The plan for the upcoming offensive of the Nazi troops. Wings spread - musical pause

In mid-July 1941, the situation at the front continued to be unfavorable for the Soviet Army. The fighting took place 120 km from Leningrad, in the Smolensk region and on the outskirts of Kyiv. The enemy created an immediate threat of capturing these large administrative centers. Only in the north (the Arctic and Karelia) and in the south (Moldova) the advance of fascist German troops was insignificant.

Soviet troops suffered serious losses and needed reorganization and replenishment with men and weapons. Meanwhile, it became obvious that industry, due to the ongoing relocation of many enterprises from threatened areas, would not be able to satisfy the growing needs of the Armed Forces in the near future.

The Soviet active army in mid-July included 212 divisions and 3 rifle brigades ( IVI. Documents and materials, inv. No. 33, l. 82a.). Of these, only 90 were fully equipped.

The shortage of military equipment and weapons, the beginning of the formation of many reserve units and formations, as well as the highly maneuverable nature of military operations, confronted the Soviet command with the need to make major changes to the organizational structure of the troops.

Headquarters on July 15, in a directive letter to the commanders-in-chief of troops of strategic directions, commanders of fronts, armies and military districts, indicated the need, at the first opportunity, to gradually, without prejudice to current operations, prepare the transition to a system of small armies “in five to a maximum of six divisions without corps commands and with direct subordination of divisions to the army commander" ( IVI. Documents and materials, inv. No. 77, l. 59.). The same letter outlined the decision to disband the mechanized corps and change the staffing structure of rifle, cavalry and aviation formations and units.

According to the staff approved on July 29, the number of rifle divisions was reduced by 30 percent, the number of artillery in it by 52 percent, and vehicles by 64 percent. The combat capabilities of the rifle division in terms of firepower and maneuverability were greatly reduced. Compared to the German infantry division, it now had 1.5 times less people, 1.4 times less small arms, 2.1 times less guns and mortars ( IVI. Documents and materials, inv. No. 5. pp. 242, 243, 704.). In fact, there were even fewer personnel and weapons in the rifle division.

The situation was no better with tank, cavalry and aviation formations and artillery units.

To restore and maintain their combat effectiveness, mechanized corps required a large number of tanks, and industry was not yet able to provide them. Therefore, these corps were disbanded. The lack of armored vehicles did not allow the preservation of individual tank divisions.

The main tactical formation of the armored forces became a brigade, and the cavalry - a division of about 3 thousand people. In aviation, three-regiment air divisions were replaced by two-regiment ones, with the number of aircraft in regiments being reduced from 60 to 30, and then to 22.

The artillery also underwent serious organizational changes. The insufficient supply of anti-tank artillery equipment forced the brigades to be disbanded and instead regiments of five batteries and then four batteries of 16 guns each were created. The cannon and howitzer regiments of the reserve of the High Command (RGK) were transferred to reduced staffing levels. In this regard, their fire capabilities decreased by 2 times.

The forced transition to the formation of units and formations with a reduced number of weapons, almost without mechanized vehicles, sharply reduced their combat power and maneuverability.

The lack of weapons and the resulting reorganization of troops forced commanders of all levels to look for appropriate tactical techniques for conducting combat operations, new forms and methods of using military branches and various types of weapons. Thus, for a more expedient and centralized use of limited aviation forces, reserve aviation groups subordinate to the Supreme High Command began to be created in August. They solved combat missions independently or were recruited to strengthen the air forces of the fronts. In order to more effectively use artillery weapons in battle and operations, assignment of tasks to artillery units and responsibility for their implementation were assigned to artillery commanders, who were appointed deputies to combined arms commanders and commanders.

The reorganization of troops at the tactical and operational levels in accordance with the requirements of the directive letter from Headquarters did not take place as a one-act event. In contrast to the restructuring of the highest military governing bodies and the central apparatus, which was carried out in a relatively short time, it continued almost until the end of 1941.

Due to the increased need for command personnel, the system of their training has changed significantly. The work of military educational institutions was completely restructured. A wide network of short-term courses was deployed at military academies, schools, front and army headquarters. The training system for junior command personnel of the Soviet Army was expanded.

The need to make up for combat losses, recruit a large number of new military units for the front and create reserves required the call-up of additional contingents of USSR citizens. In August, the mobilization of military personnel from 1890 to 1904 was announced. and conscripts born before 1923. The size of the Armed Forces also increased due to the creation of the people's militia, which was a special expression of the patriotism of the Soviet people - a manifestation of a sense of high civic responsibility for the fate of the Motherland.

Despite their deep advance into the country, the Nazis in the initial period of the war, faced with increasing resistance from Soviet troops day by day, were unable to defeat the main forces of the Soviet Army in the western regions of the USSR, that is, to solve the immediate task of the Barbarossa plan.

By mid-July, the enemy had 182 divisions on the Soviet-German front. Fourteen divisions were in the reserve of the main command of the German ground forces.

Fascist troops continued to carry out the tasks assigned to them in the directive on strategic concentration and deployment. The closest of them were: for the German army group "North" and the Finnish armies - the capture of Leningrad, for the army group "Center" - the defeat of Soviet troops in the Smolensk-Moscow direction and for the army group "South" - the capture of Kyiv and the encirclement of Soviet troops on the Right Bank Ukraine. At the same time, Army Group "Center" was supposed to encircle the armies of the Western Front with a bilateral envelopment and, having broken their "last organized resistance... open the way to Moscow" ( F. Halder. War diary, vol. 3, book. 1, p. 101.).

Advancing with the main forces of Army Group Center on Moscow, the Nazis hoped, after capturing the area between the Western Dvina and Dnieper rivers, to send its mobile troops - the 3rd Panzer Group of General G. Hoth - to help Army Group North or to the east to attack Moscow , and the 2nd Panzer Group of General G. Guderian - in a southern or southeastern direction to support the offensive of Army Group South.

The Finnish armies, which went on the offensive on July 10, were supposed to advance on both sides of Lake Ladoga and assist German troops in capturing Leningrad. At the same time, they were entrusted with the task of capturing Soviet Karelia.

The Soviet command, in order to prevent the enemy from further advancing deeper into the country, continued to take measures to stabilize the front and strengthen the active army. Having timely determined that the decisive direction was the western, where the enemy was rushing through Smolensk to Moscow, it sent there up to 80 percent of all troops deployed from the depths of the country. Most of them, who arrived in the first half of July, were already fighting in the Smolensk battle that had begun.

By order of the Headquarters of July 14, 1941, to ensure the junction between the troops of the North-Western and Western directions, the 29th and 30th armies were deployed from Staraya Russa to Olenino, consisting of 10 divisions, and to the east - in the areas of Torzhok, Rzhev, Volokolamsk, Kalinin, Ruza, Mozhaisk, Maloyaroslavets, Naro-Fominsk, the formation of the 31st and 32nd armies was completed. Together with the troops of the previously advanced 24th and 28th armies, they united in the front of the reserve armies with the task of “occupying the line of Staraya Russa, Ostashkov, Bely, Istomino, Yelnya, Bryansk and preparing for a stubborn defense” ( IVI. Documents and materials, inv. No. 77, pp. 55-57.). Here, east of the main defensive line, which ran along the Western Dvina and Dnieper rivers and had already been broken through by the enemy, a second line of defense was created.

On July 18, the Headquarters decided to deploy another front on the distant approaches to Moscow - the front of the Mozhaisk defense line under the command of General P. A. Artemyev. It included three armies, formed from divisions of the border and internal troops of the NKVD and the Moscow people's militia (33rd, 34th) and from the front of the reserve armies (32nd). The front received the task of preparing and defending the line west of the line Volokolamsk, Mozhaisk, Kaluga ( IVI. Documents and materials, inv. No. 77, pp. 65-66.).

The same events, although on a smaller scale, were carried out in the North-Western and South-Western strategic directions.

During the strategic defense, the Soviet Army had to wear down enemy strike forces, stop their advance and prepare for offensive actions. Soviet soldiers were determined to carry out the orders of the Motherland. Military councils of fronts, armies, navies and flotillas, commanders, political agencies, party and Komsomol organizations have launched a great deal of work to improve the moral and political training of soldiers, their psychological stability and perseverance in defense. The advanced experience of combat activities of troops was widely promoted and introduced into the practice of units and formations. Tank destroyer detachments were created from the most courageous and experienced fighters, commanders and political workers; 40-60 percent of the personnel of these detachments were communists and Komsomol members ( Archives of the Moscow Region, f. 208, op. 2526, d. 46, l. 204.). In party political work, much attention was paid to familiarizing newly arriving reinforcements with the heroic exploits of Soviet soldiers, the nature of the enemy’s actions, his tactics, and characteristic techniques for using tanks, aircraft, and automatic weapons; mobilization of young fighters to quickly master the most effective methods of fighting the enemy, strict implementation of the Headquarters order of July 14, 1941 on the preservation of weapons.

The Communist Party, using various forms and methods of political work in the army and navy, strengthened the faith of soldiers and commanders in victory, in their ability to defeat the enemy. Military councils, commanders, commissars and political agencies explained to the personnel the just nature of the Patriotic War, exposed fascism and the aggressive aspirations of the aggressor and instilled in the soldiers hatred of him and a readiness to overcome all difficulties in the name of victory. The educational work was based on the requirements of the GKO resolution of July 16, the order of the Supreme Command Headquarters of August 16 and the directives of the main political departments of the Soviet Army and Navy to strengthen discipline in the troops ( IVI. Documents and materials, inv. No. 5456, pp. 1-2; Archives of the Moscow Region, f. 32, op. 795436, no. 1, ll. 191 - 192; op. 920265, no. 3, l. 200.). At party and Komsomol meetings of divisions and units, meetings of the party activists of formations, at meetings of the command staff, specific measures were discussed and outlined to ensure the vanguard role of communists and Komsomol members in carrying out combat missions, strengthening order, and fighting cowards and alarmists. These decisions were persistently implemented. The pages of the military press regularly published materials about loyalty to military duty and the Soviet Motherland, and explained the requirements of the military oath and military regulations.

Due to the fact that individual commanders and political workers replaced political and educational work with administration, the People's Commissar of Defense issued an order on October 4 in which he demanded a radical improvement in the education of soldiers, strengthening discipline through methods of persuasion, and the full deployment of agitation and propaganda work. Measures were taken to improve the training of propaganda personnel and to replenish the ranks of agitators with experienced, politically literate soldiers.

The ranks of army and naval communists were replenished through general civil and party mobilizations and the admission of the best fighters and commanders into the party. In accordance with the resolutions of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks of June 27 and 29, 1941, during the first 2.5 months of the war, eight party mobilizations were carried out, as a result of which the army and navy received about 94 thousand political fighters (60 percent communists and 40 percent Komsomol members). 58 thousand of them joined the active army, the rest were sent to newly formed units, to military courses and schools ( N. Kirsanov. Party mobilizations to the front during the Great Patriotic War. M., 1972, pp. 39-41.). As the political department of the Western Front noted, political fighters joined “front units in the most difficult moments of the fighting... and were a great force in strengthening the stability of our troops” ( Archives of the Moscow Region, f. 208, op. 2526, no. 25, pp. 282-283.).

