German combat uniforms of World War Two, Volume 1 by Brian L. Davis

By Brian L. Davis

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Example text

Blyukher. After some fighting, the Japanese forces withdrew. A year later, a major battle was fought against the Japanese Kwantung Army at Khal’khan Gol, after the Japanese crossed the ill-defined border of Outer Mongolia, with which the Soviet Union had a mutual assistance pact. The culminating battle, in which Soviet forces were commanded by Georgiy K. 20 Prologue Zhukov and G. M. Shtern, took place on 23 August 1939, the very day a nervous Stalin signed his infamous Non-Aggression Pact with Hitler.

He preferred not to call attention to the nuclear weapon as long as the United States main­ tained either a monopoly or, after 1949, definite superiority both in numbers and in delivery systems. Stalin also appears to have been making plans for extending Soviet control in the Far East. In the late 1940s he moved a number of his most trusted generals and marshals to the eastern military districts to plan and support a North Korean invasion of South Korea. During this period also, North Korean divisions were sent to the Soviet Union, intensively trained there, and then Postwar Development of Soviet Military Doctrine 39 returned to North Korea.

Abandonment of the terri­ torial concept caused a greater degree of centralization of the Ground Forces and major changes in the higher military structure. This brought about a reexamination of the three basic agencies that exercised military control in the mid-1930s. The first of these was the Defense Commission, headed by V. M. Molotov, and attached to the Council of People’s Commissars (roughly the same as the Prologue 18 Council of Ministers of the 1970s). This group worked out draft proposals on major questions of defense and presented them to the Council of Labor and Defense (STO).

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