As I walked out of the tent, I saw the lieutenant and two soldiers standing in a clearing smoking. Seeing me coming out, the lieutenant quickly threw the cigarette end on the ground, then ground it twice with his feet. Then he ran to me and asked with a smile, "Comrade General, have you finished your call?"
I nodded and said to him politely, "yes, comrade lieutenant, you can go in after I call."
When trekov saw me walking into the tent, he stopped talking to lelushenko. Instead, he looked up and asked me, "Comrade oshanina, I don't know that commander vatukin called you. What's the important thing."
"It's no big deal, just to arrange the deployment of the troops." Of course, it is impossible for me to tell them what vatukin said and then perfunctorily say, "but it may take some time to supplement our army."
After listening to me, trakov didn't ask any more questions. He just nodded to show that he knew. After I sat down, he pushed the map in front of me and said, "at present, our road condition is very bad. With limited transport vehicles, it is very difficult to complete the replenishment of hundreds of thousands of millions of troops in a short time. So I'll give you a suggestion. In order to get supplies from the superior in the shortest time, you should build roads. "
"Road, what road?" Trekov's words confused me. When I thought of the earth road that would boil when it rained, I had a headache: "you won't let me send troops to repair the road, will you?"
"Of course not," trekov immediately denied my conjecture, and then said, "even if you mobilize the forces of your whole army, it will be an unfinished task to build the road from Kursk to ijum in a few days."
"What road do you want us to build?" What trekov said made me even more confused.
"O'shanina, look here." He pointed to the map and explained to me: "in fact, from Kursk to Belgorod, to Kharkov, and even to ijum, there are the same railways. As long as you repair the railways in the damaged areas, our railway transportation will be restored. You know, a train carries more than 100 trucks. As long as your superiors can supplement you through the railway, I believe your troops will soon be able to regain their combat effectiveness. "
"That's a good idea." As soon as trikov finished, chisgakov continued: "I think we only need to draw out a division to repair the railway from Kharkov to ijum in about two days. As for the railways in other areas, they can only be repaired by other troops. "
"In what direction will your troops be transferred after the completion of the rectification?" Trekov looked at me and asked curiously, "are we going to deploy our southwest army to take part in the attack on zaborosh, or are we going to move in another direction?"
It occurred to me that it should not be a secret for a commander of such a rank as trakov to know where the troops would go next. Moreover, even if I didn't say anything, he could understand it from other directions, so I said frankly, "after finishing the rest, my troops will move towards priluki and take part in the next action of the front army!"
Trakov searched the map for a moment and found the place I said. After looking at it for a moment, he slapped the table and said excitedly, "priluki is only 100 kilometers away from Kiev. It seems that the task of liberating Kiev is handed over to the Voronezh front army."
"It's so enviable." It is said that the task of liberating Kiev falls on the head of Voronezh's front army. With a look of envy, lelushenko said: "I really hope that my group army can be put under the command of general vatukin, so that we can take part in the battle of liberating Kiev. It will go down in history. "
"If I remember correctly, comrade oshanina led the 79th infantry army to liberate Kiev a few months ago." Trekov looked at me and said with a smile, "if it wasn't for the German encirclement of the city, it would be difficult to supply, I think Kiev is still in our hands."
"Don't worry, general trakov." When I think of Kiev, I feel like I've been pulled by someone. It's here that my legitimate troops are almost lost. I'm going to start from scratch. I gritted my teeth and said, "if Kiev is liberated this time, I will never let the Germans take it back."
"If you want to attack Kiev, it's almost impossible to rush into the city from the river crossing bridge." Trekov pointed to the position of Kiev and began to explain to me all kinds of situations that might be encountered in the battle: "although Kiev is divided into two parts by the Dnieper River, once we eliminate the enemy in the East Bank city and the enemy left in the West Bank, we can decisively blow up the bridge on the river, so that our mechanized troops can not rush across the river."
"At this time, if we want to capture the cities on the West Bank, we must carry out landing operations." When lelushenka heard this, he also said solemnly: "like the Volga River, the Dnieper River has a flat east bank, while the West Bank is steep. If we rashly attack the West Bank guarded by the enemy without a comprehensive plan in advance, it is likely to end in failure. "
When lelushenka said this, I found that it was true. The Dnieper River and Volga River were flat on the east bank and steep on the West Bank. After crossing the Dnieper River by force, the troops had to attack the enemy on the bank. The price must be very high.
"General lelushenko," I thought for a long time, but I didn't think of any good way, so I humbly asked lelushenko, "do you have any good way?" When I heard this question, Liu Yushchenko and Chuikov looked at each other and then joked, "I didn't think of that. O Natsu Chaanning Aa, who was good at winning the game, asked me how to force the river Nie de Bo." Having said these two words, he stopped for a moment, and then said thoughtfully, "I have two ways. One is stupid, that is, to let the artillery bombard the German West Bank positions continuously, and then let the infantry force across regardless of casualties; The second is to use a frontal feint to attract the attention of the German army, and then our main force will cross the river from other areas and detour back to the enemy's rear. " After listening, I didn't speak. I just frowned and tapped on the table with my fingers. I was thinking about which of the two combat plans proposed by lelushenko was more suitable. Seeing that I didn't speak for a long time, chisgakov was a little worried. He gently touched me with his arm, and then asked in a low voice, "Comrade commander, I don't know if you think general lelushenko's plan is more suitable for us."