In the active army, the influx of applications to party organizations for admission to the party increased. “We want to go into battle as communists,” said many soldiers and commanders.

By the end of 1941, compared with the beginning of the war, the ranks of communists in the active army more than doubled ( History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, vol. 5, book. 1, p. 373.).

In mid-July, a new, extremely difficult stage in the struggle of the Soviet Armed Forces to disrupt Hitler’s plans began. It lasted 2.5 months. During this period, the battles near Leningrad, in the regions of Smolensk, Kyiv, Odessa, as well as in the Far North and Karelia were especially intense.

Battle for Moscow. Moscow operation of the Western Front November 16, 1941 - January 31, 1942 Shaposhnikov Boris Mikhailovich

Chapter One Initial position and plans of the parties. The plan of the German attack on Moscow

Chapter first

Initial position and plans of the parties. The plan of the German attack on Moscow

In the first half of November, all types of reconnaissance began to note the pull-up and accumulation of enemy forces in front of the Western Front, the preparation of strike groups and the desire of the Nazi troops to take an advantageous starting position for resuming the offensive on a large scale. In the period from November 1 to November 11, according to our intelligence, enemy forces in front of the Western Front increased by nine divisions. It became clear that in the near future we should expect a second attempt by the Germans to capture Moscow.

At the headquarters of the Western Front and the General Staff of the Red Army, by the beginning of the second offensive of the Nazi troops on Moscow, there was generally correct information about the grouping of forces and the possible intentions of the enemy.

Back on November 5, the head of the Operations Department of the Western Front headquarters, in a document he compiled (a diagram with a legend), defined the probable plan of action of the Germans as follows: the enemy, apparently, is preparing an attack on both flanks of the Western Front: 1) in the north - in the directions to Klin and Istra ; 2) in the south - in the directions to Podolsk and Lopasnya. But he will need a certain amount of time to bring up reserves, put troops and logistics in order, rest and establish logistics. The enemy forces are currently located in several groups: a) the Volokolamsk group (five to six divisions, of which two are tank and one motorized), intended for probable actions from Volokolamsk to Klin, Dmitrov, bypassing Moscow from the north; part of the forces can be sent through Istra directly to Moscow; b) the Dorokhovskaya (Mozhaisk) group (four to five divisions), located on the shortest route to Moscow, with its axis of action along the Mozhaisk-Moscow highway; c) the Maloyaroslavets group (four to five divisions, one of them tank), apparently aimed at Podolsk and further towards Moscow from the south. West of Serpukhov, the concentration of forces (Tarussian-Serpukhov group) was also determined, consisting of four to five divisions (one of them tank) for possible actions in the direction of Serpukhov.

In the center, in the Naro-Fominsk region, it was assumed that there would be weaker forces (about three infantry and one tank divisions), intended to serve as communications between the two active wings. The operational reserves were numbered in three or four divisions, with their location near Mozhaisk, Maloyaroslavets, east of Gzhatsk, near Kaluga. In total, according to available data, about 25–30 divisions and up to 350–400 aircraft were concentrated and based at forward airfields.

Subsequent data clarified and supplemented previously available information. A prisoner captured on November 12 in front of the 33rd Army front showed that preparations for the offensive were completed and the offensive could begin at night or in the morning of November 13; according to him, the regiment in which he was located would be pinned down, and other troops would bypass the defending units of the Red Army.

On November 14, the Military Council of the Western Front reported to Comrade Stalin about the situation on its left flank:

“Parts of the right flank of the 3rd Army of the Southwestern Front continue their non-stop retreat in a southeastern direction to Efremov. Every day the gap between the right flank of the 3rd Army of the Southwestern Front and the left flank of the 50th Army of the Western Front increases and by the end of 11/13 it reached 60 km.

The enemy, having failed to capture the city of Tula from the south, failed to break through to Tula from the north. - zap., having suffered heavy losses, taking advantage of the withdrawal of units of the 3rd Army of the South-Western Front, during 12 and 13.11 began to pull tank and infantry formations to the left flank of the 50th Army. The enemy continues to create with impunity a large grouping south of Dedilovo, Uzlovaya for an attack in the north. and sowing – east direction bypassing Tula from the east to the flank and rear of the 50th Army."

In mid-November, our intelligence agencies in the center came to the conclusion that the strongest German groups were located in the following areas: a) in the Volokolamsk, Dorokhovo area; b) at the junction of the Western and Southwestern fronts - in the Tula region (two tank corps - 24th and 47th). The activities of the German command should be regarded as preparation for an offensive against the wings of the Western Front, bypassing Moscow (on the right wing in the direction of Klin, Dmitrov, on the left - in the direction of Tula, Kolomna) in combination with a frontal attack from the Naro-Fominsk area.

The number of concentrated infantry divisions in total was close to the number of divisions with which the Germans went on the offensive on October 2, 1941 against the Western Front (twenty-six infantry divisions in the first line, two army reserve infantry divisions, about seven front reserve infantry divisions; about thirty in total five divisions). The number of tank formations (up to ten tank divisions, a total of 800–900 tanks) allowed the enemy to launch an operation with attacks from large mobile groups in the most important directions. The likelihood of such an enemy attack was indicated by the following:

a) the desire of the German command (turning into a template) to use its usual, favorite method in operations: operating in two flank strike groups (“wedges”), to surround the intended object (on the scale of the vast “Cannes”, with the goal of completely encircling the enemy’s main forces, to “pincers” that broke off, surrounded and destroyed one of the private groups or one of the parts of the enemy’s operational formation). In this case, the initial encirclement was usually carried out by mechanized troops (the so-called “tank encirclement”), and then the enemy sought to consolidate it with infantry divisions following behind them (“infantry encirclement”). In this case, such an option would allow the enemy to reach the flanks of our Moscow group, and subsequently encircle the capital and the main forces of the Western Front;

b) the difficulty of a frontal offensive for the Germans in this situation and their attempts to capture Moscow head-on;

c) local conditions; in particular, the ability to cover the left flank of the northern strike group of the Germans and the flanks of the southern group with water barriers (the Moscow Sea and the Volga Reservoir in the north and the Oka River in the south);

d) the transfers of enemy troops we noted at the end of October - beginning of November: from Kalinin to the Volokolamsk region from October 30 to November 2 and in the direction of Orel, Mtsensk, Tula from October 25 to November 8.

During the first half of November, the armies of the Western Front continued to conduct battles of predominantly local significance, in order to improve their position, repelling the enemy’s attempts to penetrate our location. More significant fighting took place on both flanks of the Western Front: in the Volokolamsk direction, as well as in the area southeast of Aleksin, from where the enemy tried to reach the rear of Tule from the north.

Our troops strengthened defensive lines, carried out private regroupings, and were also supplemented with personnel and equipment. New military formations also arrived - rifle, tank, cavalry, as a result of which our forces increased. Thus, on November 12, five cavalry divisions were included in the 16th Army, which covered the very important direction to Moscow.

On November 10, the 2nd Cavalry Corps of General Belov arrived in the Serpukhov direction, which, after unloading, concentrated in the area northeast of Lopasnya. The next day, the 112th Tank Division arrived in the Lopasny area.

The concentration of cavalry and tanks in the Klin-Volokolamsk and Serpukhov directions was carried out with the goal of breaking through on both wings to the enemy’s rear in order to disrupt his preparations for the offensive. A similar event at Headquarters already outlines an active defense on the Western Front, the results of which were reflected in the subsequent period.

On November 15, the front line of our troops ran in the general direction from the western coast of the Moscow Sea to the south, east of Volokolamsk, east of Dorokhov (in the Mozhaisk direction), then to Naro-Fominsk, west of Serpukhov, further along the Oka River to Aleksin, west of Tula and west of the station Nodal. The troops of the Western Front (consisting of the 16th, 5th, 33rd, 43rd, 49th and 50th armies) repulsed attacks by enemy infantry and tanks in the center of the 16th Army and continued fighting on the front of the 49th Army and the right flank of the 50th Army, eliminating German attempts to encircle Tula with actions from the north-west.

On the right flank of the Western Front, at the junction with the Kalinin Front south of the Moscow Sea, was the 16th Army, which grouped its main forces in the Volokolamsk direction. The 5th Army operated in the Mozhaisk direction; The Naro-Fominsk direction was covered by the 33rd Army. Further to the south was the front of the 43rd and 49th armies. The 50th Army, recently included in the Western Front, defended the Tula region.

The dividing line in the north, with the Kalinin Front: Verbilki, Reshetnikovo station, Knyazhi Gory, Sychevka (all inclusive for the Western Front); in the south, with the Southwestern Front: Spassk-Ryazansky, Mikhailov, Uzlovaya station, Krapivna, Belev, Dyatkovo (all inclusive for the Western Front). The total length of the front line (excluding small bends) on November 15 is about 330 km.

In total, on the Western Front there were (including the troops of the 30th Army): thirty-one rifle divisions, three motorized rifle divisions, nine cavalry divisions, fourteen tank brigades, two tank divisions, six aviation divisions. The combat and numerical strength of some formations was very small. In total, the troops of the Western Front on November 15 had (see table of the balance of forces) about 240,000 soldiers, 1,200 field guns, 500 tanks, 180–200 combat aircraft (80 fighters, 80 bombers, 20 attack aircraft).

Note Figures on the combat strength and balance of forces of the parties were derived by comparing and studying data from several sources.

The opposing enemy forces consisted of about twenty-four to twenty-six infantry divisions, four motorized divisions, eleven to thirteen tank divisions; only about forty divisions deployed in front of the Western Front (see table of balance of forces).

The combat strength of these troops was approximately 230,000 soldiers, about 1,800 field guns, 1,300 tanks, 600–800 aircraft. When comparing the balance of forces within the entire front, we obtain almost equality in infantry, German superiority in artillery, mortars, partly in aviation, and more than double superiority in tanks. Thus, the quantitative superiority in technology at the beginning of the second offensive was on the side of the Germans.

Along with the general balance of forces on the entire front, the balance of forces in the directions where decisive events are taking place is of great importance. As will be seen below, the Germans were able to concentrate their main mobile forces on both wings in accordance with the plan of the operation - since the initiative in the first half of November was on their side - and in the first period they achieved an even more significant superiority in forces and equipment in the attack sectors . This issue will be covered in detail when describing the progress of the operation.

The enemy’s operational-strategic position in the theater of operations and quantitative superiority in tanks gave the Germans the opportunity to strike Moscow with large mobile groups in the following directions:

a) Turginovo, Klin, Dmitrov (distance about 100 km) and further bypassing Moscow from the northeast;

b) Teryaeva Sloboda, then to Klin (or directly to Solnechnogorsk) and further to Moscow, directing the main attack along the Leningradskoye Highway (a distance of about 120 km);

c) Volokolamsk, Novo-Petrovskoye, Istra and further to Moscow (distance about 110 km);

e) Naro-Fominsk direction, using the Naro-Fominsk-Moscow highway as the axis (distance 70 km);

e) Maloyaroslavets direction, with branches to Podolsk or Krasnaya Pakhra and further to Moscow;

g) Serpukhov - for actions towards Moscow from the south (distance 90 km) or bypassing Moscow from the southeast;

h) the Tula direction, with private branches to Mikhailov, Zaraysk, Venev, Kashira, Serpukhov, and the enemy’s desire to bypass Tula from the southeast and encircle it was already indicated.

