were erected to protect Vladivostok harbor in 1934. The Soviet Union asserted that its military planning against Japan during the 1930s and early 1940s was defensive in nature, intended primarily to preserve its control over the Russian Far East and communist Mongolia. The means to that end, however, would not be completely passive. Even after the German invasion and well into 1942,
Stavka advocated for an all-out defense of the border zone and heavy
counterattacks all along the front, with the objective of preventing the IJA from seizing any Soviet territory and throwing it back into Manchuria. Although the aggressive language used by
Boris Shaposhnikov in 1938 concerning "decisive action" in northern Manchuria after 45 days had by 1941 been moderated to simply "destroying the first echelon" of invaders and "creating a situation of stability," the Red Army never totally gave up limited offensive goals. The Japanese assessed that the lack of traversable terrain between the Manchurian border and the Pacific Ocean combined with the vulnerability of the Trans-Siberian Railway in the Amur and Primorye regions compelled them to take such a stance, despite investing considerable resources to fortify the area for defensive warfare. The primary Red Army forces stationed in Soviet Far East in 1941 were the
Far Eastern and
Trans-Baikal Fronts, under the command of Generals
Iosif Apanasenko and
Mikhail Kovalyov, respectively. The Trans-Baikal Front, with nine divisions (including two armored), a mechanized brigade, and a
fortified region was tasked with defending the area west of the Oldoy River near Skovorodino, and the Far Eastern Front, with 23 divisions (including three armored), four brigades (excluding antiaircraft), and 11 fortified regions was responsible for the area east of it, including the crucial seaport of Vladivostok. The two fronts together accounted for some 650,000 men, 5,400 tanks, 3,000 aircraft, 57,000 motor vehicles, 15,000 artillery pieces, and 95,000 horses. The distribution of manpower and equipment in prewar FER was as follows: ;Manpower and Materiel under Administrative Control of TBMD and FEF, 1 June 1941 By 1942, the Vladivostok Defense Sector also had some 150 artillery pieces of 75 mm to 356 mm caliber, which were organized into 50 batteries. Of these, the most numerous was the
130 mm B-13, which made up 20 batteries (90 guns). After the German invasion, Soviet forces in the Far East underwent a radical transformation. Even before the start of Operation Barbarossa, the Red Army began a steady transfer of men and materiel westward to Europe: prior to 22 June 1941, the above figures had already been reduced by five divisions, comprising 57,000 men, 670 artillery pieces, and 1,070 tanks, while from 22 June to 1 December a further 2,209 tanks were sent to the front to stem the Nazi tide. Additionally, during the same period, 13 other divisions, with 122,000 men, 2,000 guns and mortars, 1,500 tractors, and nearly 12,000 automobiles, were also detached from the Far East, along with a Japanese estimate of 1,800 aircraft. On the whole, between June 22, 1941, and May 9, 1945, a total of 344,676 men, 2,286 tanks, 4,757 guns and mortars, 11,903 motor vehicles, and 77,929 horses were removed from the Far Eastern and Trans-Baikal Fronts to bolster the desperate fighting against the
Wehrmacht, the vast majority of whom arrived before early 1943. In spite of a marked reduction in materiel power, the Soviets undertook herculean efforts to increase their troop levels in an expansion paralleling the massive Japanese buildup in Manchuria, which was easily tracked by Soviet and Chinese observers because of its sheer size. In accordance with the general mobilization ordered by the
GKO on 22 July 1941, the combined strength of the Far Eastern and Trans-Baikal Fronts was to be raised to more than 1 million by 2 August. By 20 December, the actual manpower levels had totaled 1,161,202, of whom 1,129,630 were regular officers or enlisted men and the remainder were cadets or course attendees. Additionally, the number of horses increased from 94,607 to 139,150. The expansion of active personnel was achieved in spite of the Far East's limited population base through the addition of reservists from the Ural, Central Asian, and Siberian
Military districts on top of those available locally. Furthermore, the standing strength of the NKVD and the
Soviet Navy was also increased; between 22 June and 15 November 1941, Navy manpower in the Far East under
Admiral Yumashev rose from 94,199, to 169,029, and the NKVD border troops (with a roster of just under 34,000 before the war) would, if the ratio held, have likewise increased their strength to over 60,000. Lastly there were the
Mongolians, who despite their lack of heavy weaponry had earlier proved themselves against the Japanese at the
