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RUSSIANS SWEEP TO EDGE OF THE CRIMEA AND ARE 22 MILES FROM ESCAPE RAIL WAY (10/31/43)
Microfilm-New York Times archives, Monterey Public Library | 10/31/43 | Frank L. Kluckhohn, Ralph Parker, Louther S. Horne, Sidney Shalett, Edward Streeter

Posted on 10/31/2013 4:19:08 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson

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THE NEWS OF THE WEEK IN REVIEW

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TOPICS: History
KEYWORDS: milhist; realtime; worldwarii
Free Republic University, Department of History presents World War II Plus 70 Years: Seminar and Discussion Forum
First session: September 1, 2009. Last date to add: September 2, 2015.
Reading assignment: New York Times articles delivered daily to students on the 70th anniversary of original publication date. (Previously posted articles can be found by searching on keyword “realtime” Or view Homer’s posting history .)
To add this class to or drop it from your schedule notify Admissions and Records (Attn: Homer_J_Simpson) by freepmail. Those on the Realtime +/- 70 Years ping list are automatically enrolled. Course description, prerequisites and tuition information is available at the bottom of Homer’s profile. Also visit our general discussion thread.
1 posted on 10/31/2013 4:19:08 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
Selections from West Point Atlas for the Second World War
Soviet Summer and Fall Offensives: Operations, 17 July-1 December 1943
Allied Advance to Volturno River, Reorganization, and Attack on Gustav Line (17 January-11 May 1944)
The Far East and the Pacific, 1941: Status of Forces and Allied Theater Boundaries, 2 July 1942
India-Burma, 1942: Allied Lines of Communication, 1942-1943
South Pacific Operations: Advance to bougainville, 27 October-15 December 1943
New Guinea and Alamo Force Operations: Clearing the Huon Peninsula and Securing the Straits, 19 September 1943-26 April 1944
Cartwheel, the Seizure of the Gilberts and Marshalls, and Concurrent Air and Naval Operations, 30 June 1943-26 April 1944
2 posted on 10/31/2013 4:19:54 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
The first excerpt is continued from yesterday.

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Winston S. Churchill, Closing the Ring

3 posted on 10/31/2013 4:20:28 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: r9etb; PzLdr; dfwgator; Paisan; From many - one.; rockinqsranch; 2banana; henkster; meandog; ...
Genichesk Seized – 2-3
Red Army Cracks Nazi Line in Center – 3
The Nazis Picture Their Retreat in Russia (photo) – 3
Mondragone Falls – 4-5
Swiss Say Nazis Confine Mussolini – 5
War News Summarized – 5
Allies Increasing Hold on Solomons (Kluckhohn) – 6
The Texts of the Day’s Communiques on the War – 7-8
Eisenhower Seen as Chief of Staff – 8
The New Head of the British Commandos (photo) – 8

The News of the Week in Review
The Russian Army Drives to Trap the Nazis (map) – 9
The Fronts – 10-11
Twenty News Questions – 12
Russians Threaten Foe Everywhere (Parker) – 13
Midwest Kindly to Moscow Parley (Horne) – 13
“Something Hard to Halt” – 14
Allied Drives Point toward Rome (map) – 15
Driving Nazis from Italy a Tough Job for Allies (Shalett) – 16
Air Blows Herald Pacific Attacks (Kluckhohn) – 17-18
The Pacific War Grows in Intensity (map) – 18
Answers to Twenty News Questions – 19

The New York Times Book Review
“Here is Your War,” by Ernie Pyle (by Edward Streeter, first-time contributor) – 20-23
The Best Selling Books, Here and Elsewhere – 23

4 posted on 10/31/2013 4:21:27 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

http://www.onwar.com/chrono/1943/oct1943/f31oct43.htm

Red Army cuts land link to Crimea
Sunday, October 31, 1943 www.onwar.com

On the Eastern Front... Soviet forces capture Chaplinka, thereby cutting all the railroad lines leading to the Crimean. Substantial German forces in the Crimea must now be supplied by sea.

In Italy... The British 10th Corps (part of the US 5th Army) captures Teano in attacks toward Monte Santa Croce. Meanwhile, the US 6th Corps attacks Monte Massico.

In the Solomon Islands... The US 2nd Marine Parachute Battalion on Choiseul continue to engage Japanese forces. This is a diversion from the intended attack on Bougainville.


5 posted on 10/31/2013 4:24:50 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

http://www.etherit.co.uk/month/thismonth/31.htm

October 31st, 1943 (SUNDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: Frigates HMS Rupert and Stockham launched.

Frigate HMS Conn commissioned.

