I know for a fact me or @sillygoose have repeatedly pointed out to you before that none of this has a basis in truth. Stalin did not go into any funk; that's Post-War mythmaking, we have the Kremlin logs that show he was in his office everyday. He increased VVS overflights over German territory to gain intelligence, ordered a mobilization in April that saw numerous armies arriving to the front by June including force transfers from the Asian USSR, and rapidly escalated military construction-especially of airfields-in the months coming up to the invasion. The American military attaches noted this intense military activity and thought at the time, until the picture became clear, that the Soviets had pre-empted the invasion. The USSR had, also, been in a war economy mode since 1940.
Actually not, other than possibly the 1st point. My argument was that you deploy the bulk of the forces further back so that the initial German onslaught to a large degree hits thin air and their mobile units are separated from the bulk of their forces and their air support when they hit the primary defensive lines. Rather than deploying them where they can be hammered.