Opening Moves (The Red Gambit Series) (120 page)

Hamburg had held.

It is only the dead who have seen the end of war.

Plato

CHAPTER 54 – THE STORM

0258 hrs Monday 13th August 1945, The Frontline, Europe.

From the smallest to the largest, each weapon was tended by a silent and expectant crew. Poised with shell in hand or firing cord taught ready for the order, the length of the Soviet front line concealed artillerymen with their mortars, howitzers, rockets and field artillery in numbers undreamt of in modern warfare.

All bent for a single purpose.

Officers concentrated on their watches, tense with the expectation and understanding of what was about to come to pass.

The constant drone of enemy bombers overhead only served to increase the tension felt in a million hearts, although the sound of distant muffled explosions was unheeded by those preparing for battle.

The seconds advanced, bringing closer the moment of action until it arrived in an instant of unprecedented noise, light, and fury.

Hundreds upon hundreds of weapons barked, spitting shells into the night sky only for them to fall upon their targets, killing and maiming thousands of allied soldiers in a few minutes, stunning some into shocked inactivity and destroying some units as effective formations.

Opposite the assault formations the biggest concentrations of artillery did their awful work, psychologically as well as physically destroying men in a few minutes of fiery hell.

The Soviet spearhead formations charged forward and, meeting very little resistance, broke through the front lines and rushed onward.

Europe lay bare before them.

This is not the End.

List of figures.

Fig#1 - Table of comparative ranks

Fig#2 - Château du Haut-Kœnigsbourg

Fig#3 - Château - First floor

Fig#4 - Château - Second floor

Fig#5 - Château - New Accomodation

Fig#6
- Château - New First floor

Fig#7 - Château - New Second floor

Fig#8 - Château - Defence of First floor

Fig#9 - Château - The Battle.

Fig#10 - Battlle of Kefermarkt

Fig#11 - Battle of Helingenthal

Fig#12 - Battle of Malkendorf

Fig#13 - Malkendorf - First Assault.

Fig#14 - Malkendorf - Second Assault

Fig#15 - Rottenbauer - the Battleground

Fig#16 - Rottenbauer - 0858hrs

Fig#17 - Reichenberg - First Flare

Fig#18 - Reichenberg - Second Flare

Fig#19 - Reichenberg - Third Flare

Fig#20 - Reichenberg - Death Throes

Fig#21 - Battleground at Trendelburg

Fig#22 - Trendelburg - Stealthy Attack

Fig#23 - Trendelburg - Sound of shots

Fig#24 - The Fall of Trendelburg

Fig#25 - Trendelburg - Final Positions

Fig#26 - Hamburg - Allied defensive line

Fig#27 - Hamburg - Soviet Positions

Fig#28 - Hamburg - Llewellyn Force

Fig#29 - Hamburg - Soviet Artillery

Fig#30 - Hamburg - initial Soviet Attack

Fig#31 - Hamburg -
 
Finale

Bibliography
 

Rosignoli, Guido

The Allied Forces in Italy 1943-45

ISBN 0-7153-92123

Kleinfeld & Tambs, Gerald R & Lewis A

Hitler’s Spanish Legion - The Blue Division in Russia

ISBN 0-9767380-8-2

Delaforce, Patrick

The Black Bull - From Normandy to the Baltic with the 11th Armoured Division

ISBN 0-75370-350-5

Taprell-Dorling, H

Ribbons and Medals

SBN 0-540-07120-X

Pettibone, Charles D

The Organisation and Order of Battle of Militaries in World War II

Volume V - Book B, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics

ISBN 978-1-4269-0281-9

Pettibone, Charles D

The Organisation and Order of Battle of Militaries in World War II

Volume V - Book A, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics

ISBN 978-1-4269-2551-0

Pettibone, Charles D

The Organisation and Order of Battle of Militaries in World War II

Volume VI - Italy and France, Including the Neutral Conutries of San Marino, Vatican City [Holy See], Andorra and Monaco

ISBN 978-1-4269-4633-2

Pettibone, Charles D

The Organisation and Order of Battle of Militaries in World War II

Volume II - The British Commonwealth

ISBN 978-1-4120-8567-5

Chamberlain & Doyle, Peter & Hilary L

Encyclopedia of German Tanks in World War Two

ISBN 0-85368-202-X

Chamberlain & Ellis, Peter & Chris

British and American Tanks of World War Two

ISBN 0-85368-033-7

Dollinger, Hans

The Decline and fall of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan

ISBN 0-517-013134

Zaloga & Grandsen, Steven J & James

Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of World War Two

ISBN 0-85368-606-8

Hogg, Ian V

The Encyclopedia of Infantry Weapons of World War II

ISBN 0-85368-281-X

Hogg, Ian V

British & American Artillery of World War 2

ISBN 0-85368-242-9

Hogg, Ian V

German Artillery of World War Two

ISBN 0-88254-311-3

 
Glossary

 

.30cal machine-gun

 

Standard US medium machine-gun.

 

 

.45 M1911 automatic

 

US automatic handgun

 

 

.50 cal

 

Standard US heavy machine-gun.

 

 

105mm Flak Gun

 

Next model up from the dreaded 88mm, these were sometimes pressed into a ground role in the final days.

 

 

39th Kingdom

 

See Kingdom39

 

 

6x6 truck

 

Three axle, 6 wheel truck.

 

 

Achilles

 

British version of the M-10 that carried the high velocity 17-pdr gun.