FRANCE: USAAF Twelfth Air Force B-17 Flying Fortresses bomb the Antheor Railroad Viaduct on the French-Italian border a few miles east of St Raphael.

GERMANY: During the night of 31 October/1 November, RAF Bomber Command sends 17 Mosquitos to bomb four cities: six hit Emden, four each bomb Cologne and Oberhausen and three attack Dusseldorf. One aircraft is lost.

U-772 is launched.

U.S.S.R.: The German access to the Crimea is cut as the advancing Soviets capture Chaplinka.

Moscow: Britain, the US and the Soviet Union today pledged themselves to work together for peace after the defeat of the Axis powers. A new United Nations organization will be created and national armaments will be controlled by agreement.

The three foreign ministers, Eden, Cordell Hull and Molotov, agreed to set up a three-power commission in London to consider European issues as the end of the war against Nazi Germany draws near. Austria’s independence will be restored.

Moscow: General Tolbukhin, the commander of the Fourth Ukrainian Front, has captured Chaplinka, 15 miles north of Perekop, which guards the north-western entrance to the Crimea. With the main road cut and the railway under fire, this means that the Germans in the Crimea are virtually cut off by land from the rest of their forces in Russia. It is estimated that there are about 150,000 German and Romanian troops occupying the Crimea, plus the bulk of the Seventeenth Army which has been withdrawn from Taman across the Keren Straits.

They are all now in danger of being left behind as the Russians push forward along the Black Sea towards Kherson. The Germans enjoy one great advantage, however, their navy rules the Black Sea, with the Russians too fearful of Stuka attacks to risk their ships.

While this remains the case Hitler is unlikely to sanction an early evacuation on the grounds that the divisions still in the Crimea will tie down major Russian forces to guard against an attack in their rear. This reasoning does not please Field Marshal von Kleist, who would rather get his men, guns and tanks to safety.

U-24 sank Soviet minesweeper SKA-088.

YUGOSLAVIA: Eleven USAAF Twelfth Air Force P-40s bomb and strafe a tanker off Split leaving it burning.

ITALY: Teano is captured as the British X Corps advances towards Monte Santa Croce.

The U.S. Fifth Army takes control of the Italian 1st Motorized Group.In the British X Corps area, while the 7th Armoured and 46th Divisions continue attacks on Mt. Massico and Mt. St. Croce, the 56th Division, on the Corps right flank, takes Teano. In the VI Corps area, some elements of the 34th Division reach Fontegreca while others occupy Ciorlano, on the slopes of La Croce Hill.

The Germans have lost their Italian allies; but they have the rain on their side, a steady remorseless deluge that turns the small fordable rivers of summer into fierce-flowing torrents and makes every mountain track a treacherous quagmire.

The infantry have the worst of it. Supplies are plentiful in the rear echelons, but for the men in the frontline of this campaign, life has become a matter of finding shelter in a slit trench or gully and eating “nourishing” K-rations or bully beef cold from the tin. Hot meals are no more than a memory for thousands. And the Germans are fighting a skilled defensive battle with the aid of their new ally. Bridges are demolished, culverts are mined and booby traps are everywhere. Villages are flattened to deny shelter to the Allies.

The advance continues, however, but at a desperately slow speed. Earlier this month, the US Fifth Army managed to cross the Volturno river under an artillery barrage and smoke screen. By 14 October, a four-mile-deep bridgehead had been established. In the east, General Montgomery paused to regroup the Eighth Army; as he did so, four German divisions moved up to oppose him.

In the British Eighth Army’s XIII Corps area, Cantalupo falls to the 5th Division. .

USAAF Twelfth Air Force B-26 Marauders hit Anzio; B-25 Mitchells attack docks and shipping at Civitavecchia; and P-38 Lightnings strafe and bomb Tirana airfield. .

During the night of 31 October/1 November, 27 RAF bombers of No. 205 (Heavy Bomber) Group attack Perugia Airfield, 2.3 miles (3,7 kilometers) north of Batia; two bombers are lost.

BURMA: In an attempt to knock out the Japanese base from which fighters are attacking ferrying operations, USAAF Tenth Air Force P-40s carrying 1,000-pound (454 kilogram) bombs fly four strikes against Myitkyina; following the bomb runs, the fighters strafe antiaircraft positions; the attacks cause considerable damage to the base. B-25 Mitchells attack the Meza railroad bridge, scoring hits on the approaches but missing the structure; the bridge remains unusable due to damage caused by the 10 October strike.

BISMARCK ARCHIPELAGO: USAAF Fifth Air Force P-40s sink a barge off the New Britain Island coast.

