Omeganian wrote:Doesn't show as available on every try. Interesting.
Thanks. Had a look. "Field bunkers" made from ground and wood are non-permanent field fortifications and they don't need any concrete. The data on the concrete fortifications, though, is nice to have. It seems that the data's pretty decisive on the fact that Germans hardly built anything permanent and heavy along the new border, concrete fortifications number in dozens. Sort of makes sense, they decided to invade quite early.
Omeganian wrote:The Soviets saw that on the German side "Train lines with materials for construction of fortifications are being sent to the border" as well. What does it prove (except for the Soviets hiding their military concentration in the area from the Germans)?
It doesn't prove much except Soviet forces being unconcentrated. And basically since they weren't concentrated the German attack was so successful.
Omeganian wrote:What are the distance figures for the older FR's, BTW?
Offhand, for Polotsk it was round 4 km.
Omeganian wrote:And fortification types? Wall thickness, that is.
Stalin Line - wall thickness for the Kingisepp FR typical concrete bunker - 1,2m, internal walls 86-102 cm, two-level bunkers had walls 1,5m thick and 1,4 m thick internal walls. Molotov Line - wall thickness 1,5-1,8m, internal walls up to 2,5m.
Omeganian wrote:From the memoirs, we don't see that taken seriously. If you need to force the locks open due to the keys being lost, it is difficult to believe someone cared to put in new machineguns.
It is rather stupid to assume that the situation has been uniform across the entire fortification complex. If someone lost bunker keys somewhere, how does that prevent new machineguns being put in place in another bunker? Partial deactivation of the Stalin line is actually well explainable given that it was so damn far from the border now; what is unexplainable from a point of view which only considers the possibility of offensive victory is the
partial reactivation executed by Zhukov before the war since April until June. If you expect to simply attack and win you don't expect Germans to be anywhere near these FRs at all.
Omeganian wrote:According to Suvorov, in 1941 Stalin was already sending prisoners into the army. Plenty of them were working near the border on bridges and roads.
I'd like to see NKVD documents that specify available and sent manpower volumes. I mean... what's "plenty"? Where's any indication that convicts were working in sizeable numbers in newly captured territory?
Omeganian wrote:My point exactly. ... Now, please calculate how long you need to use up 150 000 pilots (after all, other aircraft personnel was being trained as well).
You don't realize that 150 000 flight school graduates don't really equal 150 000 pilots, right? The staff of the VVS (the
entire staff) in 1941 was 11,5 thousand men (pilots, ground crews, technicians, etc.). The entire GVF staff was 42 thousand, of them more than 20 in airplane maintenance and exploitation. So the civilian airfleet was bigger than the Soviet air force, manpower-wise.
Omeganian wrote:I believe we already discussed the fact that in 1941, the Soviets were printing Russian/German phrasebooks for regular troopers since the end of May
Sure. Just like with Sweden for example. Though of course Germany as a greater threat was given priority and consideration.
Omeganian wrote:The only difference I see is the lack of signatures. For all we know, Stalin could have simply ordered to carry it out without a signature. Or there could have been several plans, with that particular one being rejected... doesn't mean the one accepted was different in principle.
Actually no signatures mean that documents mean jack and shit. McCollum memo for example is considered a valid historical document but since it wasn't really accepted (there's no signatures of a high enough level to consider that the recommendations formed a state strategy), the "Roosevelt provoked Japan into war" idea is quite ambigious.
Omeganian wrote:Who said they Soviets expected them to be unconcentrated in such a case? .. Meaning the Soviets were developing contingencies for such an occasion in advance. ... Win time to concentrate forces for an attack on the main direction. The forces for defense are mostly already there. ... He seems to state that a defense prepared in peace time doesn't need to take into account the parts of gathering under enemy fire. Not sure how much crap it is (it depends on circumstances). Of course, considering there is "no scientifically based theory of defense" and it is of secondary importance, certain shortcomings can be expected.
Read the December 1940 report carefully and you'll see that "concentration" is expected to occur after not concentrated forces somehow withstand the attack using fortifications as a base defense line. Concrete bunkers aren't contingencies, they're built to last. Field fortifications made from wood and ground, on the other hand, are contingencies indeed. I'm quite sure it's crap. Actually like most of the Soviet
shapkozakidatelstvo. Sad but true.
Omeganian wrote:Also, the June directives contain no mention of evacuating factories... and even in May, it never went beyond developing plans (where are the actual preparations? No order for that. Were they to start preparing under enemy fire?).
Problems arose due to the lack of evacuation plans for newly conquered lands. Old territories could be evacuated according to the 1938 evac. plan.
Omeganian wrote:Details, please.
