Could Paulus have abandoned Stalingrad before encirclement? BATTLESTORM STALINGRAD E37

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  • Опубликовано: 22 окт 2024
  • Could Paulus have mounted a breakout operation before he was encircled at Stalingrad? With Operation Uranus in full swing, it's doubtful. Yet many historians and German generals have suggested that "nervous Paulus" could have disobeyed Hitler's stand fast order and pulled the 6th Army away from danger. But the sources suggest something different...
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    📚 BIBLIOGRAPHY / SOURCES 📚
    The specific Battlestorm Stalingrad bibliography docs.google.co...
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    📽️ RELATED VIDEO LINKS 📽️
    BATTLESTORM STALINGRAD S1/E1 - The 6th Army Strikes! • BATTLESTORM STALINGRAD...
    For all the episodes in this series • BATTLESTORM STALINGRAD...
    History Theory 101 • [Out of Date, see desc...
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    This video is discussing events or concepts that are academic, educational and historical in nature. This video is for informational purposes and was created so we may better understand the past and learn from the mistakes others have made.

Комментарии • 949

  • @khosrowanushirvan5728
    @khosrowanushirvan5728 2 года назад +422

    It speaks volumes about German's logistical and fuel situation in this stage of war when 700 motorized equipment is just sitting around in a depot far behind front lines, getting dust on, or snow in this case.
    The oil crisis of the Axis powers is indeed overlooked. Thanks, for enlightening us TIK!

    • @eze8970
      @eze8970 2 года назад +34

      I noticed that to, a good point. The Germans in the pocket mostly only had the mobility of walking.

    • @zeitgeistx5239
      @zeitgeistx5239 2 года назад +31

      Hence why they couldn’t retreat. They were essentially demobilized and had relied on horses but with the horses went far into the rear the Soviets struck at the perfect time. German army in Stalingrad would’ve needed days just to regroup, reorganize, pull out of the city, and gather the little fuel they had to form a armored spearhead for the break through.
      The same time happened to the German Army to the SE of Berlin during the fall of Berlin. Gather what’s left of your heavy weaponry and the fuel to power them and use it to breakthrough Soviet lines and them abandon them once out of fuel and hopefully open a gap for your men to get through while your rear guard sacrifices themselves to stall the Soviets long enough before the breakdown is closed.

    • @tstocker6926
      @tstocker6926 2 года назад +61

      Energy and fuel is still the Achilles heel of the German economy

    • @henriklarssen1331
      @henriklarssen1331 2 года назад +7

      @@tstocker6926 *sad german noises*

    • @tstocker6926
      @tstocker6926 2 года назад +5

      @@henriklarssen1331 , If you look at Europe oil production , its not very much.

  • @morewi
    @morewi 2 года назад +568

    I'll be honest here the Romanians did a lot better than I originally thought. I was always under the impression that they just folded when a day of the attack.

    • @TheImperatorKnight
      @TheImperatorKnight  2 года назад +296

      I think part of the problem is that the campaign is so long that historians have been compelled to whiz through the entire thing in one book, which means that several days get condensed into a couple of sentences at best. The result is "the Romanian lines collapsed", which is technically true, but in reality it was more complicated than that.

    • @morewi
      @morewi 2 года назад +67

      @@TheImperatorKnight that makes sense. Especially as most of my knowledge on the eastern front came from a series of books that time magazine published in the 70s.

    • @Talmurid
      @Talmurid 2 года назад +86

      @@TheImperatorKnight That's an interesting thought- a kind of temporal relativism. Another example of this is saying the Roman Empire was weak since it succumbed to barbarian invaders, when in reality this glosses over the complicated and complex wars and relations between the Romans and the Germanics... I wonder how many other events are unduly simplified due to being so far removed from them due to time.

    • @KaraBoga69
      @KaraBoga69 2 года назад +8

      @@Talmurid Fear of the parthians

    • @williamtell5365
      @williamtell5365 2 года назад +32

      The Roma Ian's did not lack ability. They were badly underarmed and undersupplied. Any German army in that situation would have failed.

  • @MrGouldilocks
    @MrGouldilocks 2 года назад +54

    For me, this episode is the climax of the entire series.
    I had a general idea of the sequence of events at Stalingrad. But seeing everything laid out in detail, and most importantly with CONTEXT.
    Even if Paulus had wanted to break out of the pocket, where was the 6th army supposed to go? They're literally hundreds of miles away from anything approaching safety and they would lack transportation and heavy equipment. The German general, who said a breakout would be of Napoleonic catastrophe, was spot on.

    • @cenccenc946
      @cenccenc946 2 года назад +2

      It probably would have been worse. napoleon had some horses left. The Germans would have had to make a full fighting retreat all the way, while being over run by the russians, in the middle of storms, food shortage, etc.

    • @sillypuppy5940
      @sillypuppy5940 2 года назад

      The Germans had got themselves into this mess weeks ago. After that it was a case of playing out the inevitable disaster.

  • @CruelDwarf
    @CruelDwarf 2 года назад +339

    I think the reason why Paulus was chosen as a scapegoat for the whole thing is rather simple: he went over to the Soviets and the rest of the German general corps never forgave him for that. So he was an easy target no one would really protect post-war.

    • @Comradez
      @Comradez 2 года назад +65

      Ding ding ding! We have a winner!

    • @hodaka1000
      @hodaka1000 2 года назад +6

      @@Comradez
      Yeah nah

    • @joaoespecial4168
      @joaoespecial4168 2 года назад

      Yep. After WW2 they were looking for scapegoats, dead (like Hitler) or alive.

    • @TheImperatorKnight
      @TheImperatorKnight  2 года назад +150

      Being in Soviet captivity doesn't allow you to defend your case and point the finger at others. It also discredits you in the eyes of the generals who told you to stand fast and then failed to break through to you.

    • @miracleyang3048
      @miracleyang3048 2 года назад +12

      Went over? Wasn't he simply captured by Soviet soldiers?

  • @jayjayson9613
    @jayjayson9613 2 года назад +136

    It's amazing how long the Battle of Stalingrad really took and all the turning points and decisions that led to its outcome.
    Thank you very much for your efforts in providing an accurate account of the events TIK

    • @dusk6159
      @dusk6159 2 года назад +5

      Truly THE breath of fresh air needed in a huge and valuable topic like this in WW2.

  • @Comradez
    @Comradez 2 года назад +101

    People forget that the 6th Army had responsibilities to the entire Army Group, not just to its own survival. What if Paulus had ordered a breakout on November 21st, and in the disorder, rush, and having to leave behind almost all vehicles and heavy weapons (because of lack of fuel reserves/horses/time to prepare/etc.), what if the 6th Army had just completely disintegrated, and instead of tieing up 4+ Soviet armies until Feb. 3rd, had just left the door completely open for the Soviets to take Rostov in a matter of days, shutting the door on the entire Caucasus force before Manstein could react and precipitating an even bigger crisis? Paulus's ultimate decision to stand ground might have been the only reason the Soviets ultimately had to demote the planned Operation Saturn to Operation Little Saturn, and the only reason the Caucasus forces were able to mostly withdraw through the Rostov gate at all.

    • @Comradez
      @Comradez 2 года назад +25

      I should also add: we may be starting to see in the current Ukraine conflict the extent to which even larger numbers of troops can be relatively ineffective (especially at going on the offensive/conducting breakouts) when they lack heavy weapons. Ukraine is, in theory, supposed to have several times the number of troops mobilized than Russia by now, and yet Ukraine's counter-offensives have been petering out after capturing a village or two. That may still change, but as things stand now, Paulus's decision to stand ground where at least they could still use what vehicles and heavy weapons they had is looking smarter and smarter judging from Ukraine's experiences in the ongoing war.

    • @ShamanKish
      @ShamanKish 2 года назад

      @@Comradez Ukrainian strategy is a joke. They are literally creating an army of Orcs conceived by "Saruman", based on anti Russian sentiment and burning Russians books. That is not a military strategy. That is childish. Worse - it is delusional.

    • @Comradez
      @Comradez 2 года назад +14

      @@ShamanKish I would agree that there is certainly delusional hubris on the part of the Ukrainian war aims and strategy. Their most advantageous time for a negotiated ceasefire was in early April just after the Russian strategic withdrawal out of the Kiev/Sumy theaters. Ukraine might have been able to limit their territorial concessions to just Crimea and Donbass and their diplomatic concessions to ruling out NATO (but leaving in possibility of EU membership) at that point. But now, I suspect that Russia is so fed up with Ukraine and so distrusting of it that Russia will never give up the portions of Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, and Kharkiv oblasts that they've acquired, and that Ukraine expelling Russia from those regions (or the Donbass) by force are looking increasingly remote.