SOLOMON ISLANDS: Over 20 USAAF Thirteenth Air Force B-25 Mitchells, with fighter support, bomb Kara Airfield in southern Bougainville Island.

PACIFIC OCEAN: 0600 hours: Submarine USS Gabilan (SS-252) sinks small patrol craft at 32-50 N, 134-21 E off Murotosaki.

0900 hours: Submarine USS Guitarro (SS-363) sinks an armed cargo ship and two cargo ships at 15-15 N, 119-56 E. (Skip Guidry)

LT Hugh D. O’Neill of VF (N)-75 destroys a Japanese aircraft during night attack off Vella Lavella in first kill by a radar-equipped night fighter of the Pacific Fleet.

Admiral Richmond K. Turner, commander of Amphibious Force Pacific Fleet and the Northern Attack Force (Task Force 52), begins rehearsals for Operation GALVANIC the invasion of the Gilbert Islands, off Hawaii.

Task Force 31 units rendezvous west of Guadalcanal, then sail for Bougainville in the Solomon Islands. Japanese airfields on southern Bougainville are now unserviceable.

CANADA: Minesweeper HMCS Chedabucto declared a constructive total loss. Lost in a collision with the cable vessel Lord Kelvin 30 miles off Rimouski, Province of Quebec. One officer was lost with the ship.

U.S.A.:

Destroyer USS Irwin launched.

Destroyer escorts USS Bowers, Stern and Swearer launched.

Submarine USS Sea Lion launched.

Destroyer minelayer USS Gwin laid down.

The escort aircraft carrier USS Tripoli (CVE-64) is commissioned at Astoria, Oregon. The USN now has 29 CVEs in commission.

Destroyer escorts USS Spangler and George commissioned.

Minesweeper USS Candid commissioned.

ATLANTIC OCEAN: U-584 (Type VIIC) is sunk in the North Atlantic, about 662 nautical miles north-northeast of the Azores, at position 49.14N, 31.55W, by a Mk. 24 Fido acoustic homing torpedo from three TBF Avengers of Composite Squadron Nine (VC-9) of the US escort carrier USS Card (CVE-11). All 53 crewmen are lost. (Previously, in June 1942, U-584 had landed a saboteur team of 4 men on the shores just south of Jacksonville, Florida; one of two such teams that landed within a week of each other on the US east coast. The boat then returned safely to Brest on 22 July.)

U-732 (Type VIIC) is sunk in the mid-Atlantic near Tangier, about 8 nautical miles north-northwest of the Tangier Zone at position 35.54N, 05.52W, by depth charges from the British anti-submarine trawler HMS Imperialist (FY 126) and the destroyer Douglas (D 90). 31 dead, 18 survivors. The surface vessels are escorting slow convoy MKS-28 (Mediterranean to U.K.) and SL-138 (Sierra Leone to U.K.)

U-306 (Type VIIC) is sunk in the North Atlantic about 533 nautical miles north-northeast of the Azores, at position 46.19N, 20.44W, by depth charges from the British destroyer HMS Whitehall (D 94) and the corvette HMS Geranium (K 16). 51 dead (all crew lost). (Alex Gordon)

U-262 sank SS Hallfried in Convoy SL-138.

U-68 sank SS New Columbia.

In the Caribbean Sea, USN non-rigid airship (blimp) K 94, en route from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to San Juan, Puerto Rico, catches fire and crashes 35 miles north of Cape Borinquen, Puerto Rico.

GLOBAL: Despite, or perhaps because of, the increasingly sophisticated savagery of the war that now encircles the globe, medical treatments are being developed to halt diseases and infections of all kinds.

Countless lives are being saved by a new wonder drug known as penicillin. This is a type of mould, commonly found on old bread, which destroys a host of bacteria. It was discovered by accident by the Scottish scientist Alexander Fleming in 1928, but its crucial healing ingredient was only isolated in 1940. Now the drug is being given to war casualties by the thousand. One of its most valuable properties is to combat blood poisoning from infected wounds. Inoculations are also being widely used to prevent the spread of the disease.

In Germany there is a national institute working on ways of curbing infections such as typhus which reached epidemic proportions in the 1914-18 war. It Italy the use of the drug atebrine against malaria has reduced mortality by as much as 70% in some areas. Training for medical workers has also reduced the number of dead. While battle goes on around them, doctors crawl out to injured men to give them blood transfusions.


6 posted on 10/31/2013 4:26:33 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

October 31, 1943:


"A gruesome mound of burnt bodies testifies to the mass murder that occurred at Maly Trostinets, near Minsk in Belorussia.
With the liquidation of the Minsk Ghetto in late October 1943, more than 2000 Jews were transported to Maly Trostinets to meet their deaths.
In all, tens of thousands of Jews were executed at this site."



