Talk:Human wave attack
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Q1: Why is [insert example here], a famous example of human wave attack, not included in the article?
A1: Certain examples are not included here because there are currently no reliable sources that explicitly labeled them as "human wave attacks". If an example is truly famous for being human wave attack, then there should be multiple reliable sources that support its "human wave attack" designation. Q2: Why are certain details of human wave attack not included in this article?
A2: Because the human wave attack is an infantry tactic, its analysis are within the area of military science. Therefore, popular media sources are not reliable sources in describing the details of human wave attack. The descriptions of human wave attacks in this article are purely based on academic and peer-reviewed secondary sources published in the area of military science. |
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Red Army during WWII
There is an issue with this article around the vagueness of the term “human-wave attack” and its tendency to be applied only as a derogatory term against the opposing side in a war. This is most clearly demonstrated by the inclusion of the Red Army during the Second World War, a contention which is completely out of step with historical academia.
The exact nature of attacks during the Winter War is debatable, but it’s inclusion in this article is certainly warranted by the weight of scholarly evidence as evidenced by the strong sources in that section. The section on the Second World War itself, however, is supported by only a single source from the questionable website historynet.com written in 1999 by an American author whose primary qualifications seem to be his work as a consultant in Hollywood. The article discusses the battle at Seelow Heights exclusively, and the only instance of the phrase “human-wave attack” appearing is a completely unsourced statement that a supposed German officer named “Heinz Wilker” (I could find no evidence that such an officer even existed) had “personally held off 14 human-wave attacks… at Stalingrad”.
I personally find these claims doubtful in the extreme and additionally point out the impossibility in disproving a statement supposedly made only once and in passing more than 50 years before the article was published. The section on the Red Army in WWII will thus require a genuine and verifiable source which provides specific examples in order to avoid outright deletion.
I will also point out that the academic community has largely rejected accusations that the Red Army engaged in human-wave attacks against the German military on the Eastern Front, with many pointing to orders issued by the Stavka specifically forbidding such assaults (including one issued by Zhukov declaring that officers ordering frontal infantry assaults were committing criminal acts) and the fact that Nazi propaganda routinely portrayed defeats of their forces by Communist enemies as the result of enormous human waves overwhelming German positions in order to cover up German failures on the battlefield.
This article requires a lot of additional work and cleanup, most clearly evidenced by the claims made of the Red Army during WWII. Puma6374 (talk) 16:49, 22 January 2023 (UTC)
I agree with everything you've said and would be okay with removing and replacing the dubiously sourced text entirely. Carlp941 (talk) 17:53, 23 January 2023 (UTC)
I just want to point out that one of the sources given for the Stalingrad human wave attack claim is:
- "Stalingrad Press Coverage". research.calvin.edu. Retrieved 2022-12-27.
This webpage appears to be a translation of German war propaganda. I have no reason to doubt that the University's translation of this is accurate. But Nazi German war propaganda can NOT be used as a source since it is both WP:FRINGE and a WP:Primary source. This is a good example of a bad citation. selfwormTalk) 19:40, 10 August 2023 (UTC)
"...the usual Soviet procedure for an initial attack across mine fields is to make no attempt to locate and remove mines but to send successive waves of infantry across the field until the other side is reached." (P. 157) TM 5-223A Soviet Mine Warfare Equipment, August 1951, Dept. of the Army. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2605:59C8:425:7E10:68DC:6A40:D1BE:9D96 (talk) 06:07, 22 December 2024 (UTC)

