[soc.history] 50 Years Ago: Tuesday, 24 June, 1941

military@att.att.com (Bill Thacker) (06/24/91)

From: military@att.att.com (Bill Thacker)
Tuesday, 24 June, 1941

German forces continue to advance along the eastern front. Vilna and
Kaunas in Lithuania are captured.  Near Rasyeinyai, the Germans first
encounter the Soviet KV heavy tanks. Far heavier than any German design,
the KV's are armored better than anything the Wehrmacht has yet faced,
and are extremely difficult to halt.  They prove immune to nearly all
German antitank weapons; only heavy artillery and 88mm guns prove
effective.  The T-34 medium tank proves nearly as great a shock to the
Germans, but so far have been encountered in smaller numbers than the
KV's.

For the most part, the Soviet armor is mishandled and outmaneuvered.  Some
crews have received less than an hour's training, and a severe shortage of
radios makes battlefield control of Soviet armor almost impossible. Still,
the counterattacks achieve some local successes;  one such case is
Rasyeinyai, where a lone KV-2 manages to block a road junction and cut off
two vital German bridgeheads over the Dubissa river.  It takes over a day
for German tank, antitank and engineering forces to destroy the tank, and a
number of trucks and guns are lost in the process.

The air battle is more lopsided; by day's end over 2,000 Soviet aircraft
are destroyed.  The Red Air Force is virtually shattered, unable to offer
any meaningful resistance.  Three days ago, it was the largest air force
in the world.

Hungary declares war on the USSR, Rumania breaks its relations with Greece,
and Finland ceases relations with the exile governments of Belgium and
Poland.

President Roosevelt announces that he is willing to send material aid to 
the Soviets.  He also announces that Russian credits, frozen during the war
with Finland, are to be released.  A British mission is already en route 
to Moscow to arrange for similar assistance, and the Dominions endorse 
Churchill's promise of aid.

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Bill Thacker			            military@att.att.com
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"We moved closer and closer... soon we faced each other and 50-100 meters
... our armor-piercing rounds simply bounced off them.  They drove right
through us towards the infantry and rear services.  We turned around and
followed behind, where we succeeded in knocking some of them out with
special-purpose rounds (tungsten-core high velocity ammunition) at very
close range: 30-60 meters!" - unidentified German tanker from Panzer
Regiment 1