The Eastern Front Week by Week
Last time we spoke about the drive towards Kholm. STAVKA created the 53rd Army from Group Ksenofontov to secure the southern approaches to the Demyansk pocket, while additional artillery was allocated to support the forthcoming Soviet effort against the Ramushevo corridor. In parallel, OKH maintained that the Ostheer had grown stronger since June 1941, attributing this to newly formed divisions and continuing deliveries of equipment; however, this assessment tended to overlook lingering manpower shortages, inadequate replacement quality, and deficiencies in junior command. Plans for Kharkiv were likewise refined around a limited breakthrough aimed at facilitating an encirclement. In Crimea, Kozlov’s defensive posture was described as overstretched, and Manstein’s Luftwaffe-supported Trappenjagd was prepared for a coastal thrust toward the Black Sea. This episode is Operation Trappenjagd Well hello there, welcome to the Eastern Front week by week podcast, I am your dutiful host Craig Watson. But, before we start I want to also remind you this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Perhaps you want to learn more about world war two? Kings and Generals have an assortment of episodes on world war two and much more so go give them a look over on Youtube. So please subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry for some more history related content, over on my channel, the Pacific War Channel you can find a few videos all the way from the Opium Wars of the 1800’s until the end of the Pacific War in 1945. The fog of war was hitting hard in Ukraine, with both sides flying blind about what the enemy was cooking up next. Around Kharkiv, Generals Bock and Timoshenko were getting more and more jittery, each one half-expecting the other to beat them to the punch and kick off a massive offensive first. That paranoia sparked a noticeable uptick in small-scale hit-and-run raids all across Ukraine—especially in the Izyum Salient. The Soviets’ inexperience turned these nuisance attacks into a real headache for them, and it was yet another factor pushing back their own Kharkiv offensive until the 12th. Soviet staff officers were painfully green when it came to shuffling huge formations around; instead of crisp written orders, they often barked out conflicting verbal instructions that left units tangled up and crossing each other’s supply lines in a glorious mess. With so few experienced officers on hand, they were stretched ridiculously thin and simply couldn’t sort out the resulting chaos. On top of that, Luftwaffe interdiction raids kept hammering key roads and bridges, scattering troops every time a plane screamed overhead. After each strike, units had to scramble back together, tend to the wounded, and haul away damaged gear before they could even think about moving again. These little raids were no accident—they were part of a bigger pattern of probing and poking that had been ramping up since late April. Both armies were desperately fishing for intelligence while trying to grind down the other side’s readiness. German reconnaissance flights and ground patrols kept spotting Soviet buildups in the salient, but the Soviets’ constant counter-raids—usually small infantry groups backed by a handful of tanks—kept Bock’s forces from going all-in on their own preparations without worrying about getting hit first. Meanwhile, Timoshenko was catching heat from STAVKA to hurry up and get ready for what would become the Second Battle of Kharkov. Logistical knots and command friction kept shoving his timetable back, though. All this mutual suspicion, fed by spotty intelligence, was setting the table for one of the Eastern Front’s most explosive spring showdowns—just days away. While the final tweaks for that big offensive were happening elsewhere, spring fighting was about to flare up again in Crimea. As Citino points out, when Operation Trappenjagd kicked off, the Soviets held a comfortable two-to-one edge in manpower and equipment on the ground. In the air, though, the Germans enjoyed an overwhelming advantage—not just in numbers but in the quality of their planes and pilots. Those Soviet ground advantages were also partly wiped out by the sheer clumsiness of the Crimean Front’s command staff. The sudden spike in Luftwaffe activity was a dead giveaway that something big was coming. By the 5th, the Crimean Front was fully braced for a German attack; some reports even mentioned cheeky placards along the lines reading, “Come on. We are waiting.” Yet the Soviets still hadn’t bothered to dig in properly. Most of their fortifications were leftovers from 1941 or earlier, and only token work had been done to reposition headquarters and artillery. A few Soviet sources even claim that Kozlov was still planning another stab at Koi-Asan late on the 8th—even though he knew a German offensive was right around the corner. This complacency came from months of Soviet pressure on the Parpach Isthmus. Since January, Kozlov’s Crimean Front—made up of the 44th, 51st, and 47th Armies—had been hammering away at Manstein’s thinly stretched 11th Army, which was also busy pinning