    • @ShamanKish
      @ShamanKish 2 года назад

      @@Comradez Because Ukrainian masters are ideologically defined and determined, there is no possibility to negotiate with them. The idea which controls them will simply not allow it. By the way, they keep repeating from the very beginning: No diplomacy! 😎 And (to illustrate) judging by what Bojo is proposing right now , it's clear that land war with Russia is what concerns western politicians rather than economic situation at their home. They just don't care about economy. That is part of their strategy! They are completely delusional.

    • @unlearningcommunism4742
      @unlearningcommunism4742 2 года назад +9

      Imagine panicking retreat across hundreds of kilometers and dozens of rivers. It would be Napoleon 2.0

  • @scottnieradka6836
    @scottnieradka6836 2 года назад +73

    I never understood what many historians wanted Paulus to do, If he abandoned his positions and broke out on foot even on the 20th, they would abandon defensive positions and free up the other soviet armies in the north and east. If they were delayed in escaping, as they would as the soviet calvary and motorized units racing to kalach had better mobility, they would have been slaughtered on the steppe. Looking at a map, its absurd, casualties would have been atrocious, morales would be low if abandoning stalingrad, it would be a rout. The blame should be that all reserves had been committed to stalingrad and army group b didnt have sufficient reserves at kalach to do much to stop the soviet advance. Paulus sent what scraps he had west.

    • @TheImperatorKnight
      @TheImperatorKnight  2 года назад +29

      Yes, and as someone else has pointed out, withdrawing in the middle of a blizzard wouldn't be easy. Paulus would have had a difficult time as it was if he'd been fighting in the summer. Given the immobility of his army and the fact he only really understood the danger of encirclement at mid-day on the 21st, it really doesn't make sense to order a withdraw.

    • @pax6833
      @pax6833 2 года назад +6

      Realistically Stalingrad would have had to have been won in the beginning of the Base Blue offensive. Had the Germans driven straight to Kalach, they would've had much better odds of taking it. After scattering the Soviet front line, they could have made for their ground objectives instead of going for encirclements of troops that didn't even exist.

    • @davidburroughs2244
      @davidburroughs2244 2 года назад +1

      @@pax6833 I agree. Except for one thing. Those hundreds of thousands of "missing" Russian troops had to be somewhere and only a fool would ignore them and hope they had simply kept on running until they got to the Urals.

    • @pax6833
      @pax6833 2 года назад +1

      @@davidburroughs2244 The russians had withdrawn and instead of pursuing them, Hitler told his commanders to "encircle" Rostov thinking they would capture the Soviet Army. It wasted a TON of time and caused a massive logistics disaster that took a week to undo where they weren't moving toward Stalingrad while the Soviets set up new defenses.

    • @davidburroughs2244
      @davidburroughs2244 2 года назад

      @@pax6833 I am not sure that even if Stalingrad had taken to the Germans the southern war would have been over. I am sure the Russians would have kept on coming until they had retaken Stalingrad and fully retaken the oil fields further south. I can see few ways Germany could win this one. The German challenges and goals there was a bit of a task too far for their overall unimportant previous victories to offset.

  • @Sphere723
    @Sphere723 2 года назад +225

    I think TIK did a good job showing that the important German mistakes were made long before Operation Uranus. The Axis forces were stretched way too thin across this entire front, and the logistics capacity too limited for the Germans to do much of anything when Uranus was begun. It wasn't that the wrong option was chosen in these handful of days, rather there were no good options to take. Credit the Soviets for putting together an offensive that found the weak points in the Axis line, and executed it at a pace that prevented the 6th Army from having the time to react effectively. The real story of Uranus isn't the German command becoming dumb, it's the growing competence of the Red army.

    • @pax6833
      @pax6833 2 года назад +15

      @@Edax_Royeaux Or reinforcing the southern front with a reserve army instead of AGC. Which makes no sense since there's nothing vital for AGC to defend, unlike AGS.

    • @fighting_bones
      @fighting_bones 2 года назад +2

      Very well said

    • @andrewblake2254
      @andrewblake2254 2 года назад +9

      So where are all these idle armies or antitank guns going to come from?

    • @andrewblake2254
      @andrewblake2254 2 года назад +13

      @@Edax_Royeaux I see they were made from 1942 on so they would have been available in Germany. However getting them and their ammunition to the Romanian forces on the Don steppe was probably way beyond anything the Germans were capable of. There would also have been a training requirement. Did the Romanians even have Pak 38's at this stage?

    • @davidburroughs2244
      @davidburroughs2244 2 года назад +1

      The German logistics weren't capable of carrying the demand. They were choosing to send boys, bullets, and bandaids and had not the capacity to send, for example, many things which they had, such as winter uniforms, gas (which they lacked), and anti-tank guns and ammo. They had miscalculated what they would need and what they would have to have to get it all there.

  • @bwv1044
    @bwv1044 2 года назад +66

    The most surprising thing about this stage is there was no 11th Kotluban offensive on the 19th/20th Nov.

    • @joaoespecial4168
      @joaoespecial4168 2 года назад +2

      :)

    • @TheImperatorKnight
      @TheImperatorKnight  2 года назад +28

      There were attacks in the north designed to distract the Germans, but they were weak and didn't do anything noteworthy.

    • @Albukhshi
      @Albukhshi 2 года назад +5

      Dang it, bwv1044! this is Kotluban, not the Isonzo!
      :P
      Jokes aside: I doubt even the Red Army was THAT poorly led.

    • @miljandjuric7663
      @miljandjuric7663 2 года назад

      Kotluban offensive counter?

    • @seinine
      @seinine 2 года назад

      That is because and 11th Kotluban offensive concept by this point would have been has-been... Instead they would have rather wanted an TWELTH KOTLUBAN OFFENSIVE!
      Hell yeah!

  • @rozkaz661
    @rozkaz661 2 года назад +64

    The analisys of difrent conflicting sources and making out some sort of coherent theory out if it is absolutely amasing academic tier work. This is great work TIK. Im sure people could get phds out of the content you put out for us here

  • @joemcardle7728
    @joemcardle7728 2 года назад +19

    This is such a concise rebuttal to the "conventional wisdom" propagated the last 80 years about the breakout option, thanks TIK!

  • @karljohan3989
    @karljohan3989 2 года назад +44

    What an episode ! I'm wondering how Chuikov felt at this moment. The madlad held the thin red line until Operation Uranus. Must have felt great to finally see a glimpse of the light at the end of the tunnel.

    • @Becks670
      @Becks670 2 года назад +4

      this!

    • @neilwilson5785
      @neilwilson5785 2 года назад +4

      Chuikov, if he had had all the facts, would still be apprehensive, but worried that this new hope might just lead to another month of hell and death.He did not know what collossal moves were going on.

  • @jtfrank2006
    @jtfrank2006 2 года назад +46

    The weather played a huge factor here too.. There was a massive white out blizzard in the middle of all of this then followed by days of super dense fog.. these guys couldn’t see more than 20 feet in front of them for the most part

    • @TheImperatorKnight
      @TheImperatorKnight  2 года назад +27

      Yes! You can imagine the panic and chaos if Paulus gave the order to withdraw

    • @rring44
      @rring44 2 года назад +6

      @@TheImperatorKnight I am thinking about the German movie Stalingrad at the end of it where the soldiers just walk out into the blizzard and freeze to death.

    • @Comradez
      @Comradez 2 года назад +5

      @@rring44 Yes, the treeless steppe in a winter blizzard is kind of the worst possible environment in which to be doing a breakout on foot without vehicles or heavy weapons. It would be suicidal. At least, staying in the Stalingrad pocket, they had the rubble of the city as "shelter" and could continue distracting several Soviet armies for another several months, even if their own survival was hopeless.

    • @jtfrank2006
      @jtfrank2006 2 года назад +4

      I read the book till the last breath or until your last breath… can’t quite remember but it was a first hand account of a soldier who was eventually transferred to the Stalingrad staging area when this all went down… and the panic… then days later getting smashed by the Russian army when it regrouped..

    • @cccpredarmy
      @cccpredarmy 2 года назад

      And yet the "totally immune to winter weather conditions" soviets managed to perform an ARMY-encirclement operation... Trying to portray german warmachine as completely incompetent and incapable again?

  • @winterkingbeats4183
    @winterkingbeats4183 2 года назад +25

    I've wanted to comment this for the longest but I always get sidetracked by the video. Thank you for adding the source material right on screen and thank you for the extra editing required to do that. It's such a great help. Excellent video as always.

  • @Pincer88
    @Pincer88 2 года назад +11

    Thinking back of all the videos on this specific topic (Stalingrad) it was only recently that I realized what a work of Herculeanian proportions this entire series must be, considering the amount of detail, the many different viewpoints, the excellent analysis and careful avoidance of too convenient judgement by other historians or witnesses of the time. Not to mention the work that must have gone into making the maps with outlines of units, commanders and shifting frontlines. To me this is an above and beyond Phd-thesis effort. And then we even haven't talked about all other, related videos. Admirable doesn't begin to cover my sincere appreciation.

