Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairThanks for that. So nearly 600 aircraft out of a reported VVS
front line strength of 2,516 in mid July and the 600 would be in
addition to the reported under 400 VVS aircraft in the central
zone.
I'm not sure that PVO fighters had been ever included into
the front line numbers. Probably they weren't being under
different command.
However as you note, it is probably, hence the decision to check.
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairDo you know what area the Moscow
Air Defence district covered?
Moscow and vicinity.
Any idea about how far out the border was?
I'd assume that only far enough to have city covered but
I can be wrong.
Simply put given WWII aircraft speeds zones needed depth
to be able to intercept, which could mean tens to hundreds
of miles. The alternative is a pre war boundary dictated by
the size of Moscow.
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanI did not get how exactly this fact is related to the
air defense of Moscow.
As the VVS forces in the west lost airfields they were forced
back into places like Moscow, so increasing the strength
around Moscow. Increasing the chance non PVO units are
counted as defenders of Moscow or counted because they are
in the area.
You definitely keep trying. :-)
No, I keep reading histories where things like strength figures
are reported without clarification and at times understanding.
Post by AlexMilmanI repeat: PVO force was a separate command with its own
structure and forces. Term "defenders of Moscow" is
misleading because all troops on the Moscow direction had
been defending it by definition and this had nothing to do
with being a part of PVO.
So if all the "troops on the Moscow direction been defending it
by definition " why is it so strange to check whether the reports
are correctly identifying sub units and not giving grand totals?
Undelete,
"It would appear Moscow and Stalingrad had radar coverage
but nothing like the fighter control system used in the west."
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanMaybe but this is irrelevant, taking into an account that there
were only 2 raids on Moscow and even they were on a relatively
small scale.
Radar is important as it gives warning and that reduces the number
of people caught in the open.
It is important for many other things as well but what is
exact relevance in this case (besides the fact that you
consider PVO of Moscow being inadequate by not quite clear
criteria)?
So time to try again. People caught out in the open by air raids
take higher casualties on average than people who have had
time to make it to shelter.
PVO Moscow had plenty of aircraft and guns but not a modern
system to warn the citizens and control interceptions. So fewer
people had the chance to take shelter and more bombers made it.
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairThe Moscow raids,
195 Bombers evening of 21 July
115 Bombers night of 22 July
The third raid was around 100 bombers, the fourth was 50,
the remainder were in the order of 15 or so bombers.
Yes, and it shows that Moscow never was in a serious
danger from the air. Or, from the Soviet perspective,
that its PVO was so effective that the Germans gave up.
Whichever option you choose is a matter of taste.
Or alternatively we can look at the rapidly declining German air
strength in the east and the increasing demands on it as the
Red Army and Air Force recovered and the German Army out
ran its supply system.
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairI know Moscow had the best air defences in terms of guns
and fighters but nothing like enough air raid shelters or
any program for people to have their own.
I have no idea about the source of your information and about
your idea regarding what would constitute an adequate number
of shelters.
Enough for most of the normal population.
Meaningless: "most" of Moscow population lived in the areas
which hardly were ever bombed. Potentially endangered part
was city center.
Hardly meaningless if the bomb lands near you when you have
little shelter. Less shelter more casualties per bomb is the
basic rule.
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanThe most common and reliable type of shelter were metro stations
(quite a few in the center of Moscow) and, AFAIK, there were also
shelters elsewhere.
It is clear the Metro stations were used but they could only take a
small percentage of the population.
I have no statistics to tell one way or another.
Moscow population 3.7 million.
You really believe there was enough space in the underground
system to have hundreds of thousands at the stations?
The physical space of underground systems is limited, rail
systems assume people move through, not stay.
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanAn idea about the personal shelters is an
interesting one taking into an account that predominant majority
of the people in Moscow lived in multi-apartment buildings.
Or cellars being made stronger.
Suitable cellars had been used but you were talking about
individual shelters which is hardly an option in a
multi-apartment building.
What I wrote,
"I know Moscow had the best air defences in terms of guns
and fighters but nothing like enough air raid shelters or
any program for people to have their own."
Or you chose to interpret personal shelters as for one person,
not a family or inhabitants of a building, as opposed to official
government run shelters.
Post by AlexMilman[]
Post by Geoffrey SinclairThe relevance to me is that greater warnings and more shelters
reduce the number of casualties per ton of bombs dropped.
For this to be practical, we need data on the civilian
losses (per ton) in Moscow. I don't have these data and
not going to get into the groundless speculations.
How nice, except we do not need Moscow figures when we have
plenty of accurate statistics from air raids run in the west, which
show the effect of a lack of warning.
