Écouter et lire

Entrez dans un monde infini d'histoires

  • Lire et écouter autant que vous le voulez
  • Plus d'un million de titres
  • Titres exclusifs + créations originales Storytel
  • 14 jours d'essai gratuit, puis 9,99 € par mois
  • Annulation facile à tout moment
Essayer gratuitement
Details page - Device banner - 894x1036

Operation Typhoon: The History of the Fight for Moscow between the Nazis and Soviets

1 Évaluations

4

Durée
1H 24min
Langues
Anglais
Format
Catégorie

Histoire

After the Fall of France and the unsatisfactory Battle of Britain came to a close, Hitler turned to the east and issued Führer Directive 21, his secret order for the invasion of the Soviet Union, on 18 December 1940. Prior to this the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, a non-aggression agreement, had enabled the two countries to divide the spoils after the invasion of Poland that had triggered the Second World War. Hitler, however, had always regarded this agreement as nothing more than a temporary tactical maneuver. In the early part of the Second World War, the arrangement had suited the two nations, with the Soviet Union preoccupied with its own issues while Hitler continued his aggression in Western Europe, exporting manufactured goods to the Soviet Union in return for grain and oil. But they were never easy bedfellows since their ideological differences were diametrically opposed.

For his part, Stalin seems uncharacteristically trusting of Hitler despite Soviet intelligence reports and London warning him of Germany’s intentions. Operation Barbarossa caught him unprepared. Over three and a half million troops - eighty% of the German Army, attacked along a front almost 3,000 km, supported by 2,700 aircraft, the largest invasion force ever seen. Soviet forces were hastily dispatched to the frontier in huge numbers, but the Germans pushed through quickly and decisively, and within three weeks of the launch of Operation Barbarossa, Hitler’s initial objectives had been achieved. While a legend exists today that Hitler's strategic fecklessness destroyed Germany's chances, despite the wise objections of the Wehrmacht general staff (OKW), the actual situation in 1941 resembled the precise reverse of this familiar historical trope. It seems the Fuhrer retained his full strategic acumen in 1941, until he ill-advisedly adopted the suggestions of the OKW and diverted forces in a winter campaign to seize the Soviet capital, leading to the Battle of Moscow .

© 2023 Phaistos Publishers (Livre audio ): 9798368983608

Date de sortie

Livre audio : 8 février 2023

D'autres ont également apprécié ...

L’offre Storytel :

  • Accès à la bibliothèque complète

  • Mode enfant

  • Annulez à tout moment

15 heures

Pour accompagner vos loisirs

9.99€ /mois
30 jours gratuits
  • 1 compte

  • 15 heures/mois

Essayer maintenant

30 heures

Pour vos trajets quotidiens

14.99€ /mois
30 jours gratuits
  • 1 compte

  • 30 heures/mois

Essayer maintenant

45 heures

Pour écouter tous les jours

17.99€ /mois
30 jours gratuits
  • 1 compte

  • 45 heures/mois

Essayer maintenant