    • @sirridesalot6652
      @sirridesalot6652 2 года назад +6

      I firmly believe that with this series TIK could have earned a doctorate of history at any prestigious university.

  • @2205Razors
    @2205Razors 2 года назад +14

    Good to see you back, TIK. Always take care of your health!

  • @Comradez
    @Comradez 2 года назад +32

    The Germans were prepared to fend off another Kotluban offensive. They were not prepared to fend off an offensive almost an order of magnitude larger in scale. Their under-estimation prior to 19th of November of Soviet reserves and equipment and mobility and offensive striking capabilities (and thus their assumption that any offensive would have the less ambitious objective of severing some rail lines to Stalingrad from the North, rather than a double-sided pincer to completely encircle 6th Army) is what doomed the 6th Army. After 19th of November, there was little the 6th Army could have done differently to get any better outcome.

    • @aleksazunjic9672
      @aleksazunjic9672 2 года назад +6

      Underestimation of Soviet mobilization and industrial capacity was one of the major causes of Operation Barbarossa in general.

  • @Trojanponey
    @Trojanponey 2 года назад +17

    Day instantly improved with new Stalingrad video! Thanks TIK!

  • @ErikHare
    @ErikHare 2 года назад +51

    One thing you didn't cover in this rapidly evolving situation situation is that Paulus probably didn't know exactly what was going on at any given time. It would have been very difficult to make decisions

    • @TheImperatorKnight
      @TheImperatorKnight  2 года назад +26

      I did mention that he was only informed by von Weichs about the possibility of encirclement on the mid-morning of the 21st. But yes, we're seeing the battlefield with a lot more information than Paulus had. The 6th Army assumed that the cavalry corps was the main threat until the tanks were spotted.

    • @dennisweidner288
      @dennisweidner288 2 года назад

      Erik Hare He had plenty of time to understand before Uranus that advancing east with unprotected flanks deep into the Soviet Union was military insanity. Not to mention giving up the German trump card of mobility to fight a protracted urban struggle.

    • @stevensnake3008
      @stevensnake3008 Год назад

      also because Japan decided not to attack the Soviets in the rear the Siberian Army of 1 million men literally were Unleashed to fight Hitler and visibility was 10 yd at the most and this secret army literally crawled up on her stomachs over 100 miles and surrounded Hitler Hitler's Army the sixth Army and they had determined had no idea they were being surrounded also they burned all the grain silos and the Germans themselves brought starvation upon theirselves

    • @metalfire86able
      @metalfire86able Год назад

      @@stevensnake3008 i still couldn't figure out why Japan didn't attacks Siberian after Soviet withdraw million mens
      Maybe their situation for offensive was impossible to conduct plus their force mostly concentrated in China.

    • @imreallynoob8311
      @imreallynoob8311 6 месяцев назад

      ​​@@metalfire86ablei belive it have no reason to
      And striking south demands much less manpower with much more rewards
      While striking north all they face would be forest and snow with poor infurstructure they would gain practically nothing while lose to winter attrition

  • @jgelt
    @jgelt 2 года назад +30

    The thing that hits me the hardest, is that in this case there is enough information for TIK to build a counter-narrative to what is the accepted story of the events. How many stories of history, in fact, bear little resemblance to what actually happened because no information survives to build a counter-narrative?

    • @andrewblake2254
      @andrewblake2254 2 года назад +4

      Yes I have often pondered the fact that memoirs are only written by survivors. They then "make sense of it all" which is a natural human habit. I often what the killed would make of it all and if they would consider it a worthwhile sacrifice.

  • @jp38able
    @jp38able 2 года назад +45

    One other argument for the blame falling on Paulus could have been his inability to defend himself, since he lived behind the iron curtain when the accounts of the battle were written. In Adittion to this, Paulus was captured by the red army and was thus seen as dishonored by the rest of the german officers, which made it easier to paint him in a bad light.

  • @ricardokowalski1579
    @ricardokowalski1579 2 года назад +17

    There is a saying: "Victory has many fathers, but defeat doesn't even have a mother"
    That is why everything is "mad hitler's " fault

  • @thomasvandevelde8157
    @thomasvandevelde8157 2 года назад +19

    YES! Made my day again here TIK! And this *with* decent subtitles... Keep up the good work mate!

  • @dirremoire
    @dirremoire 2 года назад +8

    Your skill at storytelling is on par with your brilliance as a researcher. Thank you for continuing this extraordinary series.

  • @paulceglinski3087
    @paulceglinski3087 2 года назад +9

    Great!!!! Hope your feeling better, TIK. Been anxious about this series and now I'm ecstatic. Yeahhhh!

  • @JamesJones-jf2yq
    @JamesJones-jf2yq 2 года назад +3

    A Few Minutes of History from Tik Tok told me to check this channel! And I’m happy I did!

  • @natus7959
    @natus7959 2 года назад +28

    I am forming an opinion right now. The biggest mistake made might be, to even commit all forces constantly. It made them unable to react.
    Similar I have experienced in strategy games, where if you commit forces to the end, never stop and form a reserve, everything has to be "calculated" to victory. Impossible in the real world by fog of war.

    • @chaptermasterpedrokantor1623
      @chaptermasterpedrokantor1623 2 года назад +9

      The Soviet deep strike doctrine had it that exploitation force was to be completely separate from the breakthrough force. Attacking with the exploitation force as part of the breakthrough was a sign of bad generalship and losing your nerve in the heat of the moment. Which happened more often then it should, most case even late in the war Zhukov committing his tank armies into the meatgrinder of the Seelow Heights battle as he was getting frustrated in his breaktrough and Konev was already moving towards Berlin. As for reserves, even in the darkest days of 1941 the Soviets always managed to create army sized reserve forces with which they managed to blunt and frustrate German offensives after they had successfully destroyed Soviet armies and even fronts. The Germans never managed this feat and even committed their only army sized reserve force, 2nd Army, early in the Barbarossa campaign. And from then on struggled to skim enough forces from quiet sector to create an operational reserve for the Eastern Front. Which was a major reason why ultimately they abandoned the Rhzev salient in 1943 and launched operation Citadel to cut off the Kursk salient.

    • @juliantheapostate8295
      @juliantheapostate8295 2 года назад +9

      They never had enough forces to form that reserve. The entire Fall Blau was predicated on the fact the USSR was ready to collapse

    • @88porpoise
      @88porpoise 2 года назад +6

      Of course it wasn't just that Paulus and others just sent everything they could to front lines and didn't have reserves. They suffered through months of battle and attrition and had to constantly commit reserves to various places to maintain their positions and launch attacks such that by the time of Uranus, there were basically no reserves left.

    • @Vitross
      @Vitross 2 года назад +3

      Thats an easy opinion to have if you have enough forces to have reseves. When you are stretched thin you dont have the luxury of reserve forces, they needed to carve out their winter defensive positions before winter and then dig in. The fastest way to do that is to commit all you have.

    • @88porpoise
      @88porpoise 2 года назад +4

      @@juliantheapostate8295 To be fair, the entirety of Barbarossa was launched on the assumption that they only had to "kick in the door and the entire rotten structure will come crashing down"

  • @caryblack5985
    @caryblack5985 2 года назад +10

    Well argued and comprehensive. It is ludicrous to think a major withdrawal of all the forces in Stalingrad could be done in a day or two. The disposition of the forces scattered both within the city and along the northern perimeter would take quite a time to organize and lines of defense were absolutely necessary or the units of the 6th Army would be easily defeated if they lacked any cohesion.

  • @Adonnus100
    @Adonnus100 2 года назад +7

    It continuously impresses me just how well made, graphically speaking, this series is.

  • @NikhilSingh-007
    @NikhilSingh-007 2 года назад +14

    History student - Mr Stahel, when you you think the Germans lost, at what point?
    Le Stahel - 3:16AM, 22nd June 1941.
    Student- B-but.. Mr Stahel they just started the invasion barely a minute ago??
    David Stahel- Exactly ;)

    • @ricardokowalski1579
      @ricardokowalski1579 2 года назад +2

      This. 👍

    • @Pangora2
      @Pangora2 2 года назад +2

      Its the enlightened view. Also I like to play with the scenario that France folding so easily was an accident. Germany didn't have the resources to occupy it anyways, and winning gave them the hubris to bog down in the Balkans and then invade Russia. The more one study's the war, the more unwinnable it becomes.

    • @chaptermasterpedrokantor1623
      @chaptermasterpedrokantor1623 2 года назад +6

      @@Pangora2 If anything the fall of France in 1940 was a coming together of almost everything working in favor of the attacker and everything working against the defender. It was the perfect storm at the right exact moment. Like 9-11 was. You try bringing down to skyscrapers by flying 2 aircraft into them. Chances are you will probably never get to replicate that feat again if you could. Sometimes luck favors one side and misfortune the other. The mistake is in not recognizing the extraordinary circumstances of everything going right and expecting it to happen again.