 

 

Addendum F

 

Transfer of German captured equipment to Japanese to increase their firepower and reduce logistical strain on Soviets

 

 

Alkonost

 

Creature from Russian folklore with the body of a bird and the head of a beautiful woman.

 

Anschluss

The 1938 occupation and Annexation of Austria by Germany.

 

BA64

Battle of the Bulge

 

Soviet 4x4 light armoured car with two crew and a machine-gun.

 

Germany's Ardennes offensive of winter 1944

 

Bazooka

Generic name applied to a number of different anti-tank rocket launchers introduced into the US Army from 1942 onwards.

 

Bletchley Park

Location of the centre for Allied code breaking during World War two. Sometimes known as Station X.

 

Blighty

British slang term for Britain.

 

Boyes

.55-inch anti-tank rifle employed by the British Army but phased out in favour of the PIAT.

 

Branden

burghers

Rough German equivalent of commando, who were trained more in the arts of stealth and silent killing.

 

 

Bund Deutsche Madel

 

The League of German Girls, young females’ organisation of the Nazi Party.

 

 

Camel

 

US cigarette brand

 

 

Cavalry

 

The German army had cavalry until the end, all be it in small numbers. The SS had two such divisions, the 8th and 22nd.

 

 

Chesterfield

 

Combat Command [CC]

 

American cigarette brand.

 

Formation similar to an RCT, which was formed from all-arms elements within a US Armored Division, the normal dispositions being CC’A’, CC’B’ and CC’R’, the ‘R’ standing for reserve.

 

 

Colibri

 

High-class men's accessories producer, initially specialising in cigarette lighters.

 

 

Colloque Biarritz

 

The fourth symposium based at the Château du Haut-Kœnigsbourg.

 

 

Deuxieme Bureau

 

France's External Military Intelligence Agency that underwent a number of changes post 1940 but still retained its 'Deux' label for many professionals.

 

 

Douglas DC-3

 

Twin-engine US transport aircraft, also labelled C-47. [Built by the Russians under licence as the Li-2]

 

 

DP-28

Standard Soviet Degtyaryov light machine-gun with large top mounted disc magazine containing 47 rounds.

 

Edelzwicker

Fallschirmjager

Alsatian wine that is a blend of noble and standard grapes, and as a result is sometimes hit and miss, sometimes superb.

German Paratroops. They were the elite of the Luftwaffe, but few Paratroopers at the end of the war had ever seen a parachute. None the less, the ground divisions fought with a great deal of elan and gained an excellent combat reputation.

 

Fat Man

Implosion-type Plutonium Bomb similar in operation to 'The Gadget'.

 

FBI

 
 

FFI

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

FG42

 

Federal Bureau of Intelligence, which was also responsible for external security prior to the formation of the CIA.

 

Forces Francaises de L’Interieur, or the French Forces of the Interior was the name applied to resistance fighters during the latter stages of WW2. Once France had been liberated, the pragmatic De Gaulle tapped this pool of manpower and created ‘organised’ divisions from these, often at best, para-military groups. Few proved to be of any quality and they tended to be used in low-risk areas.

 

Fallschirmgewehr 42, a hybrid 7.62mm weapon which was intended to be both assault rifle and LMG.

 

 

Firefly

 

British variant of the American M4 armed with a 17-pdr main gun, which offered the Sherman excellent prospects for a kill of any Panzer on the battlefield.

 

 

Fizzle

 

Failure of a nuclear device to properly explode, but which can result in radioactive product being distributed over a sizeable local area.

 

 

Gamayun

 
 

GAVCA

 

Creature from Russian folklore with the body of a large bird and the head of a beautiful woman.

 

Grupo de Aviação de Caça [Portuguese] Translated literally means ‘fighter group’, the 1st GAVCA serving within the Brazilian Expediationary Force.

 

 

GAZ

 

Gorkovsky Avtomobilny Zavod, Soviet producers of vehicles from light car through to heavy trucks.

 

 

Gebirgsjager

 

German & Austrian Mountain troops.

 

 

Gestapo

 

GeheimeStaatsPolizei, the Secret Police of Nazi Germany.

 

 

Gitanes Mais

 

French cigarette brand

 

 

GKO

Gosudarstvennyj Komitet Oborony or State Security Committee, the group that held complete power of all matters within the Soviet Union.

 

Gro²deutschland

Literally, 'Greater Germany', the elite Grossdeutschland Division was not an SS formation although it wore a cuff title on its right arm.

 

GRU

Glavnoye Razvedyvatel'noye Upravleniye of Soviet Military Intelligence, fiercely independent of the other Soviet Intelligence agencies such as the NKVD.

 

 

 

Hapsburg

 

European monarchy that ruled Austro-Hungary amongst other European states.

 

 

 

Hauptmann

 
 

Equivalent of captain in the German army.

 

 

Hero of the Soviet Union award

The Gold Star award was highly thought of and awarded to Soviet soldiers for bravery, although the medal was often devalued by being given for political or nepotistic reasons.

 

Hitler Youth [Hitler Jugend]

Young males’ organisation of the Nazi Party.

 

 

Hohenzollern

 

Noble house of Germany, Prussia, and Romania.

 

 

IS-II

 

Soviet heavy tank with a 122mm gun and 1-3 mg's

 

 

IS-III

 

Iosef Stalin III heavy tank, which arrived just before the German capitulation and was a hugely innovative design. 122mm gun and 1-2 mg

 

 

Jeep

 

½ Ton 4x4 all terrain vehicle, supplied in large numbers to the Western Allies and the Soviet Union.

 

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