Guest Historian Chris Oakley says, thank you for visiting TIAH. This timeline attempts to portray
what might have happened if Nazi Germany and Communist Russia had
attacked each other simultaneously in June of 1941. If you're interested in viewing samples of my other work why not visit the Changing the Times web site.
| July 3 | ![]() |
On this day in 1941, Joseph Stalin addressed the Soviet people in a radio speech from the Kremlin in which he boasted that Germany would be crushed by the Red Army in six months. 'We will bury you, Herr Hitler' he said, and with Soviet armor and infantry divisions advancing at a brisk and steady pace towards the eastern bank of the Bug River there was little reason to doubt Stalin on that score. | |
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July 6
On this day in 1941, the Red Army suffered its first major defeat in the war between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union as German troops captured the historic city of Brest-Litovsk. | |
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July 9
On this day in 1941, Adolf Hitler stunned the world by unilaterally declaring a cease-fire with Great Britain and announcing that all German occupation forces would be withdrawn from France and the Low Countries within 30 days. Publicly he described it as a goodwill gesture aimed at laying the foundation for a lasting peace between Germany and Britain. In fact, it was a means to free up troops in the west to be transferred to the east to shore up his army's battlefront in Russia. | |
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July 11
On this day in 1941, the Red Army began its campaign to retake Brest-Litovsk from the Wehrmacht. | |
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July 12
On this day in 1941, Adolf Hitler said that he was granting political asylum to former Vichy French leader Pierre Laval, who had fled to Germany within hours after the Fuhrer announced his impending withdrawal of German troops from France. | |
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July 8
On this day in 1941, German troops began evacuating Denmark as part of Hitler's plan to shore up his strained Russian battlefront; also on this day, Soviet fighters bombed Wehrmacht advance positions near Brest-Litovsk. | |
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July 16
On this day in 1941, German troops began a two-pronged push into Lithuania. | |
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July 20
On this day in 1941, anti-Soviet Lithuanian rebels acting with the encouragement of Nazi Germany seized control of Lithuania's capital, Vilnius.                                         | |
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July 21
On this day in 1941, Nazi Germany became the first foreign power to recognize the new anti-Soviet government of Lithuania. | |
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July 25
On this day in 1941, the last pockets of Soviet resistance in Lithuania were crushed by German infantry and anti-Communist Lithuanian troops.                                                 | |
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July 28
On this day in 1941, the Luftwaffe bombed the Ukrainian provincial capital of Kiev into rubble. | |
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July 30
On this day in 1941, German ground forces in the Ukraine began advancing on Kiev. | |
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August 2
On this day in 1941, German and Finnish troops encircled Leningrad. | |
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August 5
On this day in 1941, the last pockets of Soviet resistance in Kiev surrendered to the Germans. | |
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October 2
On this day in 1941, deposed Soviet ruler Joseph Stalin was executed for what an official TASS bulletin described as 'conduct detrimental to the welfare of the USSR and her people'. | |
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| Joseph Stalin |
June 22
On this day in 1941, three million German soldiers crossed the Polish border in an attempt to invade the Soviet Union only to find themselves confronted by an equal number of Soviet troops seeking to enter the territory of the Third Reich. Both armies sustained massive casualties in what would later be recorded as the bloodiest and largest land campaign of the 20th century. | |
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June 23
On this day in 1941, Joseph Stalin made the formal announcement that the Soviet Union was at war with Nazi Germany.                                                                                                     | |
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June 25
On this day in 1941, Soviet warplanes bombed Berlin for the first time in World War II. | |
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June 26
On this day in 1941, German bombers raided Moscow in retaliation for the previous day's Soviet air attack on Berlin.                                                                                                   | |
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August 8
On this day in 1941, the Luftwaffe launched its famous "thousand-bomber raid" against Moscow, leaving half the city in ruins and killing a third of its population. Among the casualties: NKVD secret police chief Lavrenti Beria, who died when a German bomb scored a direct hit on his office in Dzherzinsky Square. | |
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August 12
On this day in 1941, Leningrad finally fell to German and Finnish troops after a nine-day siege. | |
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August 14
On this day in 1941, Joseph Stalin secretly ordered his cabinet to begin preparations to evacuate Moscow. That same day, the German-backed puppet government of Latvia declared its independence from the Soviet Union and joined the war on the side of the Axis powers. | |
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August 17
On this day in 1941, the sarcophagus containing the body of Communist founding father Vladimir Lenin was smuggled out of Moscow as German artillery and tanks started to bombard the Russian village of Kuvsinovo. | |
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| Lenin |
August 19
On this day in 1941, Wehrmacht and SS infantry troops in Russia seized Kuvsinovo. News of the village's fall sparked panic and riots in Moscow proper; during the riots senior Red Army commander General Georgi Zhukov disappeared, never to be seen or heard from again. | |
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| Georgi Zhukov |
August 20
On this day in 1941, the Soviet Union's already dire military situation took a sharp turn for the worse as the Imperial Japanese Army invaded Siberia. | |
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August 22