down Soviet forces at Sevastopol. Those earlier attacks had bled the Soviets badly in men and machines, but they had also convinced Kozlov and his commissar, Lev Mekhlis, that the Germans were stuck on the defensive and ripe for one more push. Manstein, however, had been quietly perfecting a counterpunch, drawing on lessons from earlier campaigns and stressing the need to concentrate force exactly where it would hurt most. As he later wrote in his memoirs, he liked to park himself right behind the front lines before launching big operations so he could keep a personal eye on things—a habit that paid off big time amid the rugged Kerch Peninsula terrain. What’s more, the feints by a single German division and three Romanian ones under the 42nd Corps had completely sold Kozlov on the idea that any German attack would come in the north. The ramped-up Luftwaffe activity had also blinded his three reconnaissance squadrons. Kozlov bought the whole charade hook, line, and sinker, never once wondering why his recon assets had suddenly become the Luftwaffe’s favorite targets. He hadn’t even noticed that most of the 11th Army had vanished from the usual spots. As a result, both the 51st and the reserve 47th Armies had shifted north into the Kerch area, leaving the southern part of the line dangerously thin. The 44th Army was left holding the bag with just six divisions out of Kozlov’s total of 21. Nobody on the Crimean Front even dreamed that the real blow would fall on the 44th. Facing them, though, was more than half of the 11th Army. To pull off that kind of concentration, Manstein had left only the Romanian 4th Mountain Brigade to watch the Crimean coastline, while the 72nd Infantry Division alone guarded the southern slice of the Sevastopol siege lines (with the German 54th Corps and Romanian 19th Infantry Division covering the northern and eastern parts). It was a masterful piece of deception, playing perfectly on Soviet expectations shaped by earlier German probes and the peninsula’s natural choke points. The northern feint kept the bulk of Kozlov’s mobile reserves tied down, while the real hammer—assembled in secret despite the nightmare of hauling heavy gear over muddy spring roads—slammed into the weaker southern defenses where the 44th Army’s lines had almost no depth and almost no modern fortifications. The original launch date for Operation Trappenjagd had already been pushed to the 7th, but on the 4th it slipped again. A burst of VVS activity right near the front made it impossible to sneak fighter units into forward airfields without being spotted. Richthofen was also sweating the delayed arrival of squadrons still stuck in Silesia. But May 8th promised excellent flying weather, and neither Manstein nor Richthofen wanted to let a perfect day go to waste. They had pulled together eleven bomber, three dive-bomber, and seven fighter Gruppen—555 combat aircraft in all. Operation Trappenjagd roared to life on May 8th with a colossal air assault. The Luftwaffe racked up more than 2,100 sorties that day; many crews flew multiple missions because their airfields sat just a few kilometers behind the lines. That short hop also let them carry heavier bomb loads since fuel wasn’t such a worry. The opening strikes hammered Crimean Front airfields, catching scores of Soviet planes on the ground, while fighter sweeps hunted down anything that got airborne. The Germans claimed 57 kills on day one alone. By noon, roughly a quarter of the Crimean Front’s air force had been wiped out. By May 9th the total climbed past 3,800 sorties, with the Luftwaffe claiming over 100 kills for the loss of just 23 of their own planes. Once air superiority was basically locked down, the Luftwaffe switched to pounding ground targets and choking off movement. Soviet radio discipline was terrible, so most command posts and positions were already lit up like Christmas trees; weak camouflage made them even easier to spot from above. Luftwaffe bombs also kept snapping the field telephone wires that linked everything together, turning communications across the entire front into a nightmare. Richthofen, who led the reinforced VIII Fliegerkorps, later called the scale of this concentrated air support “the likes of which has never existed,” highlighting how the Luftwaffe’s closeness to the battlefield let them turn around fast and hit with devastating accuracy that Soviet pilots—flying inferior machines and lacking the same training—simply couldn’t touch. This total control of the skies didn’t just neutralize the VVS; it sent a psychological shockwave through Soviet ground troops who found themselves constantly dodging Stukas and medium bombers with almost no friendly air cover in sight. The ground attack jumped off at 04:15 with a blistering ten-minute artillery and rocket barrage. The moment the guns fell silent, three leading German divisions—backed by assault guns—stormed forward under a constant Luftwaffe umbrella. The stunned and suppressed Soviets could barely mount any real resistance. Strongpoints were isolated and bypassed, with follow-up waves of infantry expected to mop up anything that wasn’t critical to the