All these directions were responsible, each of them had its own significance in the defense system of the Western Front, as a result of which they had to be reliably covered in the context of the enemy’s upcoming offensive. The shortest routes to the capital passed through our center, but the mobile groups of Germans, according to available information, were concentrated against our wings.

The Supreme Command of the Red Army took measures to repel the impending enemy offensive.

The plan of the Supreme High Command of the Red Army provided for:

1) the creation of powerful strategic reserves in the interior of the country (a large number of reserve formations, the formation of reserve armies, etc.);

2) the construction of a number of fortified lines and areas on the distant and near approaches to Moscow, which were supposed to form a multi-line defense system for the capital;

3) conducting a persistent and active defense on the approaches to Moscow from the west, allocating the necessary forces for this, based on fortified positions;

4) concentration of operational-strategic reserves near Moscow and their location behind the flanks, outside the ring of a possible enemy tank encirclement;

5) exhausting the enemy with counterattacks and partial defeats on the approaches to Moscow in order to exhaust and stop him;

6) launching a decisive counter-offensive at a convenient moment with the aim of defeating the enemy.

The main task of the troops of the Western Front in this situation was to reliably ensure the approaches to the capital, exhaust and exhaust the enemy with active defense in the most important directions, inflict partial defeats on him, stop his advance, delay him until favorable conditions were created to launch a decisive counteroffensive.

In this situation, the Western Front under the command of Army General Comrade. Zhukov took on the blow of a huge mass of people and military equipment abandoned by the fascist German command on November 15–16 in the second general attack on Moscow.

As it became known later (after the start of the second German offensive), by the beginning of December the German command had concentrated and committed 30–33 infantry, 13 tank and 4–5 motorized infantry divisions in the offensive against the Western Front, for a total of 47–51 divisions. These forces were deployed as follows:

a) against our right flank in the Klin-Solnechnogorsk direction - the 3rd and 4th tank groups of generals Hoth and Gepner consisting of the 1st, 2nd, 5th, 6th, 7th, 10th and 11th tank divisions, 36th and 14th 1st Motorized Infantry Divisions, 23rd, 106th and 35th Infantry Divisions;

b) against the left flank, in the Tula-Kashira-Ryazan direction - the 2nd Armored Army of General Guderian consisting of the 3rd, 4th, 17th and 18th tank divisions, the 10th and 29th motorized infantry divisions, the 167th infantry division ;

c) against our center - the 9th, 7th, 20th, 12th, 13th and 43rd Army Corps, the 19th and 20th Tank Divisions of the enemy.

These troops were part of the 9th and 4th armies, the 2nd tank army, the 3rd and 4th tank groups and were united by the Central Army Group (commander - General Bock; army group headquarters - Vyazma), operating in Moscow strategic direction.

Hitler gave the order to capture Moscow in the near future at any cost. The fascist German leadership had the goal of, by breaking through and deep bypassing the flanks of our Western Front, to reach our rear, defeat the opposing Red Army troops, and encircle and occupy Moscow. To do this, the enemy sought: a) in the north to capture Klin, Solnechnogorsk, Rogachevo, Dmitrov, Yakhroma; b) occupy Tula, Kashira, Ryazan and Kolomna in the south; c) then attack Moscow from three sides - from the north, west and south - and capture it.

The German News Bureau reported in early December:

“The German command will consider Moscow as its main target even if Stalin tries to shift the center of gravity of military operations to another place.”

Thus, the operational plan of the German command was reduced to a concentric attack on Moscow with its mobile forces delivering the main attacks on the approaching wings (“wedges”); the infantry formations located in the center were supposed to conduct an auxiliary offensive.

The northern German wing was supposed to, having captured the area of ​​Klin, Solnechnogorsk, Dmitrov and advancing part of its forces towards Moscow, develop a strike bypassing the capital from the northeast and enter into contact with the troops of the southern wing east of Moscow. The main task of the southern German wing (the main core of which was the 2nd Tank Army) was to carry out a quick breakthrough through our front in the direction of Tula and further across the Oka River line between Ryazan and Serpukhov, to capture important industrial areas with the cities of Tula, Stalinogorsk, Kashira, and then encircle the capital from the southeast, closing a ring east of Moscow together with the northern group. The 24th Tank Corps, according to the original plan, was to break through Tula, to the crossings on the Oka River at Kashira and Serpukhov. The 47th Tank Corps, building up the attack of the 24th Tank Corps, was supposed to capture the Kolomna area and create bridgehead positions to ensure the crossing of troops across the Moscow River. The 2nd Tank Army was assigned two army corps (43rd and 53rd) to carry out this operation.

The German center had to first pin down the Red Army troops with the forces of its army corps on the shortest approaches to Moscow from the west, and then, with the development of the operation on the wings, striking through Zvenigorod and Naro-Fominsk, break through to the capital in order to fragment our front into isolated pieces and make further organized resistance of the Red Army near Moscow impossible.

This operational plan was no worse or better than other similar plans of the German command, the implementation of which in other cases was successful. In its design and construction, this plan, at first glance, seemed to correspond to the level of development of military art and modern technology. Large forces were assembled for the offensive; they occupied an advantageous starting position and were concentrically aimed at the capital of the Soviet country. With a direct movement in front of them, they were supposed to go to the flank and rear of the troops of the Western Front and encircle Moscow. It seemed to the fascist German leadership that there were all the prerequisites for delivering a final blow of enormous force, which, even before the onset of winter, was to decide the fate of Moscow, the entire campaign and even the war. It was the plan of an experienced and skilled predator, striving for quick captures.

However, the conditions in which the great battle of Moscow took place were already different, more favorable for the Red Army than at the beginning of the war. The results of the previous five-month struggle of the Red Army and the entire Soviet people under the wise leadership of Comrade Stalin against the fascist invaders began to show. In the new conditions of struggle that developed on the Western Front in November - December 1941, with a political and strategic situation favorable for the Red Army, this operational plan of the German command no longer corresponded to the situation. It turned out to be unviable, adventuristic and led the Nazi troops to defeat near Moscow.

The beginning of the German offensive.

The order of description of the Moscow operation

On November 16, the second general offensive of fascist German forces against Moscow began on the Western Front. The operations of the troops, which unfolded from the second half of November in a vast zone from the Moscow Sea to Tula, were united by a single operational plan and a common front-line command and represented one large and complex operation. At the same time, combat operations on the northern wing, in the center and on the southern wing, in the presence of unity and interconnection of operational events within the framework of a front-line operation, also had their own pattern and a certain independence of development. They are rich in instructive factual material and are valuable for the operational and tactical conclusions that can be drawn within the framework of an army or several armies solving a common problem (an army operation, an army group operation).

In order to correctly understand the characteristic features and specificity of actions in various operational directions in different periods of the struggle (without losing sight of the connection and interdependence of events), it is advisable to consider this grandiose epic in large successive stages of the operation (defensive battle near Moscow; counter-offensive of the Red Army in the Western front; further development of the offensive from the border of the Lama, Ruza, Nara, Oka rivers). Within each stage, first analyze the actions of the wings and the center separately, and then connect them according to each stage of the front-line operation and draw the necessary general conclusions and conclusions. The further description of events will be conducted in this order.

A number of major issues and activities of the Supreme High Command that cannot be placed within this framework (for example, the concentration of reserve armies, the role of the Moscow defense zone, the participation of the High Command aviation, etc.) will be highlighted and considered separately. The defensive battle near Moscow covers the period from November 15–16 to December 5, 1941.

From the book June 41st. Final diagnosis author Solonin Mark Semyonovich

Chapter 2.1 Composition, deployment, plans of the parties At dawn on June 22, 1941, the war began. The Red Army entered it without completing its strategic deployment, without even having time to begin open mobilization. For none of any significant European countries did the Second World War

From the book June 41st. Final diagnosis author Solonin Mark Semyonovich

Chapter 3.1 Composition, deployment, plans of the parties In previous chapters of the book, we examined the course of military operations in Western Ukraine, in the zone of the Southwestern Front. The most powerful group of troops in the entire Red Army was deployed there, and the enemy - two armies of the Army Group "South" -

From the book The Truth about the First World War author Liddell Hart Basil Henry

From the book Northern Wars of Russia author Shirokorad Alexander Borisovich

Chapter 3. State of the fleets and plans of the parties By the beginning of the war, the Swedish fleet had about 26 combat-ready ships, 14 frigates and several dozen small sailing ships. There were no fundamental changes in the Swedish naval fleet compared to the wars of 1700-1721 and 1741-1743. But

From the book The Myth of the Holocaust by Count Jurgen

A. Initial position If during the Second World War there really was a systematic extermination of millions of Jews, then in this case there should have been a special, branched organization, including thousands of employees. The operation of such

From the book The Myth of the Holocaust by Count Jurgen

A. Initial position Anyone who is concerned about the problem of the “Holocaust” can be strongly advised to visit Auschwitz. All sorts of absurdities will immediately catch his eye: behind the shop windows there are mountains of women’s hair that “belonged to those killed by the gas”; they are all basically

From the book Poltava. The story of the death of one army author Englund Peter

3. Initial position SWEDISH FORCES (A-F) A. 8,200 infantry soldiers (18 battalions), 4 artillery pieces B. 7,800 cavalry soldiers (109 squadrons) C. Wallachian regiment: 1,000 irregular cavalry cavalry (12 squadrons) D. Troops in siege fortifications: 1100 infantry soldiers (2.5 battalions), 200

author

Plans of the parties After the summer of 1805, the troops of future opponents began intensive movement towards the theater of military operations. Allies, in fact, the Austrian command (Hofkriksrat) and the Russian adjutant general F. F. Wintzingerode, back in Vienna on July 4, 1805, were preliminary

From the book Napoleonic Wars author Bezotosny Viktor Mikhailovich

Chapter 6 Military preparations and pre-war plans of the parties in 1812. Napoleon’s gigantic preparations From 1810 to 1812. the two empires carried out colossal preparatory work for the decisive clash. Both powers during this period carried out a huge complex of military,

From the book Turning Around Moscow author Reinhardt Klaus

Section II Resumption of the German offensive in the second half of November 1. Preparation of German troopsThe concept of the operation. After it was decided in Orsha to continue the offensive operation according to the plans developed by the command of Army Group Center and to postpone

author Liddell Hart Basil Henry

Chapter 2. Strengths and plans of the parties The peoples entered the struggle with conventional views and with the system of the 18th century, which only slightly underwent changes under the influence of the events of the 19th century. From a political point of view, they believed that there would be a competition between coalitions competing with each other,

From the book The Truth about the First World War author Liddell Hart Basil Henry

