The unexpected arrival of Soviet troops at the end of January 1945 at the
ancient fortress and garrison town of Küstrin came as a tremendous shock to the
German High Command - the Soviets were now only 50 miles from Berlin itself. The
Red Army needed the vital road and rail bridges passing through Kustrin for
their forthcoming assault on the capital, but flooding and their own high
command's strategic blunders resulted in a sixty-day siege by two Soviet armies
which totally destroyed the town. The delay in the Soviet advance also gave the
Germans time to consolidate the defences shielding Berlin west of the Oder
River. Despite Hitler's orders to fight on to the last bullet, the Kustrin
garrison commander and 1,000 of the defenders managed a dramatic break-out to
the German lines. The protracted siege had an appalling human cost - about 5,000
Germans were killed, 9,000 wounded and 6,000 captured, and the Russians lost
5,000 killed and 15,000 wounded. Tony Le Tissier, in this graphic and
painstakingly researched account, has recorded events in extraordinary detail,
using the vivid eyewitness testimony of survivors to bring the story of the
siege to life.