advance. Within the hour they had covered the three kilometers to the antitank ditch that cut across the peninsula near Parpach and formed the 44th Army’s second line of defense. By 8 a.m. the 28th Light Infantry had crossed it in strength. The 41st Army’s first defensive belt had been shattered, along with most of the 63rd Mountain Rifle Division, and the second echelon was now wide open. Only the 50th Infantry Division ran into real trouble. Swamps south of Koi-Asan slowed them down, and thick Soviet minefields gave the defenders just enough breathing room to shake off the shock of the barrage and fight back—helped by a few Soviet tanks. The 50th only reached the Parpach ditch by nightfall. Manstein had deliberately chosen a narrow front to build breakthrough speed, counting on a short, sharp artillery prep (beefed up by Nebelwerfer rocket launchers) to keep the Soviets off-balance. As he later reflected, the trick was to exploit the lack of depth in the enemy’s positions—turning a numerically superior defense into a collapsing front through rapid penetration and bypass tactics. To sweeten the deal, an infantry company with a platoon of pioneers had been slipped 1.3 km behind the Parpach ditch by the little boats of the 902 Sturmboote-Kommando. Luckily for them, months of Luftwaffe hammering had made the Black Sea Fleet pretty shy about operating near the Crimean coast. Historian Hayward points out that this caution went all the way back to February orders from Vice Admiral Oktyabrskii: his captains were told to be extremely careful in areas patrolled by enemy aircraft, to limit coastal bombardments to nighttime only, and never to risk bigger ships unless the weather grounded the Luftwaffe. Back in winter the long nights had given them decent cover; now, with shorter nights, better weather, and a much stronger Luftwaffe presence in Crimea, naval missions had become rare. So the Black Sea Fleet never showed up to stop the amphibious landing, which only drew some half-hearted mortar and light-artillery fire during the actual touchdown. Soviet artillery eventually sank thirteen of the assault boats over the course of the day. The landed troops quickly cleared the two bunkers guarding that stretch of coastline and called in the next wave. Before long an entire regiment was ashore, slamming into the Soviet second defensive line from behind. The 157th and 404th Rifle Divisions—supposed to be the 41st Army’s second echelon—couldn’t stop the double whammy of the amphibious landing and the frontal assault. Constant air attacks kept them pinned and unable to shift forces effectively. XXX Corps reported just 104 dead and 284 wounded while bagging 4,514 prisoners on day one. This bold flank insertion, pulled off under the cover of the main barrage and Luftwaffe umbrella, was a textbook example of the joint operations that made Trappenjagd so effective—catching the Soviets completely flat-footed and stopping any organized response to the main breakthrough cold. Once the antitank ditch was behind them, the Groddeck Brigade was unleashed and sent racing toward Kerch as fast as humanly possible. Every available truck, car, and motorcycle was thrown into the effort to motorize as many men as they could, though plenty of infantry still had to pedal bicycles towed behind trucks on ropes. By the end of the day the brigade had pushed three kilometers ahead of the 28th Light Infantry, which itself had advanced nearly ten kilometers. The 22nd Panzer Division, however, had to sit tight while engineers built bridges strong enough for tanks—a job made slower by bypassed Soviet troops harassing the German rear. During the day Cherniak threw his tank reserves at the 28th Light Division, but Luftwaffe interdiction tore into them while they were still assembling; 48 out of 98 tanks were claimed knocked out before they could even join the fight. When the surviving Soviet tanks finally clashed with German ground forces, another 24 were lost in a lopsided scrap against a single battalion of StuG III assault guns. Only one StuG was written off as a total loss, with an unknown number damaged but repairable later. (It’s worth remembering that the Germans only counted a vehicle as “lost” if it was utterly beyond repair; lightly or even heavily damaged ones that could be fixed weeks or months down the line didn’t make the official loss lists. Sometimes crews abandoned tanks or planes in enemy territory hoping to recover them later, and a vehicle might not be officially listed as lost until a full month had passed. That’s why German loss figures always look so low—and why pinning down exact vehicle casualties can be a headache. The Groddeck Brigade’s lightning exploitation showed the German love of motorized mobility in the pursuit phase, even when full panzer support was still waiting on the engineers. Luftwaffe strikes that day also mortally wounded General Lvov of the 51st Army. Combined with the destruction of the Front’s physical communications, it left Kozlov completely in the dark about how bad things really were on day one. He figured it was just a minor diversion and shifted only one rifle division from the 47th Army