Post by AlexMilmanYou made statement about inadequacy so its up to you
to produce relevant statistics.
I have been in the other posts.
deleted test relates to,
the claim 1,000 were killed in the first air raid on Stalingrad
and 40,000 the total civilian deaths
Post by AlexMilman[]
Post by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairAs far as I know there was no mass evacuation of the city, indeed
Stalin ordered the people to stay, and some children ended up
surviving despite being behind German lines until the Germans
surrendered.
On August 15, local authorities (following instructions of the
Evacuation Committee of the Soviet Union) issues an order "Regarding
partial evacuation of Stalingrad". On the next day there was another
order "regarding evacuation of the civilians from the areas of military
activities". On August 18, based on the new instructions from Moscow,
there was an order regarding evacuation of the orphanages.
During July and the 1st 20 days of August 100,000 people had been
evacuated from the city (only 30 - 40K had been locals). Big numbers of
civilians still had been deployed on construction of the city defenses
and in the military plants.
So essentially the city had not been evacuated as it is likely
civilians displaced by the German offensive were being moved
first.
Evacuation started too late but the point is that this
was hardly due to the alleged Stalin's order you are
referenced to (which does not mean that I consider Stalin a
good or caring person but a tendency to blame everything on
him personally absolves everybody else of any guilt).
So essentially you are completely confident, with the evacuation of
the city essentially not started before the evacuation, that Stalin
never issued any sort of order for the or some civilians to stay,
like the workers at the tank factory.
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanDecision regarding evacuation of women, children and wounded
had been made on August 24th.
The first raid was on the 23rd.
Yes, the local authorities had been late to react.
So about the pre war population was still in Stalingrad when the
main air attacks began.
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanEvacuation of the plants (equipment and people) started in the end of
August.
http://www.callofduty.ru/forum/index.php?showtopic=2983
Since I do not read Russian that well the site is of limited use.
It was just for reference sake: I quoted most of the
relevant material to make your task easier.
Is the task meant to be verfiying the data, or reading the site?
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanBy the time when defense of the city started, there still were 400,000
civilians in the city. Evacuation had been carried by the civilian and
military craft with, presumably, over 300,000 people transported
(estimated numbers vary between 250K and not quite realistic 400K).
So 400,000 remained after 300,000 people were evacuated from the
area around Stalingrad?
No, conversation was about 300K out of 400K. Most of
evacuation had been done under enemy fire and bombing
(with the resulting high losses).
I presume you originally really meant to say evacuation "was" carried
out, not "had been".
So there were no refugees entering the city moving ahead of the
German advance, the population was essentially intact on 23
August, and large numbers were lost by the time the majority of
the civilians had been evacuated.
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanTaking into an account that the orders for evacuation had been coming
from the "center" and discounting a very low probability that the local
authorities decided to disobey Stalin, it seems that the 'order' you are
quoting is, more or less, an urban legend (big scale evacuations had been
happening from the numerous places including Moscow so why Stalingrad
would be an exception?).
Or the reporting of an order made after the siege began.
As I said, the local authorities had been slow but perhaps
partially so because of the unclear military situation
and expectation of a counteroffensive.
And it leaves open the possibility Stalin issued an order for at
least some of the population, given the people were trapped to
stay and help defend. The order has then been exaggerated
as a blanket no evacuations one.
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanso, unlike the orders regarding evacuation
(known dates, text and authorship), specifics of the alleged Stalin's
order are (AFAIK) missing. What CAN be reliably observed from the
available documents is the fact that initially planned (by the local
authorities)
evacuation had been too limited and too slow. One of the possible excuses
could be unclear military situation including a hope on successful
counteroffensive which did not materialized in August 1942.
Plus by the sounds of it the system was busy handling people
displaced by the ground fighting in front of Stalingrad.
System was busy with a lot of different things and some of
the displaced people were not from anywhere close to
Stalingrad: people had been evacuated there by the thousands
from the numerous places including Leningrad.
So is the idea the 23 August 1942 population was larger by
thousands compared to the pre war one? Then add any
people displaced from the local area heading there.
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairSo 40,000 deaths from the entire conflict which effectively
levelled the city seems low.
Not too low if most of the population had been evacuated.
And given the idea there were still 400,000 civilians in the city when
the Germans arrived it would seem most of the population was still
there, or at lease a sizeable group of civilians.
Relatively 'optimistic' assessments boil down to something
like 100K remaining in the city. Assuming that 40-50%
had been eventually killed is IMO reasonably plausible.
So above we have most of the population still in the city, plus
thousands of refugees, now we are down to 100,000, which
date is the 100,000 referring to?
deleted text,
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairAll up 1,600 Luftwaffe sorties dropping 1,000 tons of bombs,
fires burnt many residential districts to the ground, lasting
over night in the many wooden buildings.
