Which of the Soviet and German armies died more in World War II

Updated on military 2024-07-09
4 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    Soviet troops, of course.

    The Great Patriotic War, the ** figures of the USSR were very staggering, but the statistics of the parties were not the same. The recent figures released by Russia are: 10,000 military deaths (including deaths due to wounds and diseases), 500,000 deaths on the way to the front line, 10,000 deaths in the Soviet army, 17.4 million civilian deaths, and a total of 26.6 million deaths.

    The Germans (including the SS) lost about 13 million in the Soviet-German war. Among them, 3.81 million were killed, 1.8 million were captured (excluding more than 1.2 million German troops who surrendered or surrendered after May 9, 1945), and more than 7 million were wounded or sick. The final death toll was 4.18 million (including dead captives).

    The above data includes Germans in Austria, the Sudetenland, Alsace and other places (Note: other data show that before the armistice, a total of 5.3 million German prisoners were captured, of which 2.5 million were captured on the Eastern Front).

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Of course, the Soviets died a lot.

    In June 1991, the Soviet Union verified its archives and announced that 6.88 million wartime soldiers had died as a result of the war (23.35 million in total), and 8.66 million had died after being captured.

    Note that the deaths of the USSR occurred mainly in the fight against Germany, and the ** in the fight against Japan was negligible.

    German casualties in World War II (excluding prisoners and wounded): The total number of German deaths in World War II was more than 4.8 million (including dead prisoners): More than 3.7 million people (including prisoners) were killed in the war against the Soviet Union, and the others were mainly distributed in:

    150,000 in Italy, 340,000 in Western Europe, 10,000 in Africa, 50,000 in Yugoslavia, etc.

    That is, almost 8 million died in the USSR and 3.7 million in Germany, which is approximately: a death ratio of 1.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    How many people died in the USSR during WWII?

    According to statistics, a total of 26.8 million people died in the USSR during the Great Patriotic War, of which 89 million were killed by the regular army, and there is also a version of 14 million, and the number of militias greatly exceeded this figure, followed by civilians.

    The reason why there is such a big difference in the number of army deaths is mainly due to the fact that during the Great Patriotic War, many civilians and women men were temporarily integrated into the Red Army.

    So it's hard to tell whether they're regular soldiers or civilians or militia, so there's 8.9 million and 14 million.

    The West generally thinks it is 8.9 million.

    8.8 million soldiers died on the Soviet-German battlefield.

    Less than 10,000 people died on the Soviet-Japanese battlefield.

    Nearly 90,000 people died on the Soviet-Finnish battlefield.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    The Soviet Union died 26.6 million people in World War II. About 70 million people died directly in World War II, of which the Soviet Union accounted for 26.6 million of these 70 million people (from 1941 to 1945, 35% were soldiers, and the number of wounded and sick caused by the war on the Soviet side was also huge, and the cumulative number of wounded and sick among registered soldiers alone was as high as more than 18.3 million).

    The Soviets suffered heavy losses but still emerged victorious:

    During the entire Great Patriotic War, the Soviet army mobilized a total of 27 million people, 10 million were killed or missing, 18 million were wounded, and 5 million of them were disabled. At the time of the triumphant recital, only 11.36 million Soviet troops remained. However, most of the officers and soldiers from the supreme commander to the lower ranks are already experienced in combat, and their military quality surpasses that of the Germanic warriors, who were previously known as the world's leading land forces.

    The above content refers to the Encyclopedia - World War II.

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