to help the 44th. He then casually told Cherniak to use that division for local counterattacks to push the Germans back—orders that the 30th Corps swatted aside with ease. Kozlov’s underestimation was a fatal command blunder, made worse by the loss of key leaders and the total paralysis of his headquarters under nonstop air and artillery pounding. Soviet command, already weighed down by political meddling from Mekhlis, simply crumbled under the speed and coordination of the German assault. So on the 9th the German advance rolled on without missing a beat. Group Groddeck covered another 23 kilometers at high speed, brushing aside only light resistance—an NKVD rifle division and a depleted cavalry division that had no idea the Germans were even there. Most of the small Soviet groups they ran into were too shocked and confused to put up much of a fight. Fear and panic began racing through the Crimean Front as wild rumors spread of Germans running loose deep in the rear. Group Groddeck also had the good luck to hit an entirely undefended stretch of the Nasyr Line. Their pace let them seize the Marfovka airfield and destroy 35 I-153 fighter-bombers on the ground. Ironically, they moved so fast that the Luftwaffe itself was caught off guard—several times the 8th Air Corps mistook the big moving columns for retreating Soviets and strafed them. Colonel Groddeck himself was apparently wounded in one of those friendly-fire mix-ups. By the evening of the 10th the brigade was running low on fuel and ammo. Behind them the 132nd Infantry Division trudged along to secure the bypassed ground, while the 28th Light Infantry swung toward Arma-Eli and grabbed it by nightfall. Only in the late afternoon did the engineers finally finish bridges sturdy enough for the 22nd Panzer to roll. Their advance caught the 40th Tank Brigade completely by surprise in its assembly area, where it had been gearing up for a counterattack. Then heavy rain hit right before dark, stopping German mechanized movement cold and grounding the Luftwaffe. Some historians think the 22nd Panzer would have reached the coast and trapped most of the 51st and 47th Armies before nightfall if not for that downpour. Richthofen scribbled in his diary that night: “Unless the weather itself stops us, no Russian will leave the Crimea alive.” The rain also slowed the German infantry, especially those still in contact with Soviet forces. By now the momentum belonged completely to Manstein. His troops had smashed the southern sector and were already starting to roll up the Soviet lines from the flank—setting the stage for the huge encirclements that would follow in the days ahead. Up on the Arctic coastline, fighting near Zapadnaya Litsa stayed mostly frozen in place thanks to heavy snowstorms. Hitler was convinced the area was a ticking time bomb, worried that the Anglo-Americans might try a naval landing somewhere along the Norwegian or Finnish coast. German high command pegged the stretch between Narvik and Pechenga as the most likely invasion spot. Pressure was mounting on Dietl to wrap things up quickly, but there were no spare reserves, so coastal defenses had to be stripped. Dietl and Schörner agreed to send the 2nd Mountain Division plus every small detachment between Tana Fjord and Pechenga Bay down to Litsa as reinforcements. These moves showed Berlin’s lingering paranoia about Allied landings in the far north—fears stoked by intelligence reports of increased shipping activity—even as the spring thaw turned the ground into a nightmare and limited any big operations. At Kestenga the heavily outnumbered Finnish 3rd Corps was still being slowly pushed back. To capitalize, the Soviets sent a ski brigade and a rifle regiment on a wide flanking sweep south of the 3rd Corps positions. When Finnish intelligence spotted it, Siilasvuo wanted to pull his corps back between Lakes Pya and Top. Dietl overruled him, insisting any retreat would cost even more men and equipment, and ordered them to stand fast no matter what. By the 5th the main body of the Soviet flanking force was within three kilometers of the supply road, with advance elements practically on top of it. But that same day the main Soviet assault by the 26th Army bogged down in the swamps northwest of Kestenga. That gave the Finns and Germans just enough time to slap together a joint battlegroup and counterattack the flankers. By the 7th the Soviet flanking force was surrounded and essentially wiped out—only about one-tenth of the ski brigade made it back to Soviet lines. The 26th Army called off its offensive after exhausting itself in the swamps. Its huge numerical edge had been wasted on dozens of small, scattered attacks by individual units. The 186th Rifle and 23rd Guards Divisions plus the 80th Rifle Brigade had taken casualties as high as 40 percent. Dietl ordered a counterattack that day, but the spring thaw turned the whole region into a muddy quagmire that stopped everything dead. This Finnish-German teamwork in the far north showed just how brutal the terrain could be—Soviet flanking attempts often backfired because of overextension, while Axis positions held by tough mountain