Episode Details

Back to Episodes

How Stalingrad broke the German army

Episode 6311 Published 1 week, 4 days ago
Description

A German officer watching the city burn recorded that the street dogs threw themselves into the freezing Volga to escape: "Animals flee this hell... only men endure." The Battle of Stalingrad was the largest and deadliest urban battle in human history, a meat grinder that consumed up to 1.5 million Axis and over 1.1 million Soviet casualties, reduced 99 percent of a city of half a million to dust, and permanently broke the myth of German invincibility.

This episode traces how a secondary flank objective in Hitler's oil-driven Case Blue offensive metastasized into an ideological duel between two dictators over a city's name. It follows the apocalyptic Luftwaffe bombing that ironically buried German tank advantages under three stories of rubble, the women of the 1077th Anti-Aircraft Regiment who lowered their guns at advancing Panzers, Chuikov's "hugging the enemy" tactic, the Rattenkrieg fought through floorboards and sewers, and the encirclement that ended with a field marshal choosing surrender over suicide.

  • How a strategic flank became a political obsession: Case Blue, the Caucasus oil, and a city named Stalin
  • Hugging the enemy: Chuikov's 50-yard rule that neutralized the Luftwaffe and killed the Blitzkrieg
  • The grain elevator and Pavlov's House: micro-fortresses that held against impossible odds
  • Operation Uranus and the failed airlift: 300,000 men encircled, promised supplies that never came
  • The loaded pistol of a field marshal's promotion, 90,000 prisoners, and the 5,000 who came home in 1955
Listen Now

Love PodBriefly?

If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Support Us