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Poslednyaya Respublika ("The Last Republic"), by Viktor
Suvorov (Vladimir Rezun).
Moscow: TKO ACT, 1996. 470 pages.
Hardcover. Photographs.
Reviewed by Daniel W. Michaels
For
several years now, a former Soviet military intelligence officer named Vladimir
Rezun has provoked heated discussion in Russia
for his startling view that Hitler attacked Soviet Russia in June 1941 just
as Stalin was preparing to overwhelm Germany and western Europe as part of
a well-planned operation to "liberate" all of Europe by bringing
it under Communist rule.
Writing
under the pen name of Viktor Suvorov, Rezun has developed this thesis in three books. Icebreaker
(which has been published in an English-language edition) and Dni M ("M Day") were reviewed
in the Nov.-Dec. 1997 Journal. The third book, reviewed here, is a
470-page work, "The Last Republic: Why the Soviet Union Lost the
Second World War," published in Russian in Moscow in 1996.
Suvorov presents a mass of evidence to show that when Hitler
launched his "Operation Barbarossa"
attack against Soviet Russia on June 22, 1941, German forces were able to
inflict enormous losses against the Soviets precisely because the Red
troops were much better prepared for war -- but for an aggressive
war that was scheduled for early July -- not the defensive war forced on
them by Hitler's preemptive strike.
In Icebreaker,
Suvorov details the deployment of Soviet forces
in June 1941, describing just how Stalin amassed vast numbers of troops and
stores of weapons along the European frontier, not to defend the Soviet
homeland but in preparation for a westward attack and decisive battles on
enemy territory.
Thus,
when German forces struck, the bulk of Red ground and air forces were
concentrated along the Soviet western borders facing contiguous European
countries, especially the German Reich and Romania, in final
readiness for an assault on Europe.
In
his second book on the origins of the war, "M Day" (for
"Mobilization Day"), Suvorov details
how, between late 1939 and the summer of 1941, Stalin methodically and
systematically built up the best armed, most powerful military force in the
world -- actually the world's first superpower -- for his planned conquest
of Europe. Suvorov explains how Stalin's drastic
conversion of the country's economy for war actually made war inevitable.
[Image: By mid-June 1941, enormous Red Army forces were concentrated on the
western Soviet border, poised for a devastating attack against Europe. This diagram
appeared in the English-language edition of the German wartime illustrated
magazine Signal.]
A
Global Soviet Union
In
"The Last Republic," Suvorov adds to
the evidence presented in his two earlier books to strengthen his argument
that Stalin was preparing for an aggressive war, in particular emphasizing
the ideological motivation for the Soviet leader's actions. The title
refers to the unlucky country that would be incorporated as the "final
republic" into the globe-encompassing "Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics," thereby
completing the world proletarian revolution.
As Suvorov explains, this plan was entirely consistent
with Marxist-Leninist doctrine, as well as with Lenin's policies in the
earlier years of the Soviet regime. The Russian historian argues
convincingly that it was not Leon Trotsky (Bronstein), but rather Stalin,
his less flamboyant rival, who was really the faithful disciple of Lenin in
promoting world Communist revolution. Trotsky insisted on his doctrine of
"permanent revolution," whereby the young Soviet state would help
foment home-grown workers' uprisings and revolution in the capitalist
countries.
Stalin
instead wanted the Soviet regime to take advantage of occasional
"armistices" in the global struggle to consolidate Red military
strength for the right moment when larger and better armed Soviet forces
would strike into central and western Europe, adding new Soviet republics
as this overwhelming force rolled across the continent. After the
successful consolidation and Sovietization of all
of Europe, the expanded USSR would be poised
to impose Soviet power over the entire globe.
As Suvorov shows, Stalin realized quite well that, given a
free choice, the people of the advanced Western countries would never
voluntarily choose Communism. It would therefore have to be imposed by
force. His bold plan, Stalin further decided, could be realized only
through a world war.