7 posted on 10/31/2013 5:29:05 AM PDT by BroJoeK (a little historical perspective....)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

The Southern Russian front isn’t retreating, it’s a full-blown rout. Things are still stable in the North, but there are no reserves left in the South, having been used up at Kursk, or diverted to Italy.

The Romanian and Hungarian Armies have been ARGELY destroyed, although some severely understrength Romanian Units are still fighting in Crimea. I read in an article that at one point in October, the entire southern front could muster just 33 tanks of all types, against the thousands of advancing Soviet tanks.

Though the Soviets are almost beyond their logistics right now, the only effective German organization in the entire south at this point is 4th Panzer, operating around Kiev, and the units trapped in Crimea.


8 posted on 10/31/2013 11:00:13 AM PDT by tcrlaf (Well, it is what the Sheeple voted for....)
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To: BroJoeK

“A gruesome mound of burnt bodies testifies to the mass murder that occurred at Maly Trostinets, near Minsk in Belorussia.”

Oskar Dirlewanger and his crew at work, yet again...

This guy was the real deal, a pedophile sadist that reveled at killing and butchering people, sometimes even his own men, made up of the worst of the worst of Germany’s criminals, and Russian Hiwi’s, who hated the Communist-supporting Jews as much or more than the Himmler did.

Dirlewanger didn’t really “hate” the Jewish People, it just gave him an excuse to partake in his favorite activities, including child-rape, then injecting them with strychnine so he could watch them convulse and die, while he was getting his jollies. This guy reveled in blood and death, always leading his troops from the front, being wounded many times, and personally murdering anyone that didn’t follow his orders.

Even the Germans hated this guy, but he had patrons high-up in the SS, some of whom enjoyed his same taste for young girls. And his unit was highly “effective” in the field, especially in anti-partisan work, which kept his German Army foes at bay.

His troops will “save the day” in Warsaw during the ghetto rebellion, after the Russian Liberation Army falls apart, and Himmler orders its General executed.


9 posted on 10/31/2013 11:29:56 AM PDT by tcrlaf (Well, it is what the Sheeple voted for....)
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To: tcrlaf

Ever since the Germans called off Citadelle, the Soviets have been on the attack in southern Ukraine. For most of July and August, the German southern armies fought hard and gave ground grudgingly. The Soviet press releases like to boast of the German “body counts” but never mention their own losses. By western standards, those losses have been staggering. The Wehrmacht is quite adept at killing Soviet soldiers. But Stalin has developed a core of brutal generals who don’t care about casualties so long as they can preserve their army in being.

How are they doing this? There is a reason the Soviet press accounts like to trumpet how they have liberated “inhabited localities” and trumpet how they freed civilians from the Germans who would have shipped them to the west. If those “liberated inhabitants” are men between 15 and 45, they are getting a scrap of uniform, a weapon, at best a few days’ “training,” some vodka and then sent to the front to extract their revenge on the fascist invaders. Yes, they are motivated to kill Germans. But they aren’t very good at it and are dying by the hundreds of thousands. So long as the Red Army keeps going to the west, those men will be replaced by the next score of “populated places” to be liberated. Thus, like the Krell monster in “Forbidden Planet,” the Red Army is being continuously destroyed only to continuously renew itself at the same time.

So even if the Germans are killing way more men than they are losing, the Soviets are replacing their losses. The Germans cannot. Now in the 5th consecutive month of ceaseless, bitter combat, the Wehrmacht has been ground down and reduced to a gutted, burned out husk. Hitler thinks the Soviets will have to stop sometime, but all those trucks that we’ve given them are being put to good use. The Red Army won’t let up for several more months, and the Germans aren’t going to get any meaningful respite.


10 posted on 10/31/2013 1:50:03 PM PDT by henkster (Communists never negotiate.)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson; henkster

The article on Pacific air power affirms your position, henkster, that it dictated our moves during WWII.


11 posted on 10/31/2013 5:40:30 PM PDT by colorado tanker
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To: colorado tanker; henkster
If the Japanese navy won't accept fleet action . . .

As I understand it that is one thing the U.S. doesn't have to worry about. The crux of the Japanese strategy is to entice the Americans into the great all-out battle in which the IJN will destroy the U.S. fleet, rendering the home islands impervious to further assault.

12 posted on 10/31/2013 6:29:43 PM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: colorado tanker

It dictated Japanese decisions too. Ever since the disaster of the Battle of the Bismarck Sea back in February, they will never again send a convoy of merchant ships into range of American air power.


13 posted on 10/31/2013 6:58:09 PM PDT by henkster (Communists never negotiate.)
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