"many wooden buildings" implies areas with predominantly individual
------------------- end deleted text.
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanhouses. In other words, areas with a low density of population.
The fires lasted in the wooden buildings, they tended to go
out sooner in non wooden buildings.
Russia had a long story of the wooden construction and
a general rule was to build houses far enough from each
other to minimize destruction of the fires (which also
were a typical disaster).
And the reports from the city are whole districts were burnt down,
so why the need to announce the design attempts to minimise
fires? Is it to show there must have been extensive fires given
the built in fire resistance?
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanPlus, it was reasonably easy to escape from such house when it
catches fire.
Not if the area has a number of fires.
Of course, this makes things more difficult.
Which is what has been reported.
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanJudging by what is written, Luftwaffe paid a lot of attention to the
river crossing and industrial districts, none of which had a dense
population.
Chuikov thinks thousands were killed in the first raid.
This is quite possible but how many thousands and did he
count?
He did not say, but it calls into question the claim of one thousand
deaths in the first raid, or first day's raids.
deleted text,
"And the raids
had multiple objectives, including stopping troop movement through
the city by bringing down buildings, along with obvious military
objectives and also, given Richthofen, an attempt to break morale.
It seems it took the AA guns opening up before many people
realised it was time to take shelter from the first raid.
There were days of raids, with the population largely trapped,
they needed to get across the Volga to escape. Richthofen
decided on 25 August that Stalingrad had been destroyed."
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairConcentrated bombing often results in devastation, and the Soviet
Official History notes "scores of thousands", so as noted the death
toll of 1,000 civilians killed looks too low.
Of course. This was original Soviet BS.
Given the minimum of scores of thousands would be 40,000 that
would be the lowest official Soviet death toll.
Post by AlexMilmanBut there is a
big gap between 1K and 47K.
Except I was quoting around 40,000 and over the series of raids
launched against the city before the German army arrived, that is
to about 1 September.
deleted text,
">> There were a lot more raids in the following weeks but it seems
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairStalingrad was being described as ruins by 1 September.
Massive evacuation had been started well prior to this date.
Yet there were still hundreds of thousands of civilians present,
plus any refugees."
"For a raid on a smaller town,
On 11/12 September 1944 the RAF raid on Darmstadt dropped
about 875 tons of bombs causing big fires but short of a firestorm,
the minimum death toll is put at 8,433 people, the modern
estimate is 12,300, the pre war population was around 93,000."
-------- end restored text
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairI do not dispute the Luftwaffe dropped a lower bomb tonnage on
Stalingrad, which was smaller than Hamburg.
And yet you insist on the casualties being even higher.
I fail to see your logic.
It rather goes like this, the Hamburg firestorm raid was part of a
series of raids, dropping 9,656.64 short tons of bombs.
Hamburg had been hit so many times it had good air raid
protection, total deaths from the raids are generally put at
50,000 with over 40,000 caused by the firestorm.
Stalingrad, over the first few days of air raids, was hit by a
comparable bomb tonnage as the firestorm raid, reports
large fires in the first raid, the city destroyed within about
a week, that there were few air raid shelters and little
warnings so plenty of people were caught in the open.
As a result it seems the deaths from these raids were
comparable or greater than the firestorm raid on Hamburg,
and that is credible given the results of other air raids.
deleted text,
"The UK figures of
deaths per ton of conventional bombs, then from V-1s and V-2s
shows the value of warnings. A series of raids means more
chance people are caught out in the open and that seems to have
been happening in Stalingrad during the initial raids. People ended
up in the ravines out of town.
Post by AlexMilmanOne more substantial difference is that, while Hamburg is a reasonably
'concentrated' city, Stalingrad was a relatively narrow line stretched
along Volga.
And is the idea people could make it out of the city on foot in the
time it took for an air raid to bomb?"
">> > There was more than one 'accounting' post war and the numbers vary
Post by AlexMilmanPost by Geoffrey SinclairPost by AlexMilmanwidely depending on the political agenda of their authors. One may
either select whatever suits his/her/its opinion best or to consider
any of them unreliable."
------------------------ end deleted text.
deleted text,
"The Soviet Official Histories reduced the
number of casualties, with the opening of the Soviet archives a
larger figure of mainly more civilian deaths was produced.
What are the estimates you know of and how do you grade them?"
------------------------ end deleted text.
Post by AlexMilmanIt is not supposed to be: data available are highly
speculative and unreliable. Partially because this issue,
in general, is highly politicized.
So why bother to post?
Geoffrey Sinclair
Remove the nb for email.