The Soviet command failed to perform the task to encircle and destroy a large group of the Wehrmacht. The command of the Soviet troops, acting at the initial stage decisively, did not take the necessary measures to expand the breakthrough on the flanks. This allowed the Germans to move in reinforcements and suffer relatively small losses to stabilize the situation. Soviet historiography actively postulated the thesis that thanks to the Barvenkovo–Lozovaya operation, the German command could not transfer reinforcements from the southern section of the Soviet-German front to Moscow, where Soviet troops
successfully counterattacked. However, the operation itself, which began in the second half of January 1942, started too late to affect the overall outcome of the
Battle of Moscow. The Soviet advance created the Izyum–Barvenkovo salient, which would be cut off by the Germans during the
Second Battle of Kharkov in May 1942, causing the loss of some 300,000 Soviet soldiers. == References ==