Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Operation Barbarossa
Episode Date: February 2, 2024On June 22, 1941, German forces crossed into the Soviet Union. It was, and remains, the largest military operation in human history. The force that the Germans assembled for the invasion was staggerin...g, consisting of over 3 million men. However, the decision to go to war with the Soviets and break the alliance Germany had with them has puzzled historians for decades. It ultimately was an extremely costly failure that resulted in the deaths of tens of millions of people. Learn more about Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors BetterHelp Visit BetterHelp.com/everywhere today to get 10% off your first month ButcherBox Sign up today at butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily to choose your free steak for a year and get $20 off." Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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On June 22nd, 1941, German forces crossed into the Soviet Union. It was and remains the largest
military operation in human history. The force that the Germans assembled for the invasion was staggering
consisting of over 3 million men. However, the decision to go to war with the Soviets and break the
alliance that Germany had with them has puzzled historians for decades. Ultimately, it was an extremely
costly failure that resulted in the deaths of tens of millions of people and the loss of the war
for Germany. Learn more about Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union on this
episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. What if your perceptions about the past were wrong? ThruLine is a
podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night. And how it shaped the world now. Time travel with us.
every week on the Thulein podcast from NPR.
The subject of Operation Barbarossa is an enormous one.
The entire invasion of the Soviet Union, if it had happened in isolation,
would have been one of the largest wars in human history.
And depending on the sources,
there were more casualties on the eastern front of the Second World War
than there were in the entire First World War.
So you can't really cover it like you would some other battle that happened during the war.
The war between Germany and the Soviet Union lasted almost four years and included many major battles, some of which were the largest in military history.
So this episode is not going to be a list of battles and sieges that took place over four years.
The Battle of Stalingrad, the siege of Leningrad, and the Battle of Kursk will all be the subject of their own episodes in the future.
What I wanted to do in this episode is to take a higher-level look at the decision-making process that went into Barbarossa and to try and for the,
figure out why Hitler did it, why Stalin was caught unaware, and why it ultimately failed.
There is an argument to be made, and I think it's a pretty reasonable one, that the entire
reason Germany began the Second World War was just to implement Operation Barbarossa.
Their previous military efforts, which I'll get to in a bit, had strategic reasons,
all of which were in support of the ultimate invasion of the Soviet Union. However, Operation Barbarossa,
itself was actually not a strategic decision. It was an ideological one. It had everything to do
with the Nazi concept of Liebenzraum. Leibensraum, roughly translated, means living space in German.
The idea behind Liebenzraum didn't originate with Hitler, but had been a part of German nationalism
since the late 19th century. The word was first used by Oscar Pichel, a German geographer and
biologist in 1860 in his review of Charles Darwin's book The Origin of Species.
The idea of Lieben's realm developed with a 19th century geographer named Frederick Ratzel.
He contended that the power of a country depended on the amount and kind of land that it
occupied and that nations needed to expand their territory to accommodate growing populations
and to secure natural resources.
However, it was Karl Haushofer, a general and geographer who gave the term a political meaning
by explicitly stating that Germany should seek land in Eastern Europe for Lieben's realm
and expel the current populations.
This idea gained prominence after the First World War in Germany,
especially among German nationalists,
when Britain was able to block the importation of food into Germany,
causing food shortages.
One of the people who took this idea to heart was Adolf Hitler.
As early as 1925, Hitler wrote in Mind Kampf that the idea of Lieben's realm
was the ideological basis of the entire German Reich.
In particular, expansion into Ukraine.
This, according to Hitler, would give the German people room to grow,
and it would make the Reich self-sufficient in food.
So at least in this case, Hitler telegraphed exactly what he wanted to do years before it happened.
So when I say this was really the entire point of World War II for the Nazis,
this is what I'm referring to.
In fact, given the ideological necessity in Hitler's mind of expanding into Eastern Europe,
you could make sense of everything else he did that came before it.
For example, why didn't he just invade the Soviet Union directly from the start?
Because if he did, he would have to deal with France and Britain in a two-front war,
which was something he wanted to avoid.
He also wanted to placate the Soviet so they wouldn't meddle in anything until it was too late.
To achieve these goals, he signed the Ribbentrop-Molatov pact with the Soviet Union.
in August of 1939, in which they agreed to divide Poland.
The Germans invaded France in 1940 in a preemptive measure to take France out of the war,
and in the process they almost eliminated the British forces in continental Europe.
Likewise, the invasions of Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Norway were all about securing
their flanks for their eventual invasion of the Soviet Union, which was really the main objective.
Once their western flank was secured, then they could begin throwing the full might of the
German army at the Soviets. The initial plan to invade the Soviet Union was named Operation
Otto, after Otto the Great, who conquered lands in Eastern Europe. However, the name of the
operation was changed by Hitler in December 1940 to Operation Barbarossa, in honor of the 12th century
Holy Roman Emperor, Frederick Barbarossa. Now, you might be thinking that invasions of Russia
haven't historically gone very well. Napoleon famously failed in his campaign to conquer Russia,
thwarted by vast supply lines and a punishing Russian winter.
Why didn't Hitler have the same reservations about invading Russia?
Much of it had to do with hubris.
The Germans were on a role in 1941.
They'd been able to conquer much of Western and Northern Europe
with historically scant losses.
Moreover, their invasion of France went far better than even they expected,
and France was arguably the most powerful army in Europe at the time.
Given the success that the Germans had, they thought that they were unstoppable.
Conditions in the Soviet Union only help matters.
Stalin had just completed a purge of most of the top Soviet generals.
The most competent Soviet commanders had been removed or executed and were placed by men whose primary attribute was loyalty to Stalin.
The initial plan for Operation Barbarossa was to begin the invasion on May 15, 1941.
However, that didn't happen.