    • @z000ey
      @z000ey 2 года назад +1

      They actually lost the war already on September 1st 1939.

  • @muskett4108
    @muskett4108 2 года назад +6

    Fascinating piece of history that needed some real scrutiny. A lot of us always wanted to know what did go on. TIK delivers again the most compelling argument to date.
    Paulus had few options. Forming an all round defence pocket must have been the priority, or get over run from the rear.
    Withdrawal would have been an immediate rout and certain destruction of the 6th Army, for there was no fuel, no ammunition, no vehicles, no horses, and no plan. Plus the distance to friendly territory was long and an unknown quantity.
    All in a blizzard.
    All credit to the Soviets for pulling their plan off and on such a scale.

  • @Rachotilko
    @Rachotilko 2 года назад +5

    What an impressive episode. It seems TIKs passion is back.
    To the point: the whole thing starts to make sense now. Paulus is basically blamed for not teleporting 250 thousand men strong army with all the equipment 200km west over winter steppe without fuel while fighting the fresh and well supplied Soviet armored armies.

  • @88porpoise
    @88porpoise 2 года назад +15

    I think one important thing to consider in these decisions is that the Battle of Stalingrad wasn't about the German Sixth Army, it was about winning the war. "Saving the sixth army" should not be a goal into itself, but only matter if it can lead to a strategic advantage in the war.
    If you withdraw from Stalingrad, you are essentially giving up all the successes of Case Blue and are back to where you were months earlier with thousands of dead and an ever more capable Soviet Army in front of you. So even if you get Sixth Army out mostly intact (well in the state it was on the eve of Uranus), does that actually help your strategic position?
    If they could somehow hold their positions in Stalingrad until the Soviet offensive is stopped and Manstein breaks through, you still have a knife pressed against the throat of Soviet oil supplies.
    With hindsight we know Manstein had no real hope to break through and the war was going to be lost no matter what happened at Stalingrad, but I could see an argument in November 1942 that, in terms of winning the war, the small chance of holding their foothold on Stalingrad could be worth risking the loss of the quarter million men around Stalingrad. And it isn't just sunk-cost fallacy. If they withdrew, reformed and resumed the offensive in 1943, how much more would be lost getting back to the Volga and how much benefit would the Soviets get having secured the Volga until then?

    • @dennisweidner288
      @dennisweidner288 2 года назад +1

      Shaun Young What you say is true. But manpower is also important. The Soviets and Western Allies could replace losses. The Germans were already by 1942 drawing on their last reserves of military-age men. After Stalingrad, they could not begin to match the manpower reserves of the enemies they made and their allies (Romanians, Italians, and Hungarians) were effectively knocked out of the War. It is 1943that they begin to face vastly larger and better-armed Soviet and western forces.

    • @88porpoise
      @88porpoise 2 года назад +1

      @@dennisweidner288 But something like 200,000 men (there would be major losses pulling out) aren't going to change the big picture in 1943. Losing 250,000 men to keep their positions in Stalingrad and threatening Soviet access to the Caucasian oil fields would likely be well worth it for the Germans.
      And, unlike something like Dunkirk, it would be hard to spin it as a victory in propaganda as even if Sixth Army successfully withdrew. Stalingrad was still a massive loss by an army that has established a reputation of victory coming on the heels of Second El Alamein and Torch.

    • @dennisweidner288
      @dennisweidner288 2 года назад +1

      @@88porpoise I do not disagree with you. Even if the 6th army had been saved the germans faced oivee=helming odds by 1943. but losing the most powerful formation in the German Army was a huge loss. I am not arguing that they should have tied to breakout only that manpower had become a major issue for the Germans. And the loss of equipment for the inefficient German war economy was also an issue,

    • @nastypiglosi1788
      @nastypiglosi1788 2 года назад

      Losing 300,000 experienced soldiers is never good.

  • @binford5000
    @binford5000 2 года назад +3

    The reason so many people keep it simple (blame one or two men) is basic history education (high school level)
    You get shoved so much down your throat from Neanderthals to 1980s in 4 years, that basicly WWII, which still is a significant part of the 4th year, is just "they went to Stalingrad where they failed and then took 2 years to reach home".
    You gotta have a special interest to ask questions and have someone like TIK read gazillion books about it to finally get a little more insight.
    TV documentaries are just as bad as school, not because auf quality, but because what can you put into a few hours?
    This series is a ton of researched boiled down to the absolute minimum to get only a basic understanding. To really understand it, you'd have to read TIKs book list yourself a few times.
    Hats off to you sir. You are my hero.

  • @Tekisasubakani
    @Tekisasubakani 2 года назад +5

    10:07 BobRosskii Must be some happy little trees there, eh?
    I really appreciate you marking units that you are referring to with a solid colored backer card!

    • @TheImperatorKnight
      @TheImperatorKnight  2 года назад

      Yeah, the place is called "Bobrovskii", but I thought I could improve it slightly 😂

    • @Tekisasubakani
      @Tekisasubakani 2 года назад

      @@TheImperatorKnight I'm sure the Soviets would have appreciated some calmness and positivity around this time.

  • @KomradZX1989
    @KomradZX1989 2 года назад +1

    Man, the amount of work you have to do making these videos truly staggers me! And with so few mistakes so consistently to boot! Your work is top notch as always TIK! Cheers!

  • @philliprandle9075
    @philliprandle9075 2 года назад +3

    Just made my week can't wait for the next one!!!

  • @thebuzzsaw6489
    @thebuzzsaw6489 2 года назад +1

    Have read several books on Stalingrad, but your series provides significant insights and additional information.
    Thank you!

    • @ralphshelley9586
      @ralphshelley9586 2 года назад

      Supply lines stretched! Bitter cold. Low on fuel, ammo and food. Out manned. Exhausted and gallant soldiers. Luftwaffe failed.

  • @AnthonyEvelyn
    @AnthonyEvelyn 2 года назад +13

    Im not sure Paulus could have extricated 6th Army in time from Stalingrad. Paulus was an easy scapegoat, Hitler would have had his head if he broke ranks with OKH and succeeded in breaking out. The Soviets had a field day capturing Luftwaffe airfields juicy with supplies. However, I was under the impression that the Romanians lines collapsed quickly and fled in abject disarray with the Soviets rampaging to link up with the southern flanking force. Thanks TIK for your hitherto magnificent series.

    • @Blazo_Djurovic
      @Blazo_Djurovic 2 года назад +7

      Even if he had broken rank with OKH he would likely need to abandon most of their equipment and supplies in the pocket, and pretty much walk out with just days worth of rations in solders bags. So they would be lakcing shelter, and food and heavy equipment in the middle of a major Soviet offensive. And nearest unit they could retreat to... is Army group A or something.

    • @gabrieletagliaventi5516
      @gabrieletagliaventi5516 2 года назад +1

      we have evidence that a breakout would have succeeded. Evidence comes from what happened in January 1943; the Italian Alpini were trapped and made it to the Axis lines, loosing 50% of the men, but they made it. In far more horrible weather conditions and without any single one panzer

    • @Blazo_Djurovic
      @Blazo_Djurovic 2 года назад +2

      @@gabrieletagliaventi5516 Were there Axis units on the other side to accept them and did they have to leave heavy equipment.
      Also, Alpini I would imagine would be much better prepared to venture into blizzard than normal Axis solders.

  • @labrat7420
    @labrat7420 2 года назад +1

    This is such a fantastic series! Absolutely thrilled when a new episode is released. Appreciate the time and effort that goes into producing these, thank you TIK.

  • @godweenausten
    @godweenausten 2 года назад +13

    "To break out, or not to break out! That is the question." In view of what I learned through this series, and from my own reading before, the German high command really acted like a headless chicken sometimes (e.g. when things went bad for them). No wonder Hitler felt the need to appoint himself as the supreme commander. Someone had to hold the reins of this mess, lmao. And while Hitler had some capacity for strategy, he was no military genius. Anyway, I can understand why he lost his nerve so many times, and shouted at his generals... I mean, who wouldn't, just look at this mess!

    • @hermitoldguy6312
      @hermitoldguy6312 2 года назад

      They only ever planned to win.

    • @jb-xc4oh
      @jb-xc4oh 2 года назад

      The mess you talk about was the result of Hitler's poor decisions in the context of operation Blau.

  • @hermocrasbreadlord9557
    @hermocrasbreadlord9557 2 года назад +1

    Past week I've been watching Battlestorm from Episode 1 and now I'm here to the most recent episode. I'm so glad I've took the time to watch this, I've never been so taken by a documentary series. Truly TIK, you do a marvelous job and I look forward to seeing the climatic end.