Plans of the Parties In our review, preference is fairly given to the German plan. This was done not only because he was the spring that set in motion the pendulum of the war of 1914, but also because the German plan (and this can be said with complete confidence) had its effect

From the book Russian-Japanese War 1904-1905. author Levitsky Nikolay Arsenievich

Chapter VII. Plans of the parties and deployment of armies Japanese war plan Scheme 3. Deployment of the parties The plan of the Japanese command was based on Russia's unpreparedness for war and the weakness of the available Russian forces in the Far East at the beginning of the war. According to the Japanese, Russia had

From the book The Genius of War by Kutuzov [“To save Russia, we must burn Moscow”] author Nersesov Yakov Nikolaevich

Chapter 9 Plans of the parties and alignment of forces It is believed that, while developing a plan for a general battle, during a thorough reconnaissance, Napoleon hesitated between two options for conducting military operations: a deep envelopment and a frontal frontal attack. Great Master

From the book History of Slovakia author Avenarius Alexander

4.1. The starting position of the bearers of ethnic consciousness 4.1.1. The problem of literary language In the consciousness of an educated, especially a thinking person - a representative of the Slovak ethnic group in the period under review, several levels of his existence were reflected. To belong to

From the book All battles of the Russian army 1804?1814. Russia vs Napoleon author Bezotosny Viktor Mikhailovich

Chapter 6 Military preparations and pre-war plans of the parties in 1812. Napoleon’s gigantic preparations From 1810 to 1812, the two empires carried out colossal preparatory work for the decisive clash. Both powers during this period carried out a huge complex of military,


PLAN" BARBAROSSA ". In the evening December 18, 1940. Hitler signed a directive on the deployment of military operations against the USSR, which received the serial number 21 and the code name option " Barbarossa"(Fall" Barbarossa"). It was made in only nine copies, three of which were presented to the commanders-in-chief of the armed forces (ground forces, air force and navy), and six were locked in OKW safes.

It outlined only the general plan and initial instructions for waging war against the USSR and did not represent a complete war plan. The war plan against the USSR is a whole complex of political, economic and strategic measures of the Hitlerite leadership. In addition to Directive N21, the plan included directives and orders of the Supreme High Command and the main commands of the armed forces on strategic concentration and deployment, logistics, preparation of the theater of operations, camouflage, disinformation and other documents. Among these documents, the directive on the strategic concentration and deployment of ground forces was especially important. dated January 31, 1941. It specified and clarified the tasks and methods of action of the armed forces set out in Directive N21.
"Plan" Barbarossa"provided for the defeat of the Soviet Union during one short-term campaign even before the war against England was over. Leningrad, Moscow, the Central Industrial Region and the Donetsk Basin were recognized as the main strategic objects. A special place in the plan was given to Moscow. It was assumed that its capture would be decisive for the victorious outcome of the entire war. " The ultimate goal of the operation, - stated in Directive N21, - is the creation of a protective barrier against Asian Russia along the common Volga-Arkhangelsk line. Thus, if necessary, the last industrial area remaining with the Russians in the Urals can be paralyzed with the help of aviation". To defeat the Soviet Union, it was planned to use all German ground forces, excluding only the formations and units necessary to conduct occupation service in the enslaved countries. The German Air Force was tasked with "freeing up such forces to support the ground forces during the eastern campaign, so that one could count on rapid completion of ground operations and at the same time limit to a minimum the destruction of the eastern regions of Germany by enemy aircraft." For combat operations at sea against the three Soviet fleets of the Northern, Baltic and Black Sea, it was planned to allocate a significant part of the warships of the German Navy and the navies of Finland and Romania "According to plan" Barbarossa"152 divisions (including 19 tank and 14 motorized) and two brigades were allocated for the attack on the USSR. Germany's allies fielded 29 infantry divisions and 16 brigades. Thus, if we take two brigades as one division, a total of 190 divisions were allocated. In addition, ", two-thirds of Germany's air force and significant naval forces were involved in the war against the USSR. The ground forces intended to attack the Soviet Union were consolidated into three army groups: " South" - 11th, 17th and 6th field armies and 1st tank group; " Center" - 4th and 9th field armies, 2nd and 3rd tank groups; " North" - 16th and 18th and 4th Panzer Group. The 2nd Separate Field Army remained in the OKH reserve, army" Norway"received the task of acting independently in the Murmansk and Kandalash directions.
"Plan" Barbarossa"contained a somewhat refined assessment of the USSR Armed Forces. According to German data, at the beginning of the German invasion (on June 20, 1941), the Soviet Armed Forces had 170 rifle, 33.5 cavalry divisions and 46 mechanized and tank brigades. Of these, as stated by the fascist command, 118 rifle, 20 cavalry divisions and 40 brigades were stationed in the western border districts, 27 rifle, 5.5 cavalry divisions and 1 brigade in the rest of the European part of the USSR, and 33 divisions and 5 brigades in the Far East. It was assumed that Soviet aviation consisted of 8 thousand combat aircraft (including about 1,100 modern ones), of which 6 thousand were in the European part of the USSR. Hitler's command assumed that Soviet troops deployed in the west would use field fortifications on the new and old state borders, as well as numerous water barriers, for defense, and would enter the battle in large formations west of the Dnieper and Western Dvina rivers. At the same time, the Soviet command will strive to maintain air and naval bases in the Baltic states, and rely on the Black Sea coast with the southern wing of the front. " In case of unfavorable development of operations south and north of the Pripyat swamps, - noted in the plan " Barbarossa ", - the Russians will try to stop the German offensive on the line of the Dnieper, Western Dvina rivers. When trying to eliminate German breakthroughs, as well as in possible attempts to withdraw threatened troops beyond the Dnieper, Western Dvina line, one should take into account the possibility of offensive actions from large Russian formations with using tanks".






According to Mr. Barbarossa"large tank and motorized forces, using aviation support, were supposed to deliver a swift strike to great depths north and south of the Pripyat marshes, break through the defenses of the main forces of the Soviet Army, presumably concentrated in the western part of the USSR, and destroy disparate groups of Soviet troops. North of the Pripyat marshes it was planned the offensive of two army groups: " Center F. Bock) And " North"(Commander Field Marshal V. Leeb) . Army Group" Center"delivered the main blow and was supposed to, concentrating the main efforts on the flanks where the 2nd and 3rd tank groups were deployed, carry out a deep breakthrough with these formations north and south of Minsk, reach the Smolensk area planned for connecting the tank groups. It was assumed that with the entry of tank formations into the Smolensk region, the preconditions will be created for the destruction by field armies of the Soviet troops remaining between Bialystok and Minsk. Subsequently, when the main forces reach the line of Roslavl, Smolensk, Vitebsk, the army group " Center"had to act depending on the situation developing on its left wing. If the neighbor on the left fails to quickly defeat the troops defending in front of it, the army group was supposed to turn its tank formations to the north, and conduct an offensive eastward towards Moscow with field armies. If the group armies" North"will be able to defeat the Soviet Army in its offensive zone, army group" Center"It was necessary to immediately strike Moscow. Army Group" North"received the task, advancing from East Prussia, to deliver the main blow in the direction of Daugavpils, Leningrad, to destroy the troops of the Soviet Army defending in the Baltic States and, by capturing ports on the Baltic Sea, including Leningrad and Kronstadt, to deprive the Soviet Baltic Fleet of its bases. If this group of armies It would not be possible to defeat the group of Soviet troops in the Baltic states; the mobile troops of the army group should have come to its aid." Center", the Finnish army and the formations transferred from Norway. The army group thus strengthened" North"it was necessary to achieve the destruction of the Soviet troops opposing it. According to the plan of the German command, the operation was a reinforced army group" North"provided for the army group" Center"freedom of maneuver to capture Moscow and solve operational-strategic tasks in cooperation with the army group" South".
South of the Pripyat marshes army group offensive was planned" South"(Commander Field Marshal G. Rundstedt ) . It delivered one strong blow from the Lublin area in the general direction of Kyiv and further south along the Dnieper bend. As a result of the strike, in which powerful tank formations were to play the main role, it was supposed to cut off the Soviet troops located in Western Ukraine from their communications on the Dnieper, and seize crossings across the Dnieper in the Kyiv area and south of it. In this way, it provided freedom of maneuver to develop an offensive in the eastern direction in cooperation with troops advancing to the north, or to advance to the south of the Soviet Union in order to capture important economic regions. Troops of the right wing of the Army Group" South"(The 11th Army) was supposed to, by creating a false impression of the deployment of large forces on the territory of Romania, pin down the opposing troops of the Soviet Army, and later, as the offensive on the Soviet-German front developed, prevent the organized withdrawal of Soviet formations beyond the Dniester.
In respect of " Barbarossa"it was planned to use the principles of combat operations that had proven themselves in the Polish and Western European campaigns. However, it was emphasized that Unlike actions in the West, the offensive against Soviet troops must be carried out simultaneously along the entire front: both in the direction of the main attacks and in secondary sectors. "Only this way, - said the directive of January 31, 1941, - it will be possible to prevent the timely withdrawal of combat-ready enemy forces and destroy them west of the Dnieper-Dvina line".






