English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

12 answers

In simple terms, he believed (and his military intelligence indicated) that Russia was lacking in war machines and materiel. He thought that the Russians had far fewer tanks, airplanes, artillery pieces, etc. than they had or were able to produce or obtain from allies.

Secondly, he was convinced that the Russians were genetically and culturally inferior and would be unwilling and unable to mount a defense.

Thirdly, he thought that most Russians hated communism and would welcome the German army as liberators.

He was wrong on all counts.

http://www.lietuvos.net/istorija/1940_1990/Why_Hitler_Attacked_Russia.htm

2006-12-26 00:38:56 · answer #1 · answered by 4999_Basque 6 · 3 0

Actually the victory over France gave Germany the confidence to invade the Soviet Union. On paper, the French army was considered to be far more powerful force than the German army, and tanks like the SOMUA S35 and the Char B1bis were enough to give German generals some reason to be cautious. Thus, beating what was perceived to be such a powerful force so easily was enough to give the Germans confidence to take on the Red Army, which, while despite being huge and protecting a massive country, had performed poorly in the Winter War against Finland in 1939. In fact there is some evidence that Hitler was planning Barbarossa even before the first planes took off for the Battle of Britain.

2015-08-19 14:16:37 · answer #2 · answered by Bradley 6 · 0 0

the climate became a huge area of the Nazi's sluggish boost yet indexed under are some different motives. a million. Hitler grew to become smitten via taking Stalingrad and diverted a brilliant tension to take the city, (he failed) as a replace of heading right this moment to Moscow. 2. The Russians have been gained a multitude of aspects from the allies to maintain the combating going. 3. The Russians moved their factories returned east whilst they have been particular Japan would not enter the war against them. This allowed the Russians to maintain producing tanks and different weapons and flow them west to the front strains. The Nazi bombers have been basically twin engines bombers so they could no longer attain the factories and allowed the Russians to offer products unhindered. 4. The Russians used a coverage called scorched earth and this suggests they burnt and destroyed any and each thing that could have been used via the Russians. safeguard, nutrients, railroad tracks, each and every thing. 5. The Russian partisans (civilian combating tension) hindered the Nazis at each and every turn. They ambushed patrols, destroyed furnish depots, and provided information to the crimson military. 6. ultimately, and in all threat between the biggest motives became the allies touchdown on the sea coast of Normandy. With this well timed invasion, (despite the fact that Stalin wanted the invasion in the previous) it compelled Hitler to enhance the western front with troops that could have been used in the east.

2016-10-28 09:37:33 · answer #3 · answered by roca 4 · 0 0

It was the miserable performance of the Red Army during the Winter War against Finland that convinced Hitler that the Wehrmacht had a great chance at smashing the huge Red Army.
The red army performed poorly and displayed inept leadership and logistics. Bearing in mind that the Red Army outnumbered the Finns ten to one but could only achieve a draw.

2006-12-26 01:26:21 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

His belief in Russians was like many Germans that Russians and eastern Europeans were inferior and much worse subhuman. The Russian purges by Stalin due to his sycophantic ways killed his best generals and left the USSR militarially weak as Operation Barbarossa would soon reveal at least at its beginnings. The Germans were within 10 miles of Moscow before their ally the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor and gave the USSR what they needed, a second front and much needed weaponry and manpower to the West.

2006-12-26 02:07:20 · answer #5 · answered by Dave aka Spider Monkey 7 · 1 0

after world war 1 the treaty of Versailles hold Germany totally responsible for the war . he want to conquered Russia for Germany and be the most powerful man in the world.

2006-12-26 02:19:29 · answer #6 · answered by mattie B 3 · 0 0

His easy victory over western Europe

2006-12-26 06:26:26 · answer #7 · answered by brainstorm 7 · 0 0

He thought Russians were inferior

2006-12-26 00:37:15 · answer #8 · answered by . 6 · 1 0

Arrogance and just a "smidgen" of insanity.

2006-12-26 00:35:07 · answer #9 · answered by Virginia C 5 · 1 0

pure arrogance

2006-12-26 00:37:14 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers