1st Edition

The Value of Human Life in Soviet Warfare

By Amnon Sella Copyright 1992
    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    252 Pages
    by Routledge

    This is a key question for all Western military strategists. If the Soviets are indeed willing to tolerate high human sacrifice in warfare this obviously puts them at a military advantage. The perceived wisdom, hitherto, is that the Soviets are indeed willing to tolerate high casualties in battle - this, initial, view is reinforced by myths about Stalin clearing minefields by marching penal battalions across them.

    Professor Sella, however, comes to a different conclusion. He surveys Soviet attitudes to the military-medical service; to its own prisoners of war; and to the ethos of fighting to the death, considering how attitudes have changed from Czarist times to the present. He concludes that the Soviets are less ready to tolerate massive sacrifices than has been supposed; but that this position stems as much from utilitarian-military logic as from compassion.

    Chapter 1 The Soviet Military Medical Service; Chapter 2 The performance of the Service during the Great Patriotic War; Chapter 3 The Soviet attitude to POWs; Chapter 4 Fighting at all costs; Chapter 5 Conclusion: the value of human life in Soviet warfare;

    Biography

    Amnon Sella is Head of the Leonard Davis Institute for International Relations and Associate Professor of International Relations and Russian Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He has published three books and over twenty papers on Soviet military and strategic questions.

    `Amnon Sella's thoughtful monograph traces several strands in an attempt to assess the role the individual played in Soviet military art, from the evolution of the Military Medical Service, through to attitudes towards PoWs... what is being plotted is the development of Russian military culture, attitudes and assumptions still very much in the hearts of commanders in Moscow. A book for the specialist, certainly, but not just the historian.' - Jane's Intelligene Review