
eBook - ePub
The Price of Victory
The Red Army's Casualties in the Great Patriotic War
- 208 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
The Price of Victory
The Red Army's Casualties in the Great Patriotic War
About this book
"A stark picture of war between the Germans and the Soviets, including some very interesting illustration . . . fascinating, if chilling, reading."—
Firetrench
The Red Army's casualties during the Second World War and the casualties sustained by the German army they fought are a key element in any assessment of the conflict on the Eastern Front. Since the war ended over seventy years ago, the statistics have been a source of bitter controversy, of claim and counterclaim, as each generation of historians has struggled to uncover the truth. This contentious issue is the subject of this absorbing book.
The figures reveal much about the way the war was fought, and they demonstrate the enormous human price the Soviet Union paid for its victory. That is why the statistics have been so strongly contested. Distortion and falsification by official historians have obscured the facts because the issue has been so heavily politicized. Using recently declassified information from the Russian archives, the authors focus in forensic detail on the way the figures were recorded and compiled and seek to explain why, so many years after the war, the full truth about the subject is still far from our reach.
The Red Army's casualties during the Second World War and the casualties sustained by the German army they fought are a key element in any assessment of the conflict on the Eastern Front. Since the war ended over seventy years ago, the statistics have been a source of bitter controversy, of claim and counterclaim, as each generation of historians has struggled to uncover the truth. This contentious issue is the subject of this absorbing book.
The figures reveal much about the way the war was fought, and they demonstrate the enormous human price the Soviet Union paid for its victory. That is why the statistics have been so strongly contested. Distortion and falsification by official historians have obscured the facts because the issue has been so heavily politicized. Using recently declassified information from the Russian archives, the authors focus in forensic detail on the way the figures were recorded and compiled and seek to explain why, so many years after the war, the full truth about the subject is still far from our reach.
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Yes, you can access The Price of Victory by Lev Lopukhovsky,Boris Kavalerchik, Harold Orenstein in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & German History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Chapter 1
Circumstances governing the publication of loss data in the Great Patriotic War
In response to questions from a Pravda correspondent, on 14 March 1946 I.V. Stalin officially announced for the first time the magnitude of USSR losses during the Great Patriotic War: ‘As a result of the German invasion, the Soviet Union irrecoverably lost around 7 million people in fighting against the Germans, as well as through the German occupation and the penal servitude of Soviet people in German forced-labour camps.’
With this statement, the Leader charted the course for the falsification of the history of the Great Patriotic War and the underestimation of Soviet casualties in order to cover up his political and strategic mistakes and miscalculations on the eve and during the first half of the war, which brought the country to the brink of disaster. Back in June 1945 Colonel Podolsky, chief of the Directorate for accounting and control of the numerical strength of the armed forces, had already prepared ‘Information on Red Army Personnel Combat Casualties during the Great Patriotic War’ (see Appendix A). According to this, losses of servicemen alone (without consideration of the 13,960,000 wounded, of whom 2,576,000 remained disabled) comprised 9,675,000 people, including 3,344,000 prisoners and soldiers missing in action (MIA).1
By the autumn of that year the Emergency State Commission [Chrezvychainaia Gosudarstvennaia Komissiia, hereafter ChGK], which had been established in November 1942, had already completed its calculations of the country’s civilian casualties and generalized them in a document called ‘On the Results of the Investigation into the Bloody Crimes of the German-Fascist Occupiers and Their Accomplices’. According to this document, during the occupation of Soviet territory the Nazis exterminated 6,716,660 USSR citizens and 3,912,883 prisoners of war (POW) by shooting, hanging, burning, poisoning in ‘gas vans’ and gas chambers, burying alive and torturing, as well as by subjecting them to a deliberate, inhuman system of starvation, exhaustion and exposure to infectious diseases in concentration camps. Stalin, however, did not approve these ChGK data and forbade their publication;2 after all, they in no way corresponded with the numbers he had announced.
It is hard to say for sure why the Leader chose to significantly understate the true military losses of the USSR. Most likely it was his move in the complex political game that was the Cold War with the West. Stalin did not want to let his future adversaries know to what extent the Soviet Union had been weakened in the recently concluded Second World War.
