The Third Reich in Desperation

Third Reich Episode 132

The SS men have set up all the machine guns, and they still need to return the fart hand, so they just need to pull the bolt!

Are you Reinhardt really ignorant of the truth?No matter how honest Rundsteder is, he still has this understanding of the head of state who has been with him for so long.

You're talking nonsense with your eyes open, didn't you teach the grandsons of the SS army all by yourself!As a student of the SS, even if he is so proficient at playing this hand, let alone the reputation of the teacher Reinhardt.

This bitch!

"Ahem..." With two dry coughs, Rundsteder didn't bother to continue messing with Reinhardt: "Don't worry, Führer, I will take care of this matter. The SS side , it is inconvenient for me to deal with it, so the head of state will take care of it himself."

After getting the desired result, Reinhardt tried his best to suppress his joy, and put on a smile, pretending to say: "The bastards of the SS, I will definitely arrange for them to increase their training when I go back, and train them well!"

Body 2 Chapter [-] Who is faster

Far East, Nuomenkan.

While Dizhou Libing was preparing for the final decisive battle, Zhukov planned a large-scale counterattack on an unprecedented scale.

Beginning in mid-September, Zhukov asked the Soviet government to plan a large-scale deployment of combat materials to the front to make up for the loss of previous operations.In early October, the Soviet Union urgently delivered another 9 tons of arms to the Ruomenkan area, of which more than 10 tons of artillery shells alone!

After all, the war on the Western Front has come to an end. The Soviet army on the Polish battlefield, under the coordination of Timoshenko, finally ended the war against Poland in early October.

Although the occupied land area is not satisfactory, it is much smaller than Stalin expected.However, it still advanced nearly 140 kilometers westward in total, barely achieving the strategic goal of establishing a military buffer zone facing Germany in the west.

That's right, 140 kilometers!This is a full 50 kilometers longer than Timoshenko actually beat!

Not because Timoshenko dared to deceive Stalin in this final report.The real reason for the extra 50 kilometers is that after the German army made secret contacts with Khrushchev and Yezhov, they took the initiative to back off by 50 kilometers so that they could turn around and turn to Stalin.

As for the reason why the German army made this decision, it was definitely not purely to help Khrushchev and the others do good deeds.

After receiving the request from Khrushchev and others, the [-]st Armored Division of the SS, which occupied the dividing line between the Soviet and German armies, immediately notified Reinhardt by telegram.After weighing it over and over again, Reinhardt thought it would be profitable, so he approved Ribbentrop's secret rush to the border line for full power negotiations.

Reinhardt's request to Ribbentrop was that Khrushchev and the others could exchange 50 prisoners of war for the German army to retreat 50 kilometers.

In addition, there are two additional requirements for this transaction.

First, there must be one 50 prisoners of war.Because in Reinhardt's plan, Germany needs so many people to fill the Labor Construction Corps in the newly built labor camps.The Polish campaign has begun to finish work, the German army is about to start a new round of resource integration, and weapons production is at its peak.The labor force that Germany needs at present cannot be too much.

Second, 50 kilometers is the biggest concession Germany can make, not an inch more, even if Khrushchev can gather more labor, this absolutely cannot be compromised.After all, Germany also needed a military buffer zone against the Soviet Union, and the more the better.

Of course, in the Reinhardt plan, some small tricks were made to the 50 kilometers back.

First of all, the German army did not retreat the 50 kilometers evenly, but would retain a little inconspicuous arc, that is, retreat a little less than 5 to 6 kilometers on the two wings.

In this way, when the German army fights with the Soviet army in the future, it can use the slightly protruding two wings to dispatch armored forces, and it is easier to carry out encirclement operations.

Furthermore, the Soviet Army seems to have won more buffer space, but in fact moved the advantageous defensive area connecting the Vistula River and the Bug River in the northwest to the plains, which is even more unfavorable for the armor that will resist the Germans in the future. force.

This secret little trick was made by Reinhardt after asking the veteran Chief of Staff of the National Defense Forces Keitel to confirm that it was feasible.Not to mention the two politicians Khrushchev and Yezhov, even General Timoshenko, who was called a famous Soviet general by them, couldn't see the clue.

Although it was calculated, Khrushchev and the others did not notice it.Not only did they not spend any time thinking about it, but they put all their energy on how to get enough of the 50 prisoners of war.

In fact, the Soviet Army on the Eastern Front did not fight as well as they reported to Stalin.Not only did it suffer heavy losses, but it was far from reaching one-tenth of the record of other German troops.If it weren't for Timoshenko who had some real information and seized the fighter plane that the good Polish general Filipovitz led his troops to leave in time, the Soviet army might have to struggle on the border for a few more days.

The fight was won, but there were not many prisoners.