On this day in 1941, Red Army general Andrei Vlasov was summarily court-martialled and executed after authorizing one of his divison commanders to pull out of the village of Kaluga. | Red Army General |
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| Andrei Vlasov |
August 25
| Vladivostok | On this day in 1941, Japanese bombers attacked the Soviet Pacific seaport of Vladivostok, destroying at least half the Soviet navy's Pacific fleet in one fell swoop. |
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| Port Destroyed |
August 28
On this day in 1941, the Wehrmacht campaign in Russia achieved its greatest triumph to date, smashing a Red Army tank offensive near the town of Kursk. | |
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September 1
On this day in 1941, German troops in Russia captured the Moscow suburb of Strogino. | |
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September 3
| Japanese Troops | On this day in 1941, Japanese troops in Russia's Siberian territory captured the industrial city of Magadan. |
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| entering Magadan |
September 4
On this day in 1941, the last members of Joseph Stalin's cabinet were evacuated from Moscow. | |
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| Joseph Stalin |
September 7
On this day in 1941, Japanese marines in Russia captured the Bering Straits coastal town of Anadyr'. | |
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September 8
On this day in 1941, Joseph Stalin was overthrown in a military coup shortly after word reached the Soviet high command that the German army, now in control of most of Moscow's suburbs, had begun the final assault on Moscow itself. | |
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| Joseph Stalin |
September 12
| US President | On this day in 1941, in response to the Japanese capture of Anadyr' five days earlier, President of the United States Franklin Roosevelt placed all US territorial defense outposts in Alaska and Hawaii on precautionary alert and ordered a top-to-bottom review of defense readiness for US Army and Navy installations on the west coast of the American mainland. |
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| Franklin D. Roosevelt |
September 13
On this day in 1941, Red Army general Ivan Konev officially assumed the leadership of the Soviet government; in his first official act as new Soviet head of state Konev, who had let the coup which toppled Joseph Stalin's regime five days earlier, fired Vycheslav Molotov as foreign minister and brought Molotov's predecessor Maxim Livitnov. | General |
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| Ivan Konev |
September 15
On this day in 1941, the Japanese expeditionary force in Siberia was handed its first serious defeat when Soviet troops repulsed an Imperial Army attempt to seize Petropavlovsk. | |
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September 5
On this day in 1941, the Wehrmacht overran the Moscow suburb of Kotlovka, putting the Germans one huge step closer to capturing Moscow itself.                                               | |
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September 17
On this day in 1941, with Wehrmacht and SS divisions less than 40 miles from the outskirts of Moscow, Adolf Hitler inexplicably ordered a halt to the German advance in Russia. This would turn out to be as great a tactical mistake for the Third Reich on the Eastern Front as the four-day suspension of ground operations near Dunkirk in June 1940 had been on the Western Front. | |
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| Adolf Hitler |
September 21
On this day in 1941, acting CPSU First Secretary and Soviet armed forces commander-in-chief Ivan Konev ordered the Red Army to mount a multi-front attack on the German lines outside Moscow. | General |
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| Ivan Konev |
September 24
On this day in 1941, the Red Army encircled German positions near Kotlovka. | |
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| Red Army insignia |
September 27
On this day in 1941, the Red Army recaptured Kotlovka from the Germans. This marked a crucial turning point in the war on the Eastern Front and gave a much-needed boost to Soviet morale. | |
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September 30
| US President | On this day in 1941, US naval intelligence officials advised President Franklin Roosevelt that they had obtained credible evidence the Imperial Japanese Navy was planning an attack on the US Pacific Fleet's headquarters at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. |
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| Franklin D. Roosevelt |
October 4
On this day in 1941, Red Army troops in Siberia repulsed a second Japanese attempt to take Petropavlovsk. | |
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| Red Army insignia |
October 5
On this day in 1941, Soviet ground forces launched a three-column attack to retake Strogino. | |
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| Red Army insignia |
October 7
On this day in 1941, the German army unleashed a ferocious counterattack against Red Army infantry and armor divisions trying to retake Strogino.                                         | |
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October 9
| Admiral | On this day in 1941, US Pacific Fleet commander-in-chief Admiral Husband E. Kimmel got a written directive from President Roosevelt giving him full authority to take whatever measures he deemed appropriate to secure Pearl Harbor's naval base against attack. |
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| Kimmel |
October 11
On this day in 1941, the German defenses around Strogino collapsed, enabling the Red Army to retake the city. | |
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| Red Army insignia |
October 13
On this day in 1941, the Second Battle of Kursk began. | |
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October 16
On this day in 1941, the Wehrmacht defenses at Kursk collapsed as Red Army cavalry punched through the left flank of the German lines; future military historians would define this moment as the crucial turning point in the Second Battle of Kursk. | Chief of Staff |
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| Franz Halder |
Hitler blamed then-German army chief of staff Franz Halder for the collapse and sacked him even though Hitler had repeatedly overruled Halder's strategic recommendations for averting that collapse. |
October 17
| Soviet Premier | On this day in 1941, Soviet ruler Ivan Konev declared victory in the Second Battle of Kursk. |
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| Ivan Konev |
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© Today in Alternate History, 2013-. All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.





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