A
critical piece of evidence in this regard is his speech of August 19, 1939, recently
uncovered in Soviet archives (quoted in part in the Nov.-Dec. 1997 Journal,
pp. 32-33). In it, Lenin's heir states:
The experience of the last 20 years
has shown that in peacetime the Communist movement is never strong enough
to seize power. The dictatorship of such a party will only become possible
as the result of a major war ... Later on, all the
countries who had accepted protection from resurgent Germany would also become
our allies. We shall have a wide field to develop the world revolution.
Furthermore, and as Soviet theoreticians had always insisted,
Communism could never peacefully coexist over the long run with other
socio-political systems. Accordingly, Communist rule inevitably would have
to be imposed throughout the world. So integral was this goal of
"world revolution" to the nature and development of the
"first workers' state" that it was a cardinal feature of the
Soviet agenda even before Hitler and his National Socialist movement came
to power in Germany in 1933. Stalin elected to strike at a time and
place of his choosing. To this end, Soviet development of the most
advanced offensive weapons systems, primarily tanks, aircraft, and
airborne forces, had already begun in the early 1930s. To ensure the
success of his bold undertaking, in late 1939 Stalin ordered the build up a
powerful war machine that would be superior in quantity and quality to all
possible opposing forces. His first secret order for the total
military-industrial mobilization of the country was issued in August 1939.
A second total mobilization order, this one for military
mobilization, would be issued on the day the war was to begin.
Disappointment
The
German "Barbarossa" attack shattered
Stalin's well-laid plan to "liberate" all of Europe. In this sense, Suvorov contends, Stalin "lost" the Second
World War. The Soviet premier could regard "merely" defeating Germany and conquering
eastern and central Europe only as a
disappointment.
According
to Suvorov, Stalin revealed his disappointment
over the war's outcome in several ways. First, he had Marshal Georgi Zhukov, not himself, the supreme commander, lead
the victory parade in 1945. Second, no official May 9 victory parade was
even authorized until after Stalin's death. Third, Stalin never wore any of
the medals he was awarded after the end of the Second World War. Fourth,
once, in a depressed mood, he expressed to members of his close circle his
desire to retire now that the war was over. Fifth, and perhaps most
telling, Stalin abandoned work on the long-planned Palace of Soviets.
An
Unfinished Monument
The
enormous Palace of Soviets, approved by the Soviet government in the early
1930s, was to be 1,250 feet tall, surmounted with a statue of Lenin 300
feet in height -- taller than New York's Empire State Building. It was to
be built on the site of the former Cathedral of Christ the Savior. On
Stalin's order, this magnificent symbol of old Russia was blown up in
1931 -- an act whereby the nation's Communist rulers symbolically erased
the soul of old Russia to make room for
the centerpiece of the world USSR.
All
the world's "socialist republics," including the "last
republic," would ultimately be represented in the Palace. The main
hall of this secular shrine was to be inscribed with the oath that Stalin
had delivered in quasi-religious cadences at Lenin's burial. It included
the words: "When he left us, Comrade Lenin bequeathed to us the
responsibility to strengthen and expand the Union of Socialist Republics.
We vow to you, Comrade Lenin, that we shall honorably
carry out this, your sacred commandment."
However,
only the bowl-shaped foundation for this grandiose monument was ever
completed, and during the 1990s, after the collapse the USSR, the Christ the
Savior Cathedral was painstakingly rebuilt on the site.
The
Official View
For
decades the official version of the 1941-1945 German-Soviet conflict,
supported by establishment historians in both Russia and the West, has
been something like this:
Hitler launched a surprise "Blitzkrieg" attack
against the woefully unprepared Soviet Union, fooling its
leader, the unsuspecting and trusting Stalin. The German Führer was driven by lust for "living space"
and natural resources in the primitive East, and by his long-simmering
determination to smash "Jewish Communism" once and for all. In
this treacherous attack, which was an important part of Hitler's mad drive
for "world conquest," the "Nazi" or "fascist"
aggressors initially overwhelmed all resistance with their preponderance of
modern tanks and aircraft.
