Failure Of Operation Barbarossa Essay

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After Germany’s success in the early years of the war, Hitler ordered all war production to stay low, while allied production sky rocketed, causing Germany to be behind later in the war in terms of production. Hitler also wanted to maintain support from the German public, so he did not use women and children in factories. Hitler was also unclear on who was producing what, and no one was in charge of separate branch’s needs. One of Hitler's main points in his speeches were blaming the Jews for Germany’s problems, thus leading to the Holocaust, taking away many possible workers and soldiers. He did the same to any other country he invaded, killing of thousands of could-be workers and soldiers, leaving him short of millions of workers and soldiers …show more content…

They failed to attack Dunkirk, allowing British expeditionary forces to escape and later rearm, giving Britain there troops back. German soldiers were not given the right equipment for the Russian winter, causing many German troops to die of hypothermia, and “the Luftwaffe was not able to effectively bomb and disable supply routes into Leningrad”(The Failure of Operation Barbarossa by Mike Rozza), thus allowing Russian troops to get supplies in through a gap in the blockade and aid troops. During the North Africa campaign, German forces were unable to capture the Suez canal and Oil fields, causing many tanks and trucks to run out of fuel, making Rommel start an offensive too early. Luftwaffe fighters were designed for short range, tactical missions, making them a failure in operation Sea Lion, the air campaign on Great Britain, and failing in operation Barbarossa. The German army also had no idea about the new soviet T34 medium tank and Kv series heavy tanks, which made the existing panzer divisions impractical. Intelligence also overlooked the shier size of the red army, as they mustered 14 million strong by the time Hitler launched the assault. Supplies were also a big problem for Germany. The Wehrmacht were running out of boots for soldiers, fuel for vehicles and lubricants to keep vehicles warm (in operation Barbarossa). During D-Day, reports of an invasion on Normandy was ignored and two major leaders were absent from

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