USSR in world war II

GonzaloStefanoPinarg 182 views 69 slides Nov 30, 2017
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About This Presentation

The USSR in World War II
The ultimate test of the Russian battle order has usually been war
The Romanov Empire failed that test in WWI – and fell
By the time of the next test – WWII, the Russian state was transformed into a more formidable machine
The “socialist” organization of the country ...


Slide Content

The USSR
in World War II

London: monument to Roosevelt and Churchill

The Big Three: Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin at Yalta, Feb.1945

The ultimate test of the Russian battle order has usually
been war
The Romanov Empire failed that test in WWI – and fell
By the time of the next test – WWII, the Russian state was
transformed into a more formidable machine
The “socialist” organization of the country was aimed at
making the state more militarily capable
A similar logic unfolded in Italy and Germany under
different forms of “socialism”
They talked of “socialism”, but they meant winning world
wars

If the essence of War Communism was to win the Russian
civil war, the essence of Stalinism was to win in World War
II
Belief in the inevitability of war – of one kind or another
The slide to war
Forced modernization
The Great Terror of 1937-38
Skirmishes in the 1930s: China, Spain
Diplomatic maneuvers in 1934-39: attempts to contain the
fascist powers, then a non-aggression pact with Hitler

Global civil war and interstate conflict
Fierce Left-Right struggles in European countries since
WWI, the lure and fear of revolution
Stalinism in Russia as a new stage in the Russian civil
war: forced modernization to strengthen the state and
make it fit for the next round of interstate wars
Fascism as a new stage in European Left-Right conflict:
to defeat the Left internally and externally
Projection of the internal conflicts on interstate relations
The Spanish Civil War
Appeasement: betrayal of Czechoslovakia
The fall of democracies across Europe due to both
internal (Left vs. Right) and external (actions of Germany,
Italy, and the Soviet Union)

The geopolitical triangle: Axis powers (Germany, Italy,
Japan), USSR, Western democracies (WDs)
USSR
WDs
Axis

As a state committed to world revolution, the Soviet Union
was viewed as a threat by Western elites
The rise of fascism was partly a response to the threat –
and anticommunism was one of the motives of Western
appeasement of Hitler
But the Axis powers were also challenging other Great
Powers in Europe and Asia – the continuing conflict
between empires
In the 1920s-early 1930s, before Hitler’s coming to power
in Germany, USSR cooperated with Germany against
Britain and France
When Germany became a radical anticommunist force,
USSR and Western democracies discussed “collective
security” arrangements to prevent Hitler’s aggression –
without success
Then Britain, France and the USSR made their separate
deals with Hitler, which enabled him to start World War II

Britain and France hoped to channel Hitler’s aggression to
the East, toward conflict with Russia – reluctant to fight
Germany
Hitler was determined to prevent Western democracies
and USSR from joining forces: beat them one by one
Stalin was determined to avoid war with Germany as long
as possible – but convinced that such a war was
inevitable
1939: A divergence of interests between USSR and
Western democracies – and a convergence of interests
between Germany and USSR
The unexpected deal was logical – but only temporary

Moscow, August 23, 1939: German Foreign Minister Joachim
von Ribbentrop signs non-aggression pact with Russia

Hitler and Mussolini in Munich, June 1940

1939-1941: growing tensions between USSR and Germany
At first: division of the spoils. But then:
Germany’s unexpected triumph in the West emboldens
Hitler
Hitler’s strategic goal of conquering the USSR was never
abandoned – for geopolitical and ideological reasons
Stalin expected the new war to generate a new wave of
revolutions – and intended to get involved
By 1941, his fear of German power became the
overwhelming factor
He was appeasing Hitler – and preparing for war against
him at the same time
Each of the two intended to strike first
Hitler preempted Stalin and delivered a crushing blow

Operation Barbarossa
June 22, 1941
Over 4.5 million troops of the Axis powers invaded
the USSR along an 1,800 mile front
Goals:
Total destruction of the Soviet state
Colonization of the Soviet territory, together with
allies – Japan especially
Enslavement of the population, turning the territory
into a resource base for the Third Reich

The Nazi invasion :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=StYywx7Uzok&feature=related
BBC, “War of the Century”, Parts
2,3,4

