In the end, it was the lack of strategic planning in terms of logistics that would cause the demise of the Wehrmacht in the East. The diverting of manpower and resources to other fronts instead of perhaps the most important goal, Moscow, simply did not leave enough troops to combat the Soviet troops, already regrouping after escaping the Bryansk and Trubchevsk pockets. One final factor was the lack of constant support from the Luftwaffe, further moving resources and manpower away from where it was really needed. However, it can not be understated the effect of the transport of over eighteen infantry divisions and thousands of tanks and aircraft from Siberia for the Soviet counteroffensive.
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| - In the end, it was the lack of strategic planning in terms of logistics that would cause the demise of the Wehrmacht in the East. The diverting of manpower and resources to other fronts instead of perhaps the most important goal, Moscow, simply did not leave enough troops to combat the Soviet troops, already regrouping after escaping the Bryansk and Trubchevsk pockets. One final factor was the lack of constant support from the Luftwaffe, further moving resources and manpower away from where it was really needed. However, it can not be understated the effect of the transport of over eighteen infantry divisions and thousands of tanks and aircraft from Siberia for the Soviet counteroffensive.
- Battle of Moscow (Битва за Москву) is a 1985 Soviet, German, Czechoslovak, and Vietnamese film by Yuri Ozerov about the successful heroic defense of Moscow from Nazi attack in the Great Patriotic War. The film was released in two parts, as seen below: Film I: Aggression Part 2 The Red Army tries to counter the assault with a string of hasty operations, while the Brest Fortress is desperately defended. The Soviets manages to recapture Yelnya but having Major General Konstantin Rakutin killed in action. Stalin insists on defending Kiev, and his forces suffer immense losses. Film II: Typhoon
- The Battle of Moscow (, Romanized: Bitva za Moskvu) was the Soviet defense of Moscow and the subsequent Soviet counter-offensive that occurred between October 1941 and January 1942 on the Eastern Front of World War II against Nazi Germany forces. Adolf Hitler considered Moscow, which was the capital of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) and the largest Soviet city, to be the primary military and political objective for the Axis forces in their invasion of the Soviet Union. A separate German plan was codenamed Operation Wotan.
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Strength
| - 677(xsd:integer)
- 950(xsd:integer)
- 1000(xsd:integer)
- 1700(xsd:integer)
- 3232(xsd:integer)
- 7600(xsd:integer)
- 14000(xsd:integer)
- 1000000(xsd:integer)
- 1250000(xsd:integer)
- --10-01
- Initial aircraft: 549 serviceable At time of counter offensive: 599
- Initial aircraft: 936 At time of counter offensive: 1,376
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Partof
| - the Eastern Front of World War II
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Caption
| - December 1941. Soviet troops in winter gear, supported by tanks, counter-attack German forces.
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Casualties
| - 174000(xsd:integer)
- 248000(xsd:integer)
- 650000(xsd:integer)
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Result
| - Strategic Soviet victory
- Decisive Soviet victory
*Strategic Soviet success
*German operational and tactical failure
*Failure of Operation Barbarossa
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combatant
| - 44(xsd:integer)
- 48(xsd:integer)
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