Colossus Reborn: The Red Army at War : 1941-1943In Stumbling Colossus, David Glantz explored why the Red Army was unprepared for the German blitzkrieg that nearly destroyed it and left more than four million of its soldiers dead by the end of 1941. In Colossus Reborn he recounts the miraculous resurrection of the Red Army, which, with a dazzling display of military strategy and operational prowess, stopped the Wehrmacht in its tracks and turned the tide of war. A major achievement in the recovery and preservation of an entire nation's military experience, Colossus Reborn is marked by Glantz's unrivaled access to and use of Soviet archival sources. This allows him to illuminate not only Russian victories in the Battles of Moscow, Stalingrad, and Kursk, but also to rescue a host of major "forgotten battles," many of which had been suppressed to preserve reputations and national pride. As he reveals in unprecedented detail, disastrous defeats vied with resounding victories throughout the early years of the conflict, as the Red Army struggled to find itself in the "Great Patriotic War." Beyond the battles themselves, Glantz also presents an in-depth portrait of the Red Army as an evolving military institution. Assessing more clearly than ever before the army's size, strength, and force structure, he provides keen insights into its doctrine, strategy, tactics, weaponry, training, officer corps, and political leadership. In the process, he puts a human face on the Red Army's commanders and soldiers, including women and those who served in units—security (NKVD), engineer, railroad, auto-transport, construction, and penal forces—that have till now remained poorly understood. The world's top authority on the Soviet military, Glantz has produced a remarkable study that adds immeasurably to our understanding of the one part of World War II that's still struggling to emerge from the shadows of history. |
Contents
The First Period of the War 22 June 1941 to 18 November 1942 | 3 |
The Second Period of the War 1943 | 37 |
Soviet Military Art | 63 |
Strength and Major Components | 135 |
NKVD Forces | 157 |
Rifle and Airborne Forces | 181 |
Infantry Rifle Weaponry | 191 |
Tank Mechanized and Cavalry Forces | 216 |
Engineer Signal Chemical Railroad AutoTransport | 333 |
Strategic Leadership and Control Organs | 369 |
Central Military Administration | 403 |
The Officer Corps and Command Cadre | 466 |
The Red Army Soldier | 536 |
Conclusions | 609 |
Notes | 625 |
Artillery and Air Forces | 285 |
Common terms and phrases
antiaircraft antitank armii armored army commanders Army Group artillery regiments assigned August aviation axis battalions Battle Battle of Kursk began Briansk Caucasus cavalry corps chief combat commissar conduct counteroffensive counterstrokes December defense Dnepr River Don River Donbas field formations front commanders fronts and armies German Glantz guards-mortar Ibid included January July Kiev kilometers Kursk Leningrad mechanized corps military districts mobile mortars Moscow motorized rifle NKO Order NKO's NKVD November October offensive operations operating fronts Operation Barbarossa Operation Blau organs Patriotic War percent platoon PVO Strany rear service Red Army region reserve rifle corps rifle divisions Russian RVGK Rzhev Smolensk soldiers Southwestern Southwestern Front Soviet Union Staff Stalin Stalingrad Stavka strategic offensive strength subordinate tank and mechanized tank armies tank brigades tank corps Ukrainian Velikoi Otechestvennoi voiny VIZh Voenizdat Voronezh war's end wartime Wehrmacht Western Front Zhukov Zolotarev