The U.S. Army's training manuals list "enemy morale" as the first factor in determining prisoner capture rates:

https://www.bits.de/NRANEU/others/amd-u ... 859%29.pdf
Your arguments regarding low Soviet morale on the Moscow axis after the middle of October stem from your posts #4 (based on the link provided by Art in post #2) and from your postS #8 and #10. These led you to conclude that that the AGC capture rate of 4,500/day compared to the AGN capture rate of <1,000/day was proof of low Soviet morale on the Moscow axis from mid-October. Let me quote a few things from those posts -TheMarcksPlan wrote: ↑12 Aug 2020 09:58AGC's level of tactical success in this period was unremarkable. It was advancing but only very slowly. Compared to, e.g., the previously-discussed drive of AGN in summer '41, it moved at a snail's pace yet captured >5x as many Soviets.
Second, AGC's armor support was unremarkable. This is especially true of the non-panzer armies (2nd, 4th, 9th) ...
Given that AGC had unremarkable tactical success and armored support in our period, yet claimed abnormally high tactical PoW's (both absolutely and as a percentage of opposing force), the only remaining explanatory variable with any kind of analytical or data support is Soviet morale.
The Red Army endured a severe morale crisis in October/November 1941 that caused elevated PoW yields and that likely continued until the Moscow Strategic Offensive was underway.
Tmp arguments was be circles reasoning. Everything was be deliberate anti-intellectual tosh.Max Payload wrote: ↑14 Aug 2020 09:53Your arguments regarding low Soviet morale on the Moscow axis after the middle of October stem from your posts #4 (based on the link provided by Art in post #2) and from your postS #8 and #10. These led you to conclude that that the AGC capture rate of 4,500/day compared to the AGN capture rate of <1,000/day was proof of low Soviet morale on the Moscow axis from mid-October. Let me quote a few things from those posts -TheMarcksPlan wrote: ↑12 Aug 2020 09:58AGC's level of tactical success in this period was unremarkable. It was advancing but only very slowly. Compared to, e.g., the previously-discussed drive of AGN in summer '41, it moved at a snail's pace yet captured >5x as many Soviets.
Second, AGC's armor support was unremarkable. This is especially true of the non-panzer armies (2nd, 4th, 9th) ...
Given that AGC had unremarkable tactical success and armored support in our period, yet claimed abnormally high tactical PoW's (both absolutely and as a percentage of opposing force), the only remaining explanatory variable with any kind of analytical or data support is Soviet morale.
The Red Army endured a severe morale crisis in October/November 1941 that caused elevated PoW yields and that likely continued until the Moscow Strategic Offensive was underway.
You're counting PoW's taken in operational encirclements. This is easy to do, as the operational encirclements achieved by AGC between closing the Smolensk pocket and Taifun are less well known - they're smaller but still significant.Max Payload wrote:For Fourth Army (page 108)
24,372 prisoners over 25 days (22 Aug-16Sep) = 975/day
34,916 prisoners over 26 days (19 Oct-14 Nov) = 1343/day
For Ninth Army (page 119)
51,874 prisoners over 41 days (6Aug-16Sep) = 1265/day
23,027prisoners over 26 days (19 Oct-14 Nov) = 886/day
Krivosheev's data for this period simply cannot be trusted. Are we really to believe that Northwest Front had only ~40k KIA in all of 1941? (i.e. 182k irrecoverable losses minus 142k MIA) That's gotta be off by at least an order of magnitude.Max Payload wrote:Krivosheev quotes for Northwestern Front in 1941 a total of 182,264 irrecoverable losses of which 142,190 were Missing in action, POWs - 78%.
