EastWarHistorian
Posts: 19
Joined: 9/16/2010 Status: offline
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I'm currently reading "Absolute War: Soviet Russia in the Second World War", 2007, by Chris Bellamy, and in Chapter 5, "Who Planned to Attack Whom, and How?" he discusses the evidence he and others have found pointing to a plan for an early Soviet attack on German forces. Is anyone working on such a scenario? It could be a very interesting "what if" exercise. Here's the quote from page 131 of "Absolute War" that prompted this post: "The final war game plan, produced by Zhukov, who had taken over from Meretskov as Chief of Staff on May 1941, was a development of the three earlier plans, but there was one key difference. The 11 march plan had remained defensive, overestimating the German threat but deploying 171 divisions to meet a German attack, once again assumed to come from the south-west with the prime objective of seizing Ukraine. However, the 15 May plan emphatically did involve a Soviet pre-emptive strike. The plan was a fifteen-page document in Vasilevskiey's handwriting, addressed to Stalin. On the top right-hand corner it bore the caveats 'Top Secret. Very Urgent. Exclusively Personal. The only copy.' Against the 100 German divisions believed to be in the former territory of Poland, now known as the General Government, west of the Bug, Zhukov planned to launch 152. This was a fragile superiority in view of Soviet deficiencies in training and command and incomplete re-equipment. The plan...aimed to split the Germans from their southern allies and encircle the main group of forces in the Lublin area. By Day 30 the Red Army should reach the 'first strategic objective', the curved line running roughly north-east to south-west through Ostrolenka, the River Narew, Lowicz, Lodz, and Opole (Oppel'n). Then the second phase would begin: an attack from the Katowice area northwards to cut off any remaing German forces and to occupy all of the territory of the former state of Poland, and German East Prussia - the 'subsequent strategic objective'."
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