Hitler's Panzers

Home > Other > Hitler's Panzers > Page 46
Hitler's Panzers Page 46

by Dennis Showalter


  supply column losses in

  Polish Home Army

  Political Emergency Readiness Formations

  Ponyi

  Porsche, Ferdinand

  Poseck, Maximilian von

  Preparatory Commission on Disarmament

  Prioux, Rene

  ordering withdrawal

  Prison system

  Prokhorovka

  accounts of

  losses at

  Provisional Instructions for Tank and Armored Car Training

  Pskov

  Rabenau, Friedrich

  Racism

  Nazi

  during Operation Barbarossa

  of Waffen SS

  War and

  Railway

  Raus, Erhard

  fencer metaphor of

  trial of

  Reconnaissance battalion

  Red Air Force

  improvements in

  responding to Operation Typhoon

  Red Army

  counterattack

  crossing into Poland

  estimates of

  maintaining inventory

  missions of

  Order executions of

  reaching Baltic Sea

  as “reluctant soldiers,”

  retreat

  suffering from expansion

  Western images of

  Das Reich

  capture of Mortain

  casualty records of

  massacre of civilians at Oradour-sur-Glane

  order to remove cuff titles

  in Yelna

  Reichenau, Walther von

  calling for retribution against Jews

  death of

  Reichswehr

  dictating conditions of battle

  expansion plans

  field service regulations

  international admiration for

  maneuvers

  motorization achievements of, limited

  Restructuring Plan of November 1932,

  Seeckt on

  self-image of

  Treaty of Versailles specifying structure of

  Replacement Army

  Revisionists

  Rheinmetall

  Richthofen, Manfred von

  Richthofen, Wolfram von

  Richtlinien für die Führung der Panzerdivision

  Riefenstahl, Leni

  Rodin, A. G.

  Rokossovsky, Konstantin

  Romania

  declaring war on Germany

  Iron gates

  joining Axis

  Rommel, Erwin

  achievements of

  antitank operations

  appointed to commander in chief

  approach to Atlantic Wall

  on conquering Suez Canal

  criticism of

  D-Day expectations of

  establishing “thrust line,”

  flexibility of

  at head of drive to Middle East

  health of

  injured in air strike

  judging

  leadership style of

  logistics of

  in North Africa

  performance of

  signature attack of

  strategic vision of

  Rostov

  fall of

  SS Leibstandarte at

  Ruhr

  Rundstedt, Gerd von

  arguing for run on Moscow

  Kleist complaining to

  memorandum on Atlantic Wall

  stop order in France

  Rzhev salient

  abandonment of

  Soviet casualties

  from Soviet perspective

  stabilization of

  tactical characterization of

  Saint Lo

  Salerno

  Salonika

  Sankt Pölten

  Schaal, Friedrich

  Schadenfreude

  Schlachtstaffeln

  Schlieffen, Alfred von

  Schlieffen Plan

  Schlisselburg

  Schmidt, Rudolph

  Schörner, Ferdinand

  Schutzstaffel

  Schweppenburg, Leo Geyr von

  Scorching earth

  SdKfz

  official variants of

  SdKfz

  SdKfz

  exported to China

  modifications to

  SdKfz

  Achtrad

  modifications to

  SdKfz 234/2 Puma

  SdKfz

  SdKfz

  complexity of

  delays

  up-gunning

  2nd Armored Division

  2nd Canadian Corps

  2nd Guards Tank Corps

  2nd Light Mechanized Divisions

  2nd Motorized Division

  2nd Panzer Army

  run towards Kursk

  surrender of

  2nd SS Motorized

  2nd SS Panzer Corps

  2nd Ukrainian Front

  Seeckt, Hans von

  criticism of cavalry

  on mass

  misinterpretations of

  on Reichswehr

  reputation of

  7th Panzer Division

  at Dvina-Dnieper line

  finishing war

  as “ghost division,”

