
Why Did Operation Barbarossa Fail?
On 8 December 1941, Adolf Hitler proclaimed that his army had failed to capture Moscow because of “severe winter weather” and “difficulties in bringing up supplies.” After the Second World War, the chief of the German general staff, Franz Halder, blamed Operation Barbarossa's failure on the “vast immeasurable space” of the Soviet Union and the “limitations of the Russian transportation network.” For the past eight decades, historians have done little more than repeat these excuses as to why the largest invasion in history ended in defeat.
In Why Barbarossa Failed, Harvard Law School graduate and Wall Street lawyer Timothy Manion offers a bold, deeply researched re-examination of the most consequential campaign of the Second World War. Going beyond the well-worn clichés of weather and logistics, Manion draws upon a vast range of previously overlooked archival records to provide a compelling challenge to the established consensus. The accounts of officers at the front during the critical battles that brought the German army to a halt are published for the first time and rigorously analyzed in the most comprehensive examination of Operation Barbarossa ever written.
Praise for Why Barbarossa Failed:
“Timothy Manion argues lucidly and at times provocatively that the failure of Operation Barbarossa was not due to the commonly debated issues of the weather and logistics, but to wrong-headed strategy pursued by the Wehrmacht and it only achieved as much as it did due to equally wrong-headed Soviet military strategy. Manion bases his arguments on a solid exploration of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century strategic thinking and the antagonists’ interpretation of them. His account shows a mastery of the history of the campaign and the what-might-have-beens. This is fascinating reading!”
Roger R. Reese, Professor and holder of the Ralph R. Thomas Class of 1921 Endowed Professorship in Liberal Arts, Department of History, Texas A&M University; author of Why Stalin’s Soldiers Fought and Russia’s Army
"A most learned study of Barbarossa, demonstrating astonishing familiarity with the operational details at all levels and offering a wealth of dazzling insights into the campaign. Fascinating reading, even if one does not agree with the author regarding the causes of Barbarossa's failure."
Azar Gat, Ezer Weizman Chair in National Security, Tel Aviv University; author of War in Human Civilization and A History of Military Thought
Order from the Publisher:
Find on Amazon:
https://www.amazon.com/Why-Barbarossa-Failed-Germany-Russia/dp/180451909X