Authors: David E. Murphy
Bomber and ground-attack aircraft will destroy with powerful blows
the aircraft on enemy aerodromes and will bomb the main con-
centrations of ground forces. Aviation strikes will be mounted to a
218
A SUMMER OF TORTURE
depth of 100–150 kilometers in German territory. Königsberg and
Memel will be bombed. No flights over Finland and Romania are to
take place without special authorization.3
This directive bore the unmistakable imprint of Stalin’s lingering hope
that the attacks were either the work of German generals endeavoring to
force Hitler into a full-scale war with the USSR or Hitler’s way of pressur-
ing him into new concessions. Hence the absence of any language in the
new directive that declares a state of war or calls for full mobilization. And
how to explain the incomprehensible order to ground troops to attack the
invading Germans but not to set foot on enemy soil? The only explanation
for why Timoshenko and Zhukov consented to this strange directive must
have been their fear of Stalin, combined with their nearly total lack of
accurate information on the state of their own forces. Communications
with front-line units, never good to begin with (many units lacked radios)
and already badly damaged by sabotage and air attacks, were being further
degraded by continuing air strikes. That part of the directive instructing
Soviet air units to attack German air fields and troop concentrations was
particularly unrealistic. On the first day of the war, the Soviets lost 1,200
aircraft, a large number of which were never able to take off from their
bases. The raids on Königsberg and Memel were accomplished by long-
range bombers of the First Aviation Corps of the reserve of the high com-
mand operating from bases in the interior but without fighter cover. On
their return flights, the bombers were intercepted by German fighters and
three were shot down.4
Beginning at 7:30 a.m., other members of the Politburo gathered along
with Georgy Dimitrov and Dimitry Z. Manuilksky of the Executive Com-
mittee of the Communist International. All those assembled felt that Stalin
needed to address the people by radio immediately. According to Mikoyan,
who was among those present, ‘‘Stalin refused and said, ‘Let Molotov do it.’
We all opposed this; the people would not understand why, at such a cru-
cial historical moment, they would hear not Stalin, first secretary of the
Central Committee of the party and chairman of the government, but
rather his deputy. It was important to us that an authoritative voice be
heard with a call to the people: ‘All rise up for the defense of the coun-
try.’ Nevertheless, our efforts to persuade him came to nothing. Because
Stalin so obstinately refused, we let Molotov speak, which he did at 12:00
noon.’’ Molotov began his speech by saying he had been directed by Com-
rade Stalin to address the people and ended by asking citizens to ‘‘close
Operation Barbarossa, June ≤≤–September ≥≠, ∞Ω∂∞
Lake
Turku
Vipuri
Helsinki
Ladoga
Stalin line
SWEDEN
Volkhov
Front line June 21
Hanko (USSR)
G U L F O F F I N L A N D
Dec. 3 1941
Leningrad
Front line July 9
evacuated by Russians
Tallinn
Tikhvin
Front line September 1
Narva
Front line September 30
Luga
German advances
Tartu
Novgorod
Trapped Russian pockets
A
L. Iimen
E
S
I C
Northwestern Front
LT
A
(Voroshilov)
Ostrov
B
Riga
Velikiye
Rezekne
Luki
Siauliai
Rzhev
Daugavpils
Idritsa
Memel
Belyy
Moscow
Polotsk
Velizh
Viazma
Kaunas
Yartsevo
Polotsk
Vilnyus
Smolensk
Army Group
Kaluga
Yelna
Orsha
North (Leeb)
Novi Borisov
Roslavl
Western Front
Minsk
Mogilev
(Timoshenko)
Grodno
Novo Bykhov
Bialystock
Gor
Go odisce
ro
Gor disce
odisce
Krichev
Bryansk
Orel
Starodub
Warsaw
Gomel
Pinsk
Brest-Litovsk
Rechitsa
Novgorod Severski
Pripet
Mozyr
Kursk
Army Group
Marshes
Cherniov
Center (Bock)
Kovel
Korosten
Backmach
Konotop
Southwestern Front
P O L A N D
Rovno
(Budenny)
Kiev
Lokhvista
Zhitomir
Kharkow
Lvow
Berdichev
Poltava
Kazatin
Cherkassy
S L OVA K I A
Vinnitsa
Kremenchug
Kamenets-Podolsky Uman
Dnepropetrovsk
Chernovtsy
Pervomaysk
H U N G A RY
Zaporozhe
Army Group
Krivoy Rog
South (Rundstedt)
Kishinev
Nikolayev
SEA OF
Odessa
Perekop
AZOV
RO M A N I A
N
0
100
200 km
Sevastopol
0
50
100
150 mi
B L A C K S E A
The main axes of the German attacks during the summer of 1941
220
A SUMMER OF TORTURE
ranks around our glorious Communist Party, around our great leader
Comrade Stalin.’’5
Even before Molotov spoke, a number of top-secret decrees were is-
sued in the name of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet. One declared
martial law in selected union republics and oblasts. A second outlined the
procedures whereby martial law would be imposed by military authori-
ties. Another established military tribunals for hearing cases of violations
of martial law and imposing sentences, to include death by firing squad, on
those found guilty.6
At the front, meanwhile, the situation continued to deteriorate. Despite
rumors that Stalin was incapacitated by the shock of the German invasion,
by 1:00 p.m. on June 22 he began to act as commander in chief, even
though by right that was Timoshenko’s role. Worried that the front com-
manders were not up to their jobs, Stalin sent Zhukov to Kiev as a ‘‘repre-
sentative of the high command’’ in response to a request by Khrushchev,
first secretary of the Ukrainian party. He also sent Marshals Shaposhnikov,
Voroshilov, and Kulik to check on Dimitry Pavlov, commander of the West-
ern Front. Zhukov asked who would be in charge of the general staff while
he was gone; Stalin said, ‘ We’ll get along somehow.’’ After Zhukov had left,
Timoshenko issued another directive, at Stalin’s insistence, that called for
