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The bloodiest battle in human history ended 83 years ago today...

Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:10 am
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
70447 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:10 am
The Battle of Stalingrad.

This six-month nightmare (July 1942–February 1943) between Nazi Germany and its allies versus the Soviet Union ended 83 years ago today when the survivors of the German Sixth Army surrendered to the Red Army. Total casualties are estimated at between 1.8 and 2.5 million (killed, wounded, missing, or captured on both sides combined). Soviet military losses alone exceeded 1.1 million, with around 40,000 civilian deaths from bombing, starvation, and fighting. Axis forces (mainly German, plus Romanian, Italian, and Hungarian troops) suffered roughly 800,000 casualties, including over 91,000 who surrendered—most of whom never returned home.

The city itself was annihilated. Intense Luftwaffe bombings starting in August 1942, followed by relentless artillery and close-quarters combat, reduced Stalingrad (now Volgograd) to ruins. Up to 90–99% of its buildings were destroyed or heavily damaged, turning a major industrial center into a vast wasteland of rubble where soldiers fought room-by-room, floor-by-floor, and even over single buildings like Pavlov's House or the Grain Elevator.

The scale of destruction and loss of life was staggering: freezing winters, starvation, disease, and non-stop urban warfare made it a symbol of total war's horror. Stalingrad broke the German advance on the Eastern Front and marked the beginning of the end for the Nazis in the East.














Posted by Tic44
Texarkana, Arkansas
Member since May 2015
1950 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:13 am to
War is hell. We are savages when forced to be.

Posted by Strannix
C.S.A.
Member since Dec 2012
53277 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:20 am to
Hitler was a moron to fight over a meaningless pile of rubble, oh well its been rehashed for generations. Operation Uranus was pretty awesome.
Posted by ClemsonKitten
Member since Aug 2025
914 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:20 am to
Inb4 Nazi Whataboutism post
Posted by VolsOut4Harambe
Atlanta, GA
Member since Sep 2017
14038 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:28 am to
quote:

Hitler was a moron to fight over a meaningless pile of rubble, oh well its been rehashed for generations.


He was a moron to fight a 2-front war, in the onset of winter, with limited oil.

He got cocky after the initial blitzkreigs worked.
Posted by HangmanPage1
Wild West
Member since Aug 2021
2101 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:34 am to
He could have easily bypassed Stalingrad. Kept pushing east to the oil reserves. Stalingrad is where it became ideological for him. The Russians couldn’t fight on the move in open country, but this allowed them to dig in.
Posted by UptownJoeBrown
Baton Rouge
Member since Jul 2024
8096 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:35 am to
Pride goes before the fall.

A tale as old as time.
Posted by Loup
Ferriday
Member since Apr 2019
16054 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:40 am to
quote:

We are savages when forced to be.


most people are only as good as their situation/environment allow them to be.
Posted by Ace Midnight
Between sanity and madness
Member since Dec 2006
95020 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:48 am to
"What is a monument?"

IYKYK

Ghosts of the Ostfront Part I
Posted by Darth_Vader
A galaxy far, far away
Member since Dec 2011
72693 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:50 am to
quote:

He could have easily bypassed Stalingrad. Kept pushing east to the oil reserves. Stalingrad is where it became ideological for him. The Russians couldn’t fight on the move in open country, but this allowed them to dig in.


When the Wehrmacht launched “Fall Blau”, Stalingrad wasn’t even one of the main objectives. They could have easily cut it off and left it to wither on the vine. But Hitler became fixated on Stalingrad due to its name. It was insane to allow 6th Army, which was structured to fight combined arms maneuver warfare in open terrain, to be sucked into a close-quarters urban battle it was neither trained nor equipped to fight.
Posted by Tangineck
Mandeville
Member since Nov 2017
2847 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:52 am to
quote:

Stalingrad is where it became ideological for him


Downfall of many, letting emotion and point-proving dictate decision making.
Posted by jizzle6609
Houston
Member since Jul 2009
18908 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:54 am to
quote:

War is hell. We are savages when forced to be.


We may be headed down this path again sooner rather than later later.
Posted by Oilfieldbiology
Member since Nov 2016
41816 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:56 am to
Ghosts of the Osfront and Blueprint to Armageddon are two of Carlins greatest series. In particular to King of Kings and Wrath of the Khans because I enjoy pre-gunpowder battle tales more, but the two he did on WWI and WWII’s eastern front are spectacular story telling.
Posted by TT9
Seychelles
Member since Sep 2008
91392 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:56 am to
fricking Russian winters.
Posted by Arkapigdiesel
Faulkner County
Member since Jun 2009
15502 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 7:57 am to
quote:

Operation Uranus was pretty awesome.
Posted by Lonnie Utah
Utah!
Member since Jul 2012
33525 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 8:32 am to
We had a family friend who's dad was a Nazi solider in WWII. She told the story of her dad being on the eastern front and getting injured and caught frostbite early in the Fall/winter of 1942. Because he was one of the first ones with frostbite they shipped him back to Germany to recuperate. Later in the war, they shipped him to the western front, where he was captured by the American and shipped to a POW camp in Louisiana.

After the war our friend met an American GI from SC, fell in love and moved to the States.
Posted by Fat Harry
70115
Member since Mar 2005
2373 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 8:35 am to
A good friend's grandfather fought in Stalingrad in the Wehrmacht. He had his arm shot off and was evacuated back to Germany. Talk about lucky.
Posted by HeadSlash
TEAM LIVE BADASS - St. GEORGE
Member since Aug 2006
55338 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 8:35 am to
quote:

He could have easily bypassed Stalingrad. Kept pushing east to the oil reserves. Stalingrad is where it became ideological for him. The Russians couldn’t fight on the move in open country, but this allowed them to dig in.


This
Posted by rltiger
Metairie
Member since Oct 2004
2158 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 9:34 am to
quote:

He could have easily bypassed Stalingrad. Kept pushing east to the oil reserves


Yep. He diverts troops to the Caucuses and captures Baku and Grozny oil fields, no fuel for the Russians. The T34 grinds to a halt, no ability for troop movement, Soviets collapse.

Posted by Strannix
C.S.A.
Member since Dec 2012
53277 posts
Posted on 2/2/26 at 9:36 am to
quote:

He got cocky after the initial blitzkreigs worked.


I think if the Grecian distraction and detour to the oilfields werent a factor they could have taken Miscow. But I just think the Russians would have pulled back. Interesting scenario to think about.
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