 in Germany. There they were critcizised for having somewhat outdated research interests: too much operational military details, not enough about topics of more recent interest, like forced labour, the shoa. And yes: Nothing new about operation Barbarossa 1941. Why? Simply because this volume was written back in 1983. On the other hand there are many volumes, which have impressed me deeply (having had my share of WW2 lecture), mainly for decouvering the Wehrmacht superman myth, later on the totally recklessness, even against the own people, in a war which has been already lost. For the wargamer, grognard and game designer (dear Gary Grisby, you hear me!?) the series presents quite a ton of useful statistics, charts, facts and many top notch maps. For me data highlights were: The two volumes about German war production. Frex there are quite telling charts about the production numbers of most weapon systems or about the table of org & equipment of the five types of infantry divisions after the failed Barbarossa (divs fully/partially ready for offensive ops plus three types of Stellungsdivisionen, defensive divs). The volume about the forgotten war in Russia 1943/44, publ. 2007. This arguably is the one, which goes down to the operational and tatctical level. It contains an alternative interpretation of Kursk, a fascinating discourse about Russo-German strengths and weaknesses in the middle of the war. This includes quite revealing data about tank performances, based on Erstschusswahrscheinlichkeit (first shot probability) indicating the German ability to dominate the race in tank technology, albeit not in numbers. This volume also presents in detail the last and some mainly unknown German armoured offensive operations on the Eastern front. Those were partly at the same scale as the Battle of the Bulge: like the tank battle of Warsaw in August 1944, operation Doppelkopf 1944, the better known tank battle for Budapest (Konrad 1-3, including some interesting remarks about city sieges in WW2). Besides, also the papers about the air war (lots of data, technical details) and the war at sea (anybody knows about German submarine operations and a German seaplane base in the White Sea?!) are to be recommended. They destroy all phantasies about wonder weapons to remodernize an already demodernized Wehrmacht: No fuel for jet fighters. No air recon for super subs. Bottom line: Despite the price, this books are worth to be read. Hopefully the English edition will be translated quickly, to avoid more “nothing new” remarks. Regards
|