Russian WWII Veteran tells of Battle of Stalingrad (1 Viewer)

BLReed

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I thought some may be interested in reading this account.
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/0...rs-and-heroics-during-battle/?intcmp=HPBucket

90-year-old Russian WWII veteran tells of horrors and heroics during the Battle of Stalingrad
Published February 01, 2013
Associated Press
MOSCOW – The Soviet soldiers used their own bodies as shields, covering women and children escaping on ferry boats from a Nazi bombardment that killed 40,000 civilians in a single day. It was the height of the Battle of Stalingrad, one of the bloodiest conflicts of World War II.

"They were all hit in the back," said 90-year-old Alexei Stefanov. "But they did not flee."

Stefanov is among the few surviving veterans of the battle, which claimed 2 million lives and raged for nearly 200 days before the Red Army turned back the Nazi forces, decisively changing the course of the war. Russia celebrates the 70th anniversary of that victory on Saturday, with President Vladimir Putin taking part in ceremonies in Volgograd, the current name of the city in southern Russia that stretches along the western bank of the Volga River.

Stefanov arrived in Stalingrad in August, 1942, just a month after the Nazis began their onslaught. A marine, he commanded what was left of a reconnaissance platoon, 17 scouts who had survived previous missions on the front lines.

The German army invaded the Soviet Union in June, 1941, and by the following summer had pushed deep inside the country. For Adolf Hitler, taking the city named after Soviet dictator Josef Stalin would be a symbolic victory, and it also would allow the Germans to cross the Volga and secure access to Russian oil supplies.

What Stefanov saw was a once-thriving industrial city being reduced to rubble by shelling and bombing by the Nazis and their Romanian, Italian, Hungarian and Spanish allies. Only about 100,000 residents had been evacuated, and the remaining civilians were frantically helping to dig trenches.

The Red Army had orders from Stalin not to retreat, so only women, children and wounded soldiers were allowed to take the crossing over the wide river to relative safety.

The day Stefanov remembers most vividly is Aug. 23, 1942, when hundreds of Nazi planes bombed the city, turning it into a giant burning ruin. Hundreds of Soviet soldiers with wounds bad enough to keep them out of the battle but not severe enough to incapacitate them set out to rescue women and children from the basements of demolished buildings. They rushed them to ferries that would take them across the Volga, a river about 2 kilometers (more than 1 mile) from shore to shore.

Fires from spilled oil and gasoline burned on the water, and the defenseless ferries were easy prey for the Nazi planes. The Soviet soldiers covered the children with their own bodies. Stefanov is still haunted by the sight of the soldiers who died, their backs ripped apart.

In the city, thousands of dead bodies were left unburied, lying amid the ruins in the sweltering August heat. For the only time during the Battle of Stalingrad, German tanks got to the river, and Soviet tanks and artillery fiercely fought them back.

"That was hell, literal hell," Stefanov said. "This one episode to me was equal to the whole war."

Stefanov recalls reconnaissance missions deep inside enemy territory, when he had to crawl for hours and hide in ravines to gather intelligence on the location and number of Nazi troops and weapons.

In September, 1942, Stefanov was hit in his left hand, a wound that still troubles him. He later returned to active service and was with Soviet troops when they drove the Germans out of Norway and marched into Warsaw and Berlin.

He was back in Moscow in late June, 1945, to participate in the Victory Parade on Red Square. Then he went on to China to help drive out the imperial Japanese.

Stefanov's contribution to the war effort won him dozens of medals. Although they weigh a combined 11 kilograms (24 pounds), he still wears them pinned to the front of his uniform on holidays and other special occasions.

His real reward at the end of the war was his marriage to Lyudmilla, also a decorated war veteran. They are still together 67 years later.

"War is not a game, it's the most horrible thing," said Stefanov, who heads a government-run organization of World War II veterans. "That's the thing youngsters should always know."


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/0...-during-battle/?intcmp=HPBucket#ixzz2KFKC0GAZ
 
I thought some may be interested in reading this account.
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/0...rs-and-heroics-during-battle/?intcmp=HPBucket

90-year-old Russian WWII veteran tells of horrors and heroics during the Battle of Stalingrad
Published February 01, 2013
Associated Press
MOSCOW – The Soviet soldiers used their own bodies as shields, covering women and children escaping on ferry boats from a Nazi bombardment that killed 40,000 civilians in a single day. It was the height of the Battle of Stalingrad, one of the bloodiest conflicts of World War II.

"They were all hit in the back," said 90-year-old Alexei Stefanov. "But they did not flee."

Stefanov is among the few surviving veterans of the battle, which claimed 2 million lives and raged for nearly 200 days before the Red Army turned back the Nazi forces, decisively changing the course of the war. Russia celebrates the 70th anniversary of that victory on Saturday, with President Vladimir Putin taking part in ceremonies in Volgograd, the current name of the city in southern Russia that stretches along the western bank of the Volga River.

Stefanov arrived in Stalingrad in August, 1942, just a month after the Nazis began their onslaught. A marine, he commanded what was left of a reconnaissance platoon, 17 scouts who had survived previous missions on the front lines.