troops proved remarkably resilient. Inside besieged Leningrad the drive to restart military production kept rolling. Seven new factories came online during May, bringing the total to 57 active plants. By the end of the month they would turn out 150 machine guns, 2,875 submachine guns, and 150,700 shells and mines. Outside the city, Finnish and German forces were spotted building up on the northern shores of Lake Ladoga. In response, Govorov beefed up defenses along the shoreline and its islands. Sukho Island eventually got a 100-man garrison with three 100 mm guns; its position was perfect for covering most of the southeastern Lake Ladoga coastline with artillery. These industrial efforts inside the city were a gritty display of Soviet resilience—workers grinding out weapons under constant bombardment and desperate shortages to keep the defense alive and prepare for future counteroffensives. The lake fortifications were meant to stop any Axis amphibious raids or supply disruptions across Ladoga, the city’s vital lifeline. Desperate for more manpower to hold the lines around the encircled 2nd Shock Army, General Lindemann of the 18th Army told Obergruppenführer Friedrich Jeckeln to scrape together a battlegroup from his SS police units and Latvian security auxiliaries. These were to join the 50th Corps on the Leningrad siege lines so regular infantry divisions could be freed up for the next round of Soviet offensives. It was a telling sign of the manpower crunch facing Army Group North—regular divisions were being pulled toward hotter sectors while the siege lines still needed constant bodies to hold them. On May 3rd STAVKA finally finished the command-and-control shake-up that followed the dissolution of the Volkhov Front. The 8th, 54th, 4th, 59th, and 2nd Shock Armies were grouped into the Volkhov Group of Forces, while the 23rd, 42nd, and 55th Armies plus the Neva and Coastal Operational Groups became the Leningrad Group of Forces. Malaia Vishera was named the Leningrad Front’s new headquarters. A few hours later an order arrived denying Khozin the reinforcements he had asked for. What happened next is still hotly debated among historians—partly because of the postwar rivalry and finger-pointing between Meretskov and Khozin. Meretskov claimed Khozin stayed upbeat and optimistic about his planned rescue of the 2nd Shock Army. Khozin later insisted that a big chunk of the 2nd Shock had already been pulled out of the pocket by the 3rd. Yet German records show almost no movement in or out of the pocket until May 21st, although some captured deserters started claiming in mid-May that the army was being withdrawn. Glantz splits the difference, saying that after hearing the refusal Khozin began preparing to evacuate the 13th Cavalry Corps, four rifle divisions, the 7th Tank Brigade, and all the sick and wounded of the 2nd Shock Army. They also hoped to pull out the army’s rear installations. None of these steps had actually been carried out yet. The reorganization showed STAVKA’s attempt to tidy up command during the brutal fight to relieve Leningrad, but the lack of reinforcements left Khozin’s forces in a very shaky spot—and it fueled endless postwar arguments about who was to blame for the 2nd Shock Army’s fate. While the Leningrad area saw no major offensives, the German 16th Army’s sector stayed a cauldron of fighting. The 16th Army was busy with the relief of Kholm (which wrapped up on the 5th), so on May 3rd Korochkin launched a fresh offensive to pinch off the Ramushevo corridor. The Soviet 11th Army attacked the four-kilometer-wide corridor from the north while the 1st Shock Army hit from the south. Facing them were the battered infantry of the 2nd Corps. After months of siege and living on starvation rations, the Germans were in rough shape—every division was down to about one-third strength. Worse, a lot of the men still on the line would normally have been classified unfit for combat. Even so, and despite having to fight in two directions, the defenders gave up almost no ground all week. Just like their earlier repeated assaults on the Demyansk Pocket, these attacks were predictable in both timing and location—nothing like the earlier airborne attempt to disrupt the Demyansk airbridge. That predictability made life much easier for the 16th Army. Thick mud and standing water helped the defense even more. Although Kurochkin failed to overrun the corridor, his artillery kept up a constant barrage on the supply road to the 2nd Corps. That shelling, plus the mud, is why the Demyansk airbridge was still essential even after the link-up weeks earlier. The Demyansk salient—encircled since February—had become a symbol of German stubbornness, kept alive at huge cost by the airlift. Kurochkin’s predictable pushes let the weakened II Corps hold on and buy time for relief efforts elsewhere. Army Group Center’s front and rear stayed relatively quiet except for the usual skirmishes and nonstop partisan attacks. Both the Ostheer and the Red Army were simply waiting for better weather before starting anything big. On the 4th Zhukov ordered Belov to dig in and hold his positions at all costs. The