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Stalin Line

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caught the Soviets with the new line unfinished and the Stalin Line largely abandoned and in disrepair. Neither was of much use in stopping the onslaught, though parts of the Stalin Line were manned in time and contributed to the defense of the USSR.
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further west, along the new border of the USSR. A number of Soviet generals felt that it would be better to keep both lines and to have a
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Following World War II, the line was not maintained, in part due to its wide dispersal across the USSR. Unlike
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Thus, the guns were removed, but were mostly in storage as the new line began construction. The 1941 Axis
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Barbarossa Derailed: The Battle for Smolensk, 10 July - 10 September 1941
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and gun emplacements, somewhat similar to, but less elaborate than the
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The Soviet High Command: A Military-Political History, 1918–1941
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The Stalin and Molotov Lines: Soviet Western Defences 1928–41
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Photos from "Stalin Line" Museum (Minsk Fortified District)
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KaUR (Karelskij Ukrepljenyj Rajon) - www.nortfort.ru
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Index

Stalin line

Mogilev
fortifications
Soviet Union
bunkers
Maginot Line
fortified districts
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact
Poland
Baltic
Bessarabia
Molotov Line
defence in depth
World War II

Minsk
invasion
Western Europe
Belarus
Russia
Ukraine
Moldova
KaUR
St. Petersburg
Soviet offensive plans controversy
John Erickson
ISBN
0-7146-5178-8

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