David M. Glantz.
Zhukov's Greatest Defeat: The Red Army's Epic Disaster in Operation Mars 1942.
Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1999. x + 421 pp.
$39.95 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-7006-0944-4.
Reviewed by W. Robert Houston (University of South Alabama)
Published on H-War (October, 1999)
Published on H-War (October, 1999)
Over the last decade, David Glantz has made a
reputation for himself as a reinterpreter of the Soviet-German portion
of the Second World War. Basing his writings on materials from the newly
opened Soviet archives, he has authored or co-authored several books on
the Russo-German War. In addition, he has served as editor of the
Journal of Slavic Military Studies. Zhukov's Greatest Defeat is another in his continuing series of works of reinterpretation.
It is Glantz's contention in this book that the main
Soviet attack in the Winter 1942-1943 campaign was not meant to be the
Stalingrad Offensive (Operation Uranus), but rather the Rzhev salient
attack, along the western direction toward Smolensk, Warsaw, and Berlin
(Operation Mars). Indeed, he spends a great part of the last chapter of
the book detailing the comparisons to be drawn between the two
offensives. He notes that G. K. Zhukov, the Deputy Supreme Commander,
coordinated the fronts in Operation Mars, while his junior, A. M.
Vasilevsky, carried out that task in Operation Uranus. He further notes
that the Soviets deployed similar numbers of forces and equipment in
each operation, and that the commanders were of similar prominence both
before and after the battles.
Finally, the author argues that the Soviets dropped
Operation Mars down the "memory hole" when it failed abysmally to
achieve any success, treating it, if at all, as a skillful diversionary
attack. He contends that this falsified account has become the received
history of the Winter Campaign of 1942-1943.
Then, Glantz argues that he has rescued the real
facts of the situation from oblivion, while also showing Zhukov's great
cruelty and his equally great skill at preserving his own reputation.
Finally, he avers that he has thus demonstrated how much is still to be
learned from mining the Soviet archives.
If correct, Glantz's contentions and conclusions are
noteworthy and might have made a fine journal article. However, one has
to question whether they are of sufficient importance to merit the
publication of a lengthy book. First, the author does not prove his
point. The military historian looking at the Russo-German front in the
summer and fall of 1942 sees immediately where the Soviets' main thrust
had to fall. The great German salient to Stalingrad and beyond was of
vital importance. The two dictators, Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin, had
staked their regimes on the Battle for the City of Stalin. Soviet
planners had to see that this salient was the German's Achilles heel.
The flanks were held by Romanian, Hungarian, and Italian Divisions, not
German. The Nazi forces had failed to take Stalingrad in a vicious,
bloody, lengthy struggle. The Soviet opportunity to achieve great things
was obvious.
To the north, around Rzhev, were German forces, the
weakest of which were Luftwaffe Field Divisions. There was no clear
strategic point to pinching off the Rzhev salient. One can see nothing
in this work to cause a change in the current interpretation of the
Winter 1942 campaign.
What the reader does see are practices of writing
generally not accepted by professional historians. Glantz makes the
following statement in his Introduction: "I have reconstructed the
course, scope, and intent of Operation Mars based on sound archival
sources, and I have inferred [italics in original] larger aspects of the
Soviet Fall 1942 strategic plan . . . The decisions, actions,
personalities, motivations, and undocumented [emphasis added]
conversations and thoughts of the commanders, however, are based on
archival materials to a markedly lesser extent. They reflect my
subjective understanding of the operations and men, in some instances
from their own accounts and more often, based on their subsequent
actions or ultimate fate. This historical license on my part, however,
in no way detracts from the factual accuracy of what did occur in
Operation Mars and why" (p.3). In short, the author feels free to read
minds, as he does on pages 9-10, where he tells the reader Stalin's
thoughts with absolutely no evidentiary support, and on pages 30-31,
where he likewise tells one what Zhukov thought, again without any
sources. He repeats this practice in many more instances elsewhere in
the book, on both the Soviet and German sides of the front. Can this
mind reading be called history?
Further, given the book's grand strategic foci, how
is it that the reader finds himself enmeshed in the movements of
regiments and even battalions? After two and half decades as a military
historian with staff college experience, this reader found these lengthy
sections very rough going. One pities the History Book Club members who
took this book as a main selection of the club.
In addition, Glantz never explains how different the
Soviet military organization was from what one expects in the West,
which makes reading all the more unclear. Nor does he forbear to list
commander after commander of various units, to what purpose one can only
speculate. The book rapidly spirals into operational and tactical
history of the worst sort. This descent is not helped by the maps, which
are not clear and are far too difficult to read.
Finally, to argue that one is spotlighting and
documenting the sufferings of the common soldiers (p. 324) is a fine
goal, but then not do it is to fail at one's own task. There have been
recently published several excellent works on the Russo-German War, such
as Antony Beevor's book on Stalingrad, which do treat the sufferings of
the combat soldier with great feeling. This work does not.
Furthermore, one must be concerned when a scholar
using German sources notes that the German Army High Command was the
Oberkommando das Heere, or OKH (p.5), when the proper German is
Oberkommando des Heeres. One feels quite insecure about German
translation thereafter.
In the last analysis, this is not a very useful book.
Glantz raises issues that are important, but he never really proves his
points, nor does he justify his long descent into minutiae. Ultimately,
one must also say that this work is not good history. It is slip-shod,
tendentious, and dismissive of the canons of proper historical writing.
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