In late January 1942, Paulus appealed to Hitler for permission to surrender rather than risk annihilation. “Sixth Army will hold their position to the last man and the last round,” the Nazi leader replied, “and by their heroic endurance will make an unforgettable contribution toward the establishment of a defensive front and the salvation of the Western World.”
On January 31, 1943, Paulus left behind the waist-high excrement in his battered headquarters in the heart of Stalingrad and surrendered to the Soviets. When Hitler heard news, the often-volatile Führer stared silently into his soup.
US Lend-Lease Program Aids Soviet Victory
The German public was not officially told of the catastrophic defeat until the end of January 1943. Hitler was so rocked by the disaster that on the 10th anniversary of the Nazis’ assumption of power in Germany on January 30, he didn’t deliver his usual radio speech. Propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels gave the speech instead.
Besides the mind-numbing human toll of Stalingrad, the Germans lost 900 aircraft, 500 tanks and 6,000 artillery pieces. With Soviet factories outproducing the Germans, the losses were impossible for the Nazis to make up.
As the tide turned, the Soviets benefited from Lend-Lease aid from America. “If the United States had not helped us, we would not have won the war," wrote future Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, who aided in the defense of Stalingrad (Volgograd today). "One-on-one against Hitler's Germany, we would not have withstood its onslaught and would have lost the war.”
At the Battle of Kursk in July 1943, the Soviets suffered at least 800,000 casualties to the Germans’ 200,000. But the Red Army’s costly victory put the Nazis on the defensive for the remainder of the war.
Meanwhile, in North Africa in late 1942, combined British, American and French forces also took the offensive against the Nazis. The Allies’ June 1944 invasion at Normandy pushed the Germans from France and eventually from Western Europe.
On November 9, 1944, with the Soviets on the doorstep of the Reich in Eastern Europe, Hitler blamed Stalingrad for Nazi’s Germany's impending demise.
As the Red Army marched across Eastern Europe, Soviet soldiers vowed to lay waste to Berlin as the Germans had Stalingrad.