CATALOGUE AND PRICE LIST OF STUDIES ON

THE RED ARMY AND THE GERMAN-SOVIET WAR (1941-1945)

I. ART OF WAR SYMPOSIUM TRANSCRIPTS (Originals and Reprints)

1984 Art of War Symposium (Transcript of Proceedings), From the Don to the Dnepr: Soviet

Offensive Operations -- December 1942-August 1943. Unbound reprint with approximately 590 pages and 77 maps. $60.

1985 Art of War Symposium (Transcript of Proceedings), From the Dnepr to the Vistula: Soviet

Offensive Operations -- November 1943-August 1944. Unbound reprint with approximately 750 pages and 76 maps. $90.

1986 Art of War Symposium (Transcript of Proceedings), From the Vistula to the Oder: Soviet

Offensive Operations -- October 1944-March 1945. Unbound reprint with 803 pages and 400 maps. $90.

II. FORMERLY CLASSIFIED SOVIET GENERAL STAFF AND NAVAL STAFF STUDIES (Flat-bound translations with supplementary materials)

The Battle for Kursk: The Soviet General Staff Study (253 pages and 38 maps). Covers all aspects

of the battle,including ground, air, antitank, and engineer operations. $51.

The Korsun'-Shevchenkovskii Operation (The Cherkassy Pocket)(January-February 1944): The

Soviet General StaffStudy (208 pages and 45 maps). With appendices covering Soviet order of battle, strengths and losses, key command cadre, armored operations, engineer, and logistical support, and German armored strength. $32

The Belorussian Operation: The Soviet General Staff Study (339 pages and 80 maps). Covers all

aspects of thiscomplex operation. $49.

L'vov-Sandomierz 1944: The Soviet General Staff Study (July-August 1944) (242 pages and 54

maps). Includesappendices covering Soviet order of battle, key command personnel, and personnel and equipment strengths and losses during the operation. $38.

Soviet Northern Fleet Diversionary Operations in MotovskiyBay, September 1942: The Naval

Main Staff Study(33 pages and 6 maps). $10.

III. SPECIAL STUDIES

Red Army Command Cadre (1941-1945), Vol. 1: Direction, Front, Army, Military District, Defense

Zone, and MobileCorps Commanders (150 pages). Details the names of all command cadre at these levels from 1941-1945 and analyzes Red Army command cadre in 1941, 1942, and 1943, while providing data on the subsequent fate of each commander. $25.

Red Army Command Cadre (1941-1945), Vol. II: Profiles in Command at Main Direction, Front,

Army, and CorpsLevel (113 pages and 24 figures). Includes basic information on command cadre education and command profiles and biographical information on wartime main direction, front, field army, tank army, and mobile (tank, mechanized, and cavalry) corps commanders and senior engineer, artillery, air defense, and aviation command cadre. $20

Red Army Command Cadre (1941-1945), Vol. III: Military Training Institutions, Improving the

Officer Corps’ Stature,and the Memoirs of a Student-Officer (69 pages and 6 figures). Includes information on the supervision of officer military education and training, higher military academies (the Voroshilov General Staff Academy, the Frunze Academy, and the “Vystrel” Schools and Courses), mid- and lower level military training institutions, measures to increase the officer’ corps’ stature, and service branch academies and schools (armored and mechanized, artillery, engineer, signal, rear service support, air force, and national air defense forces). Concludes with the memoirs of Junior Lieutenant E. D. Moniushko, a student-officer at the 1stTomskArtilleryAcademy. $20.

The Red Army Soldier (1941-1945) (106 pages and 9 figures). Describes Red Army conscription

procedures on the eveof the war and during wartime mobilization, the ethnic composition of the army, the employment of women, convicts, political prisoners, and labor deportees in army service, aspects of the soldier’s daily service, including food and clothing, political control, discipline, motivation, and morale, and the formation and employment of penal units and blocking detachments. $19.

Red Army Weaponry and Equipment (1941-1945) (72 pages, 25 figures, and over 100 illustrations).

Providesdescriptions, specifications, and many illustrations of Red Army combat equipment, including pistols, rifles, submachine guns, machine guns, antitank weapons, aero-sleighs, field, antitank (tank destroyer), antiaircraft, multiple-rocket launcher, and self-propelled artillery; tanks; armored personnel carriers, trucks, aircraft, mines, minesweepers, bridging, radios, radio-teletypes, field telephones, flame bottles, flame-throwers, and smoke generating equipment. $15

August Storm: The Soviet 1945 Strategic Offensive in Manchuria (250 pages and 41 maps). A

reprint of Leavenworth Paper No. 7 (February 1983), with 7 figures, 19 tables, illustrations, and a revised order of battle. $36.

