This fully illustrated study assesses the Hungarian and Soviet forces
that clashed repeatedly in 1941 during the Barbarossa campaign of
World War II.
At the end of June 1941, following an aerial attack on the town of
Kassa, Hungary joined its Axis partners in Operation Barbarossa, the
German invasion of the Soviet Union. Hungary's contribution to
Barbarossa was spearheaded by the Mobile Corps, a formation made up of
motorized riflemen, cavalry, bicycle troops and light armor. The Soviet
forces facing the Hungarians belonged to the Kiev Military District,
deployed in four armies along a front nearly 600 miles long. The Red
Army, while remaining among the most formidable armies of the era, had
been seriously weakened by successive purges, its shortcomings exposed
by the Winter War against Finland in 1939-40. This fully illustrated
study casts new light on the role played by the forces of Nazi Germany's
Allies on the Eastern Front and explores the tactics and weaponry
employed by the Hungarian and Soviet forces in the Barbarossa
campaign, notably during the two sides' initial clashes, the desperate
battle for Uman, and the Soviet counter-attack at the River Dniepr.