Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - During the Soviet-German War, 654.38 million people were frozen to death by the Germans. Is the advantage of Soviet victory only the weather?

During the Soviet-German War, 654.38 million people were frozen to death by the Germans. Is the advantage of Soviet victory only the weather?

Of course, the quality of Soviet victory is not only because of the weather, but also because of their unity against foreign enemies and their familiarity with the terrain, which is also the factor of Soviet victory. But looking back at history now, we can't deny that under that condition, the Soviet Union of the German Expeditionary Force ignored the bad weather of the Soviet Union, which was an important reason for the Soviet Union's victory.

During World War II, the Germans were well-equipped, with few personnel, and their individual combat capability was particularly high. The quality of the army is also very high. German officers are good at commanding, which makes many German arms and services cooperate very tacitly, and their advantages are very obvious in field operations, especially in mobile warfare. Although the German Blitzkrieg is scary, it has a fatal disadvantage, that is, it cannot fight a protracted war. But this is not the case with the Soviet army, which is superior in equipment and personnel. The Soviet soldiers are not weak in fighting capacity, but they are of low quality and difficult to command. However, if you hold your ground, the weaknesses of low quality and poor command ability will be relatively reduced, and the greatest advantage of Soviet soldiers will be brought into play.

Originally, the Soviet Union attacked before the cold winter, but because the Soviet Union had more equipment and more people alive, it delayed the war for several months and persisted in the cold winter. In fact, the Germans were able to fight a mobile war in the cold winter, but they were still able to go to soviet strike. But Hitler was too stubborn to attack Stalingrad by force, but in the end he was dragged into the abyss of winter and surrounded by powerful Soviet troops.

Moreover, the Germans went too deep into enemy-occupied areas, and Germany had never experienced such a harsh winter. Moreover, Russia is not as developed as Germany, and there are all kinds of damages caused by guerrillas in Russian-occupied areas, so it is particularly difficult for German reinforcements and supplies.