You are welcome:
http://militera.lib.ru/h/kymanev_ga2/06.html
Расскажу еще об одном очень важном правительственном решении, принятом по инициативе Сталина. Как известно, до войны было развернуто строительство Куйбышевской ГЭС. На ее сооружении работало примерно 100 тыс. человек. И вот где-то в середине 1940 г. Сталин вызвал Андрея Андреевича Андреева – секретаря ЦК ВКП(б) по кадрам, наркома внутренних дел СССР Лаврентия Берия и меня. (Я тогда уже был заместителем Председателя Совнаркома СССР.) Сталин неожиданно для нас предложил: «Давайте, мы пока свернем строительство Куйбышевской гидроэлектростанции и всю эту мощнейшую организацию направим на создание авиационных заводов в районе Куйбышева». Это решение впоследствии, в начале войны, сыграло громадную роль в обеспечении производства боевых самолетов. В октябре 1941 г. по поручению Государственного Комитета Обороны я летал в Куйбышев для того, чтобы проверить, как подготовлены там необходимые здания для дипломатического корпуса, который был туда эвакуирован из Москвы, а также здания для размещения правительственных органов. Побывал и на строительстве одного Куйбышевского авиационного завода. И что я обнаружил: большая часть корпусов уже готова и там устанавливается оборудование, станки, агрегаты прибывших с западной части страны авиационных заводов. Трудно поверить, но факт остается фактом: в конце 1941 г. куйбышевские авиазаводы уже наладили массовый выпуск самолетов. Так что названное мною решение, принятое за полгода до начала войны, оказалось весьма своевременным и дальновидным. [126]
Хочу указать, наконец, и на такой факт, свидетельствовавший о подготовке страны к военным испытаниям. Это создание дублеров оборонных предприятий и научно-исследовательских институтов на Востоке страны. Решение об этом было принято незадолго до Великой Отечественной войны и нашло отражение в материалах XVIII съезда ВКП(б) и XVIII партийной конференции. На Урале и за Уралом стали создавать и развертывать новую угольно-металлургическую базу СССР. Закладывались заводы-дублеры тех предприятий, которые имелись в Западно-Европейской части СССР, а также соответствующие институты: и авиационные, и по вооружению, и по боеприпасам...
Omeganian wrote:To the point of using fake memoirs to disprove it?
All memoirs could be doubted as fakes, actually. Not sure what your point is. Rezun often refers to memoirs of Zhukov, while you seem to consider them a fake?
Omeganian wrote:I am afraid I don't understand this argument. Mind elaborating?
That is quite simple. The theory is falsified by observation. If no observation may falsify the theory, then that theory is not scientific. For example, if a fact of humans and dinosaurs coexisting is discovered, that falsifies the current timeframe accepted in the theory of evolution and would throw a huge part of science into disarray.
Omeganian wrote:I am asking; do all the historians have access to the same documents, or are the results still non-repeatable?
The results are quite repeatable actually. Documents are being opened (most of them). Reclassification is a rare phenomena and I've yet to see any proof that it seriously impacts the state of research right now.
Omeganian wrote:Figures for after the war GDP and cost estimates, please. And are you mixing up millions and billions? Because hesitating to spend less than a thousandth of GDP doesn't sound like Stalin.
1. Not mixing up anything. Миллион and миллиард can't be easily mixed. 2. Palace of the Soviets encountered engineering problems which are a lot more difficult to solve than money. Same as Soviet Union-class battleships actually, which encountered problems with steel quality.
Omeganian wrote:Where does Suvorov state there is something sinister in simply stopping the building? No, cutting down what's there for the industry needs is quite natural. Suvorov addresses the fact that after the war, Stalin several times attempted to restart it, and abandoned it each time.
I guess Stalin wanted to restart construction but challenges piled on, until finally the whole idea died with JVS. It doesn't really relate to war and war plans. I mean... that's so tangential, right?
Omeganian wrote:It cannot be legalized because a commander of the Leningrad District doesn't have the authority to shoot people in Moscow or Ural.
Maybe not. But then again, it was written under stress.
Omeganian wrote:Well, there is plenty of arguing about whether it was necessary to assault Berlin. As for Leningrad, please remember that:
I know. I'm just saying it still makes perfect sense. The USSR defeated Germany totally and Japan's forces in Manchuria. That's a big accomplishment and Zhukov was part of it. A rather important one.
Omeganian wrote:I would say that the article is full of both good ideas and bullshit, and there is still no evidence of any ideas being his (He does acknowledge familiarity with Triandafillov's works, after all - I am yet to see evidence of him doing his own research).
Does it really matter if the ideas were his or he took good ideas from the West? Seems to be hairsplitting. Military advancement requires borrowing as much as original research not to fall behind. Just look how much the USSR took from the Germans during 42-43.
Omeganian wrote:He handled research in that area for 9 years. Results... just about zero. Then there is Grabin telling how he tried explaining to the Marshal you can't replace all the artillery with recoilless. Tukhachevsky said "You don't understand you're slowing down the development of artillery". A trekkie through and through...
Links? And I'm not sure what's bad about Star Trek
Omeganian wrote:Tukhachevsky supported a good idea? Good. Did he support ONLY good ideas? Definitely not.
So who did then? I mean, name a better theorist who supported only good ideas?
Omeganian wrote:Suvorov has a chapter on that, BTW
Not sure I care. I mean, ascribing false achievements isn't something which belittles real ones.
Omeganian wrote:So, Hitler said something in public. Was it real or a boast? Why should the other states believe that?
Because the USSR was crazy paranoid?
Omeganian wrote:So why all the arguing about whether it's 70 or 100?
Cause not looking into the uh, manual means the researcher has an agenda to push instead of just working with raw real data.
Omeganian wrote:So? Was there need for positioning in 1939? Was there a threat?
I sort of lost the line here, sorry.
Omeganian wrote:Yeah, about ten percent at the time. Just how much better were they to win against 50/1 odds?
More like 20% I think, but 50 to 1? Seriously? The USSR didn't have fifty thousand tanks. And considering its forces were spread thin, not that it really mattered either.
Omeganian wrote:They say what was supposed to be done. But was it enforced? Was it taken seriously (after all, there is evidence it wasn't the case with the covering plans). Were any weapons being installed in the bunkers?
Of course. I mean, there were reports on the state of construction. And then there's also the history of construction, I think it is also available in English. Just google "Molotov line USSR fortification".
Omeganian wrote:Who? Tyulenev? Let's see. Half of his staff is there already. On day one of the war, when no one understands what's going on, he's assigned to command a front and goes without a hitch. Are you trying to convince me it was done without preliminary work? No, looks like a long standing decision finalized.
Rezun's pick example was Konev. He didn't move. Rezun said "all". You can't really use the "all" qualifier if hardly anyone had been moved by the time, no?