Grand Delusion: Stalin and the German Invasion of Russia

Front Cover
Yale University Press, 1999 M01 1 - 408 pages
This important book draws on vital new archival material to unravel the mystery of Hitler's invasion of Russia in 1941 and Stalin's enigmatic behavior on the eve of the attack. Gabriel Gorodetsky challenges the currently popular view that Stalin was about to invade Germany when Hitler made a preemptive strike. He argues instead that Stalin was actually negotiating for European peace, asserting that Stalin followed an unscrupulous Realpolitik that served well-defined geopolitical interests by seeking to redress the European balance of power.

Gorodetsky substantiates his argument through the most thorough scrutiny ever of Soviet archives for the period, including the files of the Russian foreign ministry, the general staff, the security forces, and the entire range of military intelligence available to Stalin at the time. According to Gorodetsky, Stalin was eagerly anticipating a peace conference where various accords imposed on Russia would be revised. But the delusion of being able to dictate a new European order blinded him to the lurking German danger, and his erroneous diagnosis of the political scene--colored by his perennial suspicion of Great Britain--led him to misconstrue the evidence of his own and Britain's intelligence services. Gorodetsky highlights the sequence of military blunders that resulted from Stalin's determination to appease Germany--blunders that provide the key to understanding the calamity that befell Russia on 22 June 1941.

 

Contents

IV
10
V
13
VI
19
VII
23
VIII
29
IX
35
X
39
XI
44
XXVII
173
XXVIII
176
XXIX
179
XXX
200
XXXI
225
XXXII
235
XXXIII
244
XXXV
246

XII
48
XIII
52
XIV
57
XV
67
XVI
75
XVII
89
XVIII
95
XIX
102
XX
115
XXI
124
XXII
130
XXIII
137
XXIV
155
XXV
159
XXVI
170
XXXVI
252
XXXVII
260
XXXVIII
265
XXXIX
273
XL
279
XLI
285
XLII
292
XLIII
299
XLIV
304
XLV
314
XLVI
322
XLVII
380
XLVIII
392
Copyright

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Page 4 - that in the event of any act of aggression against any European neighbour of the Soviet Union which was resisted by the country concerned, the assistance of the Soviet Government would be available, if desired, and would be afforded in such manner as would be found most convenient.
Page 9 - YEARLY, with tent and rifle, our careless white men go By the pass called Muttianee, to shoot in the vale below. Yearly by Muttianee he follows our white men in — Matun, the old blind beggar, bandaged from brow to chin. Eyeless, noseless, and lipless...

About the author (1999)

Gabriel Gorodetsky is Professor of History and Director of the Curiel Center for International Affairs at Tel Aviv University, where he holds the Samuel Rubin Chair for Russian and East European History.

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