August Storm: Soviet Tactical and Operational Combat in Manchuria, 1945 (220 pages and 26

maps). A reprint ofLeavenworth Paper No. 8 (June 1983), with 1 figure, 16 tables, and illustrations. $31.

Red Army Ground Forces in June 1941 (80 pages and 4 maps). Includes appendices on the Red

Army’s order of battle from 22 June through 31 December 1941 and Red Army mobilization for the first six months of war. $15.

Red Army Officers Speak! Interviews with Veterans of the Vistula-Oder Operation (January-

February 1945) (137 pages and 2 maps). Contains interviews with 17 Soviet officer-participants in the operation, with an introduction and overview of the operation. $22.

The Red Army in 1943: Strength, Organization, and Equipment (245 pages and 107 figures).

Contains data on thestrengths, organization (establishments, TO&Es, [shtat]), and weaponry of virtually all Red Army and NKVD combat, combat support, and combat service support forces, and the Red Army as a whole, including data on such specialized forces as NKVD, road, railroad, construction, and penal [disciplinary] troops. $26

The Red Army in 1943: Central Command and Control Organs and Leaders (175 pages and 19

figures). Includes descriptions of all Red Army wartime command and control, administrative, and logistical organs and the men who led them and a wide range of newly declassified and released NKO, Stavka, and General Staff orders, directives, and regulations. $19.

The Soviet-German War 1941-1945: Myths and Realities: A Survey Essay (97 pages and 10 maps).

Provides anoverview of wartime military operations, highlighting the eight distinctive campaigns, all major and most minor operations, forgotten battles, historical controversies, and comparisons between operations on the Soviet-German front and other European wartime fronts. $17.

Soviet War Experiences: Tank Operations (131 pages and 3 maps). Contains Soviet assessments of

tank andmechanized corps operations during the winter of 1942-1943. $22.

Soviet Mobilization in Peace and War, 1924-1942: A Survey (66 pages and 11 maps). $14.

Deep Attack: The Soviet Conduct of Operational Maneuver (126 pages and 17 maps). $21.

Soviet Defensive Tactics at Kursk (July 1943). Reprint of CSI Report No. 11 (70 pages). $14.

The Strategic and Operational Impact of Terrain on Military Operations in Central and Eastern

Europe (65 pages and 34 maps). $15.

The Motor-Mechanization Program of the Red Army during the Inter-War Years (61 pages). $13.

Soviet Operational Intelligence in the Battle of Kursk (July 1943) (70 pages and 42 maps). $15.

Forgotten Battles of the German-Soviet War (1941-1945): Overview (55 pages and 16 maps). $12.

The Ghosts of Demiansk: Soviet Airborne Operations against the German Demiansk Pocket

(6 March-8 April 1942)(50 pages and 8 maps). $12.

IV. RED ARMY COMBAT OPERATIONS (Flat-bound)

Forgotten Battles of the Soviet-German War (1941-1945): Detailed studies of forgotten, covered

up, or ignoredoperations of significant scale incorporating hitherto unavailable Stavka directives, Peoples’ Commissariat of Defense (NKO), and front orders, and transcripts of conversations between Stalin, representatives of the Stavka, and Red Army field commanders. Contains full documentation and a wide range of German and Soviet archival maps and operational summary maps. Each volume covers one of the war’s eight campaigns.

Volume 1, The Summer-Fall Campaign (22 June-4 December 1941). (111 pages and 62

maps). Covers 11 forgotten operations the Red Army conducted from the beginning of the German Barbarossa invasion on 22 June to the beginning of the Red Army’s Moscow counteroffensive on 5 December 1941. $20.

Volume II, The Winter Campaign (5 December 1941-27 April 1942). (158 pages and 44

maps). Covers 8forgotten operations the Red Army conducted from the beginning of its Moscow counteroffensive to the end of its Winter Campaign of 1941-42. $25.

Volume III, The Summer Campaign (12 May-18 November 1942). (195 pages and 68

maps). Covers 14 forgotten operations the Red Army conducted from mid-spring 1942 to the beginning of its counteroffensive at Stalingrad on 19 November 1942. $30.

