Vyshny Volochek 1st Baltic Front. First Baltic Front

1st Baltic Front

All activities to prepare the command, headquarters and troops of the 1st Baltic Front for the operation were planned for the period from May 29 to June 22, i.e. for 25 days. After the preliminary decision of the front commander and his giving instructions to the commanders of the 6th Guards and 43rd armies, as well as the chiefs of the military branches, the headquarters of the front and armies immediately began developing plans for the operation, calendar dates for its preparation, the order of rotation and exit of troops to concentration areas, organization commandant service, as well as front directives and other necessary documents.

Enemy reconnaissance

The command and headquarters of the 1st Baltic Front paid considerable attention to improving all types of intelligence.

During June, before the start offensive operation, 18 prisoners were captured, which confirmed the previously established enemy grouping.

Radio reconnaissance managed to detect enemy radio stations: the 16th Army - in Ludza, the 3rd tank army- in Beshenkovichi, 10th Army Corps - in Rudna, 1st Army Corps - in Vorovukha, 9th Army Corps - in Ulla, 53rd Army Corps - in Vitebsk, 87th Infantry Division - in Skaby, etc. .

All types of reconnaissance identified and clarified: the enemy's restored railway lines, their capacity, the average intensity of traffic along them, the presence of track destroyers at the Molodechno, Sebezh, Polota, Vitebsk stations, and it was also possible to establish the movement of enemy trains. Aviation reconnaissance tracked the transfer of enemy troops operating against the partisans in Ushachi, in the area of ​​Polotsk, Begoml and individual units in Beshenkovichi.

Front reconnaissance aircraft regularly monitored traffic along highways, railways and dirt roads to a depth of 150 km. The enemy's group of airfields was exposed to its entire operational depth, and work at these airfields was monitored daily. Aviation reconnaissance units photographed an area of ​​more than 48 thousand km?. In the main directions, photographs were taken of the likely routes of movement of enemy troops. By deciphering the images, about 600 railway trains, up to 300 batteries, up to 400 bunkers, up to 700 machine-gun firing points, 6,000 dugouts, 4,000 vehicles, and 50 warehouses were revealed. Based on aerial photographs, photographic diagrams were made for ground troops.

In the zone of the upcoming breakthrough, a large network of observation posts (combined arms, artillery, engineering) was deployed. Second echelon formations, as well as front and army headquarters, deployed their surveillance organs in the direction of the main attack. In particular, the front and army headquarters deployed their surveillance agencies from June 10, i.e., almost two weeks before the start of the operation. From these observation points, 24-hour surveillance of enemy defenses was carried out.

The network of artillery observation points, including joint observation points for divisions, was particularly widely developed. To study the enemy artillery grouping, sound reconnaissance was used, which covered the entire breakthrough zone. Observation of enemy behavior in the depths of the defense was organized from aerial observation balloons. As a result of the careful organization of artillery reconnaissance only in the offensive zone of the 6th Guards Army The coordinates of 47 enemy artillery batteries were determined.

All intelligence data about the enemy, obtained from ground and air reconnaissance, was systematized and analyzed at headquarters, and then applied to the general intelligence scheme. These schemes were multiplied and communicated to units and formations as the main document for planning an artillery offensive. Data obtained during the preparation for the operation about the nature of the enemy’s defense and his grouping were confirmed during the battle. The good work of the intelligence agencies greatly facilitated the command's planning and conduct of the offensive operation.

Organization of management and communications

The front command decided to echelon the front field control into three positions: the operational group, the front headquarters and the second echelon of the headquarters. In addition, an observation post of the front commander was established in the initial position before the breakthrough.

The operational group included: the Military Council of the front, the chief of staff of the front, the chiefs of the military branches with their operational groups and the main part of the operational management, intelligence and encryption departments and communications department. Troop control was carried out mainly by the operational group. In fact, it was a front command post.

At the front headquarters there were: directorates of the chiefs of the military branches, part of the operational directorate, intelligence and encryption departments, communications directorate and counterintelligence directorate, as well as staffing, personnel, topographical, combat training departments, political directorate, military tribunal and prosecutor's office.

It should be pointed out that such a distribution of front control points significantly complicated the organization of communications and led to a large expenditure of forces and communications equipment.

By the beginning of the operation, the front and army control points were located as shown in Table 1.

Table 1

Command centre Location Distance
from the front line in km from front headquarters in km from the operational group (VNU) of the front in km from the front commander's OP in km
Front headquarters Pankry 50 - - -
Front operational group Small Violins 10 - - -
NP of the front commander High 174, 3 4 - - -
Second echelon of front headquarters Ossetia 70 20 - -
Headquarters 4th shock army Bol. Sitno 18 37 - -
Headquarters of the 6th Guards Army Cadi 11 - 10 -
NP commander of the 6th Guards Army Banduras 1,5 - - 4
Headquarters of the 43rd Army Belyanki 7 - 12 -
NP of the commander of the 43rd Army High 161, 9 1,5 - - 9

The organization of wired communications was planned at a depth of 60–70 km. The front axis was planned to be built in eight lines from Voikhana to Sirotino, Shumilino, Beshenkovichi, Kamen. Two linear communications battalions and one telegraph and telephone station company were allocated for the construction and restoration of this axis. In the directions to the armies it was planned to have telegraph and telephone lines with four wires. For this purpose, one linear communications battalion was assigned to each army.

To ensure the offensive, it was necessary to do a lot of work on the construction and restoration of telegraph and telephone lines. In total, according to the plan, it was necessary to build and restore 851 km of lines, restore and hang 2,787 km of wire. To carry out the specified construction and restoration of the line and wires, 207 tons of wire and 12 km of river cable were required. The availability of linear materials and river cable fully met the expected needs.

To carry out the work, the communications department had nine construction and four cable-pole companies at its disposal. This composition coped with the work quite well, ensuring normal command and control of troops at a rate of advance of 8–10 km per day.

Radio communication

To ensure continuity of radio communications when moving control points, provision was made for separation and the creation of a reserve of radio equipment. Two radio centers were organized: one was located at the front headquarters and the other at the operational group. There were nine radio stations in reserve: some of them at the front headquarters and some at the operational group.

Communication between the front headquarters and the General Staff was carried out by radio stations "RAT" via the auditory channel and "Bodo" ​​radio. For interaction between the fronts, radio network No. 15 was specially created, which included the radio stations of the front headquarters, as well as the radio stations of the operational group of Marshal Vasilevsky. To communicate between the flank armies, radio network No. 16 was created. All fronts and armies had data for working in this radio network, and, as necessary, this network had to include radio stations of interacting armies of adjacent fronts.

Radio communication between the front headquarters and the armies was organized using high-power and low-power radio stations. The main channel was radio communication of powerful radio stations in individual radio directions. Experience has shown that such an organization ensured the greatest stability of radio communications.

Mobile communications

In preparation for the attack great attention was devoted to mobile communications. For this purpose, 20 aircraft (Po-2), 14 cars, 10 motorcycles and 3 tanks were allocated. Of these assets, the front headquarters had: 8 aircraft, cars and 2 motorcycles; the operational group has 8 aircraft, 7 cars, 4 motorcycles and 2 tanks. The remaining vehicles were in reserve.

Regroupings and concentration of troops

By the beginning of the preparatory period, the 1st Baltic Front (consisting of the 6th Guards, 4th Shock and 43rd Armies) occupied a defense line stretching 214 km. At the beginning of June, the right demarcation line for the 1st Baltic Front changed. The defense zone north of Porechye went to the 2nd Baltic Front. The 6th Guards Army, which previously occupied the indicated zone, was withdrawn to the reserve of the 1st Baltic Front with the aim of using it in the future in the direction of the main attack. As a result of this event, the length of the battle line of the 1st Baltic Front narrowed to 160 km. By decision of the front commander, the dividing line between the 4th shock and 43rd armies also changed. The lanes for both armies narrowed, and the 6th Guards Army was planned to enter the junction between them at a front of 18 km.

In order to create an appropriate grouping of forces for the offensive, it was necessary to regroup and concentrate troops in the attack direction within three weeks. During this time it was required:

Receive formations and units arriving from the reserve of the main command and withdraw them to concentration areas;

Regroup the 6th Guards Army in a strike direction and create a strike group in the 43rd Army;

Strengthen the 6th Guards and 43rd Armies using forces and assets arriving at the front, as well as from secondary directions.

During the first half of June, all but the 103rd were transferred from the reserve of the main command to the front. rifle corps(29th and 270th rifle divisions), a number of artillery, tank and engineering units and formations, and from the 2nd Baltic Front - the 46th Guards rifle division. The 11th Fighter Aviation Corps and the 382nd Attack Aviation Division arrived to reinforce the 3rd Air Army, which was part of the front.

Arriving formations and units were met at stations (south and southwest of Nevel) by representatives of the front and army headquarters and then, according to their instructions, followed to the concentration areas.

The regrouping of the 6th Guards Army from the right flank to the strike direction was carried out in three stages. In the first stage (from June 1 to June 9), the divisions of the first echelon of the 6th Guards Army were replaced by troops of the 2nd Baltic Front and army formations were concentrated in the zone of the 4th Shock Army. During this period, the 6th Guards Army included the 103rd Rifle Corps (270th and 29th Rifle Divisions), the 46th Guards Division, as well as reinforcements. In the second stage (from June 13 to 18), formations of the 6th Guards Army moved into their zones (to areas 12–18 km from the front line). In the third stage, on the penultimate night before the offensive (i.e., on the night of June 22), the infantry of the 6th Guards Army moved forward and was located 4–6 km from the front edge. The battalions advancing in the first echelon entered the first trench. On the night before the offensive, all battalions of the first echelon divisions took up their starting position for the offensive.

In the 43rd Army, the regrouping of forces and means was carried out to the right flank. By increasing the defense front for first-echelon divisions, the army command managed to withdraw several rifle divisions into reserve. Subsequently, these divisions, together with the 357th Rifle Division that arrived from the 4th Shock Army, became part of the 1st and 60th Rifle Corps. The movement of these corps to the initial position for the offensive was carried out in the same order as in the 6th Guards Army.

The movement of artillery into position areas was carried out in two stages. From June 10 to 13, artillery moved into pre-positioning areas located 10–28 km from the new firing position areas, and from June 13 to 21, it was moved to firing positions. Tanks occupied waiting areas (10–13 km from the front line) two to three days before the offensive. The tanks moved to their starting positions the night before the offensive. All regroupings and concentrations of troops were carried out at night and were ensured by a well-organized commandant service and strict camouflage measures.

Troop training

Immediately after the end of the spring offensive operations, intensive combat training began with command staff of all levels, headquarters and search operations. The military council of the front held a meeting of the highest command staff. At the army headquarters, gatherings were held for commanders of rifle, artillery and tank regiments, chiefs of staff of corps, divisions and regiments, battalion and division commanders, and at corps headquarters - gatherings for commanders of rifle companies and artillery batteries. The topics of the gathering were current issues upcoming offensive.

Enhanced combat training was deployed directly to the troops. The second echelon and reserve units were engaged in the usual manner. The defensive units were withdrawn one by one to the rear and conducted training according to a five-day program. Combat training of troops was based on the formation of companies and battalions in company and battalion exercises and live-fire exercises. In these classes, which were as close to reality as possible, we practiced critical issues offensive battle, and Special attention focused on the interaction of infantry with tanks and artillery, movement techniques on the battlefield, launching an attack, crossing water obstacles, advancing in wooded and swampy areas, attacking enemy strongholds, etc.

During the period of regrouping of troops (in June 1944), their combat training continued according to a specially compiled ten-day program. The work carried out to prepare the command staff of headquarters and troops greatly facilitated the implementation of the upcoming tasks of breaking through, crossing rivers and rapidly pursuing the retreating enemy.

Preparation of the bridgehead

The main work to prepare the starting position for the offensive was carried out by units of the 154th and 156th Infantry Divisions, which occupied the defense in the direction of the main attack. When creating the starting position for the offensive, the calculation was made: to have three trenches in the first position, not counting the forward trench with communication passages, which provided the starting position for the first echelons of the armies.

Due to the fact that the leading edge of some formations in some places was 1000–1200 m from the enemy, it was necessary to carry out a lot of work to move the trenches forward in the breakthrough area in order to get closer to 300 m. However, it should be noted that to completely open three trenches in the direction of the main strike, and also failed to complete the work of moving the trenches forward by the start of the operation.

The initial area for the offensive was largely in swampy, forested, swampy terrain. In the army and front lines there was a limited number of equipped roads, and in the military rear there were almost none. The trails and dirt roads in use were overly congested with the flow of military equipment, ammunition and troops; therefore, special attention was paid to preparing roads and laying column tracks for the deployment of tanks and artillery in the front, army and especially in the military rear. In total, it was necessary to prepare over 500 km of roads. In preparation for the operation, road repair work consumed the largest part strength engineering troops. Divisional, army front-line and sapper units, as well as combined arms formations, were involved in road work. Thus, in the zone of the upcoming offensive of the 6th Guards Army, an average of at least 4,700 people worked daily for 12 days. As a result of extensive road construction during the preparation for the operation, it was possible to restore and build 275 km of roads, as well as repair (grade) 820 km.

Material support

By the beginning of the offensive operation, a sufficient amount of ammunition, food fodder and fuel and lubricants had been delivered to the troops and to the warehouses of the front and army. Thus, in the 6th Guards and 43rd armies, by 18:00 on June 21, the troops and warehouses had up to 3.5 rounds of ammunition of various types of ammunition. The situation was somewhat worse with the availability of rounds for 45 mm guns (only about two rounds of ammunition). By this time, from 14 to 22 daily dachas of food fodder had been delivered to the indicated armies. Of the food supply, the worst situation was with the supply of oats (the 6th Guards Army had seven daily dachas, and the 43rd Army only three). Fuels and lubricants armies had from two to four gas stations. In addition to the above reserves, the armies had a significant amount of ammunition, food fodder and fuel and lubricants in front-line warehouses.

In total, 110,305 beds were deployed at the front hospital bases to receive the wounded and 16 veterinary hospitals.

Operational combat formation of the front

The front's strike force, consisting of the 6th Guards Army and two corps (1st and 60th Rifle Corps) of the 43rd Army, was supposed to break through enemy defenses on a front 25 km away. As an echelon for developing success, the front commander had the 1st Tank Corps at his disposal, and in reserve was the withdrawn front line 154th Infantry Division.

The battle formation of the armies was built in one and two echelons.