Krivosheev also quotes 73,924 irrecoverable losses for Northwestern Front in the first 18 days of the war alone. He doesn’t quote how many of these were POWs but assuming the same 78% of such losses to be ‘Missing in action, POWs’, that puts the Front’s MIA losses at 57,660 (equivalent to 3,200/day). Not all of these losses would have been to AGN, the Front’s left wing was initially hit by AGC’s Third Panzer Group, and not all MIAs become POWs but it does create an irreconcilable discrepancy between Glantz’s 35,000 POWs to 8 August and Krivosheev’s implied 57,660 POWs to 9 July.
Tmp imagination analysis: low morale was make big numbers surrenderTheMarcksPlan wrote: ↑15 Aug 2020 09:47You're counting PoW's taken in operational encirclements. This is easy to do, as the operational encirclements achieved by AGC between closing the Smolensk pocket and Taifun are less well known - they're smaller but still significant.Max Payload wrote:For Fourth Army (page 108)
24,372 prisoners over 25 days (22 Aug-16Sep) = 975/day
34,916 prisoners over 26 days (19 Oct-14 Nov) = 1343/day
For Ninth Army (page 119)
51,874 prisoners over 41 days (6Aug-16Sep) = 1265/day
23,027prisoners over 26 days (19 Oct-14 Nov) = 886/day
9th Army participated, with 3rd PzGr, in an encirclement around Toropets and Velikie Luki between Aug 22 and Sept 16. Here's an excerpt from The Viazma Catastrophe by Lev Lopukhovsky:
As Soviet 22nd Army alone lost >44k, of which most would have been PoW's, most of 9th Army's 52k prisoners probably came from that encirclement battle alone.
Can tmp for to show place on Amerika documents was write datas only apply on tmp invention tactical surrender ?TheMarcksPlan wrote: ↑13 Aug 2020 21:33I'm flogging the obvious here but in case anyone remains unconvinced about morale's impact on PoW yields...
The U.S. Army's training manuals list "enemy morale" as the first factor in determining prisoner capture rates:
https://www.bits.de/NRANEU/others/amd-u ... 859%29.pdf
When you not like Krivosheev datas you can to research self and give datas you can to think be correct.TheMarcksPlan wrote: ↑15 Aug 2020 09:58Krivosheev's data for this period simply cannot be trusted. Are we really to believe that Northwest Front had only ~40k KIA in all of 1941? (i.e. 182k irrecoverable losses minus 142k MIA) That's gotta be off by at least an order of magnitude.Max Payload wrote:Krivosheev quotes for Northwestern Front in 1941 a total of 182,264 irrecoverable losses of which 142,190 were Missing in action, POWs - 78%.
Krivosheev also quotes 73,924 irrecoverable losses for Northwestern Front in the first 18 days of the war alone. He doesn’t quote how many of these were POWs but assuming the same 78% of such losses to be ‘Missing in action, POWs’, that puts the Front’s MIA losses at 57,660 (equivalent to 3,200/day). Not all of these losses would have been to AGN, the Front’s left wing was initially hit by AGC’s Third Panzer Group, and not all MIAs become POWs but it does create an irreconcilable discrepancy between Glantz’s 35,000 POWs to 8 August and Krivosheev’s implied 57,660 POWs to 9 July.
At this point I find your screeds kind of endearing but I don't fully understand them. No offense intended, your English is far better than my Russian and I give you credit for participating a non-native forum. Suggestion: try typing your replies in Russian, pasting into Google Translate, and then posting that.Ружичасти Слон wrote: ↑15 Aug 2020 14:11
Tmp was not be flogging the obvious tmp was be flogging tmp anti-intellectual imaginations.
On serious discussion (not tmp anti-intellectual imaginations) must to have historical datas and evidences for to explain why mens was surrender.
See Part 7. I'd provide a page cite but I only have the Kindle edition...approximately 200,000 men either avoided encirclement entirely, or had managed to make their way back to friendly forces.
