Red Army Essays

  • Stalingrad How The Red Army Triumphed Summary

    1228 Words  | 3 Pages

    began to make strides to push back German forces and win small key victories. The key component of those battles were the Russian generals inspirational leadership, order 227, and the soldiers morale. Michael Jones, the author of Stalingrad: How the Red Army Triumphed places the majoring turning point on October 14th with the Russians forces pushing back the German forces in the battle of the Orlovka Salient. The soldier’s morale and the slogan “ there is no land beyond the Volga” is what he claims was

  • Personal Narrative: The Red Army

    1061 Words  | 3 Pages

    the crematorium. They give us rations every day but it will eventually not be enough. The veterans look down upon the children. They laugh at our hope. The hope that they gave up on before. I still believe we will get out of this place soon. The Red Army has to be advancing. It is what the men in here say that they have heard. I don’t know if i believe what they say but i want to believe it. Without

  • Barbarossa Operation Case Study

    1540 Words  | 4 Pages

    German used in World War II to invade the Soviet Union. Hitler who was the German Führer sent his army across the borders of the Soviet Union, starting nearly 4 years of the most violent and cruel conflict humanity has ever experienced. His army was divided in three groups which was the army group North, led by von Leeb, Von Bock commanded the Centre group army and Von Rundstedt led the south group army ( The Biggest Military Adventure in History, 2011).. They breached Russia on a front spreading

  • The Russian Civil War

    1015 Words  | 3 Pages

    Trotsky's organisation of the Red Army The disunity of the White opposition War Communism The Leadership qualities of Lenin Explain how far you agree with this statement. The four reasons why Lenin and the Bolsheviks were able to hold onto power during the Civil war are all relevant and important reasons, I am going to look into whether or not they are all as important as each other. Leon Trotsky was a superb leader, who built up the red army from next to nothing. He introduced

  • The Russian Civil War

    997 Words  | 2 Pages

    there was a civil war in Russia. The war was between the reds, who were the communists/Bolsheviks, and the whites who were the either Tsarists or anti-communists. The whites also had help by the way of foreign intervention and in this essay I am going to explain what happened and how this helped the communists win the Russian civil war. One reason why the communists won the civil war was that both sides had different aims. The reds had one collective aim that everyone could strive for. This

  • The Success Of Operation Barbarossa

    711 Words  | 2 Pages

    advancing Army. Even with the heavy demands and multiple open fronts to contend with, Germany was still able to successfully invade the Soviet Union with Operation Barbarossa. Germany took early steps to secure its eastern front from the Soviet Union taking action against them while they were busying invading and conquering the rest Stalin wished to have complete and total control of his nation to include his military. Stalin decided to purge his Officer Corps after observing weaknesses in his Army and

  • The Battle of Stalingrad- A Turning Point in the Second World War

    764 Words  | 2 Pages

    2 February 1943. Significantly, it was the first catastrophic defeat to befall the Wermacht Army who not only lost the battle but were severely humiliated. Indeed, the German Army never fully recovered from this blow to its morale. Upwards of 270,000 troops were killed and 91,000 prisoners were taken by the Red Army; included in this latter number were 23 German Generals. Conversely, morale in the Red Army soared as a consequence of Stalingrad giving the Russians increased strength and confidence

  • Analysis Of The Siege Of Leningrad

    2334 Words  | 5 Pages

    heavy rains began to slow the German Army due to the mud stopping armor and slowing the troop’s forward movement. As winter approaches, the ground hardened making it possible to continue pressing forward but the bitter cold of Soviet winters interfered with the operation of military equipment. The German Army was unprepared for the cold. Lacking winter supplies, such as uniforms for the soldiers make it very difficult to complete tasks. The German Army is too far from German supply lines, in

  • Why the Bolsheviks Won the Civil War

    936 Words  | 2 Pages

    Why the Bolsheviks Won the Civil War The Russian Civil War raged from 1918 until the start of 1921. During this time the Bolsheviks faced massive opposition to their rule in the form of the White Armies, led by the former officers of the Tsarist state, and also from intervention by the forces of foreign countries. The Bolsheviks were surrounded, and often outnumbered by their opponents, and had no experienced military commanders. At times, their situation seemed hopeless. Yet, by the start

  • The Russian Civil war, 1918-21

    1372 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Russian Civil war, 1918-21 It is accurate to say that the Whites were a huge threat to the Bolsheviks in the Russian Civil war. This discussion will analyse why they proved such a threat using source A and my own knowledge. As source A correctly shows, the whites controlled vast amounts of Russia. This would have given them a huge advantage when it came to attacking for they could do so from all sides. This ultimately would stretch the Bolshevik forces to a large extent, causing

  • Final Essay

    748 Words  | 2 Pages

    The red army barred the burden of war the soviets suffered the larger loss of resources, people and equipment.as the war worsened America declared it's unprepared for war and doesn't get immediately involved in the war till 1944, singling out the soviets.soviets union holds their own just when the war started to look grim soviets pushed germany's advance all the way back to Berlin and capture it. After that truman ends the war in August 1945 with the atomic bomb which starts the cold war . TWO superpowers

