Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

German Logistics 1939-45 [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 192 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x203 mm, 250
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Aug-2025
  • Kirjastus: Casemate Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1636245188
  • ISBN-13: 9781636245188
  • Formaat: Hardback, 192 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x203 mm, 250
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Aug-2025
  • Kirjastus: Casemate Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1636245188
  • ISBN-13: 9781636245188
Despite the Germans’ superb battlefield leadership, their technical prowess, their mighty Tigers and Panthers, a failure of logistics at critical moments in the war proved their downfall: at the gates of Moscow, in North Africa, at Stalingrad, and in Normandy.

Germany’s WWII military prowess was undermined by logistical failures, ultimately leading to defeat.When we think of the German Army we think of the Blitzkrieg years, 1939–41. With their Auftragstaktik and cutting-edge weaponry, they epitomised incisive modern war. However, there was an elephant in the room, and in spite of their superb battlefield leadership, their brilliant victories, their technical prowess, their mighty Tigers and Panthers, they lost because of it.It wasn’t, as the German generals argued postwar, the Soviet hordes that swamped them. It wasn’t the industrial capabilities of the United States. It wasn’t the control exerted by a dictator increasingly removed from the real world. It wasn’t the amount of effort spent transporting millions of people to their deaths in the camps, or the amount of concrete poured into the Atlantic Wall from the Arctic to the Mediterranean. All these points helped swing the war in the Allies’ favour but they weren’t the main reason why the German Wehrmacht lost. The elephant in the room was logistics.It’s easy to talk about the positives of German logistics—the fact that they could advance so far into the Soviet Union over such difficult terrain; the way that German industry kept going in spite of Allied strategic bombing; the resilience and resourcefulness of the way they kept the railways running, allowing the movement of huge numbers of men and armoured vehicles. But in the end, at the critical moments in the war, their logistics failed them: at the gates of Moscow, their soldiers died because they lacked the winter clothing waiting in depots to be shipped east; in North Africa, Allied air and sea assets nullified critical supplies to Rommel’s Afrika Korps when it was within sight of the Suez Canal; at Stalingrad, 6. Armee couldn’t be resupplied by air because there were too few transport aircraft; in Normandy, Allied air power cut rail traffic towards the invasion front and harried the forces moving by road; and in the Ardennes, lack of fuel forced more Tigers and King Tigers to be destroyed by their own crews for lack of it than enemy action. Fully illustrated, this book examines the logistics of the Nazis horse-drawn army, its successes and ultimate failure.
IntroductionStrategic logisticsOperational logisticsTactical logisticsSummary
Simon Forty was educated in Dorset and the north of England before reading history at London Universitys School of Slavonic and East European Studies. He has been involved in publishing since the mid-1970s, first as editor and latterly as author. Son of author and RAC Tank Museum curator George Forty, he has continued in the family tradition writing mainly on historical and military subjects including books on the Napoleonic Wars and the two world wars. Recently he has produced a range of highly illustrated books on the Normandy battlefields, the Atlantic Wall and the liberation of the Low Countries with co-author Leo Marriott. Richard Charlton Taylor has been schoolteacher, light infantryman and businessman. A collector and trader in World War II militaria, he has worked with Simon Forty on several projects sourcing images and providing detailed military knowledge of weapons, equipment, and tactics.