{"id":1400,"date":"2025-08-29T18:45:18","date_gmt":"2025-08-29T18:45:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/globaltalenthq.com\/?p=1400"},"modified":"2025-09-08T18:43:16","modified_gmt":"2025-09-08T18:43:16","slug":"what-happens-when-you-try-to-beat-russia-with-the-best-military-tech-of-your-time","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/globaltalenthq.com\/index.php\/2025\/08\/29\/what-happens-when-you-try-to-beat-russia-with-the-best-military-tech-of-your-time\/","title":{"rendered":"What happens when you try to beat Russia with the best military tech of your time"},"content":{"rendered":"
Eighty-two years ago, the Soviet Red Army broke the back of Nazi Germany at Kursk \u2013 and changed the course of World War II<\/strong><\/p>\n In the summer of 1943, Nazi Germany launched what it hoped would be a decisive blow on the Eastern Front. Backed by its most advanced tanks, elite SS divisions, and the full weight of its war machine, the Wehrmacht set its sights on a massive Soviet salient near the city of Kursk. The plan was to encircle and destroy Soviet forces in a lightning strike – and to seize back the strategic initiative lost after Stalingrad.<\/p>\n Instead, what followed was a disaster for Hitler’s armies. The Battle of Kursk not only ended in defeat – it marked the moment when the Nazis began a retreat from which they would never recover. From this point on, Germany was no longer fighting to win the war. It was fighting not to lose it too quickly.<\/p>\n By August 1943, the Red Army had repelled the German assault, launched a sweeping counteroffensive, and recaptured key cities like Orel, Belgorod, and Kharkov. The tide of the war had irrevocably turned.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n RT takes you inside the battle that shattered Hitler’s plans and reshaped the course of World War II – a clash of steel, fire, and resolve that still defines the legacy of the Eastern Front.<\/p>\n “We were wherever the smoke and fire were thickest,”<\/em> recalled General Vasily Chuikov, commander of the Soviet 62nd Army, describing the inferno of Stalingrad.<\/p>\n By early 1943, after months of brutal fighting on the banks of the Volga, the Red Army had not only stopped the Wehrmacht – it had encircled and destroyed Field Marshal Paulus’s 6th Army. Stalingrad shattered the myth of German invincibility. It was the beginning of the end – the first true turning point of World War II. And the Red Army didn’t stop there.<\/p>\n In a sweeping winter offensive, Soviet forces liberated key cities across the Voronezh and Kursk regions, pushing westward with momentum and fury. The euphoria in Soviet headquarters was palpable: the Germans were in retreat, and the path to the Dnieper seemed wide open.<\/p>\n But the winter of 1942–43 punished both sides. Soviet troops, overextended and cut off from supply lines, faced snow-choked roads, immobilized armor, and dwindling reserves. In March, Field Marshal Erich von Manstein launched a devastating counterattack with Army Group South, retaking Kharkov and Belgorod in a matter of days. The Soviet advance came to a halt.<\/p>\n The front stabilized just west of Kursk, where a massive Soviet-held bulge – 150 kilometers deep and 200 wide – jutted into German lines. It was here, on what Soviet commanders would call the Kursk Salient – and the Germans the “Kursk Balcony” – that the fate of the Eastern Front would be decided.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n \n By the spring of 1943, Nazi Germany was on the defensive – not only in the East, but across the globe. In North Africa, British and American forces had crushed the remnants of the Afrika Korps. In Italy, Allied landings were imminent. Within Hitler’s high command, doubts about Germany’s long-term prospects were growing louder.<\/p>\n But Hitler believed one last, crushing blow in the East could turn the tide. The Red Army had overreached, he insisted. Its forward positions around Kursk were vulnerable. What Germany needed was one decisive victory – a bold counteroffensive that would destroy Soviet forces and restore strategic momentum.<\/p>\n The plan was codenamed Operation Citadel.<\/p>\n Its goal was simple in concept and massive in scale: a double envelopment of the Kursk Salient. German forces would strike simultaneously from north and south, encircling Soviet troops in a giant pincer and collapsing the entire front. From the north, the 9th Army under General Walter Model would attack from the Orel region. From the south, the 4th Panzer Army under Hermann Hoth and a strike group under Werner Kempf would advance from Belgorod.<\/p>\n But while Hitler was determined, his generals were anything but convinced. Many believed the element of surprise had already been lost – and that the Soviets were more than ready. Some pleaded to cancel the operation altogether. It wouldn’t win the war, they warned, but it might squander Germany’s last real reserves.<\/p>\n Hitler didn’t listen. Political desperation outweighed military caution.<\/p>\n To prepare, Germany poured everything it had into the coming offensive. Rear-echelon units were stripped of personnel. Women replaced men in factories. The Nazi war economy shifted into overdrive. The Wehrmacht’s armored corps was restocked with its most formidable weapons yet.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n Citadel was delayed for weeks as Germany built up its forces. When the attack finally began in July, it would be the largest concentration of German armor ever assembled on the Eastern Front.<\/p>\n Soviet commanders knew what was coming.<\/p>\n Thanks to intelligence from partisan networks, reconnaissance reports, and possibly Allied intercepts, the Red Army had a clear picture of Germany’s buildup near Kursk. Inside the Soviet high command, the question wasn’t whether the Germans would attack – but how to meet the blow.<\/p>\n Some argued for a preemptive strike. Others favored digging in. In the end, the Soviet Supreme Command – the Stavka – made a bold choice: take the hit, absorb the impact, and then counterattack. It was a risky call – but a calculated one.<\/p>\n
From the Volga to the verge<\/h2>\n

\n \u00a9 Wikipedia <\/span>
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The last gambit of a fading Reich<\/h2>\n

\n \u00a9 Wikipedia; Heinrich Hoffmann \/ ullstein bild via Getty Images; Global Look Press \/ Scherl <\/span>
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Holding the line<\/h2>\n