The German army invaded the Soviet Union in June, 1941, and by the following summer had pushed deep inside the country. For Adolf Hitler, taking the city named after Soviet dictator Josef Stalin would be a symbolic victory, and it also would allow the Germans to cross the Volga and secure access to Russian oil supplies.

What Stefanov saw was a once-thriving industrial city being reduced to rubble by shelling and bombing by the Nazis and their Romanian, Italian, Hungarian and Spanish allies. Only about 100,000 residents had been evacuated, and the remaining civilians were frantically helping to dig trenches.

The Red Army had orders from Stalin not to retreat, so only women, children and wounded soldiers were allowed to take the crossing over the wide river to relative safety.

The day Stefanov remembers most vividly is Aug. 23, 1942, when hundreds of Nazi planes bombed the city, turning it into a giant burning ruin. Hundreds of Soviet soldiers with wounds bad enough to keep them out of the battle but not severe enough to incapacitate them set out to rescue women and children from the basements of demolished buildings. They rushed them to ferries that would take them across the Volga, a river about 2 kilometers (more than 1 mile) from shore to shore.

Fires from spilled oil and gasoline burned on the water, and the defenseless ferries were easy prey for the Nazi planes. The Soviet soldiers covered the children with their own bodies. Stefanov is still haunted by the sight of the soldiers who died, their backs ripped apart.

In the city, thousands of dead bodies were left unburied, lying amid the ruins in the sweltering August heat. For the only time during the Battle of Stalingrad, German tanks got to the river, and Soviet tanks and artillery fiercely fought them back.

"That was hell, literal hell," Stefanov said. "This one episode to me was equal to the whole war."

Stefanov recalls reconnaissance missions deep inside enemy territory, when he had to crawl for hours and hide in ravines to gather intelligence on the location and number of Nazi troops and weapons.

In September, 1942, Stefanov was hit in his left hand, a wound that still troubles him. He later returned to active service and was with Soviet troops when they drove the Germans out of Norway and marched into Warsaw and Berlin.

He was back in Moscow in late June, 1945, to participate in the Victory Parade on Red Square. Then he went on to China to help drive out the imperial Japanese.

Stefanov's contribution to the war effort won him dozens of medals. Although they weigh a combined 11 kilograms (24 pounds), he still wears them pinned to the front of his uniform on holidays and other special occasions.

His real reward at the end of the war was his marriage to Lyudmilla, also a decorated war veteran. They are still together 67 years later.

"War is not a game, it's the most horrible thing," said Stefanov, who heads a government-run organization of World War II veterans. "That's the thing youngsters should always know."


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/0...-during-battle/?intcmp=HPBucket#ixzz2KFKC0GAZ



Thank you for remembering the 70th anniversary of the end of Stalingrad battle{sm3}
 
Its funny well, in an ironic sense that there is still little interest or sympathy to the Russian side during WWII. I was reading some things about this story and, pretty quickly it had comments about their war crimes and the persecution of millions from their own country but also many they occupied during and after WWII. twenty million plus and Germany gets more sympathy!!!
Mitch
 
Its funny well, in an ironic sense that there is still little interest or sympathy to the Russian side during WWII. I was reading some things about this story and, pretty quickly it had comments about their war crimes and the persecution of millions from their own country but also many they occupied during and after WWII. twenty million plus and Germany gets more sympathy!!!
Mitch

Mitch ,

I will add my geuss...Firstly , Stalin...Without going into detail about it all...persecution of his own people...Also the fact many believe Hitler just beat him to the punch when invading...Given time after his officer purge possibly a year to two , Stalin would have invaded Europe & Germany...
So basic's...One bully beat the other bully to it , so to say ! Kind of removes Russia from the innocent ( my hands are clean ) party...especially since they had already showed their cards by invading Finland & agreeing to split Poland...I can tell you first hand , my dad's parent's were polish & since this is a family friendly forum i cannot type anything my grandfather said about Russia here...That being said i think my grandfather felt let them both ( germany & russia ) just have at each other ! There is also the Katyn incident if i spelled that right ?!

Secondly , i think alot of people being against Communism...

Thirdly , the width & breadth of the Cold War is fresher in people's minds...

Fourthly , I also believe current times/relations have alot to do with how people view events of the past...

Joe
 
Mitch ,

I will add my geuss...Firstly , Stalin...Without going into detail about it all...persecution of his own people...Also the fact many believe Hitler just beat him to the punch when invading...Given time after his officer purge possibly a year to two , Stalin would have invaded Europe & Germany...
So basic's...One bully beat the other bully to it , so to say ! Kind of removes Russia from the innocent ( my hands are clean ) party...especially since they had already showed their cards by invading Finland & agreeing to split Poland...I can tell you first hand , my dad's parent's were polish & since this is a family friendly forum i cannot type anything my grandfather said about Russia here...That being said i think my grandfather felt let them both ( germany & russia ) just have at each other ! There is also the Katyn incident if i spelled that right ?!

