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In Berlin during summer 1942, capturing the moment of maximum German territorial control over Europe through a comprehensive military briefing at OKW (Oberkommando der Wehrmacht) headquarters. As Field Marshal Keitel, General Jodl, and other senior commanders gather to coordinate operations across a continent-spanning empire, the story provides a sweeping overview of German power stretching from the Atlantic coast of France to the suburbs of Stalingrad, from the Arctic Circle in Norway to the North African desert. Through the perspectives of field marshals commanding different theaters—List in the Caucasus, von Bock driving toward Stalingrad, Rommel threatening Egypt, Kesselring overseeing Mediterranean operations, von Rundstedt in southern Russia—the narrative captures both the impressive scope of Wehrmacht dominance and the inherent contradictions that would doom this empire. The piece explores occupied France administered from Paris, Belgium and the Netherlands stripped of autonomy, Norway and Denmark providing strategic positions, the dismembered Balkans, and the vast conquered territories in the east where brutal occupation policies bred partisan resistance. Rich with geographic and administrative detail, the story examines how the German High Command coordinated operations across dozens of occupied nations, extracted resources from conquered territories, maintained garrison forces across thousands of miles, and implemented varying occupation regimes from relatively indirect control in Western Europe to genocidal policies in the east. Through commanders like von Kluge struggling with partisan warfare, Schenckendorff managing rear area security, and Thomas documenting economic exploitation, the narrative reveals the brittleness beneath apparent total dominance. The story explores the systematic nature of occupation—Reichskommissars governing territories, Organization Todt building the Atlantic Wall, SS implementing racial policies parallel to military administration, puppet states like Vichy France and Slovakia providing facades of autonomy, allied nations like Romania and Hungary contributing forces while pursuing their own agendas. With detailed examination of resource flows, garrison requirements, resistance movements, supply line vulnerabilities, and the growing gap between territorial extent and available manpower, the piece captures how German control in summer 1942 represented not consolidation but dangerous overextension. The narrative contrasts the impressive maps showing German control across Europe with the reality of forces spread impossibly thin, of occupation breeding resistance, of brutal policies creating enemies, of the Wehrmacht consuming its own strength through the very act of holding conquered territory. Through generals reporting from diverse fronts—Reinhardt describing vast Russian distances, Manstein capturing Sevastopol at enormous cost, Paulus advancing toward Stalingrad, Dönitz coordinating U-boat warfare, Wagner documenting unsustainable logistics—the story reveals an empire that had reached its maximum extent precisely because it could expand no further without collapse. The piece concludes with reflection that summer 1942 marked both the zenith of German power and the beginning of inevitable decline, the moment when the High Command controlled more of Europe than any force since Napoleon but also the moment when the contradictions inherent in that control became impossible to sustain.