1944-45 Murmansk Siege (Hitler’s World)

Overview
A land siege and naval blockade proved only partly successful as the Germans were mostly prone to frostbite. The use of a cutting edge ultra-sound sonic-weapons technology, the heavy use of CS gas, continued over-land raids by the Finns and the clever use of modified Paper III and Tiger I tanks finally finished the job, but the German and Romanian communist forces had been devastated by frost bite, unlike the Finnish and Soviet armies.

Causes of the conflict
A rebellion in the Karelo-Finnish SSR had left a sizable pocket of Soviet troops cut off in the naval port of Murmansk.

Tactics
The possibility of a German device that produced frequency that caused heavy vibration of victims the eyeballs and therefore distortion of vision that, was generating infrasound of 18.9 Hz, 0.3 Hz, and 9 Hz. Was sucsefluy played out. The siege was otherwise more lethal to the Germans than any one else.

Result
A narrow Finnish and German victory.

Political outcome
German advances in to the frozen wastes of Siberia and Lapland were deemed impractical, with the Finns taking their place on the front line.

Also see

 * Hitlers World