"Plan" Barbarossa"took into account the possibility of active counteraction by Soviet aviation to the offensive of German ground forces. The German Air Force was tasked with suppressing the Soviet Air Force from the very beginning of hostilities and supporting the offensive of ground forces in the directions of the main attacks. To solve these problems in the first stage of the war, it was envisaged to use almost all German aviation allocated for actions against the Soviet Union. Attacks on the rear industrial centers of the USSR were planned to begin only after the troops of the Soviet Army were defeated in Belarus, the Baltic states and Ukraine. Army group offensive" Center"it was planned to support the 2nd Air Fleet," South" - 4th Air Fleet, " North" - 1st Air Fleet.
The Navy of Nazi Germany had to defend its coast and prevent the ships of the Soviet Navy from breaking through from the Baltic Sea. At the same time, it was envisaged to avoid major naval operations until the ground forces captured Leningrad as the last naval base of the Soviet Baltic Fleet. Subsequently, the naval forces of Nazi Germany were tasked with ensuring freedom of navigation in the Baltic Sea and supplying the troops of the northern wing of the ground forces. The attack on the USSR was planned to be carried out on May 15, 1941.
Thus, according to plan" Barbarossa"nearest The strategic goal of the Nazis in the war against the USSR was the defeat of the Soviet Army in the Baltic states, Belarus and Right Bank Ukraine. The subsequent goal was to capture Leningrad in the north, the Central Industrial Region and the capital of the Soviet Union in the center, and to capture all of Ukraine and the Donetsk basin as quickly as possible in the south. The ultimate goal of the eastern campaign was the entry of fascist German troops to the Volga and Northern Dvina.
February 3, 1941. at a meeting in Berchtesgaden Hitler in the presence Keitel and Jodl heard a detailed report Brauchitsch and Haider about the plan for war against the USSR. The Fuhrer approved the report and assured the generals that the plan would be successfully implemented: " When Plan Barbarossa begins, the world will hold its breath and freeze". The armed forces of Romania, Hungary and Finland, allies of Nazi Germany, were supposed to receive specific tasks immediately before the start of the war. The use of Romanian troops was determined by the plan " Munich", developed by the command of German troops in Romania. In mid-June, this plan was brought to the attention of the Romanian leadership. June 20, Romanian dictator Antonescu Based on it, he issued an order to the Romanian armed forces, which outlined the tasks of the Romanian troops. Before the outbreak of hostilities, Romanian ground forces were supposed to cover the concentration and deployment of German troops in Romania, and with the outbreak of war, pin down the group of Soviet troops located on the border with Romania. With the withdrawal of Soviet troops from the Prut River line, which was believed to follow the advance of the German Army Group" South", the Romanian troops had to move on to vigorous pursuit of units of the Soviet Army. If the Soviet troops managed to hold their positions along the Prut River, the Romanian formations had to break through the Soviet defense in the Tsutsora, New Bedraz sector. Tasks for the Finnish and German troops deployed in Northern and Central Finland have been identified OKW directive of April 7, 1941. and announced by the operational directives of the Finnish General Staff, as well as by the directive of the army commander " Norway"dated April 20. The OKW directive stipulated that the Finnish armed forces, before the offensive of Hitler's troops, were to cover the deployment of German formations in Finland, and with the Wehrmacht going on the offensive, pin down the Soviet groups in the Karelian and Petrozavodsk directions. With the release of the army group" North"on the line of the Luga River, Finnish troops were to launch a decisive offensive on the Karelian Isthmus, as well as between Lakes Onega and Ladoga, in order to connect with the German armies on the Svir River and in the Leningrad region. German troops deployed in Finland, according to the directive of the army commander "Norway" was given the task of attacking in two groups (each consisting of a reinforced corps): one on Murmansk, the other on Kandalaksha. The southern group, having broken through the defenses, was supposed to reach the White Sea in the Kandalaksha region, then advance along the Murmansk railway to the north, in order to, in cooperation with the northern group, destroy the Soviet troops located on the Kola Peninsula and capture Murmansk and Polyarnoye.Aviation support for the Finnish and German troops advancing from Finland was entrusted to the 5th Air Fleet of Germany and the Finnish Air Force.
At the end of April, the political and military leadership of Nazi Germany finally set the date of the attack on the USSR: Sunday, June 22, 1941. The postponement from May to June was caused by the need to redeploy forces that participated in the aggression against Yugoslavia and Greece to the borders of the USSR.
Preparing the war against the USSR, Hitler's leadership outlined major measures to restructure its armed forces. They concerned primarily the ground forces. It was planned to increase the number of divisions of the active army to 180 and increase the reserve army. By the beginning of the war against the USSR, the Wehrmacht, including the reserve army and SS troops, should have had about 250 fully equipped divisions. Particular attention was paid to strengthening mobile troops. It was planned to deploy 20 tank divisions instead of the existing 10 and increase the level of infantry motorization. For this purpose, it was planned to allocate an additional 130 thousand tons of steel for the production of military trucks, all-terrain vehicles and armored vehicles at the expense of the fleet and aviation. Big changes were planned in the production of weapons. According to the planned program, the most important task was the production of the latest models of tanks and anti-tank artillery. It was also planned to significantly increase the production of aircraft of those designs that had withstood testing during battles in the West. Great importance was attached to the preparation of the theater of military operations. In the directive of August 9, 1940, which received the code name " Aufbau Ost" ("Construction in the East"), it was planned to transfer supply bases from west to east, build new railways and highways, training grounds, barracks, etc. in the eastern regions, expand and improve airfields, and communication networks.
In preparations for aggression against the USSR, the Nazi leadership assigned the most important place to ensuring the surprise of the attack and the secrecy of every preparatory measure, whether it concerned economic restructuring, strategic planning, preparing a theater of military operations or the deployment of armed forces, etc. All documents related to planning the war in the East were prepared with the utmost secrecy. An extremely narrow circle of people was allowed to develop them. The concentration and rapid deployment of troops was planned to be carried out in compliance with all camouflage measures. However, Hitler's leadership understood that it was impossible to completely hide the concentration and deployment of a multi-million army with a huge amount of military equipment near the Soviet borders. Therefore, it resorted to a broadly conceived political and operational-strategic camouflage of the impending aggression, recognizing the number one task was to mislead the government of the Soviet Union and the command of the Soviet Army about the plan, scale and time of the outbreak of aggression.


Both the operational-strategic leadership and the Abwehr (intelligence and counterintelligence) took part in the development of measures to disguise the concentration of Wehrmacht troops in the east. The Abwehr drafted a directive signed on September 6, 1940 by Jodl, which specifically outlined the goals and objectives of disinformation. Directive N21 - option also contained instructions on the secrecy of preparations for aggression Barbarossa"But perhaps the treacherous tactics of the Nazis are most fully revealed by the directive on disinformation of the enemy, issued by the OKW on February 15, 1941." The purpose of disinformation is, - stated in the directive, -h to hide preparations for Operation Barbarossa". This main goal should form the basis of all measures to disinformation the enemy."The camouflage measures were planned to be carried out in two stages. First stage- approximately until mid-April 1941 - included the camouflage of general military preparations not related to the massive regrouping of troops. Second- from April to June 1941 - camouflage the concentration and operational deployment of troops near the borders of the USSR. At the first stage, it was envisaged to create a false impression regarding the true intentions of the German command, using various kinds of preparations for the invasion of England, as well as for the operation " Marita" (vs. Greece) and " Sonnenblum"(in North Africa). The initial deployment of troops to attack the USSR was planned to be carried out under the guise of normal army movements. At the same time, the tasks were set to create the impression that the center of concentration of armed forces was in the south of Poland, Czechoslovakia and Austria and that the concentration of troops in the north relatively small. At the second stage, when, as noted in the directive, it would no longer be possible to hide preparations for an attack on the Soviet Union, the concentration and deployment of forces for the eastern campaign was planned to be presented in the form of false events, allegedly carried out with the aim of diverting attention from the planned invasion of England The Nazi command presented this diversionary maneuver as “the greatest in the history of war.” At the same time, work was carried out aimed at preserving the impression among the personnel of the German armed forces that preparations for the landing in England were continuing, but in a different form - allocated for this purpose troops are withdrawn to the rear until a certain point. " Necessary, - the directive said, - to keep as long as possible even those troops destined for action directly in the east in confusion regarding actual plans". Importance was attached, in particular, to the dissemination of disinformation information about non-existent airborne corps, supposedly intended for the invasion of England. The upcoming landing on the British Isles was to be evidenced by such facts as the secondment of English translators to military units, the release of new English topographical maps maps, reference books, etc. Among the officers of the army group " South" Rumors were spreading that German troops would allegedly be transferred to Iran to wage a war to capture the British colonies. The OKW Directive on disinformation of the enemy indicated that the more forces were concentrated in the east, the more efforts must be made to keep public opinion misleading about German plans.In the instructions of the OKW Chief of Staff of March 9, it was recommended to present the deployment of the Wehrmacht in the east and as defensive measures to ensure the rear of Germany during the landing in England and operations in the Balkans.


Hitler's leadership was so confident in the successful implementation of the plan " Barbarossa", which, around the spring of 1941, began the detailed development of further plans for conquest of world domination. In the official diary of the Supreme Command of the Nazi Armed Forces for February 17, 1941, Hitler’s demand was stated that "after the end of the eastern campaign, it is necessary to provide for the capture of Afghanistan and the organization of an attack on India"Based on these instructions, the OKW headquarters began planning Wehrmacht operations for the future. These operations were planned to be carried out in the late autumn of 1941 and the winter of 1941/42. Their plan was outlined in the project Directive N32 "Preparing for the Post-Barbarossa Period", sent to the Army, Air Force and Navy on June 11, 1941. The project provided that after the defeat of the Soviet Armed Forces, the Wehrmacht would seize British colonial possessions and some independent countries in the Mediterranean basin, Africa, the Near and Middle East, the invasion of the British Isles, the deployment of military operations against America. G Hitler's strategists expected to begin the conquest of Iran, Iraq, Egypt, the Suez Canal area, and then India, where they planned to unite with Japanese troops, already in the fall of 1941. The fascist German leadership hoped, by annexing Spain and Portugal to Germany, to quickly accept the siege of the islands. The development of Directive N32 and other documents indicates that after the defeat of the USSR and the decision " English problem"The Nazis intended an alliance with Japan" eliminate Anglo-Saxon influence in North America". Capture of Canada and the United States of America it was supposed to be carried out by landing large amphibious assault forces from bases in Greenland, Iceland, the Azores and Brazil - on the east coast of North America and from the Aleutian and Hawaiian Islands - on the west. In April-June 1941, these issues were repeatedly discussed at the highest headquarters of the German armed forces. Thus, the fascist German leadership, even before the aggression against the USSR, outlined far-reaching plans for conquest of world domination. The key positions for their implementation, as it seemed to the Nazi command, were provided by the campaign against the USSR.
In contrast to the preparation of campaigns against Poland, France and the Balkan states, the war against the USSR was prepared by the Hitlerite command with special care and over a longer period of time. Aggression against the USSR according to plan" Barbarossa"was planned as a short-lived campaign, the ultimate goal of which - the defeat of the Soviet Armed Forces and the destruction of the Soviet Union - was supposed to be achieved in the fall of 1941 .
The military operations were supposed to be conducted in the form of a blitzkrieg. At the same time, the offensive of the main strategic groupings was presented in the form of a continuous offensive at a rapid pace. Short pauses were allowed only to regroup troops and bring up lagging rear forces. The possibility of stopping the offensive due to resistance from the Soviet Army was excluded. Excessive confidence in the infallibility of one's plans and plans." hypnotized"fascist generals. Hitler's machine was gaining momentum to win victory, which seemed so easy and close to the leaders of the "Third Reich".

Due to the critical situation on the outskirts of the capital, on October 20 Moscow was declared in a state of siege. The defense of the lines 100-120 kilometers away was entrusted to the commander of the Western Front, Georgy Konstantinovich Zhukov, and at its closest approaches - to the head of the Moscow garrison P.A. Artemyev.

Due to the critical situation on the outskirts of the capital, on October 20 Moscow was declared in a state of siege. The defense of the lines 100-120 kilometers away was entrusted to the commander of the Western Front, Georgy Konstantinovich Zhukov, and at its closest approaches - to the head of the Moscow garrison P.A. Artemyev. The need to strengthen the rear and to intensify the fight against the subversive actions of enemy agents was pointed out.

The population of Moscow was actively involved in the construction of defensive structures around the capital and inside the city. In the shortest possible time, the city was surrounded by anti-tank ditches, hedgehogs, and forest rubble. Anti-tank guns were installed in tank-dangerous areas. From Muscovites, militia divisions, tank destroyer battalions, and combat squads were formed, which, together with regular army units, participated in battles and in maintaining order in the city.

