A new illustrated study of the devastating, but little-known, Soviet
armored blitzkrieg against the Japanese in the last weeks of World War
II, and how it influenced Soviet tank doctrine as the Cold War dawned.
Although long overshadowed in the West by the dropping of the atomic
bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the USSR's lightning strike into
Manchuria in August 1945 was one of the most successful and unique
campaigns of the era. Soviet forces, led by over 5,500 tanks and
self-propelled guns, attacked across huge distances and deserts,
marshes, and mountains to smash Japan's million-strong Kwantung Army in
a matter of days.
Japanese forces were short of training and equipment, but nevertheless
fought fiercely, inflicting 32,000 casualties on the Soviets. Red Army
operations were characterized by surprise, speed, and deep penetrations
by tank-heavy forces born of the brutal lessons they had learned during
years fighting the Wehrmacht. Lessons from the campaign directly shaped
Soviet Cold War force structure and planning for mechanized operations
against the West.
Illustrated with contemporary artwork and rare photos from one of the
best collections of Soviet military photos in the West, this fascinating
book explains exactly how the last blitzkrieg of World War II was
planned, fought, and won, and how it influenced the Red Army's plans for
tank warfare against NATO in Europe.