 | Tanks 1919-1939: Encyclopedia II - Tanks 1919-1939 - Soviet Union
Tanks 1919-1939 - Soviet Union
The Soviet Union initially had only a mix of imports and a few domestic tanks developed from the FTs in the 1920s, but Stalin's enthusiasm for industrialisation and mechanisation drove an aggressive military development program, resulting in by far the largest and broadest tank inventory of all nations by the late 1930s.
In 1926, under a secret annex to the Treaty of Rapallo, the Soviet Union and Germany set up a joint tank school at Kazan in the west of the Urals, which was illegal under the Treaty of Versailles. Both countries learned much about tank design and tactics in this co-operative venture. The Germans provided advice on mechanisation of Soviet heavy industry, and helped develop a sense of professionalism in the Red Army. From 1929, an experimental Mechanised Brigade was formed, training and developing combined-arms tactics with foreign tanks, armoured cars, tractors, and lorries.
The Soviets also spent tens of millions of dollars on U.S. equipment and technology to modernise dozens of automotive and tractor factories, which would later produce tanks and armoured vehicles.
Based on a mixed force of foreign tanks and imported prototypes, the Soviets developed an impressive domestic design and production capability. The T-26 light tank was based on the Vickers E (as were many other tanks of the period), chosen after it beat a Soviet FT derivative in trials. The Soviets purchased some U.S. Christie M1930 tank prototypes, from which they developed the BT series of fast tanks. They also developed the heavier multi-turreted T-28 medium tank and the massive T-35, which followed the design premise of the Vickers A1E1 Independent. Of the tanks produced between 1930 and 1940, 97% were either identical copies of foreign designs, or very closely-related improvements. Significantly, the major improvement the Soviet designers made to these foreign designs was an increase in firepower. By 1935, the Red Army ". . . possessed more armoured vehicles, and more tank units than the rest of the world combined." (Zaloga 1984, p. 107)
But from 1937 to 1941, the Red Army's officer corps, the armour design bureaux, and leadership of the factories were gutted by Stalin's Great Purge. Tens of thousands were executed. Military knowledge completely stagnated and armoured vehicle production dropped drastically (though still remaining the world's largest). Training and readiness dropped to very low levels.
The participation by Soviet 'volunteer' tank units in the Spanish Civil War was decisive in forming Soviet tank designs for WW2. Soviet tanks dominated their foreign rivals in Spain due to their firepower, but their thin armor, in common with most tanks of the period, made them vulnerable to the new towed antitank guns being supplied to Infantry units. This finding led directly to a new generation of Soviet tanks. By the eve of World War II, the Soviet Union had some of the world's best tanks (including the T-34 and KV-1, which were basically a generation ahead, coming as a shock to the Wehrmacht). However, the poor training and readiness status of most Red Army units led to a catastrophic defeat of the enormous Soviet Mechanised Corps during the opening phases of Operation Barbarossa, Germany's 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union. Despite their generally good equipment, the Red Army's operational capabilities and motorised logistic support were very inferior.
Tanks 1919-1939 - References
- Steven J. Zaloga and James Grandsen. Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of World War Two, 1984. Arms and Armour Press, London. ISBN 0-85368-606-8.
Other related archivesAMC 34, AMC 35, AMR-33, AMR-35, BT series, BT tanks, Basil Liddell Hart, Battle of France, Char 2C, Char B1, Charles de Gaulle, Christie suspension, Comparison of early World War II tanks, Czechoslovakia, FT, Great Britain, Great Purge, Heinz Guderian, History of the tank, J.F.C. Fuller, KV-1, Kazan, Lee, List of interwar armoured fighting vehicles, Maybach, Norway, Operation Barbarossa, PzKpfw 35(t), PzKpfw 38(t), PzKpfw I Ausf A, PzKpfw II, PzKpfw III, PzKpfw IV, R 35, Red Army, SOMUA S35, Sherman, Soviet Union, Spanish Civil War, T-26, T-28, T-34, T-35, Tanks, Tanks by era, Tanks in World War I, Treaty of Rapallo, Treaty of Versailles, Type 89 Chi-Ro, Type 95 Ha-Go, Urals, V8s, Vichy French, Vickers 6-Ton, Vickers A1E1 Independent, Vickers E, Vickers Medium Mk II, WWII, Wehrmacht, World War II, anti-personnel, anti-tank, armoured cars, cavalry, cruiser tanks, diesels, fall of France, half-tracks, industrialisation, infantry, mechanisation, reconnaissance, tankettes, ČKD, Škoda
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Soviet Union", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |