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Campaign 129: Operation Barbarossa 1941 (1) Army Group South

Campaign 129: Operation Barbarossa 1941 (1) Army Group SouthAuthor: Robert Kirchubel
Creator: Howard Gerrard
Publisher: Osprey Publishing
Category: Book

List Price: $19.95
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Seller: allnewbooks
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 515102

Media: Paperback
Pages: 96
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 9.6 x 7.2 x 0.4

ISBN: 1841766976
Dewey Decimal Number: 940
EAN: 9781841766973
ASIN: 1841766976

Publication Date: September 25, 2003
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Product Description
Operation Barbarossa, Germany’s surprise assault on the Soviet Union in June 1941, aimed at nothing less than the complete destruction of Communist Russia. This book focuses on Field Marshal von Rundstedt and Army Group South, tasked with the capture of the Ukraine and Crimea. Von Rundstedt’s 46 divisions and single Panzer Group faced fierce resistance from the best equipped, trained and commanded units in the Red Army, but ultimately succeeded in destroying the Soviet 6th and 12th Armies at Uman before inflicting a further 600,000 casualties at Kiev. Here, von Rundstedt’s five-month advance to Rostov is examined in detail.


Customer Reviews:
5 out of 5 stars German Command and Tactical excellence vs Soviet Incompetence   May 10, 2010
John "Silence is Golden" (New York City)
Army Group South was overall the most sucessfull of the 3 German army groups { A.G North , A.G Center, A.G. South } of Operation Barbarossa in 1941 in achieving its primary objectives. Considering the area frontage and tasks assigned, it was by far the weakest of the 3 army groups { 46 German divisions and additional satellite formations that equalled about 10 divisions } and it was also a multi-national army consisting of Germans, Rumanians, Hungarians, Italians and Czechs which complicated its command and logistical arrangements. The Red Army initially outnumbered the Germans and their allies and even though they suffered enormous losses, the Soviet state was able to mobilize massive manpower reserves to feed reinforcements to the front in far greater quanities than the Germans could. The satellite formations were not up to German {or Russian} standards in training or equipment. On June 22, 1941 - In tanks, Army Group South was inititally outnumbered by about 7 to 1 { 3400 vs 660 }. By July 15, the Soviets were reduced to about 350 tanks - a loss rate of 90%. By contrast the Germans suffered the permenant loss of less than 100 tanks. So, sheer numbers / quantities aren't the measure of an army's operational effectiveness as Mr. Kirchubel very ably shows in this excellent campaign volume. In higher command leadership, troop training, armour and infantry tactical abilities, communications, mid-level command and control and combined army /airforce coordination - Army Group South despite equiptment and logistical shortcomings was able to inflict over 1.75 million permenant casualties {killed and captured} on the Red Army in the 1st six months of the campaign. Field Marshall von Rundstedt and his army commanders did a brilliant job in manuvering their limited forces to advance over 600 miles to Rostov only to be stopped by their troops losses, exhaustion and logistical issues. The Luftwaffe working in coordination with the armored spearhead deserves a great deal of credit in providing key air support and smashing Red Army reserves and counterattacks. Yet despite all its success, Army Group South still had to face up to time and space limitations, supply problems ,wear and tear on the troops and equipment and the RUSSIAN WINTER !! Had Hitler allowed von Rundstedt to halt in November and consolidate his forces defensivly, it is likely that Stalins ham-fisted insistance that the Red Army attack, attack and ATTACK on this front could have wrecked what was left of the Red Army facing Army Group South in futile counterattacks and given Von Runstedt the ability to preserve his armour / infantry, he undoubtly would have been presented with new tactical opportunities to exploit. The overall performance by the Soviet high command and the training and tactical performance by the Red Army can only be described as lamentable. The Red Army deployed huge #s of men and equiptment and some of its formations fought well. BUT when 1 million men {or more} are taken prisoner its hard to credit that Soviet troops fought with much skill or detirmination. General Kirponos the front commander was stubborn and dogged but his inexperience by going in less than 3 years from command of a division to command of 6 armies totaling 75 divisions was to big a jump for him to be an effective commander. His army commanders {with the possible exception of Tyulenev on the Odessa Front} were inferior in command and control to the German commanders - in particular Panzer General Edward von Kleist. Kirponos was hampered by Communist political commissar control { including a young Nikita Khurshchev } and Stalin's ignorant interferance that eventually led to what is arguably the greatest disaster in military history - the encirclement and destuction of 6 armies in the Kiev pocket with the Red Army losing at least 1 million men {including 650,000 + prisoners} with Kirponos also perishing in trying to break out. The higher command incompetence of Stalin and immense losses of men and material only serve to show how remarkable the Red Army,s recovery in 1941 was and even more remarkable were the tremendous victories of 1943 -45 - no other army could have {or ever has} sustained the losses that the Red Army suffered and still remain in the field to win the war. This book provides a remarkably detailed overview of this titanic struggle. I highly recommend it and give it 4 1/2 stars



4 out of 5 stars Some Rough Edges, but a Decent Summary   November 24, 2003
R. A Forczyk (Laurel, MD USA)
16 out of 18 found this review helpful

Lieutenant Colonel Robert Kirchubel, of the California Army National Guard, has embarked upon the ambitious task of summarizing the greatest land offensive in history - Operation Barbarossa - in three volumes. Kirchubel's first volume covers the German Army Group South's (AGS) invasion of the Ukraine in 1941. The bar is high for this task, given the vast literature available on this subject, and this volume does suffer from some rough edges. However, LTC Kirchubel's volume is a handy summary of an important campaign and as such, is useful for military professionals and amateur historians alike.

Operation Barbarossa 1941: Army Group South begins with a 5-page introduction and a detailed campaign chronology. The 5-page section on opposing plans is good, and emphasizes that while Hitler sought the destruction of the Red Army, many of his commanders were attracted by prestige objectives like Moscow. The 3-page section on opposing commanders is decent in covering army-level leaders, but then Kirchubel starts to ramble and includes a diverse assortment of minor subordinates. Considering the vast amount of material available on the opposing armies in 1941, the author's 8-page section is insufficient. Kirchubel states that "von Rundstedt's command numbered 46 ½ German and allied divisions" but his own order of battle lists 48 German, 2 Slovak and 14 Romanian divisions for a total of 64. Oddly, the author does not mention that AGS had 674 tanks at the start, despite tons of data available on the panzer divisions. As for the Red Army, somehow the author managed to miss the fact that the Soviets were in the midst of a huge reorganization of mechanized forces in the summer of 1941, which had a major impact on their combat readiness. Indeed, it is clear that the author did not use David Glantz's excellent Stumbling Colossus, which details the Soviet disorganization. Kirchubel makes two other significant errors in regard to Soviet forces: (1) he is unaware that the anti-tank brigades had been stripped of their trucks rendering them immobile and (2) his exaggeration of the combat prowess of the KV-1 heavy tank is tempered by his ignorance of the vehicles' faulty transmission that rendered it too, immobile (a recent article in ARMOR magazine described how Soviet propaganda had concealed the KV-1s weakness for decades because it was one of Stalin's pet projects).

The 2-D maps in this volume are quite good and include: initial dispositions (division-level); the frontier battles; the Kiev pocket; the capture of the Crimea; the Donbas and Rostov; and strategic overview. The three 3-D maps (the Uman Pocket, the Battle of the Sea of Azov, and the Battle for Rostov) are a bit less even; the Uman map is the victim of poor editing that mixed up Axis and Soviet units and the Rostov map is just too busy (it could have showed the German offensive or the Soviet counteroffensive, but not both). The Rumanian front does not get its own map, so both the Axis allies and the German 11th Army are under-represented. The three battle scenes are all very good but lacking in balance, since all are from the German viewpoint (I thought Osprey always tried to represent both sides?) and indeed, the entire volume is clearly pro-German. The Soviet tank counterattack at Dubno - one of the largest tank battles before Kursk - would have made a good battle scene.

Kirchubel's campaign narrative, which is 55 pages in length, is relatively clear and strait-forward. It is clear from his bibliography that he has combed many excellent lengthier works for source material and that he is able to synthesize this data into a coherent summary. Unfortunately, very few of these sources represent the Soviet point of view. Overall, this volume represents a decent campaign summary, albeit one that is heavily from the German point of view. The author also misuses the 5-page conclusion to essentially summarize the highlights of his narrative with very little analysis and some faulty statistics (is he really trying to say that AGS suffered only about 20,000 casualties during Barbarossa?). The editing throughout this volume is often slip-shod, which reduces the author's ability to drive his points home.

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