an offensive by all three fronts, action that Stalin thought would drive the
enemy from Soviet territory. This irrational order, reflecting as it did Sta-
lin’s total unawareness of conditions at the front, required Soviet units,
struggling desperately to defend themselves and avoid encirclement, to
prepare for offensive operations. They had no air support, were under
constant German air bombardment, and had serious shortages of fuel and
ammunition. The air attacks had not only destroyed military materiel but
resulted in damage to scarce medical supplies, destruction of dressing
stations, clinics, and hospitals, as well as shortages of qualified medical
personnel to treat the hordes of wounded. Moreover, the loss of experi-
enced commanders at the brigade and division levels as a result of Stalin’s
vicious 1937–38 purges was taking its toll as newly installed but inex-
perienced commanders tried to cope. Because of the failure of the civilian
economy to supply the quotas of trucks, tractors, and horses called for in
mobilization plans, many units suffered critical shortages in transport. It is
no wonder the offensives failed miserably in the Western and North-
western Front areas. Indeed, they actually contributed to the rapid disin-
tegration of these commands. It was only in the Southwestern Front that
an armored counteroffensive was carried out with some success.7
A SUMMER OF TORTURE
221
These early directives mandated by Stalin were half measures taken
too late to affect the outcome of the frontier battles. On June 22, 1941, the
Presidium decreed the mobilization of men subject to military service in a
number of military districts; this action, too, should have been taken much
earlier. By June 25 the Wehrmacht had advanced as much as 150 miles
along the principal axes of advance, and continuing air strikes made mobi-
lization difficult. Because the Luftwaffe continued to destroy warehouses
holding uniforms, individual weapons, and equipment, as well as ammu-
nition dumps, newly mobilized men could not be properly outfitted. Nor
was it easy to move these reinforcements to their new units. The railroads
came under constant air attack. Main and secondary roads were jammed
with civilians from the border areas fleeing blindly east from the combat
zone, often in columns stretching for as far as twenty-five miles. Military
vehicles, artillery, and marching Red Army units trying to reach the fight-
ing were blocked for hours. All these concentrations of humanity were
mercilessly strafed by German aircraft.8
The main German effort was the responsibility of Army Group Center,
under Field Marshal Fedor von Bock. With its fifty divisions and with
panzer (tank) groups on each flank, it was the largest and most powerful of
the three German army groups committed under Barbarossa. Facing it
was the Western Front, commanded by Pavlov, who had served as an ar-
mored force adviser in the Spanish civil war. Although an RU officer who
served with Pavlov in Spain had on record criticized his personal qualities
and questioned his fitness for command, Pavlov had made a good impres-
sion on Stalin when he was appointed commanding general of the Western
Special Military District. Beginning in mid-June, Pavlov had repeatedly
asked for permission to occupy defensive structures in the newly built
fortified areas. But permission had been denied.9
The night before the German assault, Pavlov was in Minsk attending
the theater. He was convinced by the rhetoric from the Kremlin that the
Germans had no intention of starting a war. The attack, therefore, came as
a total surprise to him. Although the border troop detachments on the
frontier offered fierce resistance and the air forces of the front did their
best to contest control, they were overwhelmed by the Luftwaffe. On the
first day, the Western Front lost 738 aircraft, or 40 percent of its entire
force. The Germans were able to outperform Soviet pilots, and their ma-
chines were technically superior.
Shocked by the losses incurred by his units, the commander of the
front’s air forces, Ivan I. Kopets, another Spanish War veteran, committed
222
A SUMMER OF TORTURE
suicide. Dimitry A. Lestev, chief of the Propaganda Directorate of the front,
reported ‘‘At 5:00 p.m., June 22, Kopets killed himself in his office. The
suspected cause of this suicide was cowardice and the losses suffered by
aviation. Command of the front air forces has been taken over by Major
General A. I. Taiursky.’’ Ironically, at about 2:00 a.m. on June 22, before
the Germans attacked, Kopets and Taiursky, his deputy, had advised Pav-
lov that the air forces had been brought to complete combat readiness and
had been dispersed to reserve airfields in accordance with Timoshenko’s
orders.10
The air forces’ defeats in the Western Front produced another tragic
incident that reinforced the impression that these forces were simply not
ready to deal with Göring’s Luftwaffe. The commander of the Ninth Mixed
Air Division of the air forces of the Western Front, Sergei A. Chernykh, was
so devastated by the division’s loss of most of its aircraft on the ground that
he fled. He was found later in Bryansk and immediately shot.11 The prob-
lems in the Western Front were indeed catastrophic, yet Moscow had very
little idea of the real situation. Thus, on June 26 Stalin ordered Zhukov to
leave Kiev, go to the Western Front, and try to determine what needed to be
done. After spending three days with front commanders, Zhukov realized
that they had lost control and had little idea of the conditions their troops
were facing. In constant action for the past several days, under continuous
attack by Stukas (German ground-attack aircraft) of the Luftwaffe’s Sec-