Review of
Moscow
1941: A City and Its People at War,
by Rodric Braithwaite, ISBN 1400044308
Five out
of five stars
When the
war on the Eastern front was decided
Although there were many large and obvious
signs that Germany was about to attack the Soviet Union in the summer of 1941,
the Soviet leadership (Stalin) chose to ignore them. Trains bearing Soviet grain
and other raw materials were on their way to Germany while the German armored
units and aircraft were decimating Soviet Red Army formations. So rapid was the
advance of the German forces, millions of Red Army soldiers were surrounded and
captured.
There was a great deal of debate among the German
leadership as to what should be the primary goal of conquest in 1941. There
were those that considered the capital city of Moscow to be the primary goal
while others were in favor of maintaining the broad front.
This book is about the near conquest of Moscow
by the German forces. While other areas of the front are mentioned, the focus is
on the city and how the people and the leadership responded to the crisis. What
is made very clear is one of the most important historical facts. Had the
Germans made a concentrated drive on Moscow, they could have taken it. Even
though their forces were split, small units came within visual range of the
city.
It is fascinating to be taken within the
Soviet government at a time of true existential crisis, when all of the
mistakes made by Joseph Stalin were exposed. One of the most interesting
historical tidbits is that when the officials went to wake Stalin after it was
clear that the Germans were attacking, he thought that he was going to be
arrested.
While it is unlikely that the capture of
Moscow by the Germans would have led to their victory against the Soviet Union,
it is clear that without the capture of Moscow, the Germans could not win. Although
it is possible there could have been a negotiated settlement like the treaty of
Brest-Litovsk. The Soviet Union simply had too many resources available, most
specifically (wo)manpower and the willingness to throw it at the Germans. The
Soviet Red Army was the only military in the Second World War where significant
numbers of women served in combat roles.
This book is an important description of the most
critical time during the Second World War. Had the Soviet Union not survived
the onslaught of 1941, it is difficult to imagine how the Allies could have successfully
invaded Europe in 1944. It is impossible to understand how the Allies won the
Second World War without knowing how the Soviet Union survived the German onslaught
of 1941. This book explains how it survived.
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