This view, which was affirmed by the Allied judges at the
postwar Nuremberg Tribunal, is still widely accepted in both Russia and the United States. In Russia today, most of
the general public (and not merely those who are nostalgic for the old
Soviet regime), accepts this "politically correct" line. For one
thing, it "explains" the Soviet Union's enormous World
War II losses in men and materiel. Doomed from the Start
Contrary
to the official view that the Soviet Union was not prepared
for war in June 1941, in fact, Suvorov stresses,
it was the Germans who were not really prepared. Germany's hastily drawn
up "Operation Barbarossa" plan, which
called for a "Blitzkrieg" victory in four or five months by
numerically inferior forces advancing in three broad military thrusts, was
doomed from the outset.
Moreover,
Suvorov goes on to note, Germany lacked the raw
materials (including petroleum) essential in sustaining a drawn out war of
such dimensions.
Another
reason for Germany's lack of
preparedness, Suvorov contends, was that her
military leaders seriously under-estimated the performance of Soviet forces
in the Winter War against Finland, 1939-40. They fought, it must be stressed, under extremely severe
winter conditions -- temperatures of minus 40 degrees Celsius and snow
depths of several feet -- against the well-designed reinforced concrete
fortifications and underground facilities of Finland's "Mannerheim Line." In spite of that, it is often
forgotten, the Red Army did, after all, force the Finns into a humiliating
armistice.
It is
always a mistake, Suvorov emphasizes, to
underestimate your enemy. But Hitler made this critical miscalculation. In
1943, after the tide of war had shifted against Germany, he admitted his
mistaken evaluation of Soviet forces two years earlier.
Tank
Disparity Compared
To
prove that it was Stalin, and not Hitler, who was really prepared for war, Suvorov compares German and Soviet weaponry in
mid-1941, especially with respect to the all-important offensive weapons
systems -- tanks and airborne forces. It is a generally accepted axiom in
military science that attacking forces should have a numerical superiority
of three to one over the defenders. Yet, as Suvorov
explains, when the Germans struck on the morning of June 22, 1941, they
attacked with a total of 3,350 tanks, while the Soviet defenders had a
total of 24,000 tanks -- that is, Stalin had seven times more tanks
than Hitler, or 21 times more tanks than would have been considered
sufficient for an adequate defense. Moreover, Suvorov
stresses, the Soviet tanks were superior in all technical respects,
including firepower, range, and armor plating.
As it
was, Soviet development of heavy tank production had already begun in the
early 1930s. For example, as early as 1933 the Soviets were already turning
out in series production, and distributing to their forces, the T-35 model,
a 45-ton heavy tank with three cannons, six machine guns, and 30-mm armor
plating. By contrast, the Germans began development and production of a
comparable 45-ton tank only after the war had begun in mid-1941.
By
1939 the Soviets had already added three heavy tank models to their
inventory. Moreover, the Soviets designed their tanks with wider tracks,
and to operate with diesel engines (which were less flammable than those
using conventional carburetor mix fuels). Furthermore, Soviet tanks were
built with both the engine and the drive in the rear, thereby improving
general efficiency and operator viewing. German tanks had a less efficient
arrangement, with the engine in the rear and the drive in the forward area.
When
the conflict began in June 1941, Suvorov shows, Germany had no heavy
tanks at all, only 309 medium tanks, and just 2,668 light, inferior tanks.
For their part, the Soviets at the outbreak of the war had at their
disposal tanks that were not only heavier but of higher quality.
In
this regard, Suvorov cites the recollection of
German tank general Heinz Guderian, who wrote in
his memoir Panzer Leader (1952/1996, p. 143):
In the spring of 1941, Hitler had specifically ordered that a
Russian military commission be shown over our tank schools and factories;
in this order he had insisted that nothing be concealed from them. The
Russian officers in question firmly refused to believe that the Panzer IV
was in fact our heaviest tank. They said repeatedly that we must be hiding
our newest models from them, and complained that we were not carrying out
Hitler's order to show them everything. The military commission was so
insistent on this point that eventually our manufacturers and Ordnance
Office officials concluded: "It seems that the Russians must already
possess better and heavier tanks than we do." It was at the end of
July 1941 that the T34 tank appeared on the front and the riddle of the new
Russian model was solved.