Volume IV, The Winter Campaign (19 November 1942-21 March 1943). (438 pages and

138 maps). Covers 16 forgotten operations the Red Army conducted from the commencement of its Stalingrad counteroffensive to the end of its winter campaign in March 1943. $59.

Volume V, The Summer-Fall Campaign (1 July-31 December 1943), Parts 1 and 2 (823

pages and 422 maps). Covers 31 forgotten operations the Red Army conducted from the beginning of the German offensive at Kursk to the end of the year. Part 1 $60 and Part 2 $63.

Volume VI, The Winter Campaign (24 December 1943-April 1944), Parts 1, 2, and 3 (1,247

pages and 642maps). Details forgotten operation the Red Army conducted along the northwestern, western, and southwestern axes during the winter campaign of 1944. Part 1 includes the partially successful or failed Red Army offensives at Narva, Pustoshka-Idritsa, Novosokol’niki-Idritsa, Pskov and Ostrov, Opochka, and Sebezh. Part 2 covers Red Army offensive operations in eastern Belorussia, including those in the Vitebsk, Orsha, Rogachev, Kalinkovichi, and Ptich regions and along the DneprRiver. Part 3 included Red Army operations in the Ukraine and northern Rumania, including the Kovel’ offensive, the Battle for Brody, the Red Army’s invasion of Rumania (1st Iasi-Kishinev) during April and May (Tirgu-Frumos and the DnestrRiver bridgehead battles), and German counterstrokes along the Dnestr and at Iasi during May and early June. Part 1 $40, Part 2 $61, and Part 3 $68.

The Battle for Smolensk, 7 July-10 September 1941 (137 pages, 34 maps, and detailed opposing

orders ofbattle). Covers thecomplex fighting in the Smolensk region from the crossing of the DneprRiver by GermanArmyGroupCenter’s forces in early July to Hitler’s decision to postpone the Wehrmacht’s offensive against Moscow and instead unleash Guderian’s Second Panzer Group against Red Army forces defending Kiev. Includes unprecedented details on Soviet offensive actions at Lepel’, Zhlobin, Bobruisk, Smolensk, Dukhovshchina, El’nia, and Novozybkov, and Germans offensive operations around Smolensk, at Velikie Luki and Toropets, including Guderian’s famous southward turn. $22.

V. ATLASES (Spiral bound)

Atlas of the War on the Eastern Front (1941-1945) (85 maps). Maps cover all major and most

minor wartimeoperations. $17.

Atlas and Operational Summary of the Border Battles, 22 June-1 July 1941 (192 maps, 11 pages of

opposing orders ofbattle, and a 32-page operational summary). The large format (11 x 17) atlas consists of daily situation maps for each operational sector, Soviet and German archival maps, and detailed maps of the major tank battles during the first ten days of the war. It includes unprecedented coverage of German intelligence estimates and graphic descriptions of the once obscure but significant tank battles at Kelme, Raseiniai, Grodno, Kobrin, Lutsk, Rovno, Dubno, and Brody. This atlas serves as a companion atlas for David M. Glantz, The Initial Period of the War on the Eastern Front (London: Frank Cass, 1993) and all other books on the initial period of the war. $79.

Atlas of the Battle of Smolensk, 7 July-10 September 1941 (192 maps and 25 pages of opposing

orders ofbattle). This definitive large-format (11 x 17) atlas consists of Soviet and German archival maps covering all operational and tactical aspects of this massive and complex operation. Includes unprecedented detail on Soviet offensive actions at Lepel’, Zhlobin, Bobruisk, Smolensk, Dukhovshchina, El’nia, and Novozybkov, and Germans offensive operations around Smolensk and at Velikie Luki and Toropets, including Guderian’s famous southward turn. This atlas serves as a companion piece for The Battle of Smolenskstudy. $73.