  • @tokencivilian8507
    @tokencivilian8507 2 года назад +4

    WOW! Fantastic episode. And yes, when you lay out the timeline, it's clear - the Red Army out played the Germans, period, full stop. When Paulus and the entire German High Command would have needed to order a breakout BEFORE the commencement of the offensive, or to have taken equally radical action weeks to months early to stem the encirclement (pulling divisions from AG Center or North or reinforce the flanks or provide a break in force), it's clear that the Red Army won the battle far more than the Germans lost it.

  • @Legio__X
    @Legio__X 2 года назад +1

    TIK has finally given humanity a reason to look forward to Monday’s 👏🏻

  • @jamesbeeching4341
    @jamesbeeching4341 2 года назад +5

    Good Vid Tik.. I think realistically any breakout attempt (either now or later) would have ended in a Napoleonic catastrophe!! 6th Army was already exhausted and even in late 42 was largely reliant on horses..Which weren't even there!!

  • @danielevans8728
    @danielevans8728 10 месяцев назад +1

    Everyone seems competent and generally good at their job when the army was advancing victoriously. Then it devolves into blame deflection and ass covering. Good work sir.

  • @juliantheapostate8295
    @juliantheapostate8295 2 года назад +3

    Another great episode Lewis, good work

  • @rudolfbehm2194
    @rudolfbehm2194 2 года назад +1

    wow I cant wait for the next episode, you are doing a tremendous and HUGE job here TIK thanks for your videos!

  • @Alopex1
    @Alopex1 2 года назад +5

    I keep repeating myself, but still: excellent episode as always. Thanks for the meticulous analysis of the sources. And thanks for debunking the myths peddled by the Nazi bastards like Manstein after the war, it can't be done enough and you're doing a great job :) Keep up the great work!

    • @nemiw4429
      @nemiw4429 2 года назад

      Theres nothing wrong repeating how good TIK does his job.

  • @harbomarbo4695
    @harbomarbo4695 2 года назад +1

    Well TIK you are making the best documentary ever about Stalingrad. I can imagine it takes a lot of effort but it is a masterpiece...

  • @michaelkovacic2608
    @michaelkovacic2608 2 года назад +4

    Thanks for your incredible work!

  • @LaHayeSaint
    @LaHayeSaint 2 года назад +1

    TIK -- You should be a lecturer at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. I love your detailed and sometimes alternative explanations on what did or what could have occurred. Really brilliant!

  • @Jcod_
    @Jcod_ 2 года назад +5

    If my understanding is right, the flanks fought amazingly given the circumstances. They lacked men, mobility, and equipment but still put up resistance for as long as they did.

    • @dennisweidner288
      @dennisweidner288 2 года назад +1

      bangythebrav I am not sure the flanks "fought amazingly " but what you say in absolutektlky true. They were unmotorized and lacked heavy equipment, both tanks, and artillery. The untold story of Stalingrad is WHY the German allies were so poorly equipped.

  • @douglascrystal3837
    @douglascrystal3837 2 года назад +1

    I just watched the last 37 episodes in the last 3 days straight, what a treat, you sir are awesome, hail to thee

  • @razvananghel7492
    @razvananghel7492 2 года назад +5

    Romanian armies at Stalingrad, both of them, were moved there after the previous Crimeea campaign where they fought really hard and took Sevastopol, first unit to reach the harbor was a Romanian unit btw. And it was a Romanian Mountain Corps unit which took the crucial Sugar Loaf position at Sevastopol and also it was the Romanians which took Balaklava with 10 000 russian prisoners.
    The Stalingrad front was considered a quiet one on the flanks considering the complete routing of the soviet armies prior of the germans reaching the city.
    Romanian forces were moved there to rest and re-build. Remember that it was also the middle of the winter and no military operations were expected outside the skirmishes in Stalingrad. So nobody bothered in reinforcing the Romanians or the Italians guarding the flanks. They were supposed to be rebuild in the spring, March-April for the summer offensive and in the meantime just rest and resist the winter best they could.
    Romanians fought as they always did, bravely. when the attack begun. They repulsed the initial attack and they only started getting into trouble when the russians send in the heavy armor against which Romanians had no counter. And they still resisted bravely. Three generals were killed leading bayonet charges.
    Romania is the forgotten ally and was the most important german ally of the entire war BY FAR except Japan. And Japan only because it kept the americans from fully committing to the european theatre.
    Romania just ended on the wrong side of history at the end of the war so they were forgotten and overlooked. Germans and russians did it on purpose. Minimizing Romanian contribution to the war to make themselves look good and painting Romanians as some just some losers cannon fodder that run at the first shot. Nothing can be further from the truth
    Fully recommend this answer on Quora about Romanians in WW2:
    www.quora.com/How-well-did-the-Romanian-Army-perform-during-WW2

    • @dennisweidner288
      @dennisweidner288 2 года назад

      Razvan Anghel You make an importnt point. And I suspect the same is true for the Hungarians and Italians, Too often the Axus allies are dismissed as incompetent and lacking in fighting spirit. Simply ignored is that the Germans did not provide then heavy weapons. Almost never asked is WHY? Why were the axis allies and much of the Ostheer so poorly equipped? After all the Germans had a much larger heavy industry capacity than the Soviets. There is endless discussion of tactics and not a word about economic performance. The simple fact is that the German economic performance given their industrial capacity was miserable and much of their industrial output was diverted to fighting the War in the West. The men with east, but industrial output went West--a recipe for disaster, In addition, the Soviet economic performance was startling.

  • @heinekelland9223
    @heinekelland9223 2 года назад +7

    Maybe a withdraw from the Kotluban area to shorten the lines would have been a good idea? As it would have freed some german tank and motorized divisions to be used in the counter attacks against the soviet pincers. and to keep the corridor open at Kalach. Also maybe a withdraw of the 11th corps to the south, but as you said they would have lost most of their heavy weapons due to a lack of fuel and they'd have to march on foot. Now i understand the kotluban was a good defensive position and the soviets had lost many men trying to take it, but was it worth it to keep those motorized and tank divisions occupied there for months? They could have set up an operational reserve so when operation uranus struck they'd have something to fill the gaps with.
    Other than that, thanks a lot for the video!

    • @andrewblake2254
      @andrewblake2254 2 года назад +1

      Whichever way you arrange the divisions they were just stretched to thin and without adequate logistics.

    • @teun558
      @teun558 2 года назад +1

      If the Kotlaban area had not been held the city would have been reinforced. Making all the attacks on the city impossible. Once Uranus started it was to late any of this.

  • @andreibocse4271
    @andreibocse4271 2 года назад +65

    Paulus could have escaped the encriclement if he had done his daily prayer in front of his picture with Lord Manstein. Amateur mistake if you ask me.
    Leaving the joke aside, I am 15 mins into the video and it is great!

    • @josephjanisch5396
      @josephjanisch5396 2 года назад +5

      All hail to the Manstein!

    • @fieldmarshalbaltimore1329
      @fieldmarshalbaltimore1329 2 года назад +8

      I bet if Manstein was in charge of 6th army, he wouldn't even have been encircled. He could have coated his Panzers in Mansteininium, unbreakable steel armor.

    • @andreibocse4271
      @andreibocse4271 2 года назад +6

      @@fieldmarshalbaltimore1329 I guess we will never know. It is one of the biggest what-ifs of the war, up there with Steiner's counterattack at Berlin.

    • @NikhilSingh-007
      @NikhilSingh-007 2 года назад +1

      @@fieldmarshalbaltimore1329 This.

    • @GeneraalAmsel
      @GeneraalAmsel 2 года назад +1

      @@fieldmarshalbaltimore1329 if Manstein was in command. He would have withdrawn to Berlin. Counter attacks and struck right the Urals in 1 week with just one panzer and won the war.

  • @cwolf8841
    @cwolf8841 8 месяцев назад +1

    You are absolutely correct. Without a crystal ball you can’t immediately move over 100,000 men, weapons, vehicles, supplies, etc. while in contact with Enemy forces.
    That is the danger of trying to do things from a map. You can’t see terrain and can’t see the manpower and time to basically move an entire ‘city’ overnight. There wouldn’t even be enough prime movers to transport all the existing stores of ammo and fuel.
    Keeping in mind German logistics had been failing for years. Poor food, limited winter clothing, rampant disease, etc.

  • @raylast3873
    @raylast3873 2 года назад +24

    How lucky those Soviet POWs were that just happened to be in the path of the advancing Red Army Tank Corps with no one bothering to move them. Soviet POWs in German hands did not have a great chance of surviving, and the ones that ended up in Stalingrad had none.

    • @gromosawsmiay3000
      @gromosawsmiay3000 2 года назад +5

      for your information chance not to be punish liberated soviet POW was very low, they were treated as traitors.

    • @KOVROL
      @KOVROL 2 года назад +2

      @@gromosawsmiay3000 if not, then they died within a few days in a penal batallion.

    • @edwardjj4224
      @edwardjj4224 2 года назад +3

      Stalin and his NKWD waisted everybody's Actually more than Germans did in combat

    • @davidhauge5706
      @davidhauge5706 2 года назад

      Some of your have been listening to too much nazi cold war propaganda look up the statistics.

  • @larryspiller6633
    @larryspiller6633 7 месяцев назад +1

    When I think of Stalingrad, A David Gilmour song comes to mind. There's no way out of here. When you come in you're in for good. There was no promise made, the part you played, the chance you took.

  • @glitch7977
    @glitch7977 2 года назад +4

    You know this series really makes me consider the sheer organisational challenge that warfare is - its hard to even conceive of the many decisions and actions that must be made on an hour by hour basis but I think TIK does a good job of detailing it. I wonder what it is like in the Russo-Ukraine war, especially with the logistical nightmare that Russia must be facing.

    • @jb-xc4oh
      @jb-xc4oh 2 года назад +1

      What nightmare......Russia is basically fighting on its own border.

  • @tktheo9315
    @tktheo9315 2 года назад +1

    Tik, you should certainly do a few articles on Stalingrad. Heck, you could even complete a Ph.D. on the topic. You certainly have the facts in there but also proper argumentation. This is just brilliant!

  • @Perkelenaattori
    @Perkelenaattori 2 года назад +16

    It's not very surprising to see Von Manstein advocating for an early breakout in his memoirs considering that the man wanted to retreat all the way to Berlin just a little while later.

    • @ShamanKish
      @ShamanKish 2 года назад +1

      He was realistic.

    • @dusk6159
      @dusk6159 2 года назад +1

      @@ShamanKish Realistic had Manstein been an american/soviet general. Retreating to Berlin and giving up every conquest then wouldve been a good realistic outcome for his side.

  • @TukozAki
    @TukozAki 2 года назад +2

    OMG these maps, and commentary / questions (obviously from @TIK but also by other dudes above)!! What *happened* between November 19th and 22th is finally starting to become comprehensible to me

  • @hqlife5128
    @hqlife5128 2 года назад +4

    I've been waiting for this episode. Can't wait to see the encirclement complete. It's amazing how the Romanians have actually put up a stiff resistance to the best of their capability, I think the Germans wrongfully always portray their allies (in both world wars) as utterly incapable of military action and dragging them down, letting them go off the hook.
    The Red Army has outplayed the Germans in November 1942, maybe even earlier since the Axis were unable to take Stalingrad quickly. I've been reminiscing on the other 36 episodes in this series to see what could the Germans have done to win this campaign and I'm coming to the conclusion that they simply attempted too much with too little force. Perhaps if they sent fewer forces down to the Caucasus and sent a few more Corps either along the Don or into Stalingrad they could have won, but then again it's not like the Soviets were absent from the Caucasus or that the Axis had a walk in the park there - advancing with less troops in the Caucasus perhaps would lead to the defeat of Army Group A and the exposure of Army Group B's flank. Also as you mentioned the Germans were already struggling to supply the men they had in Army Group B, so an additional 1 or 2 more corps would likely just make that situation worse.
    What do you think is the winning strategy for Germany in this case? I'm starting to believe that this campaign is/was unwinnable, unless something unprobable happens (like the additional corps manages to break into Stalingrad before the supply situation deteriorates to a point where it's presence no longer an asset but a logistical liability)

  • @j.granger1120
    @j.granger1120 2 года назад

    Lewis, thanks for all you do for us. This was a lot to unpack, you made it understandable.

  • @kernowpolski
    @kernowpolski 2 года назад +16

    Great analysis TIK, exposing the failures of the German generals and giving credit to the Red Army where due.

    • @dennisweidner288
      @dennisweidner288 2 года назад

      KernowPolski Yes very important. The German myth of military brilliance still persists. Even more important is the superior Soviet economic performance. After losing major industrial cities (only part of the industry in these cities was evaluated east) and having a fraction of German heavy industry to begin with, the Soviets outproduced the Germans in key areas--especially tanks and artillery. Too often these discussions are only about the military. Without the industry needed to wage war, the military can not win battles. The best example here was Poland.

  • @kronniichiwa9909
    @kronniichiwa9909 2 года назад +2

    Hello from Romania TIK, love your channel

  • @raylast3873
    @raylast3873 2 года назад +4

    11:27 so actually when you said earlier the Soviet victory might be stopped if they were prevented from reaching Kalach (?) that is only true in an theoretical scenario where the Soviets hadn‘t already broken through in the South. There was absolutely no way they could reasonably stop both pincers. Possibly even with those reinforcements that Paulus had needed the whole time.

  • @IrishTechnicalThinker
    @IrishTechnicalThinker 2 года назад +2

    This series has been nothing short of spectacular. Just like a ship sinking, there becomes a point where the ship is lost even though she may still be floating, the German army reminds me of the Titanic. Water entering below the water line and at first seems controllable but soon abandon ship is called nonetheless. Don't know what's worse, being on a sinking ship or stuck in Stalingrad. Keep up the excellent work brother.

  • @bufordghoons9981
    @bufordghoons9981 2 года назад +11

    Another great video.
    Some historians & back-seat drivers seem to think Paulus could have successfully evacuated Stalingrad while the Soviets would just sit there watching them go. No, the Soviets would have taken advantage of the retreat attacking at every instance probably causing a disastrous rout. The shortage of fuel and transportation along with the horrible weather made such a retreat/break-out highly prone to failure.
    Staying put awaiting a relief force to provide a counter-weight to the heavy mass of Soviet forces was a reasonable decision.

    • @unlearningcommunism4742
      @unlearningcommunism4742 2 года назад +1

      Imagine choking points over the bridges. Imagine traffic jams, broken equipment, heavy equipment that would be abandoned...

    • @dusk6159
      @dusk6159 2 года назад +2

      If not the only decision, for the sake of the relief force, every other german army and the 6th itself.

  • @701duran
    @701duran 2 года назад +2

    when this series is said and done it's going to be really unrivaled among documentaries about World War 2 and is as epic as the battle of Stalingrad was

  • @aapokarna7880
    @aapokarna7880 2 года назад +16

    So let's get this straight. Patton wheeling his army of 100 000 men, most mechanized and well supplied army of its time 90 degrees in 48 hours and advancing 100 miles to attack the german flank during the Ardennes offensive is considered a near impossible task and his most brilliant moment.
    But Paulus and his 6th army, being engaged in some of the most brutal and grinding fighting in human history, out of supply and fuel, lacking in reinforcements, ammunition and equipment should have been capable of simultaneously disengaging from the fighting in the east, containing the soviet spearheads both in north and south, and conducted an assault through soviet lines to safety pretty much on the fly through similar time period and distance as Pattons third army. Truly, the failures and incompetencies of Paulus know no equal. Definitely worth the skill 1 he gets in HOI4.

  • @linnharamis1496
    @linnharamis1496 2 года назад +1

    I’d like to compliment you on your graphics for this series. They have been wonderful- they appear to be made by somebody with a graphics team! (My guess yes you did nearly all the work yourself or perhaps a little help from others.) Please keep up the good work.👍👍👍

  • @drencrum
    @drencrum 2 года назад +6

    A retreat to the shorter line previously proposed would've taken weeks to prepare and pull off successfully, 6th Army had 48 hours to react to getting completely encircled with few resources now to even do a prepared withdrawal. A panicked retreat really would've been a faster death of the 6th Army and a total collapse of the southern front for Germany, so the best they could hope for is the sacrifice of the 6th Army so the rest of the Army could retreat back and stabilize the entire front. Sometimes in war you just have to eat a shit sandwich, certainly the Soviets did for much of 1941, it was Germany's turn in 1942.

  • @tomfrombrunswick7571
    @tomfrombrunswick7571 2 года назад +1

    Great stuff. The incredibly complex is explained in a way that it can be navigated

  • @thecombatwombat7652
    @thecombatwombat7652 2 года назад +10

    It is also easier to blame the dead guy or the guy in a gulag because they cannot defend themselves, and not many people will rush to Hitler's defence in my opinion. Further motivation for blaming Paulus would be that he would serve in the East German army, so publishing dates could also be taken into account. Accounts after his appointment would have that extra political motivation for lieing.

    • @dennisweidner288
      @dennisweidner288 2 года назад

      The Combat Wombat It is Paulus who commanded the Sixth Army and drove East with poorly defended flanks. He was in charge. Any competent commander would have recognized the danger. He chose instead to do what Hitler wanted. He was in command and thus has to bear responsibility for what ensued. Remember he was a NAZI supporter, part of the reason he got the job in the first place.

