Eastern Front #46 The end of the 33rd cover art

Eastern Front #46 The end of the 33rd

Eastern Front #46 The end of the 33rd

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Last time we spoke about Timoshenko taking control. In the north, Soviet forces on the Volkhov Front struggled to rescue the encircled 2nd Shock Army near Lyuban, with narrow supply corridors and heavy losses in the "Meat Grinder" at Miasnoi Bor. German Group Seydlitz advanced slowly toward the Demyansk Pocket, while Kholm defenders repelled assaults. Leningrad's logistics improved with Lake Ladoga plans, and partisans inflicted significant damage behind German lines. Hitler's Directive 41 outlined Fall Blau, targeting Caucasian oil and Leningrad. In the center, partisans and Soviet airborne/cavalry units disrupted Army Group Center, prompting operations like Hannover to shorten lines. In the south, Timoshenko took Southwestern Front command, planning a Kharkov offensive with massed tanks to encircle German forces. Crimea saw Kozlov's disastrous attack on Koi-Asan, yielding 352,000 Soviet casualties versus 24,120 German. Preparations for Sevastopol's siege included massive artillery like the Dora gun. This episode is the end of the 33rd Well hello there, welcome to the Eastern Front week by week podcast, I am your dutiful host Craig Watson. But, before we start I want to also remind you this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Perhaps you want to learn more about world war two? Kings and Generals have an assortment of episodes on world war two and much more so go give them a look over on Youtube. So please subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry for some more history related content, over on my channel, the Pacific War Channel you can find a few videos all the way from the Opium Wars of the 1800’s until the end of the Pacific War in 1945. On the 13th, the Germans in Finland partly spotted the buildup of the Karelian Front when a recon flight noticed 700 rail cars at Loukhi, highlighting the challenges of aerial reconnaissance in such remote, forested terrains where visibility was often hampered by weather and camouflage. But awful weather meant the only Soviet units they identified were the two ski brigades near the Mountain Corps Norway, specialized troops trained for winter warfare that had proven effective in earlier Finnish-Soviet conflicts like the Winter War of 1939-1940. That was enough for the 3rd Corps to scrap a small attack they had planned and focus instead on beefing up their defenses, a prudent shift given the harsh Arctic conditions that could quickly turn any offensive into a costly stalemate. In the end, though, the attack never happened because the Soviet deployment dragged on so slowly, hampered by the same logistical bottlenecks that plagued both sides in this theater, where supply lines stretched over hundreds of kilometers of rugged wilderness. Inside Leningrad, the city's trams, canals, water systems, and a lot of its factories restarted, with a big emphasis on war production, especially shells and mines, which were critical for sustaining the Red Army's artillery-heavy tactics that had evolved from lessons learned in the Russian Civil War and the purges of the 1930s. In fact, by the end of April, the city's output included 5 machine guns, 649 submachine guns, and 67,900 shells and mines, a remarkable feat considering the siege had already claimed hundreds of thousands of lives through starvation and bombardment since September 1941. Since most of the remaining male population in Leningrad had already been conscripted by then, these factories relied mostly on women; out of the 254,000 war industry workers in Leningrad that month, 181,000 were women, many of whom were stepping into roles traditionally held by men, reflecting a broader Soviet mobilization effort that saw women taking on combat and industrial duties in unprecedented numbers. The population also planted food crops in every possible spot of land—over 2,000 hectares of parkland and empty ground got turned into fields, an initiative born from the desperate need for self-sufficiency amid the blockade that had severed normal supply routes. Civilians could only use wood and peat as fuel to save on coal and petrol, and all buildings not fit for living were ordered torn down for firewood, a grim necessity in a city where the harsh winter had already forced residents to burn furniture and books for warmth. They even ordered a fuel pipeline built across the floor of Lake Ladoga, an engineering marvel that would complement the "Road of Life" ice route used during the frozen months, ensuring a lifeline for oil and other essentials as the thaw progressed. Outside Leningrad, Generals Mikhail Khozin and Kirill Meretskov’s offensive plans completely fell apart, unraveling under the weight of poor coordination and the unforgiving environment. The logistical mess from the Rasputitsa and the resulting quagmire made any offensive moves ...
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