Battles of Khalkhin Gol and would later go on to participate in the Soviet invasion of Manchuria in August 1945. They lacked the Soviets' experience and organization but numbered close to 80,000. On the whole, if war had broken out in late August or early September 1941, the Soviets and Mongolians could have called on well over a million men from Mongolia to Sakhalin to confront the Japanese. About two thirds of those personnel (including virtually the entire navy) would have been on the Amur-Ussuri-Sakhalin Front, and the remainder would have defended Mongolia and the Trans-Baikal region. Equipment was split much more evenly between the two groupings. The Soviets could thus concentrate considerably greater military power east of Lake Baikal than either Japanese or American observers gave them credit for: ;Japanese and U.S. Intelligence data on the strength of Soviet Army Forces east of Lake Baikal Even though the situation in Europe was dire, Soviet planners continued to adhere to essentially the same prewar concept for operations in FER and Manchuria, as articulated by Stavka Directive No. 170149 and 170150, which were sent to Generals Apanasenko and Kovalyov on 16 March 1942. Under this strategy, during the opening days of hostilities the Far Eastern Front (with its headquarters at Khabarovsk) together with the
Pacific Fleet was ordered to conduct an all-out defense of the border; prevent the Japanese from entering Soviet territory; and hold Blagoveshchensk, Iman (Dalnerechensk) and the entirety of Primorye "at all costs." The main defensive effort was to be mounted by the
1st and
25th Armies (the former based at Vladivostok) on a north–south axis between the Pacific Ocean and Lake Khanka, while the
35th Army would dig in at Iman. To the north, the
15th and
2nd Red Banner Armies, based at
Birobidzhan and Blagoveshchensk, would attempt to repel all Japanese assaults from the far bank of the powerful Amur River. Meanwhile, the Soviets would try to hold out on Sakhalin,
Kamchatka, and the Pacific Coast, seeking to deny the
Sea of Okhotsk to the IJN. To help aid that effort, the Red Army had for years undertaken a determined fortification program along the borders with Manchuria that involved the construction of hundreds of hardened fighting positions backed by trenches, referred to as "Tochkas" (points). There were three types of Tochkas, DOTs (permanent fire points), SOTs (disappearing fire points), and LOTs (dummy fire points). The most common form of DOT built by the Soviets in the Far East was hexagonal in shape, with an interior diameter of for the smaller bunkers and up to for larger ones. They protruded approximately above ground level, with the outer wall facing the front made of solid concrete or more thick. The backbone of the Soviet defenses, DOTs usually contained two or three machine guns; some were equipped with one or two 76 mm guns. The Soviets arranged their DOTs into belts: depending on the terrain, the strongpoints were spaced out over intervals and positioned in two to four rows deep from one another. According to Japanese intelligence, by late 1941 the Tochkas were distributed among 12
fortified regions as follows:
Fortified regions in the Amur, Ussuri, and Trans-Baikal sectors The Fortified Regions were well sited; since there were a limited number of roads crossing the hilly, forested frontier, the Soviets could be confident that each avenue of approach was covered by prepared defenses, which would have to be overcome via costly
frontal attack and thus delay the enemy forces and make them pay heavily in manpower and equipment. To counter the Tochkas, the Japanese kept considerable quantities of heavy artillery near the border, ranging from more modern
240 mm and 305 mm howitzers to the antiquated
28 cm Howitzer L/10 from the Russo-Japanese War. As an added precaution, the IJA distributed a special one-ton shell with a range of only 1,000 m to its
Type 7 30 cm Howitzers meant to pulverize an enemy strongpoint in a single hit. Despite the advantages conferred by the border terrain and Tochka belt, the Red Army did not intend on solely hunkering down and outlasting a Japanese assault. By the fifth day of war, Stavka ordered the troops of the 15th and 35th Armies (minus the
66th Rifle Division), together with the
Amur Red Banner Military Flotilla and any available reserves, to defeat the Japanese-Manchu units opposite them, force the Amur and Ussuri, and launch a counteroffensive coordinated against both sides of the
Sungari River in Manchurian territory. The final objectives of the Sungari Front groups were designated as the cities of
Fujin and Baoqing, which were to be reached on the 25th day of hostilities. The objectives of that attack were to stabilize the front and to relieve pressure on the Ussuri Railway and Khabarovsk areas. Similarly, all along the front the remaining Soviet forces would begin short counterblows "in the tactical depth," in keeping with the Soviet doctrine that defensive action cannot be successful without the coordination of position defense and counterattack. Simultaneously, on the opposite side of Manchuria, the