    • @thecombatwombat7652
      @thecombatwombat7652 2 года назад +1

      @@dennisweidner288 Yes, he is responsible, but should he bear all of the responsibility? Was Paulus responsible for anti tank gun distribution in Army Group South? Or for sending most of the reinforcements for 1942 to Army Group Centre? Or for Stalin's change in attitude from shouting to listening, and rushing counter attacks to preparing them? He did what his commanding officer General von Weichs ordered him to do, who received his orders from the Chief of Staff and Halder, who received their orders from Hitler. Any competent commander would also know how easily they can be replaced in the chain of command. Criticise Paulus for his mistakes and bad decisions and his alone.

    • @dennisweidner288
      @dennisweidner288 2 года назад

      @@thecombatwombat7652 Absolutely there were all kinds of factors that led to the disaster ar Stalingrad, many outside of Palus' control. But he was in command. He accepted that command. He was not forced to take command. He was an ardent NAZK. And a mjor planner of Brbarossa. As a result, he bears responsibility for setting the Ostrieg in motion. If Germany did not have the ability to win, he should have spoken up. A commander has a responsibility to his country and superiors, but also to his men. If he didn't think he could succeed, he should have spoken up. That is what Hadler did.

  • @brucealbert4686
    @brucealbert4686 2 года назад

    Nice to see you back!

  • @StephenYuan
    @StephenYuan 2 года назад +3

    The breakout argument is settled imho. How are a bunch of half starved Germans without fuel or pack animals going to disengage from the 62nd Army, walk out into the frozen, wide open steppe and avoid being cut down by Soviet tanks?

  • @neil03152
    @neil03152 2 года назад

    Truly I am in awe Tik of what you have achieved to date. You now can stand with pride at the Table with the other experts on Stalingrad, and then more than stand your corner as the topic is discussed.

  • @gabrieletagliaventi5516
    @gabrieletagliaventi5516 2 года назад +4

    the great point of such a brilliant video is to show, for the first time, how Germans failed by not having a strong mobile forse behind the Romenian lines. Despite the lack in anti-tank of the Romenian divisions, 2-3 motorized/panzer divisions might have stopped the Soviet advance and possibly destroy them. The irony is that those motorized/panzer divisions existed in that area before OKH sent them sightseeing in France (Leibstandarte) besides von Manstein XI Army transferred to Leningrad when it could have played a decisive role in Fall Blau...

    • @andrewblake2254
      @andrewblake2254 2 года назад

      And if those divisions were not in France the Allies would have invaded.

    • @gabrieletagliaventi5516
      @gabrieletagliaventi5516 2 года назад

      @@andrewblake2254 it was the panic after the Dieppe raid

  • @kaiser97
    @kaiser97 2 года назад

    your videos are literally the only thing I look forward too. very good.

  • @kronniichiwa9909
    @kronniichiwa9909 2 года назад +5

    At least most of the Romanians fought with courage, despite being undersupplied.
    Besides, the soviets are the ones who took chunks of Romania before ww2: Basarabia & Bucovina.

  • @russellwright5141
    @russellwright5141 2 года назад +1

    This is the best video of the battle storm Stalingrad series so far and addresses the key myth that the sixth army could have escaped.
    Paulus ending up in the bag makes him an easy scapegoat.
    Til you need to write a book looking at Hitler's major military interventions and examining how many of them were not wrong.
    Final point. I have no doubt had Paulus tried to break out his army would have been slaughtered and historians would now be writing he should.have built a defensive position and waited for Mastering; who no doubt would be writing the same untruth.

  • @Calbeck
    @Calbeck 2 года назад +13

    Seems like the only chance the Germans ever really had was to have given proper anti-tank weaponry to the Romanians in the first place, so that they could have at the least bought more time in the north.

    • @juliantheapostate8295
      @juliantheapostate8295 2 года назад +6

      Indeed, but it would have meant depriving their own forces.
      Germany just didn't have a big enough arms industry and efficient enough logistics to fight the war which transpired

    • @robertleache3450
      @robertleache3450 2 года назад +2

      Could the Romanian lines have been "beefed-up" ? The answer is yes, but the process had to start no later than August 1st, 1942. What are some of the things that could have been done ? How about re-equiping the Romanian armored forces with captured Char-B French Tanks upgraded with German Optics, armament and radios ? In addition, could knocked-out T-34 Tanks, (some of them) have been repaired to augment the French Char B Tanks ? Could the Demansk salient have been abandoned in July 1942 ? This might have allowed 10-12 German Divisions to bolster the long Don River Flank. With the abandonment of the Demansk salient- could the Ju-52 transport planes formerly supplying the Demansk salient; could those planes have been modified to carry timber to the Romanian lines to help fortify their positions ? If so, where would the timber originate ? In saw mills set up behind the forested areas of Army Group Center. Could the 11th German Army, instead of being sent to Leningrad, stayed in the South and. Corseted the Hungarian sector ? Could 20 divisions on the Channel Coast in France have begun a transferr deployment starting in September 1942 & gradually transferred to the East; when the threat of a cross-channel invasion receded ? Could more captured French anti-tank guns and artillery have been provided ? These suggestions required foresight, planning and wise time-planning. Where were you General Maximilian Weichs?

    • @sirridesalot6652
      @sirridesalot6652 2 года назад +2

      @@robertleache3450 The German's logistics didn't have enough fuel for what the Eastern Front already required. Adding more fuel hungry vehicles would only have made a terrible situation even worse.

    • @cccpredarmy
      @cccpredarmy 2 года назад +1

      @@robertleache3450 I like how captured equipment all of a sudden can drive freely and shoot as many times as one can dream of... Reality is not a strategic game where you build a unit and it then moves and shoots wherever you click with your mouse button. Do you expect Axis forces building repair workshops en masse for french and soviet equipment? Which factories should produce the ammo for those? French factories? Now look at the European map and tell me how lon it ould take for ammo to catch up to tanks which are 3000km away from it?
      There is a reason why, when an army marches forward the train, vehicle and horse caravans are moving on the roads nonstop!

    • @robertleache3450
      @robertleache3450 2 года назад

      @@cccpredarmy I did not say "all of a sudden." I emphasized wise time management, if you read my comments closely. Before you generalize, what may I ask, would you have done to strengthen the Axis Lines in the time frame from July-August 1942 ? At least my ideas offered some positive solutions at what might have helped. But since you and I will not agree, let others on this forum chime in with their opinions on what might have been done
      . I just "love" naysayers who can not think out of the box-as it were-and not offer creative, positive remedies that MIGHT have prevented the disaster for the Axis satellite armies on the Don River Front. Let others voice their opinions and hopefully in a more respectful way than thou.

  • @jakemize9619
    @jakemize9619 2 года назад

    Great presentation in this series bud, really appreciate all your hard work.

  • @massafelipe8063
    @massafelipe8063 2 года назад +3

    Hard day at work, and than this..gift from the sky.

  • @longandshort6639
    @longandshort6639 Год назад

    Amazing video!! Thanks for making this.

  • @eze8970
    @eze8970 2 года назад +3

    Germans at the start of Operation Uranus did get caught out by timings/weather/overconfidence/not believing Soviets had learned from mistakes.
    Even if the Germans had managed to capture Stalingrad by mid/late Nov, how they were going to defend the long line over the winter, with frozen rivers acknowledged growing Soviet strength?
    Timing - Germans/Axis had what little reserves they did have right at the front for 'final' battle to take Stalingrad. They kept thinking one more offensive would do it, & they could hold the Don/Volga river lines, despite their weakness. They did not take heed of recon showing big Soviet build up. Lack of fuel robbed them of the assets where they had been a lot better than the Soviets - recon & mobility. Note how many trucks/motorbikes captured due to lack of fuel/spares.
    Weather - Bad weather helped the Soviets, let them get closer to Axis lines, move forward undetected & hindered Luftwaffe recon & support.
    Overconfidence - Axis had always beaten off Soviet attacks in the past, especially when they had been dug in.
    Improved Soviet Performance - They had learned a lot from previous mistakes, & finally planned & prepared both a plan, strength & capability of attacking forces to achieve aims.
    The only way to avoid the Stalingrad pocket would have been for Hitler to acknowledge failure of Fall Blau by late Oct, & to carry out a planned withdrawal earlier to the Don/ Donets rivers line. This would at least allow Hitler a face saving propaganda victory of sorts for ground taken, claim they are ready for a 1943 offensive, & are still winning the war.

