Originally posted by Darius871
- Just so you know, the Russians only won strategically in Mongolia. The Kwangtung Army went back to Manchuria, and the conflict was over. Tactically, however, the scores were almost even, with 8,629 Japanese dead and 7,974 Russians dead. It was an stalemate man-to-man, but the Japanese were not prepared for total war so they withdrew. This was not a complete rollover for Zhukov.
- Just so you know, the Russians only won strategically in Mongolia. The Kwangtung Army went back to Manchuria, and the conflict was over. Tactically, however, the scores were almost even, with 8,629 Japanese dead and 7,974 Russians dead. It was an stalemate man-to-man, but the Japanese were not prepared for total war so they withdrew. This was not a complete rollover for Zhukov.
It was complete defeat for Imperial army, not some kind of stalemate. This conflict showed- Japanese tanks and planes were light years behind Soviet. Japanese tank "Ha-go" (sp?) was nowhere near in compare with even light Soviet tanks of BT series. It has no radio, commander was also a driver and the guy who reload gun, it has very weak armor- only 12 mm, it couldn't protect tank from anything except bullets, very weak main weapon- its 37mm canon could penatrate 22mm armor of Soviet BT-7 only from distance closer then 300 meters, while 45mm canon of BT-7 could easily penatrte Ha-5 armor from distance of 1000 meters. Soviet aviation gave a good lesson to Japanese. The introduction of first air-to-air rockets had devastating impact on morale of Japanese pilots. They didn't knew what could cause such destruction and thought that Soviets invented some kind of huge cannon. Since May 15 up to Sept. 15 Japan lost 646 planes, Soviets lost 207 planes. Guess who ruled the skies?
Soviets were outnumbered, but had twice more tanks.
And it was the DEFEAT for IJA, not stalemate. My sources tells me that Japanese lost 61 000 (not 8 629 as yours) while combined Soviets+Mongolia forces lost 18 500.
Considering that Japanese lost 61 000 out of 132 000 (almost a half) soldiers they had there, and lost more then 3 times more then Soviets lost, retreated and asked for peace, I don't see how anybody could call it a stalemate.
- Not only would the Russians have less troops to fight with in summer 1941 thanks to Germany, but meanwhile the Japanese forces they would face had increased from 1939 to 1941. There would have been even more after the decison for war was made, as troops from home garrisons and China would be ordered to Manchuria. I estimate that the total troops they could muster for the attack would be around 1.5 million men. Considering the huge damage Germany made with a well-mechanized force of 3.5 million, I reckon 1.5 million Japanese with poor to moderate mechanization would at least stand a chance against less forces than Germany faced.
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