  passing through Maginot Line

  Seven Years’ War

  Shakhty Trials

  Sherman

  gun range

  production of

  up-gunning

  Sichelschnitt

  response to

  Sicily

  Allies landing in

  2nd Armored Division in

  Sidi Rezegh

  16th Corps

  attacking civilians

  16th Panzer Division

  6th Army

  controversy over holding

  destruction of

  march towards Kiev

  recreated

  6th Panzer Division

  catchphrases from

  holding Mishkova River bridgehead

  push to Stalingrad

  6th Panzer Regiment

  6th SS Panzer Army

  ordered to Hungary

  surrender of

  61st Panzer

  Slave labor

  Smolensk

  SOMUA S35

  Soviet Northwest Front

  Soviet Southwestern Front

  Army Group South attack on

  offensive around Kharkov

  Soviet Union

  atrocities in

  cooperation with Germany

  creating/sustained by Jews

  invasion decision

  order of battle

  road conditions

  tank quality

  winter in

  Spanish Civil War

  aircraft and

  Citino on

  Liddell-Hart on

  tanks in

  Speer

  Speer, Albert

  SS Leibstandarte

  mass shooting of Soviet prisoners by

  order to remove cuff titles

  POW massacres by

  reputation of

  at Rostov

  upgrades

  withdrawal to France

  SS Panzer Corps

  Stalin, Josef

  authorizing retreat

  Order 227 issued by

  ordering Kiev held

  treatment of own people

  Stalingrad

  Army Group A occupation mission of

  Army Group B ordered to attack

  Front

  holding of

  outside relief for

  6th Panzer Division push to

  Soviet withdrawal into

  Stalin Line

  Staryi Bychoff

  Stavelot

  Steiner, Felix

  Stokes mortar

  Strachan, Hew

  Straits of Messina

  Student, Kurt

  Stunde Null

 
Sturmgeschütz-Abteilungens

  Sturmgeschütz III,

  SU

  Suez Canal

  Sweden

  T-26 infantry tank

  T-34

  Guderian demanding inquiry into

  T-34/85

  Tank(s). See also specific Tanks

  air attacks on

  Allied use of

  Beck on

  delivery problems

  dummy

  fright

  future role of

  guiding tactical principle of

  Heye on

  impact in Great War

  inability to provide up-to-date

  independence of

  Lutz on

  in mass

  missions

  negative judgments on

  platoon formations

  production of

  prototypes

  quality control

  as quintessential Fascist weapon

  Rabenau on

  reduction in

  rewards for defeating

  school at Kazan

  Soviet quality of

  in Spanish Civil War

  tank v.

  technical development of

  technical limitations of

  theory

  vulnerabilities

  as weapons of opportunity

  Tank Destroyer

  “Tanker black,”

  Tank Gun M

  Tapered-bore gun

  Taschenbuch der Tanks (Heigl)

  Taysen, Friedrich von

  10th Frundsberg

  10th Panzer Division

  Thermopylae

  3rd Armored Division

  3rd Army

  3rd Byelorussian Front

  3rd Light Mechanized Division

  3rd Panzer Army

  taking of Kalinin

  3rd Panzer Corps

  advance to Budapest

  3rd (Germanic) Panzer Corps

  3rd Panzer Division

  at Dvina-Dnieper line

  in Grenoble

  3rd SS Panzer Corps

  3rd Ukrainian Front

  13th Panzer Division

  38(t)

  delivery of

  production of

  35th Panzer Regiment

  35(t)

  39th Panzer

  Thomas, Wilhelm Ritter von

  Tiger I,

  as birthday present for Hitler

  employment of

  gun power

  modifications to

  origins of

  primary missions of

  production of

  survivability rate of

  technical challenges of

  victimized by reputation

  volunteers for

  Tiger II,

  Timoshenko, Semyon

  TNHP

  TNHP

  Todt, Fritz

  Tolbukhin, Fyodor

  “To live like God in France,”

  Totenkopf

  POW massacres by

  return of

  surrender of

  Treaty of Rapallo

  Treaty of Versailles

  abolishing General Staff

  specifying structure of Reichswehr

  violation of

  Trenchard, Hugh

  Triumph of Will

  “Trumpets of Jericho,”

  Truppenamt

  monitoring foreign developments

  tank proposals

  Truppenführung

  Tuchfühling

  TuF machine gun

  Tukhachevsky, Mikhail

  Tula

  Tungsten

  Tunisia

  12th SS Panzer Division

  21st Army Group

  21st Panzer Division

  23rd Panzer Division

  24th Panzer Corps, towards Tula

  25th Panzer Division

  25th Panzer Regiment

  26th Guards Rifle Corps

  249th Assault Gun Brigade

  Ukraine

  ULTRA code breaking

  Uman

  United States

  captivity myths

  entering into war

  Hitler declaring war on

  Unit rotation

  Urban combat

  Vatutin, N. F.