The Leader could act however he wanted, as no one would dare to object. Immediately following the end of the war, statisticians broached the necessity of conducting the next census of the population of the USSR (the previous census had been in 1939) in order to assess the damage that the war had done. After all, in addition to having inflicted very heavy human casualties and enormous material damage, the war had also disrupted civilian recordkeeping. Re-establishing the economy and organizing the life of the population under peacetime conditions required adequate demographic information. Therefore, many recommended proceeding with the planned 1949 census. Stalin, however, declined to do so, since the true scale of war casualties for the Soviet people would have come to light. It is telling that all the countries that had fought in the war took a census of their populations beginning in 1945 and ending in 1951, while in the USSR a census was taken only in 1959, twenty years after the previous census rather than the customary ten.
Work on determining civilian and military casualties continued during this period, but it and its results were not advertised. In 1956 the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union [hereafter, CC CPSU] and the Soviet government established a commission to clarify the number of Soviet POWs. The results of its work were reported to the CC CPSU on 4 June 1956, signed by Minister of Defence G.K. Zhukov, Secretary of the CC CPSU E.A. Furtseva, Minister of Justice K.P. Gorshenin, Chief Military Prosecutor R.A. Rudenko, Chairman of the KGB I.A. Serov and head of a CC CPSU section V.V. Zolotukhin. In particular, the report stated that ‘Soviet repatriation organs recorded 2,016,480 imprisoned POWs, of whom 1,835,562, including 126,000 officers, had been repatriated to the Motherland. In addition, according to data from captured files, more than 600,000 Soviet POWs perished in German captivity.’3
In that same year the USSR Ministry of Foreign Affairs specified that 504,487 Soviet citizens were located in foreign countries as displaced persons, half of whom were former POWs.4
All important announcements in the Soviet Union, especially ideologically significant ones, remained the prerogative of Party and state leaders. After coming to power, N.S. Khrushchev, to spite Stalin, increased the casualty numbers to ‘more than 20 million’. During the years of Khrushchev’s ‘thaw’, the archives somewhat ‘opened’ their storerooms to historians. As a result, books and reports, the contents of which did not always correspond to the official version of events of the past war, began to appear in the open press. Much that had been secret was exposed. The authorities became frightened and, as often happened in Russia, the ‘thaw’ was replaced by ‘frost’. On 3 March 1968 L.I. Brezhnev, who replaced Khrushchev in the highest Party position, announced the following to his Politburo co-workers: ‘Recently, much memoir literature has appeared here . . . They twist the history of the Patriotic War, they take documents somewhere in the archives, distort them and misquote them . . . Where do these people take the documents? Why have we dealt so freely with this issue?’5
The current Minister of Defence A.A. Grechko eagerly assured the General Secretary that order would be restored regarding this matter. And, of course, it was restored. Microfilms containing crucial top secret documents about the war’s major operations, held at the time in higher military schools and scientific institutions, were recalled and destroyed. By 1972 they only remained at the disposal of researchers from the General Staff Academy and the Frunze Military Academy under guarantee that the strictest secrecy would be maintained. Access to documents stored in the archives was restricted once again, made available only to those official historians who knew which way the wind was blowing. All this was necessary to facilitate the glorifying of the deeds of the next leader and commanders who came into his favour, likely as it was to hinder persistent researchers.
Later, during the years of perestroika and glasnost’, the demands made by researchers and war veterans to the country’s leadership for clarification of the costs of victory increased significantly. M.S. Gorbachev, General Secretary of the CC CPSU at that time, responded that ‘the process is under way’ and already impossible to stop. As usual, this did not occur without conflicts between assessments of casualties for the population of the USSR and the Red Army during the war years. Some authors, in the pursuit of sensationalism, began to recklessly claim unjustifiably high numbers for those who died, far exceeding all reasonable limits. The issue of publishing reliable numbers of army and navy human casualties in the last war finally came to a head. In such important cases the initiative could not be ceded. In April 1988 a commission under the leadership of General-Colonel (now General of the Army) M.A. Gareev, Deputy Chief of the General Staff (now President of the Academy of Military Science of the Russian Federation), was established in the Ministry of Defence system to calculate casualties.
