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Carl Schwamberger wrote:Counting the weight of supply delivered during those weeks would be a good start to a answer. How far would the historical supply delivered go in restoring the strength of the forward combat units?



Unterdenlimeys wrote:-Would the supply effort actualy succeed? Warm winter clothing, antifreeze, crampons for the tanks
-and all of this getting all the way to the fighting units?
Possibly, but I recall reading a German quartermaster recommending AGC pull back all the way to Smolensk. It seems the sore point in supplies was anything east of Smolensk. I believe it was mainly a matter of the railways being in ruins.
How well were rear service personel equipped for the winter? Did clerks in places like Smolensk get winter clothing?
-Air support thus freed could have gone to the Med.


Unterdenlimeys wrote:You learn something new every day. I knew Hitler was supposed to have wanted to attack in the West in the autumn of 1939, but I didn't know about February. Do you know where I can find this info?
Any Russian counterattack during the Rasputitsa would itself come up against the mud.
I can see where you're coming from in saying AGC could take Moscow after a rest of 6 weeks or more.
The main problem I have with it is the mid-December date. It's one thing to be able to survive the winter, it's another thing to be able to take the offensive because it's so much colder than in middle Eurpopean and it was the coldest winter since about 1870.
German winter gear was I have read, adequate in that it would get you through the winter without you becoming a frostbite casualty, but it was never as good as Russian winter clothing. That might be a problem for them if they decided to try and take Moscow from the middle of December.

Unterdenlimeys wrote:You learn something new every day. I knew Hitler was supposed to have wanted to attack in the West in the autumn of 1939, but I didn't know about February. Do you know where I can find this info?
Anyway thanks for your reply.



Deans wrote:With the benefit of hindsight, it seems obvious that the Germans should have halted in front of Moscow, just after the end of Operation Typhoon, before resuming the advance on Moscow. (Whatever gains they made in Nov 1941, were more than negated in the Red Army counterattack). I don't however believe, that an enhanced Luftwaffe presence with AGN & AGS would have made any difference to the outcome on those fronts.
In the beginning of Nov 1941, the Red army was actually outnumbered in front of Moscow. (Glantz & House). Both German and Soviet intelligence probably knew this. November would have therefore presented a great opportunity to continue the drive to Moscow and `win the race'. I believe the desire to continue the drive to Moscow, came not from Hitler but from Von Bock, since he assumed (correctly - based on whatever intel was available to him), that the Red Army was not going to be in a weaker condition than it was in Nov (with civilian morale also being low and Moscow being evacuated) and it could well be fatal to halt the advance just when the Red army was on the ropes and awaiting the knockout punch. He probably saw the drive to Moscow as a race which would be won by the side that had more willpower. - and probably end the war.
Historically, the Germans got negligible reinforcements between Nov & Dec, whereas the Red army brought up almost 2 million men. A delay in the drive to Moscow would have enabled these reinforcements to increase their effectiveness exponentially, because they would
1. Have a month to train (reasonable time to turn a raw recruit into someone who can perform basic defense related tasks) &
2. Dig into prepared positions.
Historically however, these reinforcements were thrown into battle piecemeal, were often deployed in the wrong areas and suffered the horrendous casualties associated with an untrained mass of men being forced into battle. This was probably what Von Bock would have assumed would happen to whatever reinforcements he thought the Red army might bring up.
If the offensive was delayed, the Red Army's reinforced defensive line in front of Moscow would have been unbreakable and the Red army would have lost fewer men in their own counterattacks, partly because they would have hesitated to attack a prepared enemy and because they would have had more time to prepare. (The Red army's counterattacks actual counterattacks seemed to me to be a race in reverse - they were aware of their shortcomings but felt the Germans, who were retreating, would be far worse off.
What the Germans needed in Nov, to take Moscow, was not just winter clothing, but tanks, fuel, ammunition & trucks - none of which was going to get to AGC before the spring of 1942.


Deans wrote:1. I think the Luftwaffe's effectiveness in the middle of winter (unheated hangars) is being overestimated. In any case the role of the Luftwaffe is probably secondary to this WI.
2. I agree the Thikvin lunge was unnecessary and too ambitious (with the benefit of hindsight!) but I don't see those forces being redeployed in time to help an attack on Moscow.
3. I don't think mud was a factor after early Nov, by then the frost had set in. (I've seen a lot of mud in rural Russia, in Mid Nov, but that's probably global warming!)
4. Agree, Vzayma-Bryansk demonstrated that AGC would prevail over a numerically strong but disorganised force and for this reason Von Bock would not have halted the drive on Moscow.
5. True, the Red Army would have fought on after Moscow, but Hitler and his generals were still in the `kick in the door and.... frame of mind'.
6. I don't have a `Moscow fixation'but as you say, Hitler's generals did and I was trying to look at things as they saw them. After trying to prevail upon Hitler a few weeks earlier, to resume the drive to Moscow and not be worried about: Supplies, danger to the flanks and the `economic aspects of war', I hardly see Guderian/Hoth/Von Bock urging a halt, when the capital was within reach & the people of Moscow in a state of Panic.
7. Agree that a Valday encirclement was doable, but not sure that could be done AND the forces involved redeploy for an attack on Moscow. It would have to be either Moscow, or (as Hitler/Von Bock would see it), tinkering around the flanks.

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