Hahaha! Mr tmp was try to be Mr passive-aggressive but was make same errors on analysis like always.TheMarcksPlan wrote: ↑15 Aug 2020 20:58At this point I find your screeds kind of endearing but I don't fully understand them. No offense intended, your English is far better than my Russian and I give you credit for participating a non-native forum. Suggestion: try typing your replies in Russian, pasting into Google Translate, and then posting that.Ружичасти Слон wrote: ↑15 Aug 2020 14:11
Tmp was not be flogging the obvious tmp was be flogging tmp anti-intellectual imaginations.
On serious discussion (not tmp anti-intellectual imaginations) must to have historical datas and evidences for to explain why mens was surrender.
Yes yes yes! Much words and much numbers.TheMarcksPlan wrote: ↑15 Aug 2020 22:00While I think the data continues to support my original assertion of deteriorating morale before Moscow after Taifun, Max Payload's analysis of AGC's August/September PoW hauls shows that this was more a matter of degree than a clean break with the pre-Taifun period.
In other words, RKKA was yielding tactical prisoners at an alarming rate even before Taifun; the situation got even worse after Taifun. This indicates that morale problems started to show by August at the latest.
Just compare AGC's prisoner hauls during the Winter battles: In the first three months of 1942, AGC took "only" 51,518 PoW. https://wwii.germandocsinrussia.org/ru/ ... ect/zoom/6 That's 572/day. What's more, some of these PoW came from encircled units, such as those cut off in counterattacks like Model's 9th Army battles in January.
In May '42, AGC's PoW rate dropped to ~350/day.
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We must also keep in mind not only the absolute number of PoW but also the percentage relative to the forces involved.
After Taifun, AGC faced fewer enemy soldiers than at any time in the war. Lopukhovsky's The Viazma Catastrophe has a long discussion on casualties during Taifun, discusses various analyses, and concludes:
See Part 7. I'd provide a page cite but I only have the Kindle edition...approximately 200,000 men either avoided encirclement entirely, or had managed to make their way back to friendly forces.
While I don't have figures for AGC's opponents during August-September, Lopukhovsky estimates that they numbered 1.25mil on October 1. Glantz gives a figure of 638,000 for Western Front alone on July 31. See Smolensk, v1 appendix E. A reasonable estimate would give the Red Army close to a million men, on average, facing AGC during August/September.
AGC's 4,500 PoW/day post-Taifun is >1% of the average Red Army strength facing it in the first month or so after the battle.
By contrast, even if we say AGC's PoW/day was 3,000 in August/September (which would include operational encirclements like 22nd Army at Toropets), that's only ~0.3% of its enemies/day or <30% of its post-Taifun, enemy-adjusted capture rate.
So while I appreciate Max Payload's engagement on this issue and our deeper dive into the stats, it still seems clear to me that something anomalous was happening around Moscow post-Taifun.
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I wish the 1941 data for AG's N/S were available to me so we could analyze them as well as we can with AGC. Does anyone know which NARA rolls I should seek out?
The PoW returns for 2nd Army, which was largely driving towards Kursk rather than Moscow, are significantly lower than for the other AGC units. This suggests that the morale crisis might not have been generalized across the front, but limited to the Moscow area. As well-documented in many books, including The Viazma Catastrophe, a civilian panic subsumed Moscow after Taifun. It may be that this civilian panic spread undermined troop morale around Moscow but not across the front.
Unless you are questioning Krivosheev’s figure of 73,924 irrecoverable losses for Northwestern Front in the first 18 days of the war, the Front must have lost more personnel to German POW camps by 9 July than the 35,000 stated by Glantz to 8 August.TheMarcksPlan wrote: ↑15 Aug 2020 09:58Krivosheev's data for this period simply cannot be trusted. Are we really to believe that Northwest Front had only ~40k KIA in all of 1941? (i.e. 182k irrecoverable losses minus 142k MIA) That's gotta be off by at least an order of magnitude.