  • Operation Barbarossa: Hitler's Strategic Folly and Its Implications

    959 Words  | 2 Pages

    Operation Barbarossa where in a display of betrayal and treachery, he invaded the Soviet Union. Lasting a gruelling 6 months in unforgiving Russian weather, Barbarossa saw the Red Army defeat the Germany Nazi party in the prime of Hitler’s dominance over Europe. In a demonstration of Hitler’s overconfidence and arrogance, the Germany army failed to defeat the Soviet Union due to poor leadership and guidance, personal values getting mixed with political issues and a lack of preparation for the challenging

  • Leon Trotsky Essay

    906 Words  | 2 Pages

    classes." Hence, Trotsky lacked political capacity and nature, which could have leaded him to highest office of land. In conclusion, Trotsky was able to highlight that he possessed both ability and talent through his organizational skills made by the Red Army, his oratical and literacy skills respectively. However, he lacked understanding of the counter revolution and a firm political nature. Therefore, the most talented and able to men do not always rise to the highest office in the land, due to their

  • Stalin's Authoritarian Leadership: Two Styles Of Leadership

    1365 Words  | 3 Pages

    instance, Stalin created a young savage military group known as the Red Army. The purpose of the Red Army was to patrol neighborhoods and to see if anyone was planning against Stalin. If they were the individuals were shot dead and executed. They, however, also fought wars with the other western countries. Furthermore, “The Red Army was successful in perpetuating a brutal totalitarian system at home and in Eastern Europe” (“Red Army” 1). Clearly, Stalin became obsessed with power and wanted to rule

  • THE SOVIET-AFGHAN WAR

    1973 Words  | 4 Pages

    civil war ensued and the Russians began to feel as if they were starting to loss control of the Afghan regime. The Red Army invaded in December of 1979 and subsequently killed the Afghan president then emplaced a pro-Soviet government which had requested their military assistance . The Soviet-Afghan War had begun. For the next decade U.S. backed Mujahedeen would confront the Red Army using tactics, mobility and war fighting skills only those indigenous to Afghanistan could use to such effect as to

  • The Role of the Soviet Union in World War II

    3194 Words  | 7 Pages

    Kremlin. The MacMillan Company, New York, New York, 1949. Fugate, Bryan I. Operation Barbarossa: Strategy and Tactics on the Eastern Front, 1941. Presidio Press, Novato, California, 1984. Kozhevnikov, M. N. The Command and Staff of the Soviet Army Air Force in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945. All-Union Copyright Agency of the U.S.S.R., Moscow, 1977. Overy, Richard. Russia's War. Penguin Books Ltd, New York, New York, 1997. Staff of Strategy and Tactics Magazine. War in the East:

  • Georgy Zhukov

    1078 Words  | 3 Pages

    was conscripted into the army for World War I in 1915. He executed his duties in the cavalry commendably, and was awarded the Cross of St. George twice. He served with the 106th Reserve Cavalry and the 10th Dragoon Novgorod Regiment, but his service in World War I ended after he was badly wounded. Soon after, Zhukov joined the Bolshevik Party and enlisted in the Red Army. He remained in the cavalry, serving in the famous 1st Cavalry Army. He was awarded the Order of the Red Banner for his help in

  • Adolf Hitler and The Soviet Union

    1186 Words  | 3 Pages

    collective-security agreement, against Germany, with Britain and France. Negotiations with a peace agreement between Russia and Germany began shortly after, and would prove to be successful. Stalin made this deal for the purpose of building the Red Army back up after the purge, but did not inform the Germans; but Hitler had plans of his own, and broke the Nazi-Soviet Nonaggression pact in June 22, 1941 by launching a full scale attack on the Soviet Union, officially starting Operation Barbarossa

  • Surviving Auschwitz And The Gulag

    2187 Words  | 5 Pages

    Shannon Keegan Doctor Brennan History 121 April 5 2014 Surviving Auschwitz and the Gulag Living in Europe during the 1930’s and 1940’s was very a difficult experience, especially if you were Jewish. In 1933, the Holocaust began when Adolf Hitler came to power in the country of Germany. An estimated 11 million people were killed during the holocaust, six million of those, innocent people, were Jewish. Allied Powers conquered Hitler and the Nazi power on May 8, 1945. Primo Levi was one of the men

  • The History of Stalingrad

    4706 Words  | 10 Pages

    war…In the scale of its intensity, its destructiveness, and its horror, Stalingrad has no parallel. It engaged the full strength of the two biggest armies in Europe and could fit into no lesser framework than that of a life-and death conflict which encompasses the earth” New York Times, February 4, 1943 The battle fought between the Soviet Red Army and the Nazi Wehrmacht over the “city of Stalin” for four long months in the fall and winter of 1942-3 stands as not only the most important battle