

Knowledge of the operation was severely limited to the five or six officers working on the plan. Planning for the Belorussian Offensive, as Bagration is also known, began in the spring of 1944. In turn, Stalin promised to support this operation by launching a massive strategic offensive of his own. Churchill and Roosevelt informed Stalin that they intended to open the long-awaited second front by landing in France in May 1944. Many subjects of great importance were covered at this conference, the most important being their agreement to orchestrate future operations against Germany in 1944. The political scene for the Soviet 1944 Summer Offensive was set at the meeting between Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin at Tehran in December 1943. But Bagration was too large and important to ignore or minimize. These have received the preponderance of attention while the near destruction of three German army groups on the Eastern Front has been relegated to a few paragraphs or pages in the more popular accounts of the war in the East. It took place at a time when the Western Allies were still engaged in Operation Overlord––the fighting in Normandy’s hedgerow country inland from the beaches––the landings in southern France, the dash across France, and the ongoing struggle in Italy. A few very recent books may be an indication that its importance is finally beginning to be recognized. While it dwarfed all other operations, it lacked a dramatic and popular focal point like Normandy, Stalingrad, or Leningrad––which have been written about more extensively. Operation Bagration, the largest operation of World War II, has never been adequately acknowledged in the West to the same extent as a number of smaller campaigns.

Something like Bagration was beyond the capabilities of the Western Allies not just because of its scale but also the tactical and operational knowledge the Soviets had accumulated over three years of the most intense war theater ever fought Along with the later Vistula-Oder and August Storm offensives Bagration represented the height of Red Army’s prowess which by now was by some distance the most powerful land army in the world and capably-led and highly-experienced in combined arms operations.