Suvorov cites another
revealing fact from Robert Goralski's World
War II Almanac (1982, p. 164). On June
24, 1941 -- just two days after the outbreak of the German-Soviet war:
The Russians introduced their giant Klim
Voroshilov tanks into action near Raseiniai [Lithuania]. Models weighing
43 and 52 tons surprised the Germans, who found the KVs
nearly unstoppable. One of these Russian tanks took 70 direct hits, but
none penetrated its armor.
In short, Germany took on the
Soviet colossus with tanks that were too light, too few in number, and
inferior in performance and fire power. And this disparity continued as the
war progressed. In 1942 alone, Soviet factories produced 2,553 heavy tanks,
while the Germans produced just 89. Even at the end of the war, the
best-quality tank in combat was the Soviet IS ("Iosef
Stalin") model. Suvorov sarcastically
urges establishment military historians to study a book on Soviet tanks by
Igor P. Shmelev, published in 1993 by, of all
things, the Hobby Book Publishing Company in Moscow. The work of an
honest amateur military analyst such as Shmelev,
one who is sincerely interested in and loves his hobby and the truth, says Suvorov, is often superior to that of a paid government
employee.
Airborne
Forces Disparity
Even
more lopsided was the Soviet superiority in airborne forces. Before the
war, Soviet DB-3f and SB bombers as well as the TB-1 and TB-3 bombers (of
which Stalin had about a thousand had been modified to carry airborne
troops as well as bomb loads. By mid-1941 the Soviet military had trained
hundreds of thousands of paratroopers (Suvorov
says almost a million) for the planned attack against Germany and the West.
These airborne troops were to be deployed and dropped behind enemy lines in
several waves, each wave consisting of five airborne assault corps (VDKs), each corps consisting of 10,419 men, staff and
service personnel, an artillery division, and a separate tank battalion (50
tanks). Suvorov lists the commanding officers and
home bases of the first two waves or ten corps. The second and third wave
corps included troops who spoke French and Spanish.
Because
the German attack prevented these highly trained troops from being used as
originally planned, Stalin converted them to "guards divisions,"
which he used as reserves and "fire brigades" in emergency
situations, much as Hitler often deployed Waffen
SS forces.
Maps
and Phrase Books
In
support of his main thesis, Suvorov cites
additional data that were not mentioned in his two earlier works on this
subject. First, on the eve of the outbreak of the 1941 war Soviet forces
had been provided topographical maps only of frontier and European areas;
they were not issued maps to defend Soviet territory or cities, because the
war was not to be fought in the homeland. The head of the Military
Topographic Service at the time, and therefore responsible for military map
distribution, Major General M. K. Kudryavtsev,
was not punished or even dismissed for failing to provide maps of the
homeland, but went on to enjoy a lengthy and successful military career.
Likewise, the chief of the General Staff, General Zhukov, was never held
responsible for the debacle of the first months of the war. None of the top
military commanders could be held accountable, Suvorov
points out, because they had all followed Stalin's orders to the letter.
Second,
in early June 1941 the Soviet armed forces began receiving thousands of
copies of a Russian-German phrase book, with sections dedicated to such
offensive military operations as seizing railroad stations, orienting
parachutists, and so forth, and such useful expressions as "Stop
transmitting or I'll shoot." This phrase book was produced in great
numbers by the military printing houses in both Leningrad and Moscow. However, they
never reached the troops on the front lines, and are said to have been
destroyed in the opening phase of the war.