Enemy air raids on Moscow were successfully repelled. By the beginning of the Battle of Moscow, the capital's air defense had a coherent system based on the principle of all-round defense, taking into account the most dangerous directions - the western and southwestern, as well as on the maximum use of the combat capabilities of fighter aircraft and anti-aircraft weapons, which closely interacted with each other.

Fighter aircraft fought against enemy air at distant approaches. Its airfields were located within a radius of 150-200 kilometers from Moscow, but as the Germans approached the capital, they relocated closer and closer. During the daytime, fighters operated throughout the entire depth of the defense, and at night, within the light searchlight fields.

On the immediate approaches to Moscow, German planes were fired upon and destroyed by predominantly medium-caliber anti-aircraft artillery. Its fire was controlled in sectors, each of which housed one anti-aircraft artillery regiment. The regiments formed battle formations in three lines, which had considerable depth. Units and subunits of small-caliber anti-aircraft artillery and anti-aircraft machine guns were used to provide air cover for important objects inside the city (the Kremlin, train stations, power plants).

Retreating, the German bombers dropped their deadly cargo anywhere.

In October, the enemy carried out 31 raids on Moscow, involving 2018 aircraft, of which 278 were shot down. Moscow air defense troops fought an intense battle with the air enemy and defended the capital from destruction.

The control of Moscow air defense forces and means was carried out centrally from the command post of the 1st Air Defense Corps. The commander of the Moscow air defense zone was General M. S. Gromadin.

In October, fascist aviation carried out 31 raids on Moscow. About 2 thousand aircraft took part in them, but only 72 were able to break through to the bombing targets 1. While repelling the raids in air battles and anti-aircraft artillery fire, 278 German aircraft 2 were shot down.

In the second half of October, it was possible to delay the advance of fascist German troops in the Bryansk Front. This allowed the 3rd and 13th armies, which had been engaged in heavy fighting behind enemy lines for almost three weeks, to break out of encirclement on October 23 and, by order of Headquarters, retreat to a line east of Dubna, Plavsk, Verkhovye, Livny.

The actions of the front troops pinned down the 2nd Tank Army in the Tula direction. She was able to resume attacks only at the end of October, when the offensive of the 4th Army of Army Group Center had already stalled. The enemy's tank divisions advanced from Mtsensk to Tula by October 29, but were stopped here. “The attempt to capture the city on the move,” Guderian wrote after the war, “ran up against strong anti-tank and air defense and ended in failure, and we suffered significant losses in tanks and officers.” For three days, the Nazis furiously attacked Tula, but the troops of the 50th Army and the Tula combat sector, together with the militia, defended themselves selflessly. Communists and Komsomol members of the city and region joined the ranks of the defenders. Their courage was amazing. The Tula people turned their city into an impregnable fortress and did not surrender it to the enemy. A major role in organizing the struggle for Tula was played by the city defense committee, headed by the first secretary of the regional party committee V.G. Zhavoronkov, who in those days was a member of the Military Council of the 50th Army.

The defense of Tula ensured the stability of the left wing of the Western Front on the far southern approaches to the capital. It also contributed to stabilizing the situation on the Bryansk Front.

Thus, the October offensive of fascist German troops on Moscow failed. The enemy was forced to go on the defensive on the line Selizharovo, Kalinin, Tula, Novosil.

The most important condition for thwarting the enemy's intentions was the creation of reserves in a short time, most of which were brought into battle in the Western Front at the turn of the Mozhaisk defense line.

Along with the ground forces, the Soviet Air Force played a huge role in repelling the fierce onslaught of the Nazis. In the first nine days of the enemy offensive on Moscow alone, Western Front aviation, the 6th Air Defense Aviation Corps and DVA units carried out 3,500 sorties, destroying a significant number of enemy aircraft, tanks and manpower. In total, from September 30 to October 31, the Air Force carried out 26 thousand sorties, of which up to 80 percent were to support and cover troops.

The enemy also experienced the force of powerful attacks from Soviet tanks and artillery. Tank brigades blocked the path of fascist troops in particularly dangerous directions.

To disrupt the enemy's offensive, anti-tank areas and strongholds, as well as various engineering obstacles, were set up.

Soldiers of all branches of the military in the battles on the outskirts of Moscow showed examples of fulfilling military duty and the irresistible strength of moral spirit, and showed mass heroism. In these battles, units of the rifle divisions distinguished themselves: the 316th under General I.V. Panfilov, the 78th under Colonel A.P. Beloborodov, the 32nd under Colonel V.I. Polosukhin, the 50th under General N.F. Lebedenko, the 53rd 1st Colonel A.F. Naumov, 239th Colonel G.O. Martirosyan, as well as the 1st Guards Motorized Rifle Division Colonel A.I. Lizyukov, the cavalry group of General L.M. Dovator, tank brigades led by M.E. Katukov, P. A. Rotmistrov, I. F. Kirichenko, M. T. Sakhno, and many other compounds.

The results of the October offensive did not please the Nazis. The main goals of Operation Typhoon - the destruction of the Soviet Army and the capture of Moscow - were not achieved. The outcome of the bloody battles was unexpected not only for the soldiers, but also for the Wehrmacht generals.

The stubborn resistance of the Soviet troops was the main reason for the hesitation that appeared among the Wehrmacht command, the divergence of opinions in determining the ways of further waging the war against the Soviet Union. At the beginning of November, Franz Halder, at that time the chief of the German General Staff, wrote in his diary: “We must, by analyzing the current situation, accurately determine our capabilities for conducting subsequent operations. There are two extreme points of view on this issue: some consider it necessary to gain a foothold on the achieved positions, others demand to actively continue the offensive.”

But in fact, the Nazis had no choice. Winter was approaching, and the goals of Plan Barbarossa remained unfulfilled. The enemy was in a hurry, trying at all costs to capture the capital of the Soviet Union before the onset of winter.

The plan of the fascist German command to continue the offensive in November contained the same idea as in October: with two mobile groups, simultaneously deliver crushing blows to the flanks of the Western Front and, quickly bypassing Moscow from the north and south, close the encirclement ring east of the capital.

In the first half of November, the fascist German command regrouped its troops: from near Kalinin it transferred the 3rd Tank Group to the Volokolamsk-Klin direction, and replenished the 2nd Tank Army with more than a hundred tanks, concentrating its main forces on the right flank to bypass Tula .

Army Group Center by November 15, 1941 included three field armies, one tank army and two tank groups, numbering 73 divisions (47 infantry, 1 cavalry, 14 tank, 8 motorized, 3 security) and 4 brigades.

The task of enveloping Moscow from the north (Operation Volga Reservoir) was assigned to the 3rd and 4th German tank groups consisting of seven tank, three motorized and four infantry divisions, and from the south to the 2nd Panzer Army consisting of four tank, three motorized and five infantry divisions. The 4th Army was to conduct a frontal offensive, pin down the main forces of the Western Front, and then destroy them west of Moscow. The 9th and 2nd armies, shackled by the troops of the Kalinin and Southwestern fronts, were actually deprived of the opportunity to take part in the November offensive. In total, the fascist German command allocated 51 divisions, including 13 tank and 7 motorized, directly for the capture of Moscow.

Assessing the current situation, the Soviet command clearly understood that the relative weakening of tension on the front near Moscow was temporary, that although the enemy had suffered serious losses, it had not yet lost its offensive capabilities, retained the initiative and superiority in forces and means, and would persistently strive to capture Moscow. Therefore, all measures were taken to repel the expected attack. At the same time, new armies were formed and deployed at the line of Vytegra, Rybinsk, Gorky, Saratov, Stalingrad, Astrakhan as strategic reserves.

The headquarters, having determined the enemy’s intentions and capabilities, decided

strengthen the most dangerous areas first. She demanded

from the Western Front, in cooperation with the troops of the Kalinin and right wing of the Southwestern Front, to prevent a bypass of Moscow from the north

west and south. His armies were reinforced with anti-tank artillery and

guards mortar units. In Volokolamsk and Serpukhov

in these directions the reserves of the Headquarters were concentrated; The 16th Army was re-

three cavalry divisions were given; the 2nd Cavalry Corps (two divisions) arrived in the Podolsk, Mikhnevo area from the Southwestern Front, part

which additionally included rifle and tank divisions. For the first

half of November the Western Front received a total of 100 thousand.

Kalinin Front - 30th Army.

The German shock groups were opposed by the 30th, 16th and partly the 5th armies on the right and the 50th and 49th armies on the left wing of the Western Front.

The command of the Western Front, having strengthened the troops operating north-west and south-west of Moscow, organized counterattacks in the 16th Army zone towards Volokolamsk and in the Skirmanovo area, as well as in the 49th Army zone - in the Serpukhov direction. According to the fascist command, the counterattack in the 49th Army zone did not allow the 4th German Army to go on the offensive here in the second half of November 3.

In total, the troops of the Western Front (including the 30th Army) by mid-November included 35 rifle, 3 motorized rifle, 3 tank, 12 cavalry divisions, 14 tank brigades. As before, the Soviet divisions were significantly inferior in number to the German ones. Despite the strengthening of the troops of the Western Front, the fascist German armies in November continued to maintain an overall numerical superiority in men and military equipment near Moscow, especially in the directions of the main attacks. So, in the Klin direction, against 56 tanks and 210 guns and mortars that the 30th Army had, the enemy had up to 300 tanks and 910 guns and mortars.

By concentrating about 1,000 aircraft near Moscow (although many of them were of outdated types), the Soviet command created a quantitative superiority over the enemy in aviation. To gain air supremacy, the Headquarters ordered the commander of the Air Force of the Soviet Army to carry out an operation to destroy German aviation at airfields from November 5 to 8. The air forces of the Kalinin, Western, Bryansk fronts, the 81st division of the DBA and the aviation of the Moscow defense zone were involved in it. 28 enemy airfields were hit, and on November 12 and 15, 19 more, where 88 aircraft were destroyed.

Much attention was paid to the engineering equipment of the area. The troops improved their positions and created operational barrier zones. Intensive construction of defensive lines continued. On the outer border of the Moscow zone alone, by November 25, 1,428 bunkers, 165 km of anti-tank ditches, 110 km of three-row wire fences and other obstacles had been built.

The air defense of the capital continued to be strengthened and improved. According to the decision of the State Defense Committee of November 9, 1941, the country's air defense zones were removed from the subordination of military councils of districts and fronts and were subordinate to the Deputy People's Commissar of Defense for Air Defense, who actually became the commander of the country's Air Defense Forces as an independent branch of the USSR Armed Forces. At the same time, all air defense zones in the European part of the Soviet Union were transformed into divisional and corps air defense areas. The Moscow air defense zone became the Moscow corps air defense region.

In those difficult days, the Soviet people celebrated the 24th anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution. The ceremonial meeting of the Moscow Council of Workers' Deputies on November 6, the parade of troops on Red Square on November 7 and the speeches of the Chairman of the State Defense Committee I.V. Stalin played an important role in strengthening the confidence of the people and the army that the enemy near Moscow would be stopped, that here, at walls of the capital, the defeat of the Nazi invaders will begin.

