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Index
Cover
Half Title
Full Title
Copyright
Contents
Foreword
Introduction and Acknowledgements
1 ‘Operation Barbarossa’
The German dispositions
The Red Army’s dispositions
2 The German Army
3 The last days of tank destruction unit DORA II in Brandenburg during April 1945
4 The foreignness of it all
5 The Waffen SS on the Eastern Front
6 The Red Army of Workers and Peasants
7 Two German views of the Red Army
8 The development of the Red Army
9 Partisans
10 The influence of terrain
11 The influence of climate
12 The effect of winter upon a Red Army unit at Rzhev
13 The German Army resolves the problems of winter warfare
14 The construction of an ice railway bridge across the Dneiper, winter 1941–1942
15 The frustrating mud and the scouring dust
16 To Moscow by horse
17 The weapons of the Eastern Front
18 Assault artillery in action on the central front in the early days of the war with the Soviet Union
19 An SP detachment in the closing stages of the encirclement battles around the Kiev pocket, autumn 1941
A Winter Drive
20 A platoon of SP guns in action against the Soviet thrust to capture Rzhev, autumn 1942
21 The 249th Assault Artillery Brigade in action during the battle for Berlin, 1945
22 Hugo Primozic: Germany’s most successful SP fighter in Russia
23 Hyazinth von Strachwitz: the German Army’s most successful tank man
24 Anti-tank weapons and tactics
25 Rocket propulsion: a new form of artillery, first used on the Eastern Front
A Red Army infantryman and his first encounter with the Nebelwerfer, spring 1942
A Nebelwerfer regiment in the German summer offensive towards Voronezh, 1942
26 A phenomenon of the Eastern Front: encirclement
27 The destruction of the encircled Soviet forces in the fighting around Kiev, autumn 1941
28 The Cholm pocket, winter 1941–1942
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index
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