Aid
from the 'Neutral' United States
As Suvorov notes, the United States had been
supplying Soviet Russia with military hardware since the late 1930s. He
cites Antony C. Sutton's study, National
Suicide (Arlington House, 1973), which reports that in 1938 President
Roosevelt entered into a secret agreement with the USSR to exchange
military information. For American public consumption, though, Roosevelt announced the
imposition of a "moral embargo" on Soviet Russia.
In
the months prior to America's formal entry
into war (December 1941), Atlantic naval vessels of the ostensibly neutral United States were already at
war against German naval forces. (See Mr. Roosevelt's Navy: The Private
War of the U.S. Atlantic Fleet, 1939-1942 by Patrick Abbazia [Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1975]). And
two days after the "Barbarossa" strike,
Roosevelt announced US aid to Soviet
Russia in its war for survival against the Axis. Thus, at the outbreak of
the "Barbarossa" attack, Hitler wrote
in a letter to Mussolini: "At this point it makes no difference
whether America officially enters
the war or not, it is already supporting our enemies in full measure with
mass deliveries of war materials."
Similarly,
Winston Churchill was doing everything in his power during the months prior
to June 1941 -- when British forces were suffering one military defeat
after another -- to bring both the United States and the Soviet Union into the war on Britain's side. In truth,
the "Big Three" anti-Hitler coalition (Stalin, Roosevelt, Churchill) was effectively in place even before Germany attacked Russia, and was a major
reason why Hitler felt compelled to strike against Soviet Russia, and to
declare war on the United States five months
later. (See Hitler's speech of December 11, 1941, published in the Winter
1988-89 Journal, pp. 394-396, 402-412.)
The
reasons for Franklin Roosevelt's support for Stalin are difficult to pin
down. President Roosevelt himself once explained to William Bullitt, his
first ambassador to Soviet Russia: "I think that if I give him
[Stalin] everything I possibly can, and ask nothing from him in return,
noblesse oblige, he won't try to annex anything, and will work with me for
a world of peace and democracy." (Cited in: Robert Nisbet,
Roosevelt and Stalin: The Failed Courtship [1989], p. 6.) Perhaps
the most accurate (and kindest) explanation for Roosevelt's attitude is a
profound ignorance, self-deception or naiveté. In the considered view of
George Kennan, historian and former high-ranking US diplomat, in
foreign policy Roosevelt was "a very superficial man,
ignorant, dilettantish, with a severely limited intellectual horizon."
A
Desperate Gamble
Suvorov admits to being fascinated with Stalin, calling him
"an animal, a wild, bloody monster, but a genius of all times and
peoples." He commanded the greatest military power in the Second World
War, the force that more than any other defeated Germany. Especially in
the final years of the conflict, he dominated the Allied military alliance.
He must have regarded Roosevelt and Churchill contemptuously as useful
idiots.
In
early 1941 everyone assumed that because Germany was still
militarily engaged against Britain in north Africa,
in the Mediterranean, and in the Atlantic, Hitler would
never permit entanglement in a second front in the East. (Mindful of the
disastrous experience of the First World War, he had warned in Mein
Kampf of the mortal danger of a two front war.) It was precisely
because he was confident that Stalin assumed Hitler would not open a second
front, contends Suvorov, that the German leader
felt free to launch "Barbarossa." This
attack, insists Suvorov, was an enormous and
desperate gamble. But threatened by superior Soviet forces poised to
overwhelm Germany and Europe, Hitler had
little choice but to launch this preventive strike.
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Soviet
troops hoist the red hammer-and-sickle flag over the Reichstag in Berlin, an act that
symbolized the Soviet subjugation of eastern and central Europe. The Battle of
Berlin climaxed the titanic struggle of German and Soviet forces that
began on June 22, 1941. On the
afternoon of April 30, 1945, as Soviet
troops were storming the Reichstag building, Hitler committed suicide in
his nearby bunker headquarters.
