At dawn on 10 July 1941, massed tanks and motorized infantry of
German Army Group Center's Second and Third Panzer Groups crossed
the Dnepr and Western Dvina Rivers, beginning what Adolf Hitler,
the Führer of Germany's Third Reich, and most German officers and
soldiers believed would be a triumphal march on Moscow, the
capital of the Soviet Union. Less than three weeks before, on 22
June Hitler had unleashed his Wehrmacht's [Armed Forces] massive
invasion of the Soviet Union code-named Operation Barbarossa,
which sought to defeat the Soviet Union's Red Army, conquer the
country, and unseat its Communist ruler, Josef Stalin. Between 22
June and 10 July, the Wehrmacht advanced up to 500 kilometers
into Soviet territory, killed or captured up to one million Red
Army soldiers, and reached the western banks of the Western Dvina
and Dnepr Rivers, by doing so satisfying the premier assumption
of Plan Barbarossa that the Third Reich would emerge victorious
if it could defeat and destroy the bulk of the Red Army before it
withdrew to safely behind those two rivers. With the Red Army now
shattered, Hitler and most Germans expected total victory in a
matter of weeks. The ensuing battles in the Smolensk region
frustrated German hopes for quick victory. Once across the Dvina
and Dnepr Rivers, a surprised Wehrmacht encountered five fresh
Soviet armies. Despite destroying two of these armies outright,
severely damaging two others, and encircling the remnants of
three of these armies in the Smolensk region, quick victory
eluded the Germans. Instead, Soviet forces encircled in Mogilev
and Smolensk stubbornly refused to surrender, and while they
fought on, during July, August, and into early September, first
five and then a total of seven newly-mobilized Soviet armies
struck back viciously at the advancing Germans, conducting
multiple counterattacks and counterstrokes, capped by two major
counteroffensives that sapped German strength and will. Despite
immense losses in men and materiel, these desperate Soviet
actions derailed Operation Barbarossa. Smarting from countless
wounds inflicted on his vaunted Wehrmacht, even before the
fighting ended in the Smolensk region, Hitler postponed his march
on Moscow and instead turned his forces southward to engage
"softer targets" in the Kiev region. The 'derailment" of the
Wehrmacht at Smolensk ultimately became the crucial turning point
in Operation Barbarossa. This groundbreaking new study, now
significantly expanded, exploits a wealth of Soviet and German
archival materials, including the combat orders and operational
of the German OKW, OKH, army groups, and armies and of the Soviet
Stavka, the Red Army General Staff, the Western Main Direction
Command, the Western, Central, Reserve, and Briansk Fronts, and
their subordinate armies to present a detailed mosaic and
definitive account of what took place, why, and how during the
prolonged and complex battles in the Smolensk region from 10 July
through 10 September 1941. The structure of the study is designed
specifically to appeal to both general readers and spets by
a detailed two-volume chronological narrative of the course of
operations, accompanied by a third volume, and perhaps a fourth,
containing archival s and an extensive collection of specific
orders and reports translated verbatim from Russian. The s,
archival and archival-based, detail every stage of the battle.
Within the context of a fresh appreciation of Hitler's Plan
Barbarossa, this volume reviews the first two weeks of Operation
Barbarossa and then describes in unprecedented detail Plan
Barbarossa, sing Forces, and the Border Battles, 22 June-1
July 1941; Army Group Center's Advance to the Western Dvina and
Dnepr Rivers and the Western Front's Counterstroke at Lepel' 2-9
July 1941; Army Group Center's Advance to Smolensk and the
Timoshenko "Counteroffensive," 13-15 July 1941; Army Group
Center's Encirclement Battle at Smolensk, 16 July-6 August 1941;
The First Soviet Counteroffensive, 23-31 July 1941; The Battles
on the Flanks (Velikie Luki and Rogachev-Zhlobin), 16-31 July
1941; The Siege of Mogilev, 16-28 July 1941; Armeegruppe
Guderian's Destruction of Group Kachalov, 31 July-6 August 1941;
Armeegruppe Guderian's and Second Army's Southward March and the
Fall of Gomel', 8-21 August 1941; The Second Soviet
Counteroffensive: The Western Front's Dukhovshchina Offensive,
6-24 August 1941 and the Reserve Front's El'nia Offensive, 8-24
August 1941; The Struggle for Velikie Luki, 8-24 August 1941.
Based on the analysis of the vast mass of documentary materials
exploited by this study, David Glantz presents a number of
important new findings, notably: Soviet resistance to Army Group
Center's advance into the Smolensk region was far stronger and
more active than the Germans anticipated and historians have
previously described; The strategy Stalin, the Stavka,
and Western Main Direction Command pursued was far more
sophisticated than previously believed; Stalin, the Stavka, and
Timoshenko's Western Main Direction Command employed a strategy
of attrition designed to weaken advancing German forces; This
attrition strategy inflicted far greater damage on Army Group
Center than previously thought and, ultimately, contributed
significantly to the Western and Kalinin Fronts' victories over
Army Group Center in December 1941. Quite simply, this series
breaks new ground in World War II Eastern Front and Soviet
studies.