But Stalin didnt want a war with the IIIrd Reich till 1943.
OSTHEER IS DONE WHEN IT'S DONE!
I wont extend on details, but Vladimir Suvorov (V. Rezun is his real name) dont have any serious fact to assert that the Soviet Union was going to attack Germany at this point.Every specialist of the German-Soviet war (Glantz, Erickson, Gorodetsky and even Muller) contradict the Ice-breaker theory. Goebbels was the first to invent it, to justify the invasion of the Soviet Union.Stalin didnt wanted any provocation, and everyone apart Stalin in the Stavka knew that the Heer could attack at any time. Stalin would have attacked maybe in 1944. The theory of a 2nd invasion of Finland is false also, for the same reason than the Ice-Breaker. Plus, the public opinion wasnt favourable to an other attack on this small country, and the Party knew it.
@neosdarkThe communist doctrine heavily emphazised on the need to go to the offensive whenever you can; soviet forces were placed on the western border since the early 1930's to counter-attack an attack from the "capitalist devil". Even during the Cold War, there were a lot of soviet division in East Germany ready to attack the West within 3 hours of the declaration of war. The deployment you mentionned is due to the doctrine in use at that time in the Red Army.1) I wasnt even aware of that fact But again, that could be linked to the offensive doctrine at that time.2) During April and May 1941, Stalin reluctantly authorized a partial mobilisation of some unit on the border. Your great-grandfather may have been in one of these particular unit.3) Ahhh, the numbers! Always helpful! - Of the 20000 tanks you mentionned, 3/4 of them were simply unable to move/fire, due to a lack of mechanics and supply. Most of them were just destroyed at their garrison point. The Mechanised Corps were simply not able to fight a war. - 1 000 000 paratroopers; this one is pretty vicious: there was 1000000 men able to perform paradrop, not 1000000 able to fight like paratroopers. These were for the most part volunteers whom had a training related to paradrop, nothing more. And ANYWAY, Stalin didnt have enough planes to perform great scale paradroping. The few planes able to fly were used, well, for training.4) I dont understand how its related to the topic.
I repeat, 20000 tanks is a false number considering the capabilities of these tanks at the time. And again, I stated earlier that Stalin would have maybe attacked in 1944 (or 1943), so this deployment can be explained. But more than 15000 were unable to move