jb pondered:
...it would be nice to gather some pertinent info from the "other" side. I looked through the member list and see we have a few members from Belarus,Ukraine,and Russia. If they are able to be authoritive would be another question...
I have observed and participated in extensive discussions with folks from "the other side" on this issue.
Valera Potopov, webmaster of the Russian Battlefild site and forum, has hosted discussions on this from time-to-time.
TankNet has gnashed over this topic as well. Valera used to participate in TankNet discussions years ago, but is not seen there any more. Vasiliy Fofanov, webmaster of a site on modern Soviet and post-Soviet armor (
http://armor.kiev.ua/fofanov/) and a noted source on Russian, Belorussian, and Ukrainian armor, is one of the Moderators at TankNet. He and a fellow from Russia who posts under the nic Harkonnen provide a great deal of detailed information from Russian sources.
One of the gamers we play with, Vladimir, also a TankNetter, is Soviet-born. He has been here since the mid-90s, but his interests in tanks (and ships) are still focused on Russian and Soviet vehicles. He is mostly a modeller ... we've only recently recruited him into micro armor gaming, but his research for his modelling (and his personal interests) is quite extensive.*
It is largely from these discussions, with fellows who often have access to primary documents from Soviet-era archives (Vasiliy, in particular, has had access to some amazing documents over the recent several years), that I have formed my impressions on this isssue, as well as many other unsolved questions from the history of Soviet armor (such as JS-IIIs in Manchuria). The heart of the matter is that it is difficult to come up with a definitive answer on any of these questions. One seeks information from as many sources as possible, and considers the quality of those sources as well as the disparate nature of the information, and comes to a "well, it was probably like this" kind of conclusion.
Or at least, I have.
*Note;
Vlad's photo websites provide some of the best pictures of Russian equipment you can get anywhere. (It was one of his websites we used for the pictures of the 85mm AA gun in the recent thread.) His pictorial essay on the Kubinka collection taken on his trip just a few weeks ago is fantastic:
http://svsm.org/gallery/KubinkaMuseum
He has extensive connections with the workers at the Kubinka museum, as he is sort of their "unofficial purchasing agent" in the west. He uses his contacts here in California to find and buy parts for their restoration projects that are simply unavailable in Russia. He also provides the hard currency necessary to do purchases here in the west.
We gamed at his apartment one evening last year. The whole time we were playing, he had video of a 1936 Red Army Tank Brigade Services Training Film running in the background. It was great! Whenever it got interesting, though, we'd have to stop the game so he could give us a running translation. T-26s all in a row on the road... "OH NO! Here come the IMPERIALIST BOMBERS!" and a flight of Po-2 biplanes drifts into view, circles once or twice (giving enough time for the air-raid drill: "Every tank must prepare for the impending attack. All commanders must now remove their DT MGs from the hull mounts, and fix them into the AA cradles on their roofs"), and then we watch as all the planes, in line-abreast formation at about 500 feet, make a parade-ground fly-by over the tanks so that they can get shot down. We all chear. Time for a drink! Now, who's turn was it?