Addressing the soldiers leaving Red Square for the front, J.V. Stalin said on behalf of the party and the people: “The whole world is looking at you as a force capable of destroying the predatory hordes of German invaders. The enslaved peoples of Europe, who fell under the yoke of the German invaders, look at you as their liberators.”

After a two-week pause, Army Group Center resumed its attack on the Soviet capital. On the morning of November 15, powerful artillery and aviation preparation began, and then the 3rd Tank Group dealt a strong blow to the 30th Army of General D. D. Lelyushenko. Part of the troops of this army, located north of the Volga Reservoir, by order of the command on November 16, retreated to the northeastern bank of the Volga.

The formations defending south of the reservoir offered stubborn resistance to the enemy. Only in the second half of November 16 was the enemy able to cross the Lama River, losing up to 60 tanks and armored vehicles. By the end of November 17, he managed to reach the Novozavidovsky area. The situation at the junction of the Kalinin and Western fronts became extremely complicated. To eliminate the threat of an enemy breakthrough to Klin, the front command reinforced the 30th Army with two divisions and organized several air strikes in its zone against the advancing enemy troops.

On November 16, in the Volokolamsk direction, the 4th German Tank Group (at least 400 tanks) with massive air support went on the offensive against the 16th Army. Its main blow fell at the junction of the 316th Infantry Division of General I.V. Panfilov and the group of troops of General L.M. Dovator. In decisive battles with the fascists, Panfilov’s heroes immortalized their names. In the area of ​​the Dubosekovo crossing, 28 Panfilov men, having destroyed 18 tanks and dozens of fascists in four hours of unequal battle, did not let the enemy through.

And on the same day, part of the forces of the 16th Army, with the support of aviation, launched a powerful counterattack on the enemy. The defenders of Moscow also fought steadfastly on other sectors of the front. In the Istra direction, the 78th Infantry Division defended itself especially stubbornly.

Events at the front in the period from November 16 to 21 showed that the main forces of the 3rd and 4th Panzer Groups, which had the task of making quick operational breakthroughs and a rapid bypass of Moscow, found themselves drawn into protracted battles. The pace of the enemy offensive continuously decreased and did not exceed 3-5 km per day even among mobile troops. The Nazis had to overcome strong defenses, while repelling counterattacks from rifle, tank and cavalry formations. The enemy's attempts to encircle any division were, as a rule, unsuccessful. To capture each subsequent line, he was forced to organize the offensive anew.

Kalinsky actively helped the Western Front, whose troops firmly pinned down the 9th German field army, not allowing it to transfer a single division to the Moscow direction.

On November 19, the command of Army Group Center, having strengthened the 3rd Tank Group with tank and motorized divisions, demanded that it capture Klin and Solnechnogorsk as soon as possible. To avoid encirclement, Soviet troops abandoned these cities on November 23 after stubborn street fighting.

The enemy's pressure did not weaken in other sectors of the defense either. Particularly stubborn battles were fought by the troops of the 16th and partly the 5th armies at the turn of the Istra River. Soviet divisions held back the fierce attacks of the Nazis here for three days and inflicted great damage on them. However, on November 27, the 16th Army had to leave the city of Istra.

Despite significant losses, the enemy continued to rush towards Moscow, using up their last reserves. But he failed to cut through the defense front of the Soviet troops.

The Soviet command assessed the created situation as very dangerous, but not at all hopeless. It saw that the troops were determined to prevent the enemy from approaching Moscow and were fighting steadfastly and selflessly. Every day it became more obvious that the enemy’s capabilities were not unlimited and as reserves were spent, his onslaught would inevitably weaken.

The assessment of the current situation given by the Wehrmacht leadership in those days can be judged by Halder’s entry in his service diary: “Field Marshal von Bock personally directs the course of the battle near Moscow from his forward command post. His... energy drives the troops forward... The troops are completely exhausted and incapable of attacking... Von Bock compares the current situation with the situation in the battle of the Marne, pointing out that a situation has arisen where the last battalion thrown into battle can decide the outcome battles." However, the Nazis’ calculations for each “last” battalion did not come true. The enemy suffered heavy losses, but was unable to break through to Moscow.

After the capture of Klin and Solnechnogorsk, the enemy made an attempt to develop his attack northwest of Moscow. On the night of November 28, he managed with a small force to cross to the eastern bank of the Moscow-Volga canal in the Yakhroma area north of Iksha.

The Headquarters of the Supreme High Command and the command of the Western Front took urgent measures to eliminate the created danger. Reserve formations and troops from neighboring areas were transferred to the Kryukovo, Khlebnikovo, and Yakhroma areas. An important role in changing the situation north of Moscow was played by the timely movement from reserve to the line of the Moscow-Volga canal between Dmitrov and Iksha of the 1st Shock Army under the command of General V.I. Kuznetsov. Its advanced units pushed the enemy back to the western bank of the canal.

At the end of November and beginning of December, the 1st Shock and the newly formed 20th Armies, with the active support of the aviation group of General I. F. Petrov, launched a series of counterattacks against the Nazi troops and, together with the 30th and 16th Armies, finally stopped them further promotion. The enemy was forced to go on the defensive. The threat of a breakthrough to Moscow from the north-west and north was eliminated.

Events on the left wing of the Western Front unfolded extremely sharply and intensely. Here the 2nd German Tank Army was able to resume the offensive only on November 18. After unsuccessful attempts to capture Tula from the south and north-west, the command of Army Group Center decided to launch an offensive in a northerly direction, bypassing the city from the east.

The strike force of the 2nd Tank Army, consisting of four tank, three motorized, and five infantry divisions, supported by aviation, broke through the defenses of the 50th Army and, developing an offensive, captured Stalinogorsk (Novomoskovsk) on November 22. Its formations rushed towards Venev and Kashira. Fierce fighting broke out.

The front commander demanded that the 50th Army “under no circumstances allow the enemy to penetrate into the Venev area.” This city and the approaches to it were defended by a combat group consisting of a regiment of the 173rd Infantry Division, the 11th and 32nd Tank Brigades (30 light tanks), and a tank destroyer battalion formed from the local population. Without breaking the group's resistance with frontal attacks, the 17th German Panzer Division bypassed the city from the east. On November 25, its advanced units found themselves 10-15 km from Kashira.

The other two divisions of the 2nd Tank Army advanced on Mikhailov and Serebryanye Prudy. The Nazis sought to take Kashira as quickly as possible and seize the crossings on the Oka.

To stop the advance of the enemy’s southern attack group, the Western Front command on November 27 carried out a counterattack in the Kashira area with formations reinforced by tanks and rocket artillery of the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps. As a result of the counterattack, the corps, with the support of front aviation and Moscow air defense units, inflicted a heavy defeat on the enemy's 17th Tank Division and by November 30th threw it back to the Mordves area.

Thus, the stubborn defense of Tula and the persistent resistance of Soviet troops in the areas of Stalinogorsk and Venev thwarted the enemy’s plans. The 2nd Tank Army was unable to capture the crossings across the Oka River.

After this failure, the Nazis made desperate attempts to capture Tula with a blow from the east and northeast. They believed that in the current situation it was impossible to “conduct further operations to the north or east... without first capturing this important communications hub and airfield.”

On December 3, the enemy managed to cut the railway and highway north of Tula. At the same time, he increased pressure on the city from the west at the junction of the 49th and 50th armies. The struggle reached its highest intensity. To eliminate the breakthrough north of Tula, the 50th Army of General I.V. Boldin launched a counterattack on the enemy in the Kostrovo, Revyakino area, where it surrounded part of the forces of the 4th German Tank Division.

Active actions by the troops of the left wing of the Western Front in early December forced the 2nd German Tank Army to begin withdrawing. At the critical moment of the battle in the Kashira and Tula regions, she could not receive help from her neighbor on the right - the 2nd Field Army, the main forces of which were drawn into protracted battles with the troops of the 3rd and 13th armies of the Southwestern Front in the Yelets direction.

The enemy suffered setbacks north and south of Moscow. On December 1, he tried to break through to the city in the center of the Western Front. He dealt strong blows in the Naro-Fominsk area and pushed back the defending divisions. The front command immediately responded to this with a counterattack, using the reserve of the 33rd and neighboring armies. The enemy was driven back across the Nara River with heavy losses. Thus, his last attempt to save Operation Typhoon failed. The Nazis also failed to carry out their plan to destroy Moscow with air strikes. Strengthening air defense has yielded results. In November, only a few planes broke through to the city. In total, during the period July - December 1941, Moscow air defense forces repelled 122 air raids, in which 7,146 aircraft took part. Only 229 aircraft, or a little more than 3 percent, were able to break through to the city.

The Nazis' attempts to carry out extensive reconnaissance, sabotage, terrorist and other subversive activities were also unsuccessful. State security agencies neutralized about 200 fascist agents in the capital and its suburbs. In addition, in the combat area of ​​the Western Front, border guard units for rear protection detained over 75 spies and saboteurs, and eliminated several enemy sabotage and reconnaissance groups. In the Moscow direction, the enemy did not manage to commit a single sabotage in the rear of the Soviet troops, disrupt the work of industrial enterprises, transport, or disrupt the supply of the active army. Using captured and self-confessed enemy agents, Soviet counterintelligence officers, together with the military command, misinformed enemy intelligence about the location and redeployment of formations and formations of troops, their command posts, and the work of the Moscow road junction. As a result, the Nazi command did not have reliable data on the deployment of reserves to the Moscow region.

The end of November - beginning of December was a period of crisis in the Nazi offensive on Moscow. The plan to encircle and capture the Soviet capital was a complete failure. “The attack on Moscow failed. All the sacrifices and efforts of our valiant troops were in vain. We suffered a serious defeat,” Guderian wrote after the war. The enemy was completely exhausted, his reserves were exhausted. “The information we had said that all the reserves that von Bock had were used and drawn into battle,” noted Marshal of the Soviet Union K.K. Rokossovsky. The failure of Operation Typhoon became a fait accompli.

In those difficult, decisive days of the battle for the capital, Pravda wrote: “We must at all costs thwart Hitler’s predatory plan... Our whole country is waiting for this... The defeat of the enemy must begin near Moscow!”

Trains with weapons and ammunition were arriving at the front in a continuous stream. Fresh reserves of the Headquarters were concentrated in the areas northeast and southeast of the capital. Moscow and Tula became front-line arsenals of the fighting troops.

An important measure in thwarting the new enemy onslaught near Moscow was the counteroffensive organized by Headquarters in mid-November near Tikhvin and Rostov-on-Don. The Nazi Army Groups North and South, repelling the advance of Soviet troops, were deprived of the opportunity to assist Army Group Center in the decisive days. These were the first serious harbingers of great changes on the entire Soviet-German front.

So, the offensive of the Nazi troops on Moscow in November also ended in complete failure.