And there's been a great deal of debate amongst historians as to why the invasion was postponed,
but there are several major theories.
The first is that the Germans got stuck invading Greece and Yugoslavia in April.
The second is that the previous winter had been very wet, and rivers and streams were still
flowing near their capacity, which would have made maneuvering difficult.
And finally, Germany wasn't going to be doing this alone.
Romania and Finland were going to take part, and they simply needed more time.
In the end, the invasion was pushed back to June 22nd.
How important this delay was to the overall failure of the campaign has been debated for decades.
On the one hand, an extra month meant an extra month fighting before winter sets in.
On the other hand, many historians say that it really didn't make any difference in the long run.
In the lead-up to the invasion, the Germans managed to bring 3 million German troops to the Soviet border, along with another 690,000.
thousand soldiers from Axis Allied countries. There were 153 divisions in total, including 104
infantry, 19 panzer, and 15 motorized infantry divisions, as well as the smattering of security
divisions, reserves, and four divisions in Finland. The Germans had amassed 6,867 armored vehicles,
of which about 3,500 were tanks. There were also 4,000 aircraft and almost 20,000 artillery pieces.
In addition, there were between 600 and 700,000 horses because there just weren't enough mechanized vehicles to carry everybody.
By all accounts, the Soviets were taken by surprise.
If you remember back to my episode on the Ribbentrop Molotov Pact and the Axis Powers,
Stalin didn't particularly like Hitler, but he at least saw him as an ally in fighting what he thought were the real enemies,
the Western capitalist powers.
Stalin simply didn't think that Hitler would break their treaty in the way he did when he did.
The Soviet army identified the German army as the biggest threat to their existence as early as July 1940.
In fact, their military planners predicted almost exactly how and where the Germans would attack.
Stalin knew that Hitler mentioned invading the Soviet Union in Mein Kampf.
However, he was hoping that the Soviets would have more time at least a few years before having to go to war with Germany.
In the days leading up to the invasion, the Soviets heard reports.
A Chinese spy overheard a German military attache and sent word to the Soviets.
Both Soviet and American intelligence both felt that an invasion was imminent and they sent word to Stalin.
A Soviet spy in Germany gave Stalin the exact date of the invasion.
A German soldier who was a committed communist ran to a Soviet border station the night before the invasion
to warn them what was going to happen, but Stalin ignored.
him. While the Soviets may have been caught unaware, it wasn't as if the Soviets had no defensive
capabilities. Their army had 5.5 million men with another 14 million in reserve. They had 33,000
pieces of artillery and 23,000 tanks, 14,000 of which were battle-ready. However, their units were
often poorly trained and their equipment was often shabby. One of the big reasons why Stalin didn't
do more is that he supposedly didn't want to provoke Hitler.
and start a war before the Soviets were ready, which is something that just ended up happening
anyhow. At 3.15 a.m. on June 22nd, 1941, Operation Barbarossa commenced. There were three
main battle groups, a north group that was to head to Leningrad, a middle group that was to head to
Moscow, and a southern group that was to take Kiev in Ukraine. The first day was a resounding
success for the Germans. They managed to take out much of the Soviet command and control system,
leaving the Soviet leadership unaware of what was happening on the ground.
The German Luftwaffe supposedly destroyed almost 1,500 Soviet aircraft in just the first day.
Behind the German army came Nazi Gestapo units that would exterminate entire villages
and round up Jews and other undesirables.
To Hitler, this was total warfare and a war of annihilation.
Hitler didn't want any Slavs left behind because the land was to be given to Germans to farm.
By the end of 1941, over 600,000 Jews alone had been killed by these roving death squads.
Soviet prisoners of war were often just starved to death.
From here, you can probably fill in the rest of the story, although as I mentioned,
there will be many future episodes on the Eastern Front of World War II.
The German advance eventually slowed, the Soviets regrouped, and the Eastern Front
became the biggest human meat grinder in history, and the Germans were stuck in a quagmire
of their own making.
In the end, what went wrong?
Why did the Germans fail so miserably in their invasion of the Soviet Union when they
performed so brilliantly everywhere else they invaded?
One reason had to do with hubris and ideology.
The Germans took the invasion of countries in Western Europe more seriously.
They were treated as the military operations that they were.
Operation Barbarossa was tainted from the start with Nazi ideology which interfered with
plans.
The Germans thought the Soviets to be inferior and under-exam.
estimated their resolve and the amount of manpower and resources that they were able to muster.
The Germans failed to take into consideration the industrial capabilities of the Soviets
and what they would be able to create for their war effort.
They failed to properly plan their logistics with supply lines that stretched as long as they did.
The further the Soviets retreated into their vast hinterland, the longer the German supply lines got.
Hitler, not the world's greatest military mind, often personally interfered in military planning,
which caused enormous problems. Also, the Germans, shockingly, weren't prepared for the winter,
which you would think would have been the first lesson you'd learn when studying any historical
invasions of Russia. Finally, in December 1941, the Germans completely unnecessarily declared war
on the United States, which forced the hand of the world's largest economy and resulted in a
dramatic increase in weapons shipments to the Soviets. Operation Barbarossa was unquestioned,
the largest single military operation in world history. However, the decision to invade was
made out of ideology, not from any deep military strategy. As a result, it became the bloodiest
theater of the Second World War and marked the beginning of the end of the Third Reich.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers
are Peter Bennett and Cameron Kiefer. Today I have a couple of reviews from over on Spotify.
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You, sir, are what I want to be when I grow up. Thank you for making my otherwise insufferable
drives to work enjoyable. The next review comes from listener, it's maze. And they write,
Love it. Each and every episode. Gary is amazing at choosing a wide variety of topics,
but dissects plainly with unbiased language. Even I can understand, lull, nearing my completionist
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