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

Mar 20, 2026
Timothy Manion, author and archival researcher of German and Soviet records, reexamines Operation Barbarossa. He traces prewar doctrines, German command flaws, and Soviet adaptability. Short, punchy takes cover Army Group missteps, the Kyiv diversion, and why weather and logistics were not the sole reasons for failure.
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ANECDOTE

Frontline Diaries Pleaded To Stop Sacrificing Panzers

  • Frontline staff diaries repeatedly begged High Command to stop isolating panzer corps, reporting repeated untenable thrusts; commands ignored these pleas.
  • The 11th Panzer was so mauled by repeated isolation it was removed from front‑line duty by end of August.
INSIGHT

Dispersed October Operations Turned Offense Into Defense

  • Operation Typhoon stalled because Germans repeatedly conducted isolated panzer lunges while mopping up encirclements, dispersing effort and letting Soviets recover and go on the offensive by October.
  • By late October Germans were defending, not advancing, which doomed time‑sensitive objectives.
INSIGHT

Soviet Industrial Relocation Enabled Long Term Survival

  • By winter 1941 the Wehrmacht was a shadow of its June self: heavy casualties, equipment loss, overstretched front; meanwhile the USSR mobilized industry by relocating factories east of the Urals.
  • Soviet raw‑material bases in Siberia, the Urals, and Baku enabled sustained wartime production.
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