Abstract
In the summer of 1941, the Third Reich was at the apex of its power.
After the defeat of Poland in September 1939, German troops had engaged
in a series of spectacular blitzkrieg offensives against Denmark,
Norway, the Benelux countries, and France, occupying almost the whole of
Western Europe. In Eastern Europe, the Nazi regime was allied with
Romania, Hungary, and Bulgaria, and in the spring of 1941 it conquered
Yugoslavia and Greece. Hitler thought the time for “Europe’s crusade
against Bolshevism” had come. For the June 22, 1941, attack on the
Soviet Union, Hitler assembled an invading force of unprecedented size.
In addition to 3.6 million German and allied soldiers, about 600,000
motor vehicles, 3,600 tanks, 7,200 artillery pieces, and 2,700 warplanes
were deployment in the invasion. This photograph shows a unit of German
tanks before their deployment; in the background, we see the bombardment
of Sluk.