  at Kursk

  V-E Day

  Vereker, John

  Verfügungsdivision

  Verfügungstruppen

  Vernichtungsschlacht

  Vickers-Carden-Lloyd

  Vickers Medium

  “Victory disease,”

  Vienna

  Viking Division

  fighting into Gomel

  motivations for

  reputation of

  return of

  Volckheim, Ernst

  Volga

  Volkskrieg

  Vollard- Bockelberg, Alfred von

  Waffen SS

  achievements of

  concentration camp system and, distinction between

  criminality of

  enlisting racially-suitable non-Germans

  identity of

  as ideological soldiers of National Socialism

  institutional improvement of

  loyalty of

  officers of

  in Operation Citadel

  origins of

  racism of

  rank structures

  reputation of

  standards

  subdividing

  upgrading

  vitalism of

  volunteer enlistment in

  weapon allocations

  War. See also Blitzkrieg; specific Wars

  as art form

  as Bildungserlebnis

  British approach to

  clean

  critique of mass

  exterminating

  games

  German approach to

  managerial approach to

  material

  mechanized

  mobile

  National Socialist view of

  panache in

  racism and

  scientific approach to

  situational awareness in

  Soviet approach to

  as test of skill/virtue

  total

  United States approach to

  War crimes. See also specific War criminals

  discrepancies in judging

  High Command Trial

  pardoned by de Gaulle

  Warsaw

  Army Group South in

  fall of

  Hitler’s ordered destruction of

  Wasp

  Wehrmacht

  basic training

  as “clean-shield” force

  demodernization

  discipline

  expectations for officers

  facilities of

  forced-draft expansion of

  growth of

  homogenization

  institutional mentality of

  mythology of

  officer personalities

  pragmatism

  replacement pool

  as rite of passage

  success in reconfiguration

  training casualties

  waves

  westwards deployment

  Weichs, Maximillian von

  Weinberg, Gerhard

  Wespe

  Weygand, Maxime

  Wietersheim, Gustav von

  Willkischken

  Wittmann, Michael

  Yelna

  Yom Kippur War

  Yugoslavia

  coup in

  ordered destruction of

  Zaloga, Stephen

  Zeitzler, Kurt

  Zuckmayer, Carl

  Zukhov, Georgi

  appointed as deputy supreme commander

  at Kursk

  reputation of

  1 Another element of the reorganization was Hitler’s creation of the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (Wehrmacht High Command), in theory superior to t
he Army High Command, and intended as its rival—a common pattern in the Nazi regime. In practice it functioned as his personal advisory board. After 1940, OKW was given responsibility for an increasing number of “secondary” war theaters; by 1942, only the Eastern Front remained under direct control of the Army High Command. Since that theater absorbed most of the panzers for most of the war, for the sake of clarity, “High Command” refers to the army authority in this text unless otherwise noted.

  2 It was officially renamed II SS Panzer Corps in June, but the original designation remained common usage during Kursk.

  3 Eventually some “Army Assault Artillery Brigades” would have 45 guns plus an “escort battery” of riflemen and pioneers. That upgrading, however, was in the future and too often on paper.

  4 The “Sherman factor” is even larger if the Cromwell, which equipped a half-dozen British armored battalions, is understood as a Sherman counterpart, with higher speed but the same kind of medium-velocity 75mm gun and similar protection.

  5 British armored divisions in 1944 had a force ratio based on the “ideal” panzer division of 1941-42: three tank battalions, one mechanized and three truck-borne infantry battalions, and an “armored reconnaissance” battalion, also tank-equipped. Their initial employment in separate armored and infantry brigades proved too rigid and usually gave way in practice to a battle group system pairing tank and infantry battalions, two pairs to each brigade. An interesting organizational footnote is the British experiment in 1942 with “mixed divisions” of two infantry and one tank brigades—the same combination initially advocated for postwar US armored divisions. However, based on infantry divisions with an infantry ethos, the experiment proved a failure.

  6 The name was changed to Autumn Mist (Herbstnebel ) in December, but to avoid confusion the original is used throughout.

 

 

 


‹ Prev