6th Guards Army consisting of four rifle corps (eleven rifle divisions), it built its battle formation in two echelons: in the first echelon there are two rifle corps (22nd and 23rd Guards) and in the second there are also two corps (2nd Guards and 103rd ).

43rd Army, causing main blow two rifle corps, built its battle formation in one echelon. This army did not have its own second echelons or reserves.

The corps of the 6th Guards Army formed their battle formation in one echelon. In the 43rd Army, the corps advancing in the main direction had a battle formation in two echelons: two divisions in the first and one in the second. The tank brigades and regiments available at the front, as well as self-propelled artillery regiments, were intended to directly support the infantry.

Thus, the main forces of the front were concentrated in the breakthrough area of ​​the 6th Guards Army. The presence of strong second echelons in the army made it possible to solve major operational problems. The 43rd Army occupied a wider front (50 km) and had smaller forces. This circumstance did not allow the army command to allocate second echelons at least in the attack direction. The second echelons were in the corps (1st 60th Rifle Corps), which delivered the main blow. In general, the operational combat formation of the 1st Baltic Front corresponded to the plan of the operation, the prevailing situation and the availability of forces and means.

Artillery support for the operation

The 1st Baltic Front included (without regular artillery regiments of rifle divisions) 76 artillery, mortar and anti-tank artillery regiments; three guards mortar brigades and five guards mortar regiments.

In all artillery formations and regiments, including the artillery of rifle divisions and regiments (without 45-mm guns and guards mortars), there were 4,419 guns and mortars. More than 70% of the guns and up to 80% of the mortars were concentrated in the direction of the main attack.

The density of artillery in the breakthrough area (without anti-tank guns and guards mortars) reached 125–130 guns and mortars per 1 km of front. If we also take into account the 581 guards mortars concentrated in the direction of the main attack, then the artillery density here was even greater.

The order of the artillery offensive was developed by the front artillery headquarters and approved by the Military Council. The artillery headquarters of armies, corps and divisions received from higher headquarters: a schedule of artillery offensive indicating the consumption of ammunition at the stages of the battle, a plan and schedule for shooting, a combat order or combat order indicating the allocated reinforcement means. Targets for destruction and areas of suppression were outlined and planned directly by the executors themselves, with subsequent approval of the schemes by the army artillery commanders. This planning method made it possible to organize artillery and mortar fire more specifically (at observed targets or target nodes, grouped into sections).

The following artillery offensive pattern was established:

For two hours - sighting and control, at the breakthrough front they were combined with battle intelligence units;

90 minutes were allotted for the destruction period; in the last 20 minutes of the destruction period, direct fire guns were turned on;

45 minutes were allotted for the period of suppression - at this time the maximum intensity of fire from all guns and mortars was planned, the main efforts were aimed at suppressing the enemy fire system and manpower in the first and second trenches (to a depth of 2 km);

Accompanying infantry and tanks with a barrage of fire was designed to last 30–60 minutes - until the infantry captured and secured the first and second lines of trenches; further escort of the infantry was provided for by sequential concentration of fire.

By the beginning of the offensive, there was an average of 3 to 4 rounds of ammunition in warehouses and in troops. Depending on the availability of ammunition and the nature of the enemy’s defense, ammunition consumption on the first day of the battle was planned according to following standards(in ammunition): 82 mm, 120 mm mines and artillery rounds for 122 mm guns - 2.5; 45 mm and 76 mm guns - 1.5; 122- and 152-mm howitzers, 152-mm cannons - 2.25 and for 203-mm - 2.

Aviation support

The 3rd Air Army, which was part of the 1st Baltic Front, had 1094 aircraft. The offensive operation plan assigned the following tasks to the 3rd Air Army:

Cover the strike group of the 6th Guards and 43rd Armies and the 1st Tank Corps in the initial position and during the offensive;

By interaction with ground troops suppress the enemy’s battle formations and nodes of resistance in the offensive zone (in this case, special attention was paid to the nodes of resistance Sirotino, Dobrino, Shumilino);

Prevent the approach of enemy reserves from the directions of Polotsk, Lepel, Chashniki;

Ensure the entry of the 1st Tank Corps into the breakthrough, facilitate its advance to the Beshenkovichi area and capture crossings across the Western Dvina River.

The interaction of the 3rd Air Army with the 6th Guards and 43rd Armies, as well as the 1st Tank Corps, was organized on the principle of support. Aviation support for the operation was planned for only three days, i.e. until the infantry reached the Western Dvina line.

The planned combat air tension for the first three days of the operation is shown in Table 2.

table 2

Aircraft type Number of aircraft Number of sorties Average number of sorties per aircraft
Stormtroopers 340 2550 7,5
Fighters 350 3430 4000
Pe-2 10 20 2
Po-2 80 450 5,6
Total 780 6450 -

As can be seen from the table, the planned combat stress of the 3rd Air Army was very significant and required good organizational and preparatory work from the command.

Engineering support

At the beginning of the operation, the front included (without the regular means of rifle divisions): two assault engineer brigades, three army engineer brigades, a motorized engineering brigade, nine pontoon and bridge battalions, two defensive construction departments and a number of other sapper units and divisions. The command concentrated over 90% of all engineering forces and assets in the direction of the main attack.

During the preparation of the offensive operation, the main tasks of engineering support were: engineering reconnaissance of enemy barriers; preparing a bridgehead for an offensive, removing friendly and enemy minefields; preparation and ensuring the passage of tanks into the “neutral zone”; construction, repair of roads and column tracks.

Engineering reconnaissance was carried out by regimental and divisional sappers of rifle divisions occupying defenses in the attack direction. In order to duplicate and control, separate platoons from army engineering battalions were involved, and personal reconnaissance of engineering commanders was also carried out.

During the preparation for the operation, great importance was given to mine clearance. In the directions of the tanks' operations, complete demining was carried out. The removal of the German minefields was carried out in the last two nights before the offensive. During the battle of reconnaissance units during the day of June 22 and on the night of June 23, the removal of enemy minefields was completed.

In preparation road network It was taken into account that difficulties would arise when passing military equipment and military logistics from the initial position of our troops to the equipment of enemy roads. This strip of terrain could become especially difficult to pass after rains. Anticipating this, the engineering units prepared the necessary timber in advance. As a result great job It was possible to build the required number of roads and bridges and thus ensure the concentration of troops, as well as the delivery of everything necessary for the battle.

During the period of breakthrough and troop operations in operational depth, engineering units and formations were assigned the following tasks:

Ensuring a breakthrough of the enemy’s main defense line (clearing mines and escorting tanks and infantry);

Restoration of army and corps routes;

Ensuring the crossing of the Western Dvina River (building crossings, building bridges);

Covering the flanks of the breakthrough;

Demining and final restoration of front-line roads in the zone of the 6th Guards and 43rd armies.

To accomplish these tasks, the bulk of engineering reinforcements were distributed among the armies. The 1st Tank Corps was assigned mainly pontoon battalions to ensure the crossing of the Western Dvina. However, during the offensive, the pontoons fell behind, and the crossing of the water lines by the tank corps was delayed.

