On the Red Army Manstein portrayed the average Soviet soldier as courageous but poorly led. Depicting the Soviet officer corps as hopelessly incompetent, he portrayed the war on the Eastern Front as a German army vastly superior in fighting ability being steadily ground down by an opponent superior only in numbers. According to
The Myth of the Eastern Front by Ronald Smelser and
Edward J. Davies, that aspect of
Verlorene Siege was self-serving, as it allowed Manstein to ignore several occasions, such as the
fall of Kiev in November 1943, in which he was deceived and defeated by the
Stavka.
On German generals Manstein disparaged other German generals, portraying them as incompetent. Manstein took the credit for German victories and blamed Hitler and his fellow generals for every defeat. His arch-enemy was General
Franz Halder; according to Manstein, although Halder understood that Hitler's leadership was defective, he lacked the courage to do anything about it. Smelser and Davies also called Manstein's criticism of Hitler self-serving. The general falsely claimed that he wanted the
6th Army to be pulled out of
Stalingrad after it was encircled, only to be overruled by Hitler, and attacked Hitler for launching
Operation Citadel, a plan developed by Manstein himself for execution months earlier, before the buildup of Soviet defenses.
Absence of politics and war crimes Manstein avoided political issues, treating the war as an operational matter. He expressed no regret for serving a genocidal regime, and nowhere in
Verlorene Siege did Manstein condemn
National Socialism on moral grounds; Hitler was criticized only for faulty strategic decisions. Manstein's lament for Germany's "lost victories" in the Second World War implied that the world would have benefited from a Nazi victory. Manstein falsely claimed that he did not enforce the
Commissar Order and omitted any mention of his role in
the Holocaust, such as sending 2,000 of his soldiers to help the
SS massacre 11,000 Jews in
Simferopol in November 1941. ==Translation==