The performance of the T-60 and T-70 light tanks in combat
was far from satisfactory because of a combination of inferior armour and lack
of firepower. A noted critic of these two tank types was Major-General M.E.
Katukov. In a meeting with Stalin in autumn 1942, Katukov told him that his
crews did not like the T-60:
It has only a 20mm
[0.78in] gun. In serious combat with armoured forces it just does not have it
... To attack in mud or snow is a deadly affair. In the battles around Moscow,
we continually had to drag them in tow.
He was more cautious, however, about the new T-70, but
nonetheless noted, somewhat sceptically, 'It has not shown us anything special.'
Katukov was right about the crews' intense dislike of the
T-60: they nicknamed them BM-2, meaning Bratskaya Mogila na Dovoikh; quite
literally, 'a brother's grave for two', referring to the tank's vulnerability
to German antitank fire. On the other hand, they were better than nothing
during the dark days of 1941 and 1942, and as commander of I Tank Corps during
fierce fighting earlier in 1942, Katukov was forced to acknowledge the debt he
owed them:
And now, in this
fateful hour, when the Germans had almost defeated us, those 'ridiculous' tanks
saved our positions. It was lucky that the rye in the area was over a metre
high, as the T60s were almost hidden by it. Using this rye field, both of our
T-60 tanks were able to infiltrate to the rear of the German infantry and then
open fire. After several minutes of intensive fire, the German attack was
halted.
The T-70's most dramatic engagements came in July 1943 at
the Battle of Kursk, the climax of the German summer offensive. On 12 July, the
Soviet Fifth Guards Tank Army and German II SS Panzer and III Panzer Corps
clashed on a 32km (20 mile) front before the village of Prokhorovka. In all,
during the heavy fighting, 429 German tanks and 870 Soviet· tanks were engaged,
and this number included 261 T-70 light tanks. Although Soviet tank losses were
significantly greater than those of their opponents (perhaps even as much as
three times as high), the German advance was contained and the battle
subsequently swung in favour of the Soviets. At the height of the battle on 12
July, the Red Army's 31 st Tank Brigade succeeded in penetrating the rear
elements of the 1st SS Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler Panzergrenadier Division. The
1st SS Divisional history recorded the sheer ferocity of the tank action:
the remaining three
Panzers ... could fire at the Russians from a distance of 10 to 30 metres
[30-90ft] and make every shell a direct hit because the Russians could not see
through the dust and smoke that there were German tanks rolling along with them
in the same direction. There were already 19 Russian tanks standing burning on
the battlefield when the Abteilung [2nd Panzer Regiment] opened fire for the
first time ... destroying 62 T-70s and T-34s in a three hour long battle that
could almost be termed hand-to-hand combat.
Soviet losses were inflated by the Germans, but it seems
clear that a large number ofT-70s were lost. For the rest of the war, the T-60
and T-70 were gradually removed from combat roles and used for convoy duties,
reconnaissance, training and defending headquarters.
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