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But it was too little, too late. In
spite of the advantage of striking first, it was the Soviets who finally
prevailed. In the spring of 1945, Red army troops succeeded in raising the
red banner over the Reichstag building in Berlin. It was due only
to the immense sacrifices of German and other Axis forces that Soviet
troops did not similarly succeed in raising the Red flag over Paris,
Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Rome, Stockholm, and, perhaps, London. The Debate
Sharpens
In
spite of resistance from "establishment" historians (who in Russia are often former
Communists), support for Suvorov's
"preventive strike" thesis has been growing both in Russia and in western
Europe. Among those who sympathize with Suvorov's
views are younger Russian historians such as Yuri L. Dyakov,
Tatyana S. Bushuyeva,
and I. V. Pavlova. (See the Nov.-Dec. 1997 Journal,
pp. 32-34.)
With
regard to 20th-century history, American historians are generally more
close-minded than their counterparts in Europe or Russia. But even in the United States there have been a
few voices of support for the "preventive war" thesis -- which is
all the more noteworthy considering that Suvorov's
books on World War II, with the exception of Icebreaker, have not been
available in English. (One such voice is that of historian Russell Stolfi, a professor of Modern European History at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California. See the review
of his book Hitler's Panzers East in the Nov.-Dec. 1995 Journal.)
Not all the response to Suvorov's work has been
positive, though. It has also prompted criticism and renewed affirmations
of the decades-old orthodox view. Among the most prominent new defenders of
the orthodox "line" are historians Gabriel Gorodetsky
of Tel Aviv University, and John Ericson of Edinburgh University.
Rejecting
all arguments that might justify Germany's attack, Gorodetsky in particular castigates and ridicules Suvorov's works, most notably in a book titled,
appropriately, "The Icebreaker Myth." In effect, Gorodetsky (and Ericson)
attribute Soviet war losses to the supposed unpreparedness
of the Red Army for war. "It is absurd," Gorodetsky
writes, "to claim that Stalin would ever entertain any idea of
attacking Germany, as some German
historians now like to suggest, in order, by means of a surprise attack, to
upset Germany's planned
preventive strike."
Not
surprisingly, Gorodetsky has been praised by
Kremlin authorities and Russian military leaders. Germany's
"establishment" similarly embraces the Israeli historian. At
German taxpayers expense, he has worked and taught
at Germany's semi-official
Military History Research Office (MGFA), which in April 1991 published Gorodetsky's Zwei Wege nach Moskau
("Two Paths to Moscow").
In
the "Last Republic," Suvorov responds to Gorodetsky
and other critics of his first two books on Second World War history. He is
particularly scathing in his criticisms of Gorodetsky's
work, especially "The Icebreaker Myth."
Some
Criticisms
Suvorov writes caustically, sarcastically, and with great
bitterness. But if he is essentially correct, as this reviewer believes, he
-- and we -- have a perfect right to be bitter for
having been misled and misinformed for decades.
Although
Suvorov deserves our gratitude for his important
dissection of historical legend, his work is not without defects. For one
thing, his praise of the achievements of the Soviet military industrial
complex, and the quality of Soviet weaponry and military equipment, is
exaggerated, perhaps even panegyric. He fails to acknowledge the Western
origins of much of Soviet weaponry and hardware. Soviet engineers developed
a knack for successfully modifying, simplifying and, often, improving,
Western models and designs. For example, the rugged diesel engine used in
Soviet tanks was based on a German BMW aircraft diesel.
One
criticism that cannot in fairness be made of Suvorov
is a lack of patriotism. Mindful that the first victims of Communism were
the Russians, he rightly draws a sharp distinction between the Russian
people and the Communist regime that ruled them. He writes not only with
the skill of an able historian, but with reverence for the millions of
Russians whose lives were wasted in the insane plans of Lenin and Stalin
for "world revolution."
Journal of Historical Review 17, no. 4
(July-August 1998), 30-37. Daniel W. Michaels is a Columbia University graduate (Phi
Beta Kappa, 1954), a Fulbright exchange student to Germany (1957), and
recently retired from the US Department of Defense after 40 years of
service. Also see (off-site) the National Vanguard's review of Icebreaker and Hitler's
Reichstag speech of December 11, 1941.
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