Even with the militias brought in by the Polish army to make up the numbers, there are only 30 people, which is a full 50 short of the goal of 20 prisoners of war!

Now that the war is over, where can I make up for the 20?

Khrushchev and Yezhov are indeed experts in politics, and they can use all kinds of dirty methods at their fingertips, and their whimsical ideas emerge in endlessly.

They summed it up, and since the Polish prisoners of war couldn't make it up, they used Polish civilians to make it up.In the Polish War Territory under the control of the Soviet Army, it is enough to just say that they are militiamen.

Anyway, what the Germans want is only young and strong laborers, and when they are caught, they just need to catch them according to this requirement.

As for the guilt of conscience... they don't think there's anything wrong with it!

Politicians are not something ordinary people can be. Few of the political circles have crooked intestines.Besides, Khrushchev and Yezhov thought that they were not good people in the Soviet political arena until they reached their current positions.

In their eyes, the most important thing is to end the war on the Western Front as well as possible before Zhukov on the Eastern Front achieves great results!

As long as you can do business in front of the general secretary, win the battle, and occupy even an inch of land, everything else doesn't matter!

Although he was disgusted with Khrushchev and Yezhov's methods of doing things without conscience, Timoshenko also turned a blind eye to this matter and didn't care about it.

Speaking of which, those two were already polite enough to him.The First World War in Poland turned the three of them into grasshoppers tied to a rope.

Besides, if he went back to do business with the record of less than 90 kilometers, he would not explain it to Stalin when he turned around.Can he still admit that he is indeed not as good as those generals in Germany, just an ordinary person.

Putting it on any general, admitting this kind of thing is a great shame for the general.Besides, in the Soviet Union, such generals might be exiled to Siberia to build socialist projects.

From this point of view, Zhukov, who fought in the Far East, seemed much luckier.

First, there are no disgusting high-level politicians like Khrushchev and Yezhov around him.Although the political commissar sent to "assist" Zhukov was stupid, he was still able to fool around without affecting his military plan.

Second, and most importantly.That is, Zhukov himself has excellent military qualities not inferior to the German generals, and he is more than enough to deal with the Lieutenant General Dizhou Libing of the Kwantung Army.

On October 10th, the German army had just captured the city of Warsaw, and the day when the game was decided.Zhukov also held the last pre-war meeting before the last round of the strongest counterattack for the upcoming decisive move.

"The commander of the Japanese army has withdrawn all the troops that can be contracted. He will do this only to plan the strongest attack!" In the conference room, Zhukov clasped his hands behind his back, confidently explaining to the generals under his command.

The preparations to be made have been made long ago. In this final pre-war meeting, Zhukov and his generals could smoothly sort out the next combat missions without even needing to compare the maps.

Looking at the well-prepared generals under his command, Zhukov nodded with satisfaction: "The Japanese army and us are both preparing for a decisive battle. Now the competition is who is faster."

"Are you ready?" Zhukov shouted.

"Ready at all the time!"

What responded to Zhukov was an equally confident roar.

Body 2 Chapter Twelve Is There Anything Better? (Add more)

If Zhukov's pre-war meeting was full of confidence, then Dizhou Libing's pre-war meeting was only a kind of solemn and majestic.

"After more than a month of arduous fighting, we have finally ushered in this day." Since Dizhou Libing started, he used the heavy word "hardship" to describe this meeting. The generals of the Kwantung Army present here, None showed a relaxed expression.

"This battle has been fought so far. Not only us, but the Soviet army has also been forced to fight with all our strength. Both sides are fighting for a chance to decide the world. If anyone backs down half a step, he will be in a catastrophe. to the point of failure!" Although the enthusiasm of a month ago was no longer in his eyes, Dizhou Libing was still trying to use words to cheer up his subordinates as much as possible.

In fact, Dizhou Libing has been able to support Zhukov's violent bombardment until now, which is enough to prove that his ability is not bad among Japanese generals. If it were another person, he might have collapsed completely.

In this partial battle, Zhukov has consumed nearly 31000 tons of ammunition so far.You know, even in the Battle of Stalingrad, which was hailed as the turning point of World War II, the Soviet army only consumed 8 tons of ammunition.

The amount of shelling suffered by the 6th Army under Dizhou Libing has so far exceeded one-third of that in the Battle of Stalingrad!But how many German troops were there in the Battle of Stalingrad?How many Japanese troops are there in Nomenkan.

It seems that the paper force under his command seems to be nearly 7 people.But so far, only one brigade of the 8th National Border Guard and one 1rd Division have really been on the battlefield. Other troops on paper have never appeared at all!

As for the 23rd Division, which is the main force on the battlefield, although its equipment is still at the forefront of the Japanese Army, it is only a newly formed division in the final analysis, and its combat experience is not in place at all.

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