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syscom3 said:Ive always wondered if the nazi's had bypassed Stalingrad and rolled on towards the Caspian Sea oil fields, that they would have won.
I also believe that the city was open and they could have easily captured it at one point, but they ignored it and gave the Russians time to set up defenses.
I don't know that the Germans could have held the area, unless they could have somehow destoyed those armies.
schwarzpanzer said:The failure to take Moscow had something to do with Hitler having the Panzers being told to wait for the infantry, as someone here has said, though I forget the exact details.
schwarzpanzer said:I also believe that the city was open and they could have easily captured it at one point, but they ignored it and gave the Russians time to set up defenses.
That was Moscow, Stalingrad may have been similar? - but I doubt it.
I may be wrong but I believe if Moscow had been captured, it would have lead to a major disruption in the distribution of material and men for the Russian military.
I may be thinking of the Battle of Smolensk...
Imagine a Kursk like battle in the early fall.
schwarzpanzer said:Leningrad I'd have just left, the same with Stalingrad.
Moscow was vital, as were the oil fields.
Moscow always had excellent air defense though, but the Panzers could have taken it easily, allowing the infantry to hold it easily again.
Why bother with SG and LG though?
Hitler could have bombed them into oblivion?
The same could go for Smolensk? - allowing the infantry to clean up the remainder (if they didn't surrender or run away!) and not stopping the Panzers?
I believe the attack on Stalingrad was necessary. It would have acted as an anchor on the left flank of the drive to the Caucases, as well as cut river traffic on the Volga. I don't think the Caucases could have been held if the Russians were able to use Stalingrad as a staging area for attacks there.