Only real source I can find for this mentions it as a single incident:
“By 12 March, when the 204th Airborne Brigade began to cross into German territory, it came under intense small-arms fire, punctuated by artillery. The German actions inflicted heavier and heavier casualties as the missions continued over the next few nights. The Germans also noted the flight of Soviet transport aircraft into areas behind their own lines, evidently dropping supplies to the advancing airborne groups. Some troops without parachutes were also dropped during the course of the operations. Slow-flying U-2 biplanes would skim close to the ground, and the paratroopers would leap off into deep snowdrifts. The first major attack occurred on 15 March when the garrison at Maloye Opuevo was overrun by about twelve hundred paratroopers from the 1st and 204th Airborne Brigades.”
Perfect, deep snow to ice your bruises and broken bones. That’s extremely efficient.
“Is not bad, tovarisch. Snow makes it hurt less.”
“By cushioning the fall, right?”
“…”
“… by cushioning the fall, right…?”
Slow-flying U-2 biplanes would skim close to the ground, and the paratroopers would leap off into deep snowdrifts.
Were their experiments successful?
The source I found doesn’t specify other than that it happened, so I can only assume at least some of them successfully survived the landing lmao
we got about a couple million of these guys, we can surely afford to cripple a couple hundered
Look man, it was the 30s. No one knew how anything works and everyone was on benzedrine
We’ll say the same in 100 years about shit we do today.
Look man, it was the 20s. No one knew how anything worked and everyone was on horse ketamine and antidepressants
From the army who brought you “retreat and be killed”
Also, 1 gun per 2-3 man squad. You were to pick up the rifle of the person in front when they died.
This is a popular myth, but has little-to-no basis in reality. The Soviets had plenty of rifles to equip their infantry with.
Wasn’t it in the history of the Russian sniper from that time?
It is from the movie Enemy At the Gates, which is at best, not very historically accurate.