The commission included representatives of appropriate ministry staffs, directorates and institutes. It met at full strength only twice, including representatives of several interested departments. At the first organization session tasks were assigned to departments and institutes. In the second session the commission secretary reported on the results of its work. According to the testimony of several of the sessions’ participants, who had come with their own computations and calculations, tables were posted before the astonished members of the commission with results that had already been prepared. Such work could not have been completed in the short time available, which amounted to hardly more than six months. The basis of the calculations that were presented was the results of the work by a group of General Staff officers under the leadership of General-Colonel S.M. Shtemenko conducted in 1966–1968.
On 16 December 1988 Minister of Defence D.T. Yazov addressed the CC CPSU with a request to examine data about the Soviet armed forces’ casualties during the Great Patriotic War, having proposed to publish them in the open press after they had been approved. The text of his speech is cited below.
Memorandum from the USSR Minister of Defence to the CC CPSU on the Soviet Armed Forces’ Personnel Casualties during the Great Patriotic War, 1941–1945
16 December 1988
CC CPSU
Secret
Decisions of the XIX All-Union Party Conference on glasnost’ and the interests of Soviet people’s reliable information about the results of the Great Patriotic War require the publication of data about our armed forces’ casualties. The necessity for this is also occasioned by the fact that in recent years much contradictory and baseless information about the scope of human losses suffered by the Soviet armed forces and by our nation as a whole during the war has been cited in Soviet and foreign print. The lack of official data on our losses also makes it possible for some authors to distort and minimize the importance of the Soviet Union’s victory in the Great Patriotic War.
Taking all this into account, document materials (reports on losses, the orders of battle and strength of fronts, fleets and armies),6 statistical collections and reports from the directorates of the General Staff and Central Military Medicine Directorate, official data published in the Federal Republic of Germany [FRG] and the German People’s Republic [GDR], and captured documents that we have were investigated in the USSR Ministry of Defence by a specially established commission. A careful analysis of all these sources is making it possible to conclude that the irrecoverable losses of USSR armed forces personnel during the Great Patriotic War, including border troops and internal troops, amount to 11,444,100 people.
In studying documents from military-mobilization and repatriation organs, it has become clear when mobilization was conducted in 1943–1944 on Soviet territory that had been liberated, 939,700 servicemen, former POWs and men who had been encircled and who had stayed on occupied territory were re-inducted into the Soviet Army, and 1,836,000 former servicemen returned from captivity after the war ended. Therefore, these servicemen (a total of 2,775,700) have been excluded from the number of irrecoverable losses.
Thus, the Soviet armed forces’ irrecoverable losses (killed, died of wounds, MIA, not returned from captivity, and noncombat casualties) during the war, taking into account the Far East Campaign, amount to 8,668,400 men: 8,509,300 in the Army and Navy, 61,400 KGB Border Troops, and 97,700 Ministry of the Interior [MVD] Internal Troops. A significant part of these casualties occurred in 1941–1942, due to the extremely unfortunate circumstances that had developed for us during the first period of the war.
As for data about Fascist Germany’s casualties, they are clearly understated in the literature printed in the FRG and other Western countries: they do not take into account the casualties of Germany’s allies (Italy, Romania, Hungary, Finland), foreign formations fighting for Fascist Germany (Vlasovites, Slovaks, Spaniards, etc.), rear Wehrmacht establishments, and construction organizations in which mainly other nationalities (Poles, Czechs, Slovak...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- List of Plates
- List of Tables
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1. Circumstances governing the publication of loss data in the Great Patriotic War
- 2. Soviet troop casualties in certain strategic operations
- 3. Results of the computation of Soviet troop casualties by the authors of Russia and the USSR in Wars of the 20th Century
- 4. Soviet armed forces’ actual irrecoverable losses
- 5. Irrecoverable casualties of the German armed forces on the Soviet-German Front
- 6. Irrecoverable casualties of the German and Soviet allies on the Soviet-German Front
- 7. Overall ratio of irrecoverable losses of the opposing sides in the Great Patriotic War
- 8. Conclusion.
- Appendix A: Information on Red Army Personnel Combat Casualties during the Great Patriotic War
- Appendix B: Information on the Numerical Strength of the Red Army, Replacements and Casualties from the Beginning of the War to 1 March 1942
- Appendix C: Report on Mobilization Resources and their Use during the War (1 September 1942)
- Appendix D: Information on the Number of Soviet POWs Captured by German Forces from 22 June 1941 to 10 January 1942
- Notes
- Selective Bibliography
- Plate section