“Hitler: Beyond Evil and Tyranny” by R.H.S. Stolfi

“Hitler: Beyond Evil and Tyranny” by R.H.S. Stolfi

New biography “Hitler: Beyond Evil and Tyranny” by R.H. S.Stolfi will be published in October 2011, available for pre-orders now on amazon.com. Stolfi is well-known for his “NATO under attack”, written with his co-author von Mellentin in 1980s, revisionist “Hitler’s Panzers East”, brilliant, but taken apart by mainstream critics, and follow-up companion, excellent “German Panzers on the Offensive Russian Front, North Africa 1941-1942”.

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From the military point of view Stolfi’s analysis is quite plausible. Well-known facts, if taken without prejudice, tend to support his views. Germans were able to come perilously close to Moscow in November 1941, taking Krukovo and Krasnaya Polyana suburbs and even making foray in the city proper on the bridge across the Volga Canal, less than 1 mile distance from the “Rechnoi Vokzal” subway station on the line, leading directly to Kremlin. In August situation was much more favorable for the Germans than in November. More available German forces, less Soviet, no “Siberian” troops from the East, no T-34s in noticeable numbers, no even makeshift defensive positions, no mud on the roads, clear skies for Luftwaffe support, longer days for panzer and motorized infantry operations. All these factors could lead to the even larger version of the “Great October Panic” and prompt eviction of Soviet forces from the Moscow Defense Area. According to Stolfi all this never happened in reality not because of increasing Soviet resistance, but due to Hitler’s “siege” mentality and peculiar conservative, “hedge” mindset, manifesting itself in his over-cautious decisions and propensity for the lesser, secondary, sideshow operations.

Hopefully, with Stolfi’s help, we will be getting more insights into the mind of one of these “Hegel’s impossibly rare world historical personalities”. Please standby for the forthcoming AllWorldWars review.

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