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http://conspiracycentral.info (Educational & Conspiracy Forums)
The Soviets celebrated their victory in Stalingrad as the "biggest battle in
history". For the German Wehrmacht, it was the biggest catastrophe.
In the icy-cold winter of 1942/43 the city on the Volga River turned into a
mass grave for an entire army: over a quarter million German soldiers
perished at Stalingrad. Ever since, the name has stood not only for the most
traumatic event of the Second World War, but also for the psychological
turning point in the war Hitler unleashed.
The starting point for the tragedy was "Operation Blue" - a clandestine plan
of attack conceived by Hitler to capture Russia's oil fields in the
Caucasus.
The advance began in June 1942, with German troops initially rapidly winning
ground. But the first reports of success were deceptive: the Soviets evaded
the attackers and allowed them to rush forward into a vacuum.
On August 23 the first German tanks reached the banks of the Volga. And two
days later the German Luftwaffe starting bombing Stalingrad. The city had
become an obsession with Hitler - it was, after all, named after his biggest
rival.
On November 8 Hitler optimistically proclaimed that Stalingrad was as good
as in his hands. But things then turned out differently. A bitter struggle
ensued in the streets of the city on the Volga: the Red Army and the German
Wehrmacht clashed in hand-to-hand combat, fighting for every house, every
cellar, every dugout.
Completely encircled by the enemy, the German soldiers waited in vain for
help to come. Hitler would not stand for either retreat or surrender. "Hold
out to the last man!" was his command. The human tragedy of Stalingrad ran
its course.
The Red Army gradually tightened the noose on the Germans, who, suffering
from hunger and the extreme cold, had little hope of escaping their plight.
On January 30, 1943 - the tenth anniversary of Hitler's rise to power - they
listened to their own heroic deaths being honored on the military radio
station.
Three days later the last resistance was snuffed out - the German Sixth Army
was beaten. Some 300,000 soldiers had come to conquer Stalingrad. Ninety
thousand of them were taken prisoner by the Soviets, and only 6,000 of these
ever saw their homes again.
Never-before-shown colour footage provide a surprisingly new impression of
the battle of Stalingrad. With complete frankness, both German survivors
and, for the first time, former members of the Red Army describe their
gripping experiences in the biggest battle in the history of the world.
Runtime Aprox. 48 mins
Xvid
Lame MP3 192K Forced Mono
Widescreen Aspect 1.78
Ripper OGnir
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