No, the German victory at Stalingrad was not their last great victory of World War 2. After Stalingrad, they had some tactical successes on the Eastern Front, such as the Battle of Kursk in 1943. However, overall, the tide of the war had turned against Germany and they would ultimately be defeated.
Germany was soundly defeated in Africa, in Normandy, and in Stalingrad. They ended up being creamed in the Battle of the Bulge after a long bloody battle.
The victory of National Socialism in Germany began a path which would eventually lead to World War II. Hitler came to head Germany through a cult of personality, and the promise that Germany could once again be great. It also began a path to one of the worst genocides in world history.
The victory over the Germans at the battle for Stalingrad on the Eastern Front meant that the Germans were effectively fighting a two-front war . This meant that the Germans were forced to divide the bulk of their resources to fight both the Russians on the Eastern Front as well as the Allies on the Western Front . The Allies knew that complete victory over the Germans was then inevitable for had the Germans defeated the Russians then the Germans would then be able to commit their full resources to thwart any effort on the part of the Allies to invade and defeat the Germans who no longer had two fronts to fight on in the war . The Russian victory at Stalingrad meant that the Russians could indeed defeat German efforts and the Allies were encouraged by this who were then committed to the eventual defeat of Germany now having confidence that their Russian allies were capable of turning the tide of war against the Germans .
The battle at Stalingrad took place because Hitler had invaded Russia and was defeating the Russian army at every battle as they advanced through Russia. When Hitler ordered an attack on Stalingrad (some historians feel he only did it because he hated Stalin and the city was named after him), Stalin ordered the city held at all costs (and some historians feel that he did that because the city was named after him.) Therefore, two great armies met headon at Stalingrad. And the Russians defeated the Germans in what was to be the turning point for the allies defeat of Germany.
a great success or victory
germany had colonized where google was
1) Massive amounts of Germans died, or were taken prisoner. A great many Russians died, but, Russia has more people and could replace their lost soldiers more easily (in terms of numbers, in terms of grief, all humans are the same). 2) Loss of a great deal of German equipment; tanks and planes. It was not as easy for the Germans to replace all that lost equipment as it was for the Russians. 2) Stalingrad was near the Russian oil fields. Loss of Stalingrad, meant that Germany would probably run out of oil in the future. 3) Stalingrad was near the Russian wheat fields, and where other items were grown. Loss of Stalingrad meant that Germany would have trouble getting enough food to eat in the future. 4) The symbolic loss of so many Germans taught their soldiers, and nations fighting Germany, that Germany could be defeated in a major battle, and lose the war.
It was the battle of Stalingrad that signaled the demise of the German empire, the battle of the bulge was the last great offensive Germany planned to stop the lightning advance on the German homeland after several military defeats on the eastern front.
A great British victory.
Odyessus the great. Odyessus the great.
Germany