EBOOK

What Stalin Knew

The Enigma of Barbarossa

David E. Murphy
(0)
Pages
340
Year
2005
Language
English

About

On June 22, 1941, Nazi Germany's Operation Barbarossa was launched against Russia. Within days, the invading army had taken hundreds of thousands of Soviet captives while the Luftwaffe bombed a number of Russian cities, including Minsk. Though accurate intelligence about the plan had been available to Stalin before the attack, he chose not to heed the warning.

In What Stalin Knew, historian and former chief of the CIA's Soviet division David E. Murphy illuminates many of the enigmas surrounding the catastrophic invasion, offering keen insights into Stalin's thinking and the reasons for his fatal error of judgment. A story of successful misinformation campaigns, and a leader more paranoid about threats from within his regime than from an aggressive neighbor, this authoritative history sheds essential new light on the most consequential event in the Eastern Front of World War II.

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Reviews

"David Murphy has written a valuable and detailed account of the intelligence from Soviet sources warning Stalin of Hitler's invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, that helps to explain his costly refusal to heed their warnings."
Donald Kagan, Yale University
"What Stalin Knew is a fascinating and meticulously researched account of mistaken assumptions and errors of judgment that culminated in Hitler's invasion of Russia in June 1941. Never before has this fateful period been so fully documented."
Henry A. Kissinger
"David Murphy brings the incisive eye of a former intelligence professional to the dramatic story of Operation Barbarossa. The result is a significant addition to our understanding of Stalin and the Second World War."
David Stafford, author of Churchill and Secret Service and Roosevelt and Churchill: Men of

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