Army Group Center failed to achieve the objectives of Operation Typhoon. Its troops were drained of blood and lost their offensive capabilities. During the battles from November 16 to December 5, the Wehrmacht lost 155 thousand soldiers and officers, 777 tanks, hundreds of guns and mortars near Moscow. Frontline aviation and Moscow air defense forces shot down many aircraft in air battles and destroyed them at airfields. During two months of defensive battles, the Soviet Air Force carried out more than 51 thousand sorties, of which 14 percent were to provide air cover for the capital. Here, in the Moscow direction, by December 1941, they for the first time won operational supremacy in the air. The Air Guard was born in the skies of the Moscow region. The 29th, 129th, 155th, 526th Fighter, 215th Attack and 31st Bomber Aviation Regiments received the title of Guards.

On December 4-5, 1941, the defensive period of the Battle of Moscow ended. The Soviet Armed Forces defended the capital, stopping the advance of the fascist hordes.

The situation at the front in the spring of 1942, the plans of the parties, the German offensive in the summer of 1942, the beginning of the Battle of Stalingrad, the German occupation regime, the Holocaust on the territory of the USSR, the partisan and underground movement, the formation of the anti-Hitler coalition, the results of the first stage of the war.

The situation at the front in the spring of 1942 G. Plans of the parties.

The victory near Moscow gave rise to hopes among the Soviet leadership for the possibility of a quick defeat of the enemy and the end of the war. In January 1942, Stalin set the Red Army the task of launching a general offensive. This task was repeated in other documents.

The Red Army - to ensure that 1942 becomes the year of the final defeat of the Nazi troops and the liberation of Soviet land from Hitler's scoundrels!

The only one who opposed the simultaneous offensive of Soviet troops in all three main strategic directions was G.K. Zhukov. He rightly believed that there were no prepared reserves for this. However, under pressure from Stalin, the Headquarters decided to attack in all directions. The dispersal of already modest resources (by this time the Red Army had lost up to 6 million people killed, wounded and captured) inevitably led to failure. Stalin believed that in the spring and summer of 1942 the Germans would launch a new attack on Moscow, and ordered the concentration of significant reserve forces in the western direction.

Hitler, on the contrary, considered the strategic goal of the upcoming campaign to be a large-scale offensive in the southern direction with the goal of capturing the Lower Volga and the Caucasus. In order to hide their true intentions, the Germans developed a special plan to disinform the Soviet military command and political leadership, codenamed “Kremlin”. Their plan was largely successful.

German offensive in the summer of 1942. The beginning of the Battle of Stalingrad.

By the spring of 1942, the preponderance of forces still remained on the side of the German troops. Before launching a general offensive in the southeastern direction, the Germans decided to completely capture Crimea, where the defenders of Sevastopol and the Kerch Peninsula continued to offer heroic resistance to the enemy. The enemy's offensive in May ended in tragedy for the Soviet troops: in 10 days the troops of the Crimean Front on the Kerch Peninsula were defeated. The losses of the Red Army here amounted to 176 thousand people, 347 tanks, 3476 guns and mortars, 400 aircraft. On July 4, Soviet troops were forced to leave the city of Russian military glory, Sevastopol.

Picture: Defense of Sevastopol.

In May, Soviet troops went on the offensive in the Kharkov region, but suffered a severe defeat: the troops of two Soviet armies were surrounded and destroyed. Losses amounted to up to 230 thousand people, more than 5 thousand guns and mortars, 755 tanks. The German command once again had the strategic initiative.

At the end of June, German troops rushed to the southeast: they occupied Donbass and reached the Don. An immediate threat was created to Stalingrad. On July 24, Rostov-on-Don, the gates of the Caucasus, fell. Only now did Stalin understand the true purpose of the German summer offensive. But it was already too late to change anything. Fearing the rapid loss of the entire Soviet South, Stalin issued order No. 227 on July 28, 1942. It went down in the history of the war as the order “Not a step back!”

We have much less territory... there are much fewer people, bread, metal, plants, factories... We no longer have a superiority over the Germans either in human reserves or in grain reserves. To retreat further means to ruin yourself and at the same time ruin our Motherland... Not a step back! This should now be our main call... Undoubtedly, eliminate retreating sentiments in the troops and suppress with an iron fist the propaganda that we can... retreat...
Form within the army 3-5 well-armed barrage detachments (up to 200 people each), place them in the immediate rear of unstable divisions and oblige them in the event of panic and disorderly withdrawal of division units to shoot panickers and cowards on the spot...

From the beginning of September 1942, street fighting broke out in Stalingrad, which was completely destroyed. But the tenacity and courage of the Soviet defenders of the city on the Volga did what seemed incredible - by mid-November the offensive capabilities of the Germans had completely dried up. By this time, in the battles for Stalingrad, they had lost almost 700 thousand killed and wounded, over 1 thousand tanks and over 1.4 thousand aircraft. Despite Hitler's daily incantations, the Germans not only failed to occupy the city, but also went on the defensive.

German occupation regime. Holocaust on the territory of the USSR.

By the fall of 1942, German troops managed to occupy a huge part of the European territory of the USSR. A brutal occupation regime was established on the occupied lands. The main goals of Germany in the war against the USSR were the destruction of communist ideology and the Soviet state, the transformation of the Soviet Union into an agricultural and raw material appendage and a source of cheap labor for the so-called Third Reich. In the occupied territories, all power belonged to the military command of the German army. Death camps were created for prisoners of war and those Soviet people who did not obey the decisions of the German authorities. Arrests, executions, and hangings of party and Soviet activists and underground members became an everyday occurrence.

Labor mobilization covered all citizens of the occupied territories aged 18 to 45 years. They had to work 14-16 hours a day. Hundreds of thousands of Soviet citizens were sent to forced labor in Germany.

The special master plan "Ost", developed before the war, contained a plan for colonization and Germanization. According to it, in particular, it was supposed to destroy 30 million Russians, and turn the rest into slaves and resettle them in Siberia.

From the comments and proposals on the Ost master plan by SS Reichsfuehrer G.Himmler

This is not only about the defeat of the state with its center in Moscow... The point is most likely to defeat the Russians as a people, to divide them... It is important that the majority of the population on Russian territory consists of people of a primitive semi-European type... This mass of racially inferior, stupid people needs... leadership.

Jews, gypsies and other “inferior” peoples were generally subject to complete extermination. Considering Jews to be the ideological support of the “Judeo-Bolshevik” regime, the fascists exterminated them along with the commissars without trial or investigation. During the first six months of the war, they destroyed up to 1.5 million Jews, almost every second of them on the territory of the USSR. The rest were imprisoned ghetto, where they found themselves on the brink of survival.

In total, during the war years in the occupied territories of the USSR, the Nazis killed about 11 million people (including about 7 million civilians and about 4 million prisoners of war). They were shot, burned, gassed, hanged, drowned, and subjected to monstrous torture and torture. But the threat of physical violence did not stop the Soviet people from fighting the enemy not only at the front, but also in the rear.

Partisan and underground movement.

The Soviet underground movement emerged in the first weeks of the war. In places subject to occupation, underground party bodies of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks were created, which acted as coordinators of all underground work. During various periods of the war, illegal Central Committees of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Ukraine and Belarus, 90 underground regional committees and inter-district party centers existed in the occupied territory.

During the war, more than 6 thousand partisan detachments operated in the country, in which more than 1 million people fought. Representatives of most peoples of the USSR, as well as citizens of other countries, fought in their ranks. Soviet partisans destroyed, wounded and captured more than 1 million enemy soldiers and officers, representatives of the occupation administration, more than 4 thousand tanks and armored vehicles, 65 thousand vehicles and 1,100 aircraft were disabled.

They destroyed and damaged 1,600 railway bridges and derailed over 20 thousand railway trains.

To coordinate the actions of partisan formations, the Central Headquarters of the partisan movement was created in 1942, headed by P.K. Ponomarenko. K.E. Voroshilov was appointed commander-in-chief of the partisan movement. The underground heroes not only acted against enemy troops, but also carried out death sentences on the bloody executioners of their people. The legendary intelligence officer Nikolai Kuznetsov destroyed the chief judge of Ukraine Funk, the vice-governor of Galicia Bauer, and kidnapped the commander of the German punitive forces in Ukraine, General Ilgen. The General Commissioner of Belarus, Cuba, was blown up by underground member Elena Mazanik right in bed in her own residence.

During the war years, more than 184 thousand partisans and underground fighters were awarded orders and medals of the USSR. 249 of them received the high title of Hero of the Soviet Union. And the legendary commanders of partisan formations S.A. Kovpak and A.F. Fedorov became twice heroes.

Formation of the anti-Hitler coalition.

From the very beginning of the Great Patriotic War, Great Britain and the USA announced their support for the Soviet Union.

From a radio speech by British Prime Minister W. Churchill 22June 1941

Over the past 25 years, no one has been a more consistent opponent of communism than me. I won't take back a single word I said about him. But all this pales in comparison to the spectacle now unfolding. I see Russian soldiers standing on the threshold of their native land, guarding the fields that their fathers have cultivated since time immemorial. I see them guarding their homes, where their mothers and wives pray - yes, for there are times when everyone prays - for the safety of their loved ones, for the return of their breadwinner, their protector and support... The danger for Russia is our danger and danger to the USA...

In July 1941, an agreement was signed between the USSR and Great Britain on joint actions in the war against Hitler, and in early August the US government announced economic and military-technical assistance to the Soviet Union “in the fight against armed aggression.”

In September 1941, the first conference of representatives of the three powers was held in Moscow, at which issues of expanding military-technical assistance from Great Britain and the United States to the Soviet Union were discussed.

After the United States entered the war against Japan and Germany (December 1941), US military cooperation with the USSR expanded even more. On January 1, 1942, in Washington, representatives of 26 states signed a Declaration in which they pledged to use all their resources to fight the common enemy and not to conclude a separate peace. The signed treaty of alliance between the USSR and Great Britain (May 1942) and the agreement with the United States on mutual assistance (June 1942) finally formalized the military alliance of the three countries.

Results of the first stage of the war.

The first period of the Great Patriotic War, which lasted from June 22, 1941 to November 18, 1942 (the date of the Soviet troops' counteroffensive at Stalingrad), was of great historical significance. The Soviet Union withstood a military blow of such force that no other country could have withstood. The courage and heroism of the Soviet people thwarted Hitler’s plans for a “lightning war.” Despite major military defeats in the first year of the war, the Red Army showed its high fighting qualities.

By the summer of 1942, thanks to the efforts of home front workers, the transition of the country's economy to a war footing had largely been completed, which laid the main precondition for a radical change in the course of the war.

At this stage, an anti-Hitler coalition took shape, possessing enormous military, economic and human resources. All this made victory over fascism a matter of time. The main result of the first period of the war was the formation of the prerequisites for a radical change during the Great Patriotic War and the entire Second World War.

Latest materials in the section:

Practical work with a moving star map
Practical work with a moving star map

Questions of testing to assess the personal qualities of civil servants
Questions of testing to assess the personal qualities of civil servants

Test “Determination of Temperament” (G. Eysenck) Instructions: Text: 1. Do you often experience a craving for new experiences, to shake yourself up,...

Michael Jada
Michael Jada "Burn Your Portfolio"

You will learn that brainstorming often does more harm than good; that any employee from a design studio is replaceable, even if it is...