By 1943, after the catastrophic German defeat at Stalingrad, the Wehmacht's panzer armies gradually lost the initiative on the Eastern Front. The tide of the war had turned. Their combined arms technique, which had swept Soviet forces before it during 1941 and 1942, had lost its edge.Thereafter the war on the Eastern Front was dominated by tank-led offensives and, as Robert Forczyk shows, the Red Army's mechanized forces gained the upper hand, delivering a sequence of powerful blows that shattered one German defensive line after another.His incisive study offers fresh insight into how the two most powerful mechanized armies of the Second World War developed their tank tactics and weaponry during this period of growing Soviet dominance. He uses German, Russian and English sources to provide the first comprehensive overview and analysis of armored warfare from the German and Soviet perspectives. This major study of the greatest tank war in history is compelling reading.
Военная история18+Robert A. Forczyk
TANK WARFARE ON THE EASTERN FRONT 1943–1945
List of Plates
T-34 tanks on the production line.
Vyacheslav Malyshev was the Soviet engineer tasked by Stalin with running the Soviet Union’s tank industry.
A Lend-Lease Matilda tank with a tank unit in the Central Front, January 1943.
An Su-122 self-propelled gun negotiates its way down a very muddy trail.
German preparations for Operation Zitadelle were extensive.
A Soviet tank company commander briefs his platoon leaders on their next operation.
The turret of a Panther Ausf D after an internal explosion had shattered the interior.
A German StuG-III assault gun pauses by a burning T-34/76 Model 1942 in the summer of 1943.
This is the same burning T-34 as in the previous photo.
A Tiger positioned next to a knocked-out KV-1.
Crewmen of a Panther loading 7.5-cm ammunition in a hurried, haphazard manner which begs for an accident.
T-34 with its turret blown off after a massive explosion.
The crew of an SU-76M assault gun in action.
Soviet T-34s enroute to Zhitomir, November 1943.
A Soviet KV-85 tank captured during the German counter-attack near Radomyschyl in early December 1943.
Soviet Lend Lease Churchill tanks entering Kiev, November 1943.
T-34s advance with infantry across a frozen field, winter 1943/44.
A German Pz IV advancing with an infantry section.
The recapture of Zhitomir in late November 1943 was a minor tactical victory, but von Manstein’s armored counter-offensive failed to destroy Rybalko’s 3 GTA or recover Kiev.
A Kampfgruppe from 1.
German infantry ride atop a Pz IV tank during the winter of 1944.
A German grenadier with a Panzerfaust observes a burning T-34 in a village.
A late-model Pz IV alongside a knocked-out late-model T-34/76 in the Ukraine, early 1944.
A Panther from SS-
A Lend-lease Sherman in Red Army service.
A JS-2 lies disabled in the streets of an East Prussian town.
Another JS-2 has come to grief in a German city street, which was far too narrow for armoured operations.
List of Maps
Disposition of German Panzer-Division and Soviet Tank/Mechanized Corps on 1 January 1943
LVII Panzerkorps stand north of the Manych River, 5–11 January 1943
The Ostrogozhsk-Rossosh Operation, 13–31 January 1943
Advance of Hoth’s Panzerarmee 4 on first day of
Operation
Battle of Bogodukhov, 13–16 August 1943,
Soviet breakout from the Lyutezh Bridgehead and liberation of Kiev, 3–5 November 1943
German Effort to relieve the Korsun Pocket, 1–16 February 1944
Second Battle of Tirgu Fromos, 2 May 1944
Advance of Soviet tank armies during Operation Bagration and Lvov-Sandomierz Offensive, June–July 1944
Glossary
ABTU –
AFV – Armoured Fighting Vehicle
AOK –
AP – Armour Piercing
APCBC – Armour Piercing Composite Ballistic Cap (steel core)
APCR – Armour Piercing Composite Rigid (tungsten core)
APHE – Armour Piercing High Explosive
C2 – Command & Control
cbm (m3) – Cubic meter of fuel, equivalent to 1,000 litres or 744 kg
GAU KA –
GCC – Guards Cavalry Corps
GKO –
GMC – Guards Mechanized Corps
GTC – Guards Tank Corps
HE-FRAG – High Explosive, Fragmentation
HEAT – High Explosive Anti-tank
HKL –
HVAP – High Velocity Armour Piercing (Tungsten core)
Kradschützen – Motorcycle infantry
KwK –
MC – Mechanized Corps
MD – Military District
NKO –
NKTP –
NKVD –
OKH –