“Book Descriptions: On June 22, 1941, Hitler invaded the Soviet Union, a country with which he had signed a nonaggression pact two years earlier but which always was a target in his ideological and racial plans. This invasion, Operation Barbarossa, opened the Eastern Front and fundamentally changed World War II. Within six months - in early December 1941 - the German invasion had bogged down at the gates of Moscow, and within four years, the Eastern Front proved to be the decisive theater in the war against the Third Reich. The outcome has always colored analysis of Hitler's decision to launch Barbarossa, and most historians have agreed that this was one of Hitler's great mistakes. In Hitler's Great Gamble, James Ellman argues that Barbarossa was a gamble, but that it was not doomed from the start: that it was a reasonable gamble spoiled not by strategic shortsightedness, but diplomatic setbacks and tactical execution.
In Ellman's recounting, the invasion of the Soviet Union was not a doomed act of madness or hubris, but a logical gamble that maximized the Third Reich's attempts at achieving its war aims, however perverted, of "living space" and subjugating the Slavs. Had Finland and Japan made good on their alliance with Germany - had Hitler been more committed to diplomacy and not military invasion - Germany might well have succeeded in defeating the Soviet Union and, perhaps, winning World War II. Drawing on a wealth of primary and secondary sources (including many recently released), Hitler's Great Gamble is a provocative work that will appeal to a wide cross-section of World War II buffs, enthusiasts, and historians.” DRIVE