Atlas of the Battle for Kiev, Part I: Penetrating the Stalin Line and the Uman’ Encirclement,

2 July-9 August 1941(121 maps, a 10-page operational summary, and 8 pages of orders of battle). This large-format (11 x 17) atlas contains German Army High Command (OKH) Lage Ost daily situation maps depicting actual German and suspected Red Army force dispositions, blown-up maps detailing Axis operations and Red Army counterattacks and counterstrokes, and translated Soviet archival maps depicting Red Army force dispositions throughout this phase of the battle for Kiev, as well as complete orders of battle for the opposing forces as of 1 July and 1 August 1941. Graphically depicts in detail Army Group South’s penetration of the Stalin Defense Line, the First Panzer Group’s advance to Kiev, the subsequent encirclement of the Soviet 6th and 12th Armies at Uman’, the Soviet 5th, 6th, and 26th Armies’ counterstrokes, and the German Sixth Army’s assault on Kiev during early August. $53

Atlas of the Battle for Kiev, Part II: The German Advance to the DneprRiver, 9-26 August 1941

(83 maps, a 10-pageoperational summary, and 8 pages of orders of battle). This large format (11 x 17) atlas contains German Army High Command (OKH) Lage Ost daily situation maps depicting actual German and suspected Red Army force dispositions, blown-up maps detailing Axis operations and Red Army counterattacks and counterstrokes, and translated Soviet archival maps depicting Red Army force dispositions throughout this phase of the battle for Kiev, as well as complete orders of battle for the opposing forces as of 1 August and 1 September 1941. Graphically depicts in detail Army Group South’s encirclement battles with the Soviet 18th and 9th Armies in the Nikolaev region, the First Panzer Group’s advance to the Dnepr River’s “great bend,” the battles for Krivoi-Rog, Dnepropetrovsk, and Zaporozh’e, the German seizure of bridgeheads over the Dnepr River, the Soviet 26th Army’s counterstroke near Boguslav, and the German Sixth Army’s advance across the Dnepr River north of Kiev. $44

Atlas of the Battle for Kiev, Part III: The Encirclement and Destruction of the Southwestern Front,

25 August-26 September 1941(193 maps, a 10-page operational summary, and 7 pages of orders of battle). This large format (11 x 17) atlas contains German Army High Command (OKH) Lage Ost daily situation maps depicting actual German and suspected Red Army force dispositions, blown-up maps detailing Axis operations and Red Army counterattacks and counterstrokes, and translated Soviet archival maps depicting Red Army force dispositions throughout this phase of the battle for Kiev, as well as complete orders of battle for the opposing forces as of 1 September and 1 October 1941. Graphically depicts in detail the southward advance by ArmyGroupCenter’s Second Army and Second Panzer Group to and across the DesnaRiver, German attacks and Soviet counterstrokes in the Chernigov, Korop, and Konotop regions, Army Group South’s seizure of the Kremenchug bridgehead, the encirclement and destruction of the Southwestern Front, and Soviet attempts to relieve their encircled forces. $73

Atlas of the Battle for Bessarabia and the Southern Ukraine, 22 June-7 September 1941(79 maps,

an 11-pageoperational summary, and 8 pages of orders of battle). This large-format (11 x 17) atlas contains German Army High Command (OKH) Lage Ost daily situation maps depicting actual German and suspected Red Army force dispositions, blown-up maps detailing Axis operations and Red Army counterattacks and counterstrokes, and translated Soviet archival maps depicting Red Army force dispositions throughout operations in this sector, as well as complete orders of battle for the opposing forces as of 22 June, 10 July, 1 August, and 1 September 1941. Graphically depicts in detail Army Group South’s advance through Bessarabia, the Stalin Defense Line, and southern Ukraine during July, August, and early September, including German attempts to encircle the Soviet 9th and 18th Armies in the Bershad’, Kotovsk, Berezovka, and Nikolaev pockets, the initial stages of the siege of Odessa, and the German exploitation to and across the lower Dnepr River. $44

Atlas of the Battles for Khar’kov and the Donbas, 26 September-31 October 1941 (99 maps, a

15-page operationalsummary, and 8 pages of orders of battle). This large-format (11 x 17) atlas contains German Army High Command (OKH) Lage Ost daily situation maps depicting actual German and suspected Red Army force dispositions, blown-up maps detailing Axis operations and Red Army counterattacks and counterstrokes, and translated Soviet archival maps depicting Red Army force dispositions throughout the battles for Khar’kov and the Donbas region, as well as complete orders of battle for the opposing forces as of 1 October and 1 November 1941. Graphically depicts in detail Army Group South’s offensive operations to capture the Khar’kov and Donbas regions, including the Sixth and Seventeenth Armies advance to Khar’kov and the Northern Donets River, the First Panzer and Eleventh Armies’ encirclement of the soviet 9th and 18th Armies near Melitopol’, and the First Panzer Army’s advance to the approaches to Rostov. $49