The battle for Gomel was entirely a Second Army affair. The battle for Krichev was fought by Second Panzer Group. The 78k POWs had nothing whatsoever to do with Fourth Army. Any mopping up and subsequent accrual of prisoners resulting from Guderian’s drive to the south would have been undertaken by 46 Pz Corps after it had been transferred back to Second Panzer Group from Fourth Army to protect Guderian’s flank and rear in the Pochep area. Fourth Army during this time was preoccupied with the fighting on the Elnia - Roslavl axis, extending its frontline south only as far as northwest of Bryansk.TheMarcksPlan wrote: ↑15 Aug 2020 09:47You're counting PoW's taken in operational encirclements. This is easy to do, as the operational encirclements achieved by AGC between closing the Smolensk pocket and Taifun are less well known - they're smaller but still significant.
9th Army participated, with 3rd PzGr, in an encirclement around Toropets and Velikie Luki between Aug 22 and Sept 16. ...
4th Army's PoW haul in the post-Taifun period is 38% higher than between Aug 22 and Sep 16, which is consistent with Soviet morale being worse post-Taifun than in August/September. But 4th Army was also involved in mopping up encirclements in Guderian's wake as he began to drive southward during later August. ...
The map is from August 20; as you can see PzGr2 is beginning the southward drive with 4th Army in its wake. These initial battles are not usually considered part of the Battle of Kiev; Art's document labels them "Schlacht von Gomel und Kritschew," dates them from August 6-27, and assigns 78,374 PoW to them. ... In your period of Aug22 - Sep16, some 4th Army units would have continued to accrue prisoners in the wake of Guderian's southwards drive.
That's not the issue. Here's how I understand your argument:Max Payload wrote:Unless you are questioning Krivosheev’s figure of 73,924 irrecoverable losses for Northwestern Front in the first 18 days of the war, the Front must have lost more personnel to German POW camps by 9 July than the 35,000 stated by Glantz to 8 August
Yeah point granted - AGC prisoner tallies say the same.Max Payload wrote:The battle for Gomel was entirely a Second Army affair.
That is true, but there are two counter arguments to explain a higher Fourth Army prisoner count post Viazma compared to Aug/Sep despite there being fewer Red Army personnel available for capture.TheMarcksPlan wrote: ↑15 Aug 2020 22:00We must also keep in mind not only the absolute number of PoW but also the percentage relative to the forces involved.
After Taifun, AGC faced fewer enemy soldiers than at any time in the war. Lopukhovsky's The Viazma Catastrophe has a long discussion on casualties during Taifun, discusses various analyses, and concludes:
See Part 7. I'd provide a page cite but I only have the Kindle edition...approximately 200,000 men either avoided encirclement entirely, or had managed to make their way back to friendly forces.
While I don't have figures for AGC's opponents during August-September, Lopukhovsky estimates that they numbered 1.25mil on October 1. Glantz gives a figure of 638,000 for Western Front alone on July 31. See Smolensk, v1 appendix E. A reasonable estimate would give the Red Army close to a million men, on average, facing AGC during August/September.
You may be correct, but on p127 of Art’s link the prisoner numbers of Third Panzer Group (to 27 Sep) are reported separately. As I wrote previously, “it is not clear (to me at least) whether the 52k POWs quoted for Ninth Army includes any, some or all of the prisoners associated with the Toropets encirclement.”TheMarcksPlan wrote: ↑16 Aug 2020 02:43Re 9th Army and 3 PzGr the former must have received credit for the latter's haul during its subordination ...
The question is, do you accept Krivosheev’s figure for NWF irrecoverable losses over the first 18 days of the war? If so, pick your own KIA figure -TheMarcksPlan wrote: ↑16 Aug 2020 02:31Krivosheev’s figure for KIA is absurdly low and therefore the proportion of PoW/MIA among irrecoverable losses is too high.Max Payload wrote:Unless you are questioning Krivosheev’s figure of 73,924 irrecoverable losses for Northwestern Front in the first 18 days of the war, the Front must have lost more personnel to German POW camps by 9 July than the 35,000 stated by Glantz to 8 August