same instructions went to the 39th Army and the 11th Cavalry Corps, which were half-encircled behind the 9th Army. Meanwhile the Western and Kalinin Fronts kept building up. By late May the Kalinin Front was drawing rations for 601,894 men and the Western Front for 823,101. Ration strength is one way to track unit sizes, but it includes the sick and wounded the formations still have to feed, so it overstates immediate combat power—even though it’s useful for logistics planning. Even with that overestimate and some doubts about the numbers, more than a million men were being massed against Army Group Center. As a side note, Zhukov’s Western Theatre command had been dissolved and both the Kalinin and Western Fronts returned to direct STAVKA control—though sources disagree on the exact date, some saying early April and others May. On the 9th Belov’s encircled force received a battalion of anti-tank guns by air—kicking off a new airlift meant to strengthen Group Belov. On the same planes came General Mayor Golushkevich, Deputy Chief of Staff, carrying secret orders for Belov to be ready for a new southward offensive no later than June 5th. Belov was also told that the 50th Army would get major reinforcements and refitting in preparation for the joint attack. These moves showed Zhukov’s strategy of keeping pressure on German lines even inside encircled pockets, using air resupply to keep partisan-linked forces alive for future exploitation once the weather improved. At the same time the Germans were busy planning Operation Hannover. The 4th Army was given a single corps headquarters and three divisions pulled from the 3rd Panzer Army (which had taken over for the 4th Panzer Army, now headed to Ukraine), plus a corps HQ and three divisions from its own forces. Their planning mistakenly assumed that most of Belov’s roughly 20,000-man force was east of the Ugra River because of bad intelligence. In reality only parts of the 4th Airborne Corps and the Zhabo Partisan Regiment were on that side. The Airborne had an active strength of 2,300 plus another 2,000 sick or wounded as of May 1st, and 1,700 attached partisans from the Zhabo regiment. If the Germans had been right, they could have launched a fast offensive along the river to split the 3,900-square-kilometer pocket into easier-to-handle chunks and bag most of Belov’s strength. Once Hannover wrapped up quickly, most of those forces were supposed to head north to help the 9th Army’s coming offensive. May 21st was the planned start date. The movement of these German divisions had already been spotted, which only encouraged Group Belov to dig in harder. German deception was already ramping up to hide bigger summer plans, but local clean-up operations like Hannover were meant to tidy up rear-area headaches first. Even though the Soviets had noticed some of these smaller preparations, the Germans went to enormous lengths to hide their real summer intentions. After a Moscow newspaper somehow predicted a German summer offensive aimed at Voronezh and Stalingrad, Jodl demanded even heavier deception efforts ahead of Fall Blau. That gave birth to Operation Kremlin. Its first phase was to make the Soviets think the German summer buildup was actually happening in Army Group North and Center—especially to reinforce Soviet fears of another push toward Moscow. Fake headquarters were set up with bogus radio traffic suggesting frantic activity. Dummy aircraft were parked at phony airfields to simulate a bigger Luftwaffe presence. Security troops staged very visible fake redeployments. Reconnaissance raids were stepped up all along the front of both army groups. This elaborate maskirovka would play a huge part in keeping STAVKA guessing about the true direction of the coming campaign, giving the Germans precious time to prepare their southern thrust. And finally, after last week’s Reichstag speech Hitler had gone on a short holiday at the Berghof. But on May 3rd he cut the vacation short and returned to the Wolf’s Lair in Prussia. He said he simply couldn’t stand the sight of snow anymore after the horrors of the last winter. I would like to take this time to remind you all that this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Please go subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals [http://www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals]. If you are still hungry after that, give my personal channel a look over at The Pacific War Channel at Youtube, it would mean a lot to me. Operation Trappenjagd in Crimea proceeded with rare Black Sea interference, as Soviet artillery sank thirteen landing craft. German engineers and mobile exploitation then pushed rapidly toward Kerch, while Soviet command mistakes and Luftwaffe interdiction crippled attempted tank and counter moves; a downpour later slowed mechanization. In the Arctic, German and Finnish forces resisted Soviet flanking attempts near Kestenga as mud and bogs stalled offensives. Around Leningrad, factories expanded output and Lake Ladoga defenses strengthened, while STAVKA reorganized fronts after the Volkhov dissolution.
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