Hitler explaining the future war against Russia, March 1941:
“It is a struggle between two ideologies… Communism
presents an enormous danger for the future. A communist
has never been and never will be our comrade. It is a
struggle for annihilation. If we think otherwise, then, even if
we should crush the enemy, the communist threat will rise
again in 30 years…
This war will be vastly different from the onw in the West. In
the East, brutality is a benefit for the future. Commanders
must be ready for sacrifice and overcome their doubts.”
From the diary of General F. Halder, Chief of Staff, Land
Forces, Germany

German poster
depicting
Soviets: “The
lower race”

STAKES IN THE BATTLE FOR RUSSIA
Will the Soviet state survive?
Will Soviet society as a product of the transformations since
1917 be crushed?
Will the Soviet Union become a German colony?
How many Soviet citizens will survive?
Will genocide become a new global norm?
What will become of the world?

In the first 10 days, German armies moved 550 km into
Soviet territory
In the first 20 days of the war, the Red Army lost 1/5 of its
manpower – 600,000 men
By July, 20 mln. Soviets found themselves under
occupation. Nazi terror began.
Resistance
Redeployment of industry to the East

Victims of German occupation

Japanese
terror in
occupied
China

Resistance
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=4IAfigTgzmU&feature=related

The Battle of Moscow: September
1941 – January 1942

Moscow, October 1941

Women digging anti-tank moats near Moscow

Antitank barriers in downtown Moscow

November 7
th
, 1941: military parade in Red Square

Marshal
Georgi
Zhukov,
commander
of Soviet
forces in the
Battle of
Moscow

Women in the war: medics

Women in the war: pilots

Children workers assembling weapons

Partisans

Partisans

The Battle of Moscow was the first
Soviet victory over Nazi Germany.
Casualties in the battle of Moscow:
250,000 – 400,000 German
600,000 – 1,300,000 Soviet

The Siege of Leningrad
September 1941 – November 1943
The Germans and Finns failed to take the city
The cost to Soviet population:
About 1.4 million people were rescued by military
evacuation from the besieged city of Leningrad in
two years between September 1941 and November
1943.
Another 1.2 million civilians perished in the city.

In 1939-41, states of the Global Right attacked the world
order, aiming at global primacy
Western democracies joined forces with the communist
state in a defensive Center-Left coalition against the Right
The battle for Russia became decisive for the defeat of the
Global Right

US and British aid to the Soviet ally, 1941-45:
Food - $1.5 bln. in
Automobiles – 427,000
Warplanes – 22,000
Tanks – 13,000
Warships – over 500
Explosives – 350,000 tons
Other supplies
Total estimated cost of Allied aid to USSR in contemporary
prices –
$100 bln.

America at war:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=G5u8E4s57I0&feature=related

The turning point of World War II:
Stalingrad
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=G5u8E4s57I0&feature=related

The Battle of Stalingrad claimed over two million
casualties, more than any other battle in human history
It was also one of the longest: it raged for 199 days
Killed, wounded or captured at Stalingrad:
Soviets: 1,290,000
Germans and allies: 850,000

Red flag over Berlin, May 1945

Checking out Hitler’s headquarters, May 1945

Berlin, 1945: surrender of German High Command

Ovens in Buchenwald concentration camp

Survivors of a Nazi concentration camp

June 24, 1945: Marshal Zhukov leads Victory Parade in Red Square

Victory Parade in Red Square, June 24,
1945:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=QDQ2gQttPBs&NR=1

Soviet losses in World War II
Over 27 mln. killed (13.6% of the population)
Of those who survived, 29 mln. took part in the fighting
(including 0.8 mln. women)
Battlefield losses – est. 8 mln. (Germany lost 4 mln.)
5 mln. POWs (of them 3 mln. died in concentration
camps)
US and British POWs – 232,000 (8,500 died)
German POWs – 2.4 mln (0.45 mln. died)
1710 cities and 70,000 villages completely or partially
destroyed
40,000 hospitals, 84,000 schools, 43,000 libraries
destroyed
Historically unprecedented level of damage suffered by
any country

The war took
all nine of her
sons

http://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=da1e9Sz8I8k&feature=related