  • @LavrencicUrban
    @LavrencicUrban 2 года назад +1

    I LOVE YOUR ALTERNATIVE SCENARIOS; UNTIL TODAY I'VE NEVER HEARD ABOUT 29TH'S MOVEMENT DIRECTION IMPORTANCE, BUT I GUESS IT'S JUST IMPOSSIBLE FOR EVEN A SOLIDLY EDUCATED WW2 NERD TO NOT HEAR SOMETHING NEW IN EVERY SINGLE OF YOUR EPISODES. I'VE JUST LISTENED TO "THE RISE AND FALL OF THE THIRD REICH" AUDIO BOOK, AND ONLY THANKS TO YOUR VIDEOS I'VE RECOGNIZED NUMEROUS ERRORS IN THE NARRATIVE.
    I'M WATCHING STALINGRAD SERIES FOR THE 3RD TIME ALREADY, THAT'S HOW FKN GOOD IT IS!

  • @MadeleineTakam
    @MadeleineTakam 2 года назад +3

    So the overall analysis of Soviet / Russian performance is, many weeks of Stalemate and grinding attrition followed by pedal to the metal. Hey just like what is going to happen in Ukraine.

  • @stevedrugscreensrus6935
    @stevedrugscreensrus6935 2 месяца назад

    Another awesome video! Very nice!

  • @jomojedacab9299
    @jomojedacab9299 2 года назад +7

    The Germans has no HORSES, so no chance to flee.

    • @nemiw4429
      @nemiw4429 2 года назад

      Rather take the chancen and try by foot. Leave everything behind, even your rifle. When the soviets catch up its not gona help you anyway. Cut out the horse fat. 1kg / 2.2 pounds = 7000 calories. Take 3kg with you and your good for 15-20 days which is more then enough to reach the lines. With a white uniform you can easily hide in the snow. Just let yourself fall head first.
      If your not warm enough cut out the horse skin and put it between your clothes and on your shoes and as gloves.

  • @HerraHazar
    @HerraHazar 2 года назад

    I absolutely love TIK ! The only show I actually wait for anxiously !

  • @ericlefevre7741
    @ericlefevre7741 2 года назад +3

    It WAS overall Hitler's fault for the debacle. It was Hitler who split Army Group South into two half army groups, rather than sticking with the original plan which entailed setting up the northern blocking force, then sending Army group B into the caucus. It was also Hitler's fault for splitting Army group B into two pieces, sending a third of it to the Black Sea Coast and the remainder towards Grozny leaving both pieces with insufficient strength to accomplish their objectives.
    Halder also deserves a large part of the blame since he wrote the original (crappy) plan to begin with. It was Halder that did not give Paulus the replacements he needed, instead diverting strategic reserves to Army Group Center, which by August, it was clear was under no threat. The entire Army High Command also shares blame seriously underestimated the Soviets and the strength of the Red Army. The amount of intel they got about the Red Army buildup on their flanks, and they just chose to ignore it.
    Paulus was just a scapegoat. BTW, it's a good thing the Sixth Army lost, they were a bunch of war criminals.

    • @nemiw4429
      @nemiw4429 2 года назад

      You dont really know what was said in the OKW. And if a man with an estimated IQ over 140 did these mistakes, we would have. Dont forget, Stalingrad was only one small part ofnthe whole war he had to keep an eye on.

  • @erikmartin4996
    @erikmartin4996 Год назад +2

    Pretty amazing how the entire battle of Stalingrad was ridiculous from beginning to end. It should never have been an objective at all

  • @klown463
    @klown463 2 года назад +4

    Good argument, but I don’t think your argument and the “Soviets bad” argument are mutually exclusive. Yes, the Germans tried to deflect blame from themselves and their performance. Yet the Soviets are still pretty low quality at this point, taking heavy casualties against a 3rd rate power like Romania. It’s probably more accurate to say that the Soviets beat Romania, which caused the Germans to implode, rather than saying that the Soviets outgunned/planned the Germans. Or if they did outgun the Germans, indeed it was because of their superior numbers, which of course is congruous with the traditional narrative.

    • @Dth-str
      @Dth-str 2 года назад +1

      Yeah

    • @caryblack5985
      @caryblack5985 2 года назад +4

      They outproduced the Germans in tanks, aircraft and artillery in every year from 1942 on. They put together a large force of troops that the Germans did not think they could. They executed a plan of encirclement when the Germans believed that since they had defeated every attack on the northern line that it would necessarily fail.

    • @lif3andthings763
      @lif3andthings763 2 года назад +1

      The Germans completely underestimated the Soviets. Which is why they thought it was bright idea to put Romanians stretch thin with little anti tank weapons.

  • @GoodGirlKate
    @GoodGirlKate 2 года назад +2

    Amazing Stalingrad series TIK 👍🙂

  • @GeographyCzar
    @GeographyCzar 2 года назад +6

    I think TIK is wrong, I don’t think the encirclement was inevitably permanent, although I agree that the National Socialist system made the situation nearly impossible. Here’s what I mean: if the German command structure had been less rigid, and allowed for more latitude and independent thought, things could have been done differently. For example, all those division commanders (in conjunction with their staffs) inside what would become the pocket could surely have come up with adequate plans to extricate their own forces from the front lines in a timely fashion and get their men moving south or west or southwest or all of the above (considering there were 20 divisions, they would have needed to take different routes). However, the German division commanders needed permission practically to wipe their own butts. Contrast this with the way defensive lines and even effective counter attacks were cobbled together at Kasserine pass or in the battle of the Bulge and you see the striking difference between the level of independence exercised by mid-level American commanders and their German counterparts. I believe firmly that there was adequate force available inside the Stalingrad pocket to have forced open the thinly held Red Army circumvalation lines during the early days of the encirclement. I understand about the logistical issues, and the question of whether you have an army left at the end of such a campaign or just a couple of hundred thousand half starved half frozen refugees, but still. The survival rate would surely have been higher that way than by doing what they eventually settled on. Moreover, it’s not as though such a breakout would have left the Soviet units through which they would have passed unaffected. In all likelihood, a properly supported (from the air) breakout would have shattered many Soviet divisions as well as German and left both sides practically incapable of large scale offensive operations for several weeks. Thus, Manstein and/or Weichs would have had time to reorganize the survivors of 6th Army prior to the resumption of the Russian offensive that winter.

    • @Blazo_Djurovic
      @Blazo_Djurovic 2 года назад

      Eh. Germans did have a LOT of units inside, but most of those units were occupied keeping in check other Soviet units. And if Soviets saw they were beggining to withdraw they can then strike at them. A Soviet breakthrough the northern front during an evacuation attempt would have been catastrophic. Proper rear guard units needed to be assigned. Front shortened etc. All of which takes time they did not have, nor did they apparently have enough ammo for more than days worth of fighting without airlifts. And right now I bet Luftwaffe should be getting concerned about security of their own airfields given that there is pretty much NOTHING to the southwest of Stalingrad to prevent some Soviet mobile unit from rolling into one of their other airfields. Like they did do in Romanian sector. Which makes me dubious of how much air support could they even provide for a breakout attempt in these couple of days. Not to mention that weather was unsuitable for airsupport.
      KEY advantage Germans had was fire support from artilery units and airforce combined with tanks. They have little to no fuel in the pocket for tanks, Luftwaffe would probably need to fly fuel in to do any operations from inside the pocket and other airfields are in danger right now, and situation is probably not great for artilery given mention of ammo shortages.
      And even more importantly, even though they could get some or lot of men out if they just started walking and abandoned most of their gear, that would pretty much evaporate that army as an effective fighting force. Meaning all those units it was keeping in check, and will continue to keep in check since they will be busy for months sieging them, would now be free to go wherever their logistics allow them given that right now there is nothing much stopping them from rushing to the Black Sea.

    • @GeographyCzar
      @GeographyCzar 2 года назад +1

      @@Blazo_Djurovic Chuikov's 10,000 survivors are going to hold 90,000 German troops inside Stalingrad? Please...

    • @seinine
      @seinine 2 года назад +1

      Supported from the air? There is blizzard... And for the troops on the ground, they would have to orientate themselves with compass... half of the army would have ended in middle of the soviet jaws, the other half would be swimming in icy Volga or Don...

    • @andrewblake2254
      @andrewblake2254 2 года назад

      There were not twenty routes out of Stalingrad. The conditions on the steppe was horrific at that time and it was difficult to stay alive let alone conduct military operations.

    • @seinine
      @seinine 2 года назад

      @@GeographyCzar You don't seem to grasp the concept of "encirclement". The 90 000 Germans aren't all in front of Chuikov, if they would, this would meant leaving ground to the soviet all around. Even if the Germans with only part of their troops pushed Chuikov to the river (which I doubt they could by this point: they have been trying now for month in much more favourable conditions, and now suddenly they would succeed while being encircled?), what then? They would found an empty city, still well encircled, and in fact ease the work for the red army, since all this can only be accomplished by deploying more precious resources on offensive while they barely hold in defensive... The fact is, Chuikov don't need to hold Stalingrad by then, he can evacuate on the other bank, and wait the Germans to starve...

  • @comiccollex958
    @comiccollex958 2 года назад

    Even though we all know how this ends, this video was gripping. Thanks for putting so much work into these videos TIK