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Battle of Moscow

The Battle of Moscow was a military campaign that consisted of two periods of strategically significant fighting on a 600 km (370 mi) sector of the Eastern Front during World War II, between September 1941 and January 1942. The Soviet defensive effort frustrated Hitler's attack on Moscow, the capital and largest city of the Soviet Union. Moscow was one of the primary military and political objectives for Axis forces in their invasion of the Soviet Union.

This article is about the 1941 battle. For other uses, see Battle of Moscow (disambiguation).

The German Strategic Offensive, named Operation Typhoon, called for two pincer offensives, one to the north of Moscow against the Kalinin Front by the 3rd and 4th Panzer Armies, simultaneously severing the Moscow–Leningrad railway, and another to the south of Moscow Oblast against the Western Front south of Tula, by the 2nd Panzer Army, while the 4th Army advanced directly towards Moscow from the west.


Initially, the Soviet forces conducted a strategic defence of the Moscow Oblast by constructing three defensive belts, deploying newly raised reserve armies, and bringing troops from the Siberian and Far Eastern Military Districts. As the German offensives were halted, a Soviet strategic counter-offensive and smaller-scale offensive operations forced the German armies back to the positions around the cities of Oryol, Vyazma and Vitebsk, and nearly surrounded three German armies. It was a major setback for the Germans, and the end of their belief in a swift German victory over the USSR.[17] As a result of the failed offensive, Field Marshal Walther von Brauchitsch was dismissed as supreme commander of the German Army, with Hitler replacing him in the position.

Wehrmacht advance towards Moscow (1 November – 5 December)[edit]

Wearing down[edit]

By late October, the German forces were worn out, with only a third of their motor vehicles still functioning, infantry divisions at third- to half-strength, and serious logistics issues preventing the delivery of warm clothing and other winter equipment to the front. Even Hitler seemed to surrender to the idea of a long struggle, since the prospect of sending tanks into such a large city without heavy infantry support seemed risky after the costly capture of Warsaw in 1939.[58]

Casualties[edit]

Both German and Soviet casualties during the battle of Moscow have been a subject of debate, as various sources provide somewhat different estimates. Not all historians agree on what should be considered the "Battle of Moscow" in the timeline of World War II. While the start of the battle is usually regarded as the beginning of Operation Typhoon on 30 September 1941 (or sometimes on 2 October 1941), there are two different dates for the end of the offensive. In particular, some sources (such as Erickson[107] and Glantz[108]) exclude the Rzhev offensive from the scope of the battle, considering it as a distinct operation and making the Moscow offensive "stop" on 7  January 1942—thus lowering the number of casualties.


There are also significant differences in figures from various sources. John Erickson, in his Barbarossa: The Axis and the Allies, gives a figure of 653,924 Soviet casualties between October 1941 and January 1942.[107] Glantz, in his book When Titans Clashed, gives a figure of 658,279 for the defense phase alone, plus 370,955 for the winter counteroffensive until 7 January 1942.[108] The official Wehrmacht daily casualty reports show 35,757 killed in action, 128,716 wounded, and 9,721 missing in action for the entire Army Group Centre between 1 October 1941 and 10 January 1942.[109] However, this official report does not match unofficial reports from individual battalion and divisional officers and commanders at the front, who record suffering far higher casualties than was officially reported.[110]


On the Russian side, discipline became ferocious. The NKVD blocking groups were ready to shoot anyone retreating without orders. NKVD squads went to field hospitals in search of soldiers with self-inflicted injuries, the so-called 'self shooters' - those who shot themselves in the left hand to escape fighting. A surgeon in a field hospital of the Red Army admitted to amputating the hands of boys who tried this 'self-shooting' idea to escape fighting, to protect them from immediate execution via punishment squad.[111] In the first three months, blocking detachments shot 1,000 penal troops and sent 24,993 to penal battalions. By October 1942, the idea of regular blocking detachments was quietly dropped; by October 1944, the units were officially disbanded.[112][113]

Panfilov's Twenty-Eight Guardsmen

German war crimes during the Battle of Moscow

8th Guards Motor Rifle Division

Russian Winter

Perimilovsky Heights

Bellamy, Chris (2007). Absolute War: Soviet Russia in the Second World War. New York: Vintage Books.  978-0-375-72471-8..

ISBN

Braithwaite, Rodric. Moscow 1941: A City and Its People at War. London: Profile Books Ltd., 2006.  1-86197-759-X.

ISBN

Collection of legislative acts related to State Awards of the USSR (1984), Moscow, ed. Izvestia.

Belov, Pavel Alekseevich (1963). Za nami Moskva. Moscow: Voenizdat.

Bergström, Christer (2007). Barbarossa – The Air Battle: July–December 1941. London: Chevron/Ian Allan.  978-1-85780-270-2.

ISBN

Boog, Horst; ; Hoffmann, Joachim; Klink, Ernst; Müller, Rolf-Dieter; Ueberschär, Gerd R. (1998). Attack on the Soviet Union. Germany and the Second World War. Vol. IV. Translated by Dean S. McMurry; Ewald Osers; Louise Willmot. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-822886-8.

