The Battle of the Tanks Quotes

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The Battle of the Tanks: Kursk, 1943 The Battle of the Tanks: Kursk, 1943 by Lloyd Clark
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The Battle of the Tanks Quotes Showing 1-3 of 3
“A harmincas évek elején a párt meggyőződéses híveit és a megfélemlítetteket autóbusszal egyik helyről a másikra szállították, hogy garantálhassák a nagy és lelkes hallgatóságot.”
Lloyd Clark, The Battle of the Tanks: Kursk, 1943
“The aim, as would have been understood by the great nineteenth-century Prussian generals, such as von Moltke, was to encircle and physically annihilate the enemy in a kesselschlacht (cauldron battle) and through this achieve a vernichtungsschlacht (the annihilation of the enemy’s armed forces through a single crushing blow). Blitzkrieg, therefore, presented Hitler with the means for a swift, efficient and decisive military victory, which avoided the protracted, bloody and resource-sapping fighting that he had experienced during the Great War.”
Lloyd Clark, The Battle of the Tanks: Kursk, 1943
“Sixth Army and elements of the Fourth Panzer Army had been encircled in an offensive that was an ominous sign for the Wehrmacht. Joachim Wieder wrote: ‘We have never imagined a catastrophe of such proportions to be possible.’ The Sixth Army was in dire straits. Caught with no winter clothing and little food and fuel, it was too weak to try to break out of its confines. But Hitler did not want Paulus to break out and instead directed him to establish ‘Festung Stalingrad’ – Fortress Stalingrad – and to ‘dig in and await relief from outside’. Although he was placing this formation in a desperate situation, Hitler demanded that the Sixth Army pin and fix as many Soviet troops as possible around the Volga in order to give Army Group A the best possible chance to extract itself from the Caucasus. In the meantime, Field Marshal Erich von”
Lloyd Clark, Kursk: The Greatest Battle