Page 363 - The Chief Culprit
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308  y  Notes to Pages 213–224


                 40.   Estonian People in the Great Patriotic War of the Soviet Union, 1941–1945 (Tallinn: Eesti raamat, 1973),
                     1: 43.
                 41.   Ibid.
                 42.  L. M. Sandalov, On the Moscow Direction (Moscow: Nauka, 1970), 63.
                 43.  V. A. Anfilov,  e Path that Led to the Tragedy of 1941 (Moscow: Akopov, 1997), 219–20.
                 44.  Command and HQ of the Soviet Army in the Great Patriotic War, 1941–1945, ed. M.N. Kozhevnikov,
                     (Moscow: Nauka, 1977), 41.
                 45.   VIZh, no. 1 (1969): 61.
                 46.   Battle for Leningrad, 1941–1944 (Moscow: Voyenizdat, 1964), 22.
                 47.   Krasnaya Zvezda, April 28, 1985.
                 48.   G.  A. Kumanev,  Soviet Railroad Personnel during the Years of the Great Patriotic War, 1941–1945
                     (Moscow: AN SSSR, 1963), 36.
                 49.   VIZh, no. 5 (1980): 71.
                 50.   e Rear of the Soviet Armed Forces in the Great Patriotic War, 1941–1945 (Moscow: Voyenizdat, 1977),
                     59.
                 51.   Ibid., 173.
                 52.   I. V. Boldin,  e Pages of My Life (Moscow: Voyenizdat, 1961), 92.
                 53.  S.P. Ivanov,  e Early Stage of the War, 211.
                 54.   VIZh, no. 9 (1960): 56.
                 55.   VIZh, no. 6 (1962): 77.
                 56.   VIZh, no. 9 (1966): 66.
                 57.   M. I. Kazakov, Reflections over Maps of Former Battlefields (Moscow: Voyenizdat, 1971), 64.
                 Chapter 35
                  1.   e Year 1941, 2: 112.
                  2.   Ibid., 2: 151.
                  3.   It Must Be Published, 167.
                  4.   Yakovlev, Life’s Task, 252.
                  5.   “High-frequency lines”: Encoded communication equipment.
                  6.   Voprosy Istorii [Questions of History], no. 5 (1970): 42.
                  7.  Vassilevsky, Life’s Mission, 119.
                  8.    ese seven armies were (RC is rifle corps, MC is mechanized corps, RD is rifle division, TD is tank
                     division): the 16thArmy (32nd RC, 5th MC, 57th TD), the 19th Army (25th and 34th RC—the latter

                     had five divisions, 26th MC, 38th RD), the 20th Army (61st and 69th RC, 7th MC, 18th RD), the
                     21st Army (63rd and 66th RC, 25th MC), the 22nd Army (51st and 62nd RC), the 24th Army (52nd
                     and 53rd RC, 23rd MC), and the 28th Army (30th and 33rd RC, 69th MC).
                  9.  V. Khvostov and Major General A. Grylov, Communist, no. 12 (1968): 68.
                 10.   History of the Second World War, 1939–1945, 3: 352.

                 Chapter 36
                  1.   History of the Second World War, 1939–1945, 4: 27.
                  2.   Krasnoznamennyi Byelorussian Military District (Minsk: Belorus:, 1973), 84.
                  3.  Sandalov, On Moscow Direction, 41.
                  4.   Ibid.
                  5.   “On the  Eve of the  War: Documents of the Conference of the  Supreme Command of  the  Red
                     Army, December 23–31, 1940,” in  e Russian Archive: the Great Patriotic War (Moscow: Terra, 1993),
                     12: 1: 34.
                  6.   Ibid., 12: 1: 40–41.
                  7.   I. Bagramian, VIZh, no. 1 (1976): 62.
                  8.   Moskalenko, In the Southwestern Direction, 18.
                  9.   VIZh, no. 4 (1984): 42.
                 10.  V. Sikorsky,  e Future War (Moscow: Voyenizdat, 1936), 240.
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