17th and
36th Armies of the Trans-Baikal Front (with its headquarters at Mount Shirlova in the
Yablonovy Range) were ordered to hold and counterattack after a period of three days and to advance to Lakes
Buir and
Hulun by the tenth day of the war. Undoubtedly, as a consequence of the Soviets' desperate situation at the time reinforcements from the hinterland were relatively small. Only four tank brigades, five artillery regiments, six guards mortar regiments, and five armored train battalions were allocated to both fronts put together. With the aim of supporting the Red Army's struggle on the ground, the
Soviet Air Force and Navy were also to have an active role in opposing the Japanese invasion. The foremost objective of the air force was the destruction of Japanese aircraft both in the air and on the ground, which was to be followed by tactical ground-attack missions against Japanese troops to assist the progress of the Sungari Offensive. Other objectives included the destruction of railways, bridges, and airfields in both Manchuria and Korea and the interception of both troop transports and warships in the Sea of Japan in coordination with the Pacific Fleet. Strategic bombing was to be limited to only 30
DB-3s, to be sent in groups of 8 to 10 aircraft against targets in
Tokyo,
Yokosuka,
Maizuru, and
Ominato. Concurrently, the Soviet Navy would immediately move to close the mouth of the Amur River, mine the
Tatar Strait, and defend the Pacific Coast from any potential landing, which would free up the 25th Army in Primorye from coast defense duty. Submarine patrols would begin in the
Yellow Sea, Sea of Okhotsk, and Sea of Japan with the aim of preventing the transport of troops from the Japanese Home Islands to the Asian Mainland and to disrupt their maritime communications. The Soviet submariners were ordered not to press operations against the eastern (Pacific) coast of Japan but to protect the eastern and northern shores of Sakhalin Island and .
Combatants' strengths and weaknesses was capable of outranging most Japanese pieces and fired a shell weighing 43.6 kg. Weaknesses in military industry would not have permitted the Japanese to fight an all-out modern land war for years on end. According to a study prepared just before the outbreak of the Pacific War, it was estimated that Japan's capacity to produce Army ground ordnance would reach a peak of 50
kaisenbun during the 1942 fiscal year, or enough to sustain 50 divisions for four months. In reality, annual production never surpassed 25
kaisenbun, with only 19 being produced in 1941 on top of an Army reserve of 100; total expenditures during that year amounted to 11
kaisenbun. For operations against the Soviet Union, General Tanaka believed that a supply basis of 3
kaisenbun per division was necessary and so a total of 48
kaisenbun were assigned to the 16 divisions of the Kwantung and Korea Armies during the Kantokuen buildup. If the buildup proceeded to the 24-division level, it would have meant the Japanese were effectively gambling two thirds of their ammunition stockpile on the initial blow of an open-ended war that they admitted could not be won by force of arms alone. In stark contrast to this, although the Trans-Siberian Railway imposed a limit on the size of the force the Soviets could bring to battle at any one time, their military industry as a whole,
supported by Western aid, was able to sustain a grinding four-year war against Germany to a victorious close. For its part, without a "second front" diverting the majority of Soviet resources to Europe, Japan would have been hard-pressed to supply its forces for more than two consecutive years. In addition, although their then four-year war in China had provided the Japanese with a large amount of combat experience, much of it translated only obliquely to a campaign against the Soviets, who had a firmer understanding of concepts such as massed firepower and motor-based logistics. During the Nomonhan Incident, the IJA regarded distances of 100 km as "far" and 200 trucks as "many," but Zhukov's corps of over 4,000 vehicles supplied his Army Group on a 1,400 km round trip from the nearest railheads (Zhukov himself credited the logistics to his superior
Grigory Shtern). Although both Japanese and Soviet infantry at Nomonhan were equipped with
bolt-action rifles, mortars, and light automatic weapons, Japanese artillery often found itself outranged and undersupplied against the heavy Soviet guns. Even though Japanese
counterfire managed to silence a number of Soviet batteries, the lack of range and shortage of ammunition left it at a distinct disadvantage against the Red Army. To make up for its inferiority in numbers and limited material resources, the IJA relied on intangible factors such as fighting spirit and
