ENRICHED BY EXTRAORDINARY FIRST-HAND ACCOUNTS, THIS IS A FASCINATING
HISTORY OF THE DYING DAYS OF THE THIRD REICH AS STALIN SOUGHT TO
CONSOLIDATE HIS OWN EMPIRE.
In January 1945, the Red Army launched a powerful offensive across the
Vistula River to drive the Wehrmacht out of Poland, with the intention
of securing a start line for an operation that would ultimately result
in the capture of Berlin and the end of the war. But, as Prit Buttar
expertly reveals, there were other issues at play. Stalin was
determined to push the boundaries of the Soviet Union further west,
restoring land lost by the tsars and securing vast industrial and
mineral wealth. While negotiations took place between the Allied
powers regarding the fate of Poland, the Red Army burst through the
German lines, liberating Auschwitz even as the SS drove concentration
camp inmates onto frozen roads in a series of death marches.
The Wehrmacht staged a desperate fight back with their last major
armoured offensive on the Eastern Front. Launched in February 1945
from the German-Polish border, it forced a halt to the Soviet forces
on the banks of the Oder before the rush to Berlin. Written by an
acknowledged expert on the Eastern Front and packed with first-hand
accounts, this is the definitive account of the strategic goals, both
military and political, of Stalin, his generals, and their armies as
they raced into the Reich, and of the German forces who stood in the
way.
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The Red Army’s advance to the Oder in 1945
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472867018
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter