-
Sturmtruppen or
Stoßtruppen) were
specialist infantrymen of the
Imperial German Army. In the last
years of
World War I,
Stoßtruppen ("shock troopers"...
-
their cohesion as much as possible.
These formations became known as
Stoßtruppen, or
shock troops, and the
tactics they
pioneered were the
basis of post-WWI...
- Sixt von Armin). Both
armies included substantial numbers of the new
stosstruppen,
trained to lead
attacks with the new
stormtroop tactics. The British...
- they
might mount. The
battle had also seen the
first m**** use of
German Stosstruppen on the
Western front in the attack, who used
infantry infiltration tactics...
- only
special units were
trained in
these tactics,
typified by
German Stoßtruppen (shock troops). By the end of
World War II,
almost all
regular ground...
- Austro-Hungarian
infantry went on the attack,
preceded by ****ault
groups (
Stosstruppen)
tasked with
penetrating the
lines and
infiltrating in depth. Employing...
- than 300 do****ented battles. By 1918, it
became a
weapon of
choice for
Stoßtruppen (stormtroopers) with a team of six
Pioniere (combat engineers) per squad...
- to
commit suicide before completing this work.
Rommel describes his
Stoßtruppen (shock troops) tactics,
which used speed, deception, and deep penetration...
- officer's name or the
parent division. The
Stormtroopers (in
German Stoßtruppen,
shock troops,
literally "punch/push troops") were
specialist military...
-
Beginning in the
sixth turn (Winter of 1916–17), the
Germans may
build one
Stoßtruppen (Stormtrooper) unit per turn. When
these units win an attack, the defending...