élan to overcome the foe, with mixed results. Although the Kwantung Army's state of supply improved substantially between 1939 and 1941, Japan's fundamental reliance on spirit to bring victory in battle never changed, sometimes at the expense of logical thinking and common sense. Often, fanatical adherence to tradition so impeded revisions to both doctrine and technology that those who spoke about the matter were accused of "faintheartedness" and "insulting the Imperial Army." Toward the end of the Pacific War, the pendulum began to swing in the opposite direction, with Japanese leaders grasping at
wonder weapons such as the
Nakajima Kikka jet fighter and a so-called "death ray" in the hope of reversing their fortunes. Despite glaring Japanese weaknesses in the long run, the short-term situation was far less reassuring for the Soviets, who were hard-pressed by Germany's devastating advance in Europe. Although the Far Eastern and Trans-Baikal Fronts had a formidable array of weaponry, the desperate fighting in the west meant that strength was siphoned away by the week. The state of the remaining equipment was often mixed: prior to the 1941 transfers, some 660 tanks and 347 aircraft were inoperable because of repair needs or other causes. Because the Soviets had only a limited offensive capability on the Primorye and Trans-Baikal directions they were unlikely to have achieved a decisive victory during the initial stage of the fighting, even if they succeeded in slowing or stopping the Japanese. Furthermore, as pointed out by Soviet General Sergey Shtemenko after the war, attacking into the teeth of a prepared enemy was "the hardest kind of offensive," which required "overwhelming numbers and massive means of assault" to succeed, neither of which the Red Army had at the time. The Soviets' position was further aggravated by the dispersal of their forces across a vast arc from Mongolia to Vladivostok. Without the ability to capitalize on that deployment by striking deep into Manchuria from multiple axes, their strength would be diluted and prone to piecemeal destruction at the hands of the Japanese, who could shift their forces from one front to another along interior lines. On the other hand, the remoteness of the theater from European Russia meant that the Soviets were not in danger of sustaining a mortal blow unless there was either a political collapse or a German breakthrough on the main front. Despite those difficulties the Red Army maintained its superiority in armored vehicles. Although the most modern tank available to the Kwantung Army in 1941, the
Type 97 Chi-Ha, had thicker armor (up to 33 mm) than the Soviet
BT and
T-26, its low-velocity 57 mm gun was outmatched by the long-barreled 45 mm weapons mounted on the latter, and the
Ha-Go and
Te-Ke's 37 mm cannons had an effective range of less than 1 km. In general, the "handcrafted, beautifully polished" Japanese tanks were more survivable thanks to their diesel engines (the gasoline powerplants used by the Russians were especially fireprone), but their smaller numbers meant that each loss was more damaging to the IJA than each destroyed "crudely finished" "expendable" BT or T-26 was to the Red Army. "Zero" fighter was superior to anything in the Soviet inventory. The situation in the air was reversed: even though the
Polikarpov I-16, the best Soviet fighter plane in the theater, performed adequately against the
Nakajima Ki-27 at Khalkhin Gol most other Red aircraft were considerably older. Furthermore, the Soviets had no answer to either the
Mitsubishi A6M, which had been operating in China since 1940, or the high-speed
Ki-21 bomber, which could fly faster and farther than its counterpart, the
SB-2. Japanese pilots were also highly experienced, with
IJNAS airmen averaging roughly 700 hours of flight time by late 1941 while
IJAAF pilots averaged 500. Many of these fliers had already tasted combat against China or the VVS in previous battles. In comparison,
German pilots received only about 230 hours of flying time and Soviet pilots even less. Lastly, the quality of personnel in the respective armies cannot be ignored. As the Soviets drained their best and most well-trained divisions to fight in the west, their combat effectiveness in the east correspondingly diminished, which forced the Stavka to place increased emphasis on the fortified regions for defensive operations. Meanwhile, the opposing Kwantung Army was "the cream of the entire Japanese armed forces" and was receiving reinforcements by the day. Many of its units were elite Type A divisions, many of which had experience in China. Several officers who would go on to have notable careers in the Pacific War, including
Tomoyuki Yamashita (head of the Kwantung Defense Command and later First Area Army),
Isamu Yokoyama (
1st Division, later
4th Army),
Mitsuru Ushijima (
11th Division), and
Tadamichi Kuribayashi (
1st Cavalry Brigade,
Mongolia Garrison Army) held commands there. == Conclusion ==