OPERATION BARBAROSSA, A CALCULATION ON WEATHER AND TIME Sunday 22nd February 2026
OPERATION BARBAROSSA, A CALCULATION ON WEATHER AND TIME
Sunday 22nd February 2026
The point of posting this is to make it clear that an invasion can be calculated to a considerable extent based on time and weather such as Operation Barbarossa.
In the incident report here, the heaps of dead bodies formed very quickly by a powerful wind force from the air. This was a clear indicator of speed.
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LARGE SCALE UBIQUITOUS GENOCIDAL MURDERS AGAINST ME WHO WRITE THIS PHYSICALLY
Written on Wednesday 18th February 2026
Occurred sometime from 14th to 16th February 2026
Such an invasion would need completion in 5 months or thereabouts depending on the exact location because of the time of the dry season as well as time the invaders would likely require to attack the existing water sources because of the serious aridity psychologically observed.
This was a spiritual and or psychological observation but has some similarities with a real and practical occurrence in human history.
This is an observation.
The purpose of writing this is to legally, humanely and accurately prevent this sort of devastation and aggression.
- The Plan: The German General Staff aimed for a "Blitzkrieg" victory, aiming to reach the A-A line (Archangelsk-Astrakhan) within 5 months, before winter.
- The Reality: The vast, under-mapped terrain and fierce Soviet resistance meant that by the time the Germans reached Moscow in December 1941, they were already exhausted.
- The Delay: The invasion was postponed from mid-May to June 22, 1941, largely due to the need to invade Yugoslavia and Greece. This 5-week delay compressed the timeline, ensuring the offensive would hit the Russian winter.
- Logistical Miscalculation: German planners used simple formulas to calculate the distance tanks could travel, failing to account for the immense time needed to repair vehicles over vast distances, causing armored units to lose over half their strength due to mechanical breakdown before reaching Moscow.
- Rasputitsa (Mud Season): In autumn, heavy rains turned the unpaved Soviet roads into impassable mud ("rasputitsa"), halting the rapid advance of tanks and supply trucks.
- Winter Temperatures: When the "General Winter" hit, temperatures dropped to -22°F to -30°C or lower.
- Equipment Failures: The German military failed to supply winter clothing or specialized gear for their equipment, as they expected the war to be over. Lubricants in tanks froze, firing pins on rifles broke, and engines ceased functioning.
- Impact on Human Life: Frostbite and disease caused more casualties than combat during the initial winter, with German soldiers resorting to using newspapers for insulation.
- Misjudged Enemy: The Germans believed the Soviet system would collapse immediately under the first blow.
- The "Short War" Fallacy: The assumption that the war would last until September allowed them to ignore long-term logistics.
- Ignoring History: The failure to account for Napoleon's 1812 retreat from Moscow due to the same factors.
Written and researched by Abiodun Mohammed Adeyemi Ajijola

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