Guttersnipe
One Too Many
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As everyone else said, the Soviets pretty much just threw hordes of infantry at the Axis and relied on sheer weight of numbers to succeed!
I also see in that photo collection that they've put in the 'retouched' pictures of the soldiers on the roof of the Reichstag, omitting the many wristwatches which had been acquired by the Soviets!
The most visually telling reason for massive Soviet losses is presented at the beginning of the Jude Law movie, "Enemy at the Gates". There weren't enough rifles for every infantryman, and the ones who lacked were told to charge anyway, pick up the gun of the next person to get killed, and keep on charging.
You all realize that these statements have little basis in historical fact, right? The factual errors in Enemy at the Gates are far too numerous to go so into here.
The notion that the war on the eastern Front was won through human wave assaults is a fallacy perpetuated during the cold war. There were instances when attacks, like the one depicted in the fore mentioned film took place, but they were rare, and generally punitive in nature (e.g. if a unit retreated without orders, they would be ordered to retake positions at all costs).
A lot of the basis for the myth that the Soviets won the war by throwing "hords" of infantry at the Germans comes from German accounts of the period. Our traditional view of the Soviet army in the West is that of a clunky, unsophisticated rabble, however, at the strategic level, time and time again the Soviets out foxed the Axis with large tactical troop movements.
The pincher attack in the Caucuses that cutoff 6th Panzer Army was carried off by pulling troops off the line throughout the rest of the front, took months to build up, and went undetected by Axis intelligence; in the wake of the successful encirclement the German high command was left with the impression that the Soviets had overwhelmed them with numbers when, in actuality, the Soviets had bluffed them in other areas in order to establish a localized superiority of force. . .