Secondly , i think alot of people being against Communism...

Thirdly , the width & breadth of the Cold War is fresher in people's minds...

Fourthly , I also believe current times/relations have alot to do with how people view events of the past...

Joe

Fifthly, official Russian accounts of the war are very suspect on accuracy because of the highly political nature of the regime following the war. Historical commentaries were constantly revised to fit the views of the current power brokers of the time.
 
Hopefully no one minds if we transform this thread into a general discussion on the Eastern Front.

Here's a snippet that might get the ball rolling.

On 22 June 1941, the Wehrmacht launched its long anticipated invasion of the Soviet Union. The Germans struck with 153 divisions. During the initial assault the Germans crushed Soviet resistance along the frontier and conducted rapid pursuit operations that carried them all the way to the gates of Leningrad and Moscow. During this time the Wehrmacht executed several encircling operations that destroyed numerous Soviet combat formations.

But, despite these stunning accomplishments, the German offensive suffered from a lack of focused objectives and coordinated operational direction that might have yielded the quick strategic victory they sought. At the end of this lighting campaign, the Wehrmacht found itself halted at the outskirts of the strategic cities of Leningrad and Moscow and experienced accumulating hardships from the Russian winter and Soviet counter-attacks. The initial phase of the war between the Wehrmacht and Red Army is strewn with many questions regarding German and Soviet strategic intentions that generate many operational and tactical “what ifs”.

Did Stalin intend to launch a preventative war by invading Germany first and thereby forgo defensive training for the Red Army that resulted in the disasters suffered during the early campaigns?

Did Hitler’s directive to Guderian to encircle the Soviet forces at Kiev cause a fatal delay that prevented the Germans from capturing Moscow?

What if the Germans had waited until 1942 to strike?

What if Moscow and/or Leningrad had fallen to the Germans in the intial campaign?

Hopefully this and other related topics will serve to generate some fun and interesting discussions regarding the operations conducted between the Germans and Soviets on the Eastern Front.

:)
 
Hopefully no one minds if we transform this thread into a general discussion on the Eastern Front.

Here's a snippet that might get the ball rolling.

On 22 June 1941, the Wehrmacht launched its long anticipated invasion of the Soviet Union. The Germans struck with 153 divisions. During the initial assault the Germans crushed Soviet resistance along the frontier and conducted rapid pursuit operations that carried them all the way to the gates of Leningrad and Moscow. During this time the Wehrmacht executed several encircling operations that destroyed numerous Soviet combat formations.

But, despite these stunning accomplishments, the German offensive suffered from a lack of focused objectives and coordinated operational direction that might have yielded the quick strategic victory they sought. At the end of this lighting campaign, the Wehrmacht found itself halted at the outskirts of the strategic cities of Leningrad and Moscow and experienced accumulating hardships from the Russian winter and Soviet counter-attacks. The initial phase of the war between the Wehrmacht and Red Army is strewn with many questions regarding German and Soviet strategic intentions that generate many operational and tactical “what ifs”.

Did Stalin intend to launch a preventative war by invading Germany first and thereby forgo defensive training for the Red Army that resulted in the disasters suffered during the early campaigns?

Did Hitler’s directive to Guderian to encircle the Soviet forces at Kiev cause a fatal delay that prevented the Germans from capturing Moscow?

What if the Germans had waited until 1942 to strike?

What if Moscow and/or Leningrad had fallen to the Germans in the intial campaign?

Hopefully this and other related topics will serve to generate some fun and interesting discussions regarding the operations conducted between the Germans and Soviets on the Eastern Front.

:)


You rise very interesting points....I read many books about this subject by british historians like A. Beevor, and especially by many german historians and writers.

As you say, the objectives in the east were many because of the huge extension of Soviet Union, and for the first time Hitler had a clash against his generals , especially against Guderian and Manstein. The generals wanted to take Leningrad, then Moscow, as forecast originally in the "Barbarossa" plan. Hitler had more confused ideas....On one side he thought or hoped that a few forces could take Leningrad with a siege, and was wrong in this. Then, he wanted to take Kiev and the rich ukrainian lands, and this move made the Moscow attack to be too late in the year: the snow, and the siberians coming from Vladivostock stopped the germans a few Km from Moscow....If the original plan was applied, Moscow and Leningrad would have fallen? Who knows....And if those towns were taken, would Soviet Union have collapsed? In my opinion maybe yes, this shock would have destroyed the central command system of Russia.

About the Stalin aim to attack Germany...According to the evidences he wanted to attack Germany for first, but not immediately....He massed huge quantity of troops along the western borders, but these troops weren' t neither trained, nor equiped for a war: probably Stalin was waiting for the nazi Germany and the capitalistic UK to weaken each other in the war first. And he believed hard that Hitler would have respected the Molotov-Ribentropp agreement.

About waiting for year 1942 to launch Barbarossa..This was not in the Hitler's brutal character to wait, and objectively, the preparations were already made so that it would have been impossible to delay this for the following year.
 
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