Förster, Jürgen

Chew, Allen F. (December 1981). (PDF). Leavenworth Papers (5). Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. ISSN 0195-3451. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 February 2017. Retrieved 29 May 2017.

"Fighting the Russians in Winter: Three Case Studies"

Erickson, John; Dilks, David (1994). Barbarossa: The Axis and the Allies. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.  978-0-7486-0504-0.

ISBN

; House, Jonathan M. (1995). When Titans Clashed: How the Red Army Stopped Hitler. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0717-4.

Glantz, David M.

Goldman, Stuart D. (2012). Nomonhan, 1939; The Red Army's Victory That Shaped World War II. Naval Institute Press.  978-1-61251-098-9.

ISBN

Heinz Guderian, Воспоминания солдата (Memoirs of a soldier), Smolensk, Rusich, 1999 (Russian translation of Guderian, Heinz (1951). Erinnerungen eines Soldaten. Heidelberg: Vowinckel.)

Hill, Alexander (2009)."British Lend-Lease Tanks and the Battle of Moscow, November–December 1941 – Revisited." Journal of Slavic Military Studies, 22: 574–87. :10.1080/13518040903355794.

doi

Hill, Alexander (2017), The Red Army and the Second World War, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,  978-1-1070-2079-5.

ISBN

Hardesty, Von. Red Phoenix. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1991.  1-56098-071-0

ISBN

Jukes, Geoffrey (2002). The Second World War: The Eastern Front 1941–1945. Oxford: Osprey.  978-1-84176-391-0.

ISBN

Liedtke, Gregory (2016). Enduring the Whirlwind: The German Army and the Russo-German War 1941–1943. Helion and Company.  978-1910777756.

ISBN

Lopukhovsky, Lev (2013). Britton Stuart (ed.). The Viaz'ma Catastrophe, 1941 The Red Army's Disastrous Stand Against Operation Typhoon. Translated by Britton Stuart. West Midlands: Helion.  978-1-908916-50-1.

ISBN

Moss, Walter G. (2005). A History of Russia: Since 1855. Anthem Russian and Slavonic studies. Vol. II (2nd ed.). Anthem Press.  978-1-84331-034-1.

ISBN

Flitton, Dave (director, producer, writer) (1994). (television documentary). US: PBS.

The Battle of Russia

Plocher, Hermann (1968). Luftwaffe versus Russia, 1941. New York: USAF: Historical Division, Arno Press.

Prokhorov, A. M. (ed.). Большая советская энциклопедия (in Russian). Moscow. or Prokhorov, A. M., ed. (1973–1978). Great Soviet Encyclopedia. New York: Macmillan.

; Newton, Steven H. (2009). Panzer Operations: The Eastern Front Memoir of General Raus, 1941–1945. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-7867-3970-7.

Raus, Erhard

Reinhardt, Klaus. Moscow: The Turning Point? The Failure of Hitler's Strategy in the Winter of 1941–42. Oxford: Berg Publishers, 1992.  0-85496-695-1.

ISBN

Sokolovskii, Vasilii Danilovich (1964). Razgrom Nemetsko-Fashistskikh Voisk pod Moskvoi (with map album). Moscow: VoenIzdat.  65-54443.

LCCN

(2019). Retreat from Moscow: A New History of Germany's Winter Campaign, 1941–1942. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-03742-49526.

Stahel, David

Stahel, David (2015). The Battle for Moscow. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.  978-1107087606.

ISBN

Vasilevsky, A. M. (1981). Дело всей жизни (Lifelong cause) (in Russian). Moscow: Progress.  978-0-7147-1830-9.

ISBN

Williamson, Murray (1983). Strategy for Defeat: The Luftwaffe 1933–1945. Maxwell AFB: Air University Press.  978-1-58566-010-0.

ISBN

Ziemke, Earl F. (1987). Moscow to Stalingrad. Center of Military History, United States Army.  978-0880292948.

ISBN

Zetterling, Niklas; Frankson, Anders (2012). The Drive on Moscow, 1941: Operation Taifun and Germany's First Great Crisis of World War II. : Casemate Publishers. ISBN 978-1-61200-120-3.

Havertown

Жуков, Г. К. (2002). (in Russian). М. ISBN 978-5-224-03195-5. Archived from the original on 21 January 2021. Retrieved 27 October 2018.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) (English translation Zhukov, G. K. (1971). The Memoirs of Marshal Zhukov. London: Cape. ISBN 978-0-224-61924-0.)

Воспоминания и размышления. В 2 т.

"Operation Typhoon": on YouTube, lecture by David Stahel, author of Operation Typhoon. Hitler's March on Moscow (2013) and The Battle for Moscow (2015); via the official channel of USS Silversides Museum

Video

Map: Deployment of troops before the battle of Moscow

Map (detailed): Battle of Moscow 1941. German offensive

WW2DB: Battle of Moscow