The naziz were halted because they were supposed to fight on the spring date they had finalled that is spring 1941 but they fought in winter.....another reason is that there were some problems in the baltc states
The major factor for the faltering of the German advance would be the lack of supplies and winter gear due to the German's long supply lines. Another would be the "tenacity" of the Russian defenders and by "tenacity" I mean the use of human wave tactics and snipers.
The major factor for the faltering of the German advance would be the lack of supplies and winter gear due to the German's long supply lines. Another would be the "tenacity" of the Russian defenders and by "tenacity" I mean the use of human wave tactics and snipers.
Rivers.
sending a warning to the Soviet Union sending a warning to the soviet union
mile climate conditions
The major factor for the faltering of the German advance would be the lack of supplies and winter gear due to the German's long supply lines. Another would be the "tenacity" of the Russian defenders and by "tenacity" I mean the use of human wave tactics and snipers.
The major factor for the faltering of the German advance would be the lack of supplies and winter gear due to the German's long supply lines. Another would be the "tenacity" of the Russian defenders and by "tenacity" I mean the use of human wave tactics and snipers.
Numerous ways. The Soviet Union was a major factor in WWII. Early in the war in Europe, Adolph Hitler and Germany maintained a commitment to avoiding a confrontation with the Soviet Union. This would change as it became evident to the German command that an eastern front was inevitable. Germany then launched an attack on the Soviet empire and even on Russia itself. This was a huge burden on the German fighting machine, and the commitment drew huge amounts of resources away from the German fighting effort in Western Europe and in other areas of the world such as North Africa.
the Nile
The German advance into the Soviet Union begun on June 22, 1941 was stopped before the Germans could seize Moscow or Leningrad. The German advance was stopped by a combination of factors, with the weather (snow) being the one cause most cited. However, three other significant factors are also relevant to the failure of the German Army.The first of these factors was the German failure to prepare for a long campaign that would go beyond September 1941. They had insufficient logistical support (transport vehicles, aircraft & equipment), insufficient amounts of ammunition, winter clothing & replacement troops & equipment, infrastructure (roads & rail lines) & great land distances to cover from the German start positions to the outer reaches of the German advance. Hitler believed that the Soviet Union could be defeated easier than France. Hitler & his Generals had no clear view of what would be required to defeat Stalin.The second factor, especially for the advance towards Moscow, was the loss of German offensive momentum caused by German losses, the shortage of mobile units, and the overstretched German Armies at the front. Even without the advent of cold & snow the German Panzer units were too weak to seize & hold Moscow. Seizure of a major city requires large numbers of infantry troops, which the Germans did not have near Moscow by December 1941.The third factor was the last-minute arrival of veteran Soviet reinforcements coming from Siberia. Earlier these Soviet troops had been on the Siberian border with Manchuria watching the Japanese Army & preventing Japanese border incursions. In November 1941, Stalin learned from his spies in Japan, that Japan was not going to help Hitler with an attack into Siberia from China. Instead Japan was going to launch a war against the United States, Great Britain (& Commonwealth), and the Netherlands. Ironically, Hitler believing that victory over the Soviet Union was certain, urged Japan to attack Britain & the United States. This information allowed Stalin to shift much of his Siberian troops to the west to defend Moscow, starting in November 1941.
Q: Which geographic factor is most associated with the decline of the Indus Valley civilizations?A: Isolation from other civilizations
Q: Which geographic factor is most associated with the decline of the Indus Valley civilizations?A: Isolation from other civilizations
Monsoons
Hot weather.
Oil
the geographic factor that is most in fluential to a places economy is transportation because transportation let's people in an economy travel to different place's.
Rivers.