New Books in History

Timothy Manion, "Why Barbarossa Failed: Germany and Russia in the Second World War" (Helion, 2026)

Mar 20, 2026
Timothy Manion, author and archival researcher who reexamined German and Soviet records, presents a revisionist take on Operation Barbarossa. He explores archival discoveries, doctrinal continuities from the interwar period, and early German tactical setbacks. Short, sharp chapters probe planning disputes, Soviet adaptation, and why decision-making — not just terrain or weather — reshaped the campaign.
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INSIGHT

Typhoon Repeated July Mistakes And Lost Initiative

  • Operation Typhoon repeated earlier errors: isolated panzer lunges, dispersal to multiple axes, and failure to broaden the front for a decisive envelopment of Moscow.
  • By late October Germans were on the defensive and lost the strategic initiative.
INSIGHT

Soviet Economic Resilience And German Overstretch

  • By winter 1941-42 Germans were weakened, front lines overstretched, while Soviets had mobilized industry east of Urals and achieved numerical superiority by spring 1942.
  • Soviet relocation of factories and resource base in Urals and Caucasus underpinned wartime output.
INSIGHT

Failure To Destroy Red Army Echelons Was Decisive

  • Barbarossa failed because Germans didn't methodically destroy Red Army echelons and misused panzers on deep penetrations, not because of logistics alone.
  • Halder noted Germany could only bring ~1,000 men per day as reinforcements, so German strength eroded while Soviet mobilization rose.
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