Balance of forces and means

After the borders were changed on the night of June 6, the defense zone north of Porechye moved to the 2nd Baltic Front. The front width for the 1st Baltic Front was reduced from 214 to 160 km. In the zone of action of this front, the enemy had seven infantry divisions in the first line (389th, 87th, 205th, 252nd, 56th, 246th and 4th) and four in reserve (281st , 221st and 391st security and 24th infantry divisions), not counting individual units for various purposes. In addition, at the junction with the 3rd Belorussian Front in the Lepel area there were units of the 95th Infantry and 201st Security Divisions. These divisions could equally be used against both of these fronts.

At the beginning of the operation, the 1st Baltic Front (4th Shock, 6th Guards and 43rd Armies) had: twenty-four rifle divisions, one rifle brigade, one tank corps, three artillery and mortar divisions, four tank brigades, four tank regiment; four self-propelled artillery regiments, as well as a number of other artillery and engineering units and formations.

The balance of forces along the entire 160 km front is shown in Table 3.

Table 3

Enemy Strengths and means Our troops
Total Density per 1 km of front Density per 1 km of front Total
11 One division for 14–15 km of front Divisions One division for 6–7 km of front 24 2,2:1
133 500 834 Combat people 1391 222 712 1,7:1
15 282 95,5 Slot machines 321,6 51 453 3,4:1
7443 46,5 Machine guns 52,7 8432 1,1:1
823 5,1 Mortars 13,9 2216 2,7:1
622 3,9 Anti-tank guns 4,6 730 1,2:1
728 4,5 Field guns 13,2 2120 3:1
130 0,8 Tanks and self-propelled guns 3,6 582 4,5:1
314 - Aircraft - 1094 3,5:1

Having on average an almost double overall superiority in manpower and a three to fourfold superiority in artillery and tanks over the enemy, the front command in the direction of the main attack in a 25 km wide zone (in the Volotovka, Toshnik sector) concentrated more than 90% of tanks, up to 80% of manpower forces and mortars and more than 70% of artillery.

The operation plan took into account that when breaking through the defenses in the Beshenkovichi-Lepel direction, the enemy would direct the main operational reserves primarily against the front’s strike group. Thus, the front’s strike force was opposed by the main forces of two divisions in the first line (252nd and 56th Infantry) and three divisions from the nearest operational reserves. Taking into account these five enemy divisions, the balance of forces and means in the direction of the main attack (25 km front) was as shown in Table 4.

Table 4

Enemy* Strengths and means Our troops Superiority over the enemy
Total Density per 1 km of front Density per 1 km of front Total
5 One division per 5 km front Divisions One division per 4 km front 18 3,6:1
55 500 2220 Combat people 7151 178 783 3,2:1
6844 274 Slot machines 1613 40 326 6:1
3362 134,5 Machine guns 245,5 6137 1,8:1
371 15 Artillery 69,2** 1729 4,6:1
278 11 Anti-tank guns 21,1 528 1,9:1
321 13 Field guns 68 1693 5,3:1
90 3,6 Tanks and self-propelled guns 21,6 539 6:1
314 - Aircraft - 1094 2,6:1

* Excluding units of the 95th Infantry and 201st Security Divisions.

** Excluding guards mortars.

As can be seen from Table 4, as a result of the regrouping of forces and means, the front command managed to concentrate more than three times superiority in manpower and five to six times superiority in artillery and tanks in the strike direction.

Thus, the general superiority of forces and means on the entire front, and especially the triple-six-fold superiority in the strike direction, allowed the 1st Baltic Front to successfully solve the tasks assigned to it.

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17 To the front During my stay in Odessa in a hotel, or perhaps even earlier, in Novorossiysk, I again became infected with typhus, but this time it was relapsing. I felt the first attack on the ship on the way to Novorossiysk, then, as usually happens when returning

The First Baltic Front - an operational unification of the Soviet armed forces during the Great Patriotic War, operated in 1943-1945 in the Baltic direction, created on October 20, 1943 as a result of the renaming of the Kalinin Front. Initially, the front included the 4th Shock Army, 39th, 43rd Armies, 3rd Air Army, later included: 2nd, 6th, 11th, 51st, 61st Armies, 5th Guards Tank Army. Army General A.I. became the commander of the front. Eremenko, member of the military council - Lieutenant General D.S. Leonov, chief of staff - Lieutenant General V.V. Kurasov (since June 1944 - Colonel General). In November 1943, Army General I.Kh. became the new front commander. Bagramyan.
From November 1 to November 21, 1943, front troops launched an offensive in the Vitebsk-Polotsk direction. With the support of the Second Baltic Front, it was possible to penetrate the German defenses to a depth of 45-55 km and cover the Gorodok and Vitebsk groups of German troops. As a result of the Gorodok operation (1943), the German group was defeated, a bulge in the enemy’s defense was eliminated, and advantageous positions were taken on the approaches to Vitebsk. In February-March 1944, troops of the Western and First Baltic Fronts carried out the Vitebsk operation, breaking through the enemy’s defenses, but failed to take the city.

In the summer of 1944, the First Baltic Front took part in the Belarusian Strategic Operation. On June 23, in cooperation with the troops of the Third Belorussian Front, during the Vitebsk-Orsha operation, the left wing of the German Army Group Center was defeated. Soviet troops liberated Vitebsk and reached the approaches to Polotsk. Building on the success, the Polotsk operation was carried out without an operational pause. As a result, the troops of the First Baltic Front advanced with their left wing 120-160 km into the depth of the enemy’s defense, and conditions were created for the development of an offensive on Daugavpils and Siauliai.

In July, front troops carried out the Siauliai operation, liberated Panevezys and Siauliai, then launched an attack on Riga with the aim of cutting off the land communications of the German Army Group North. The troops of the First Baltic Front managed to reach the Gulf of Riga, but in August German counterattacks forced them to withdraw from the coast 30 km to the south. In September, the front took part in the Riga operation. At the beginning of October, Soviet troops attacked Memel (Klaipeda). After the completion of the Memel operation, together with the troops of the Second Baltic Front, the First Baltic Front blocked from land Kurland group enemy. In November 1944, Lieutenant General M.V. became a new member of the front’s military council. Rudakov.

In January-February 1945, part of the front participated in the East Prussian strategic operation and assisted the Third Belorussian Front in the defeat of the enemy’s Tilsit group. At the end of January, the Memel bridgehead was liquidated, January 28 liberated city Memel. At the beginning of February 1945, troops of the First Baltic Front, together with the Third Belorussian Front, took part in an operation to eliminate enemy groups on the Zemland Peninsula and in the Konigsberg area. The armies of the First Baltic Front operating in Courland were transferred to the Second Baltic Front and from February 17 all front efforts were concentrated on eliminating the Zemland enemy group. On February 24, 1945, the First Baltic Front was abolished, and its troops, transformed into the Zemland operational group of forces, were included in the Third Belorussian Front.

THE FIRST BALTIC FRONT is an operational-strategic unification of Soviet troops in the Great Patriotic War in the northwestern and western regions.

Ob-ra-zo-van on October 20, 1943 at the Headquarters of the Verkhov-no-go Main-no-ko-man-do-va-niya dated October 16, 1943 (re-zul- ta-te re-name-no-va-niya of the Ka-li-nin front) in the company of the 4th shock, 39th and 43rd society -voy-sko-vykh and 3rd air-show-army. Subsequently, the 2nd, 6th and 11th Guards, 51st and 61st General Wars entered at different times. Guards and 5th Guards Tank Army. From November 1 to November 21, the front troops were stationed at the vi-teb-sko-po-loc-com on the right-hand side, in re-zul- that one, with the co-operation of the 2nd Baltic Front, got involved at 45-55 km in the region opposition to its right wing and deep oh-va-ti-li with se-ve-ro-behind the city and vi- Teb-skaya group-pi-rov-ki German troops. During the City Operation of 1943, the City Group of Pi-rov-ku and Li-k-vi-di-ro va-li go-ro-dok-skiy vy-stup pro-tiv-ni-ka, having taken even more of the oh-so-great position from-no-she-niu to Vi-teb-sk.

In February-March 1944, the troops of the First Baltic Front, in cooperation with the troops of the Western Front, came to the near Vi-teb-sk and, having broken through the defense against-tiv-no, improved its position in Vi-teb-sk on the right-hand side . Since June 23, in cooperation with the troops of the 3rd White Russian Front in the course of the Vi-Teb-Or-Shan Opera -tions of 1944 destroyed the left wing of the army group "Center" (commander - Field Marshal E. Bush), went to the approaches to Po -lots-ku and, developing the us-infantry, carried out the Po-lots-kuyu operation of 1944 without an operational pause. Having defeated a group of German troops, they advanced with their left wing to 120-160 km and created a mustache -lo-viya for development of the st-p-le-niya on Dau-gav-pils and Siau-lai. In July, the army of the front during the Siauliai operation of 1944 razed the pa-ne-ve-zhis-sko-shau-lyai group. dit-ku pro-tiv-ni-ka and, from-me-niv to the-right-le-nie Ch. blow-ra, once-on-the-stu-p-le-nie on Ri-gu with the aim of re-cutting the dry-ho-put-nye com-mu-ni-ka- tions of the German army group "North" from East Prussia, went to the Gulf of Riga, but in August they moved 30 km to the south. In September, the front took part in the Riga operation of 1944.

Mo-re-group-pi-ro-vav his forces to the left wing in the Shiau-laya region, in the beginning of October the troops of the First Baltic Front brought -or a sudden attack on Me-mel (now Klai-pe-da) and, having completed the Me-mel operation of 1944, together with troops 2 of the Baltic front, block-ki-ro-vali from the land of the Kur-Land group of German troops; in the following battles were fought to destroy it. In January-February 1945, they participated as part of the forces in the East Prussian operation of 1945, co-operating with the 3rd Be -to the Russian front in the raz-grom of the til-sit group of pi-rov-ki against-tiv-no. At one time, at the end of the yang-va-rya si-la-mi of the 4th shock army in interaction with the joint -mi naval infantry, art-til-le-ri-ey and air-ci-ey of the Baltic fleet of the military front-ta li-k-vi-di-ro- wa-li me-mel-skiy parade ground pro-tiv-ni-ka and January 28 os-vo-bo-di-li Me-mel. At the beginning of February 1945, the troops of the First Baltic Front, together with the 3rd White-Russian Front, were responsible for di-ro-vate the East-Prussian group against the sea on the Zem-Land Peninsula and in the Kö region -nigs-ber-ga (now not Ka-li-nin-grad). The armies of the front that acted in Latvia were transferred to the 2nd Baltic Front. Since February 17, all the efforts of the front have been concentrated on the li-k-vi-da-tion of the Zem-land group of pi-rov-ki. The First Baltic Front was divided on February 24, 1945, and its troops, converted into the Zemland operational group of troops, included chens are part of the Third White-Russian Front.

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I. The offensive of the Kalinin (1st Baltic) Front in the Nevelsk, Gorodok and Vitebsk directions

Having repelled enemy attacks in the Kursk salient area in July 1943, the Soviet Armed Forces launched large-scale offensive operations. In accordance with the plan of the Headquarters Supreme High Command The main blow in the summer-autumn campaign was delivered in the southwestern direction with the goal of liberating Donbass and the richest agricultural regions of Left Bank Ukraine, access to the Dnieper and seizing bridgeheads on its right bank. At the same time, an offensive began in the western direction. This created the preconditions for the transfer of military operations to the territory of Belarus and the advance of the Red Army to the borders of East Prussia and Poland.

Assessing the future prospects of the armed struggle, in General Staff German ground forces, not without reason, believed that the blow Soviet fronts in the western direction can lead to serious consequences. In this regard, the Department of Foreign Armies of the Countries of the East, considering the situation in the zone of Army Group Center, emphasized in its conclusions that after the capture of Smolensk, “new operational opportunities...” would open up for the command of the Red Army. Using them, Soviet troops will strive to “break through as far as possible to the west and provide... advantageous starting areas for subsequent operations against the Minsk region...”.

Therefore, even before the end of the summer of 1943, the enemy began preparing numerous echeloned defensive zones and lines. On August 11, A. Hitler gave the order for the immediate construction of a defensive line of strategic importance, the so-called Eastern Wall, which was supposed to run from the Kerch Peninsula along the Molochnaya, Dnieper and Sozh rivers to Gomel, then east of Orsha, Vitebsk, Nevel, Pskov and north Lake Peipsi along the river Narva. In pursuance of the Fuehrer's instructions, German troops deployed intensive work to create long-term and field fortifications, focusing on road junctions and river banks, populated areas and tank-hazardous areas.

In such a situation, the Kalinin, Western and Bryansk fronts, having launched the Smolensk (August 7 - October 2) and Bryansk (August 17 - October 3) offensive operations in August, by the beginning of the third ten days of September overcame the stubborn resistance of Army Group Center and reached the north -eastern and eastern borders Belarus. At the same time, the armies of the Central Front created favorable conditions for the liberation of the southeastern regions of the republic. The results achieved in the western direction, as well as intelligence reports that the enemy had suffered heavy losses here, was demoralized and had no reserves, prompted the Supreme Command Headquarters to decide to continue the offensive to greater depths in order to capture Riga, Vilna (Vilnius - Note. ed.) and Minsk. But first it was planned to defeat groups of German troops in Eastern Belarus. To do this, the troops of the Kalinin Front had to strike in the Vitebsk-Polotsk direction in order to cover Army Group Center from the north. From the south, moving towards Gomel and Bobruisk, it was supposed to be covered Central Front. The Western Front received the task of operating in the Orsha and Mogilev directions.

It should be said that the Headquarters did not have sufficient grounds for optimistic forecasts and setting such decisive tasks for the fronts. They did not have much superiority over the enemy: in terms of people only 1.1 times, tanks - 2 times, guns and mortars - 1.8 times. Only for airplanes it was noticeable - 3.7 times. In addition, during the previous long offensive, formations and units suffered heavy losses and lacked people, equipment, ammunition, fuel, food and other material resources. The situation was aggravated by the wooded and swampy terrain, which made it difficult to maneuver and supply troops, and the onset of the autumn thaw. All this had a negative impact on subsequent military operations of the Kalinin (1st Baltic), Western and Central (Belarusian) fronts.

Back in August 1943, long before the end of the Smolensk offensive operation, the commander of the troops of the Kalinin Front, Army General A.I. Eremenko received from the Supreme High Command Headquarters the task of developing a preliminary plan for an offensive in the Vitebsk-Polotsk direction. At the same time, it was planned to launch another attack on the right wing of the front with the aim of capturing the city of Nevel. Such actions made it possible to cut off enemy communications on the adjacent wings of Army Groups “North” and “Center”, disrupt interaction between them and thereby isolate German troops in Belarus from the receipt of reserves.

However, the difficult situation that developed at that time in the western direction did not allow these plans to be implemented as soon as possible. The command of the Kalinin Front was able to return to them only at the end of September, when they began preparing the Nevelsk offensive operation (carried out with the transfer of hostilities to the territory of Belarus. - Author's note). In accordance with the plan of Army General A.I. Eremenko, the main role in it was assigned to the 3rd Shock Army of Lieutenant General K.N. Galitsky. It was supposed to deliver the main blow in the direction of Nevel, capture the city, and then gain a foothold to the north and west of it in the inter-lake defile. Another blow, in the direction of Gorodok, was delivered by the 4th Shock Army of Major General V.I. Shvetsova.

By October 1943, the 3rd Shock Army operated in a zone 105 km wide. It was opposed by five divisions of the German 2nd Airfield and 43rd Army Corps. Being in a state of defense for six months, they created several echelon defensive lines and lines equipped with trenches, full-profile communication passages, dugouts and wood-earth firing points. The front edge was covered with two strips of minefields, each 40-60 m deep, as well as two rows of wire fences. The total depth of the first strip reached 6-7 km.

The creation of a stable defense with relatively small forces was also facilitated by the wooded, swampy, heavily rugged terrain with an abundance of natural barriers. Nevel itself was bordered on all sides by numerous lakes, separated by several defiles no more than 2 km wide. The enemy dug anti-tank ditches between the lakes, and placed mines and reinforced concrete gouges in 5-8 rows on the roads. He turned the settlements on the outskirts of the city into centers of resistance. The Nevel garrison consisted of the 343rd security battalion, the construction battalion of the 43rd Army Corps, rear units and institutions - in total more than 2 thousand people.

The 3rd Shock Army consisted of five rifle divisions, three rifle brigades, one tank brigade, seven cannon, howitzer and mortar regiments, an anti-tank fighter and anti-aircraft artillery regiment and two field fortified areas. The number of rifle divisions averaged 5-6 thousand, rifle brigades - 3-4 thousand people. It was impossible to carry out an offensive with such limited forces throughout the entire zone. Therefore, Lieutenant General K.N. Galitsky decided to break through the enemy’s defenses in a narrow area, the width of which was only 4 km. To him in short time In compliance with camouflage measures, essentially all combat-ready formations were concentrated, as well as all tanks (54 units) and almost all of the army’s artillery (814 guns and mortars out of 886). In the rest of the zone, two field fortified areas, an army reserve regiment, four barrage detachment and two poorly equipped rifle divisions.

The operational formation of the army included: the first echelon (28th and 357th rifle divisions); success development echelon (78th Tank Brigade, 21st Guards Rifle Division, one of whose regiments was supposed to operate in vehicles, three artillery regiments); reserve (46th Guards Rifle Division, 31st and 100th Rifle Brigades). Such echeloning of forces and means was determined by the conduct of combat operations in wooded and swampy areas, when maneuver along the line of contact of the parties was extremely difficult, and the need, in connection with this, to continuously increase the force of the strike from the depths.

The transition of the main forces to the offensive was preceded by reconnaissance in force, which began at 5 a.m. on October 6. To carry it out, one rifle company, supported by artillery, was allocated from each of the two divisions of the first echelon. And although the advanced units were unable to capture individual sections of the first trench, their actions made it possible to clarify enemy firing points and identify several mortar and artillery batteries, as well as observation posts. At 8:40 a.m., artillery preparation for the attack began, which lasted 1 hour, 35 minutes and ended with a salvo from two rocket artillery regiments. After this, several groups of 6-8 aircraft of the 211th assault aviation division, Colonel P.M. Kuchma attacked the strongholds of German units at the front line and in the tactical depth.

After artillery and aviation strikes, the 357th and 28th rifle divisions of Major General A.L. Kronik and Colonel M.F. Bukshtynovich went on the attack. Within two hours, units of the 28th Infantry Division penetrated the enemy’s defenses in an area 2.5 km wide and advanced up to 2 km. But the 357th Division did not achieve success: its advanced units were stopped in front of barbed wire barriers by heavy fire from tactical reserves deployed by the enemy command. In order to prevent the strengthening of the group of German troops in the direction of the emerging success and the reduction in the pace of the offensive, the army commander decided to introduce a success development echelon into the battle. At 12 o'clock, the battalions of the 78th Tank Brigade (Colonel Ya.G. Kochergin) with a landing of machine gunners began to be drawn into the narrow neck in two columns, and behind them - the regiment of the 21st Guards Rifle Division, whose units moved in vehicles. In each column, in addition to tanks and vehicles, there were artillery and mortar batteries, anti-tank and anti-aircraft guns, as well as sappers.

At first, the group's pace of advance was slow due to the presence of wetlands and minefields. In the current situation, a responsible task was assigned to sappers. Under artillery and machine-gun fire, they reconnoitred and cleared the road, moving ahead of the tanks. The battalions of the 59th Guards Rifle Regiment under Lieutenant Colonel N.P. also relentlessly followed the combat vehicles. Chebotareva.

Close interaction between tank crews and sappers, rifle units and artillery, their decisive collaboration ensured success. By 14:00 on October 6, the mobile group overcame the defenses of the German troops and rushed to Nevel at top speed, destroying retreating convoys and artillery and throwing back the surviving small groups of the enemy to the north and south. The tankers went to the river. Six of them forestalled the 2nd Air Field Division, which was retreating towards it, in occupying an advantageous defensive line, crossed over serviceable bridges across the river and captured artillery pieces abandoned by the enemy at firing positions.

Already at 16:00, tank battalions with a landing of machine gunners, having defeated German units on the approaches to Nevel, entered the city, captured the telegraph, station and bridges. They were followed by the advanced units of the 59th Guards Rifle Regiment of the 21st Guards Rifle Division. By the end of October 6, Nevel was cleared of the enemy. Soviet troops destroyed up to 600 of his soldiers and officers and captured about 400 prisoners.

In fact, the 3rd Shock Army achieved the goal of the operation within one day, moving forward more than 35 km, which was a great success in conditions of well-prepared engineering defense and wooded and swampy terrain. Without giving the enemy the opportunity to restore the position and control of the troops, the army commander brought the 31st Rifle Brigade into the battle. Destroying retreating enemy groups, by the morning of October 7, it expanded the breakthrough to 10-12 km. By the end of the day, the brigade captured the Pechische line, Lake. Yemenets (south of Nevel). To the north of the city, the 46th Guards Rifle Division, brought into battle on the morning of October 8, under Major General S.I., was entrenched. Karapetyan.

In an effort to prevent the further advance of the 3rd Shock Army in the northwestern direction, the German command began hastily transferring reserves from other areas to the threatened direction - the 58th and 122nd infantry divisions from the Volkhov and Staraya Rusa areas, the 281st security division from near Novorzhev. At the same time, large aviation forces were aimed here, which, operating in groups of 20-40 aircraft, began to strike at the battle formations of the Soviet troops.

On the morning of October 8, the enemy brought newly arrived units into the battle with a total strength of at least two divisions. He delivered the strongest blow west of Nevel against the positions of the 69th Guards Rifle Regiment of the 21st Guards Rifle Division. Here up to infantry regiment with twelve tanks supported by aviation. They managed to get closer to the city at one of the sites. However, the further advance of this group was stopped by units of the 47th Guards Artillery Regiment and the 78th Tank Brigade. With their support, the 69th Guards Rifle Regiment regained its lost position. But even after this, the enemy did not give up hope of breaking through to Nevel, continuously attacking for two days, on October 9 and 10.

Having switched part of its forces to the defensive, the army at the same time tried to develop an offensive. On October 9, the 46th Guards Rifle Division liberated ten settlements and expanded the breakthrough to 20-25 km. The next day, her regiments, having crossed the river. Yemenka, occupied the Opukhliki railway station and reached the river line. Balazdyn. The 28th and 357th Infantry Divisions continued to push back the enemy, as well as the 185th Infantry Division and the 153rd Army Reserve Regiment, which carried out an auxiliary attack. However, in all directions, numerical superiority has already passed to the enemy.

This completed the Nevel offensive operation. During its course, the 3rd Shock Army inflicted serious damage on the German 263rd Infantry and 2nd Air Field Divisions, which lost more than 7 thousand people killed and wounded. Soviet troops captured more than 400 prisoners, 150 guns and mortars, over 200 machine guns, up to 40 different warehouses, a large number of small arms, ammunition and other military equipment. At the same time, the army's losses were relatively small - almost 2 thousand people, of which about 500 were irrevocable. In the 78th Tank Brigade, out of 54 tanks, only seven were lost.

At the same time, the successful offensive in the Nevel area could not compensate for the failures of the Kalinin Front in the direction of the main attack, in the center and on its left wing, where military operations were carried out with the goal of capturing Vitebsk. The directive of the Supreme Command Headquarters dated October 16 noted on this matter: “The troops of the Kalinin Front did not fulfill their assigned task - to capture Vitebsk by October 10. One of the reasons for this is the disorganization of the offensive... It is not carried out by all forces of the front, more or less simultaneously, but separate armies in certain areas ... which gives the enemy the opportunity to maneuver on his own and create fists to counter.” In the October battles, the front lost 56,474 people killed, wounded and missing. Despite this, he was forced to quickly prepare an offensive in two directions at once - Vitebsk and Gorodok.

After the completion of the Nevel offensive operation, the unification of the right wing of the Kalinin Front until the end of October repelled the attacks of the German troops, which they undertook in order to restore the lost position on the adjacent wings of Army Groups “North” and “Center”. Only at the beginning of November did the 1st Baltic Front (created on October 20, 1943 on the basis of the Kalinin Front) resume its offensive. In the middle of the month, his 4th Shock Army, in cooperation with the 3rd Shock Army of the 2nd Baltic Front (created on October 20, 1943 on the basis of the Baltic Front), broke through the enemy’s defenses in a narrow area west of Nevel and wedged into his position at 45- 55 km. However, with formations of the 4th Shock Army reaching the Dretuni area, on the distant approaches to Polotsk, and the 3rd Shock Army reaching Pustoshka, their further advance was stopped, as a result of which both armies, numbering up to fifteen divisions, found themselves in a very difficult situation . They occupied an area stretching for 100 km from north to south and 55 km from west to east, despite the fact that the width of the breakthrough area at the base of the wedge was only 9-10 km. In essence, this group found itself in a huge “sack” and was under threat of encirclement. The configuration of the line of contact between the parties and two years of war experience indicated that the enemy was unlikely to miss such an opportunity. This was also evidenced by intelligence data, according to which he was preparing a strike with the aim of destroying Soviet troops in the resulting ledge.

In such conditions, the commander of the 1st Baltic Front, Colonel General I.Kh. Bagramyan sought to deprive the German command of the initiative in combat operations and forestall it in going on the offensive. To do this, he decided to conduct an offensive operation (received the name “Gorodokskaya”) with the goal of encircling and defeating the enemy group south of Nevel and in the Gorodok area. The headquarters supported the idea of ​​the Front Military Council and transferred the 11th Guards Army to its composition, the commander of which was appointed the former commander of the 3rd Shock Army, Lieutenant General K.N. Galitsky. According to I.Kh. Bagramyan, this army was supposed to deliver the main blow in the direction of Kudena, Bychikha station, Gorodok, and to meet it from the “bag” - the 4th shock army of Major General V.I. Shvetsova in the direction of Bychikha station. As a result, it was planned to encircle six German divisions occupying defenses in the ledge north of Gorodok and defeat them. Subsequently, the 11th Guards Army was given the task of capturing Gorodok and conducting an attack on Vitebsk, bypassing it from the north-west, and the 4th Shock Army was to assist it, moving towards Shumilino from the north. The 43rd Army was planning to attack from the east towards Vitebsk.

The 11th Guards Army included four rifle corps (eleven rifle divisions), the 1st Tank Corps (97 tanks and self-propelled guns), the 10th Guards Tank Brigade (46 tanks), the 2nd Guards Heavy Tank Regiment (17 tanks) , two artillery divisions breakthrough, two anti-aircraft artillery divisions, three M-31 guards mortar brigades, five M-13 guards mortar regiments, four cannon, howitzer and mortar regiments, an engineer brigade, three separate sapper battalions. In addition, it was supported by two assault aviation divisions and was covered by front fighter aircraft.

The army was opposed by an enemy group consisting of units of the 211, 129, 87th Infantry, 2nd and 6th Air Field Divisions. In the operational depths, the German command concentrated the 20th tank and 252nd infantry divisions. According to intelligence data, in the direction of the upcoming offensive of the Soviet troops, the enemy prepared two lines in the main defense line. The first consisted of several echeloned trenches equipped with dugouts, communication passages, wood-earth firing points and engineering obstacles. On the second defensive line there were separate trenches, machine gun platforms, and artillery firing positions. East of the station Bychikha, several intermediate lines were created, consisting of separate strongholds located along the highway and railways. A serious advantage of the defending side was the inaccessible terrain, saturated with numerous rivers, streams, and swamps, most of which did not freeze until the end of December.

Lieutenant General K.N. Galitsky decided to deliver the main blow in the center of the army with the forces of the 36th and 16th Guards Rifle Corps. In addition, two auxiliary strikes were envisaged on the flanks: on the right - by the 29th and 5th Guards Rifle Divisions, united under the command of Major General A.S. Ksenofontova; on the left - the 83rd Rifle Corps. After breaking through the tactical defense zone, it was planned to introduce a mobile group into the battle - the 1st Tank Corps of Major General V.V. Butkova.

The 4th Shock Army, which occupied the defense in a wide zone, could attract only two rifle corps (five rifle divisions), the 5th Tank Corps (91 tanks and self-propelled guns), the 34th Guards Tank Brigade (24 tanks) and 3 1st Guards Cavalry Corps, although significantly weakened in previous battles and numbering about 12 thousand people. It received eight artillery and mortar regiments for reinforcement, including the M-13 regiment, and three separate sapper battalions. An assault aviation division was allocated to support the army.

In accordance with the plan of Major General V.I. Shvetsov, the main blow was delivered from the isthmus between lakes Bernovo and Chernovo in the direction of Bychikha station by the forces of the 2nd Guards Rifle Corps and the 5th Tank Corps. Behind them were the 3rd Guards Cavalry Corps and the 166th Rifle Division, intended to build on the success. The 22nd Guards Rifle Corps and the 34th Guards Tank Brigade operated in the direction of the other attack.

Due to the onset of mud, the start of the operation was postponed several times. Since dirt roads became impassable, ammunition was delivered to firing positions by horse-drawn vehicles, and often by hand. Every day in the 11th Guards Army, up to 2 thousand soldiers were allocated from each division to carry shells, mines and other cargo. This made it possible to accumulate about 1.5 rounds of ammunition for guns and mortars. However, in the 4th Shock Army the supply of artillery did not exceed 0.6-0.9 rounds of ammunition.

The offensive began on the morning of December 13th. From its first minutes, the weather made adjustments to the developed plan. That day it became warmer, the sky became cloudy, fog fell on the ground, which almost completely eliminated the use of aviation. This greatly complicated artillery operations. In the 11th Guards Army, artillery preparation lasted 2 hours. The fire was quite effective against targets on the front line, but artillery and mortar batteries located in the depths of the defense, as well as strongholds in villages hidden from ground observation, were poorly suppressed. Already 7-10 minutes after the rifle units, supported by tanks, went on the attack, the German artillery opened concentrated and defensive fire. Having captured a number of strong points and trench sections in the first position, the Soviet troops were forced to stop.

We had to organize artillery preparation again and then repeat the attack. This took a long time. In addition, the German command brought up reserves, which put up stubborn resistance. By the end of the day, most divisions and regiments had advanced a small distance. For example, the penetration of the 16th Guards Rifle Division (Major General E.V. Ryzhikov) into the enemy’s defense was only 400-600 m. Only the 84th Guards Rifle Division, Major General G.B. Petersa broke through the first position, covering 2 km in a 1.5 km wide strip.

This development of events required Lieutenant General K.N. Galitsky, with the permission of the commander of the 1st Baltic Front, change the plan of operation and begin organizing the entry into battle of the 1st Tank Corps and the 83rd Guards Rifle Division, which was being promoted from the reserve, not where it was foreseen, but in the direction of the emerging success. They received the task of completing the breakthrough of the enemy defense and reaching the Bychikha station area.

The 4th Shock Army operated more successfully on the first day of the operation. After a 1.5-hour artillery preparation of the formation of the 2nd Guards Rifle Corps of Major General A.P. Beloborodova, with the support of tanks and under the cover of a smoke screen, attacked the enemy and quickly broke through the first position. By the end of the day, the 47th Infantry Division of Colonel G.I. Chernov with the 24th Tank Brigade of Colonel V.K. Wartkina advanced forward up to 5 km, breaking the main line of defense. At the same time, the 90th Guards Rifle Division of Colonel V.E. Vlasova, wedged to a depth of 3 km, reached the second position. The prerequisites were created for the entry into battle of the 5th Tank Corps of Major General M.G. Sakhno and the 3rd Guards Cavalry Corps, Lieutenant General P.S. Oslikovsky.

The relatively successful start of the offensive by the strike group of the 1st Baltic Front caused alarm among the German command. At dawn on December 14, it began to carry out counterattacks against units of the 11th Guards Army, attracting up to an infantry battalion with the support of 7-15 tanks from the 20th Tank Division. Having met their strong opposition, the 16th, 11th and 31st Guards Rifle Divisions, which tried to conduct an offensive in the center and on the left flank, remained at their previous lines. At the same time, they attracted enemy reserves, which made it possible to develop success on the right flank of the army, in the zone of the 8th Guards Rifle Corps under Lieutenant General P.F. Malysheva. Here, two tank and one motorized rifle brigades of the 1st Tank Corps were brought into the battle, which, together with the 84th Guards Rifle Division, by mid-day advanced 4 km and cut the Nevel-Gorodok highway.

The further task of the corps was to strike along the highway to the south, in the direction of Gorodok. While carrying out this task, tank units encountered several enemy strongholds. Trying to get around them combat vehicles fell on swampy soil and got stuck in marshy soil. It took a lot of time to pull them out, and the pace of the offensive slowed sharply. In the afternoon, the army commander brought the 83rd Guards Rifle Division into the battle on the right flank. By 5 p.m., its units reached the rear of the German 211th Infantry Division.

That day, they continued to build on the success achieved the day before by the formation of the 4th Shock Army. Having broken enemy resistance, the 5th Guards Cavalry and 47th Rifle Divisions reached the Nevel - Gorodok railway. Units of the 90th Guards and 381st (Colonel I.I. Serebryakov) rifle divisions, in cooperation with the 70th Tank Brigade, surrounded up to an infantry regiment in the large settlement of Vyrovlya. At the same time, the 22nd Guards Rifle Corps of Major General N.B. began an offensive on the left flank of the army. Ibyansky, who covered 1.5 km in difficult conditions of wooded and swampy terrain.

On December 15, both armies, conducting an offensive in converging directions, defeated the 211th Infantry Division. The next morning, the 1st Tank Corps and the advanced detachment of the 1st Guards Rifle Division (Major General N.A. Kropotin) of the 11th Guards Army and the 5th Tank Corps with the advanced units of the 90th Guards Rifle Division of the 4th The shock army united in the Bychikha area. As a result, units of the German 83rd, 87th, 129th, 252nd Infantry and 2nd Air Field Divisions, as well as six separate special and security battalions, were surrounded. During December 16 and 17, after refusing to lay down their arms and accept the ultimatum of the Soviet command, they were destroyed. Only small scattered groups were able to break through to the west.

In general, during the five-day battles strike force The 1st Baltic Front defeated the enemy in the entire northwestern part of the Gorodok ledge, successfully completing the task of the first stage of the operation. Thus, the breakthrough throat south of Nevel was expanded to 30-35 km, which, in turn, led to a significant improvement in the operational position of the 3rd Shock Army. At the same time, conditions were created for the development of an offensive in the directions of Gorodok and Vitebsk.

In an effort to prevent the enemy’s Gorodok group from strengthening with reserves, Colonel General I.Kh. Bagramyan already on the morning of December 18 assigned new tasks to the 11th Guards, 4th Shock and 43rd armies. He continued to assign the main role in the second stage of the operation to the 11th Guards Army. She was ordered to take possession of the Town, to the end next day reach the border of lakes Losvido and Convenient, and subsequently liberate Vitebsk.

In accordance with the decision of Lieutenant General K.N. Galitsky, the main blow was delivered in the zone of the 8th Guards Rifle Corps, to which the 10th Guards Tank Brigade was attached. He had to conduct an offensive along the railway to Bolshoi Prudok (4-5 km north of Gorodok), bypass the latter from the west with the forces of the 83rd and 26th Guards Rifle Divisions and reach the river. Berezhanka. From the east the city was to be bypassed by the 16th Guards Rifle Corps. It was planned that the 5th Guards Rifle Division would attack it from the north.

However, the army spent not one day, as envisaged by the commander of the front troops, but five whole days to complete the task of capturing the Town. The German command attached great importance to holding the city area. Here the defense areas of the 20th Tank, 256th, 129th Infantry and 6th Airfield Divisions were occupied. On the approaches to Gorodok and on its outskirts, the enemy prepared four defensive lines. Skillfully using the rugged terrain, replete with commanding heights, lakes and rivers, he offered fierce resistance to the Soviet troops who continued the offensive. Already in the first days, the 1st Tank Corps, which had suffered heavy losses in military equipment, had to be withdrawn from the battle. Only towards the end of December 21, the army’s strike force broke through the first two defensive lines. While the advance of the formations operating in the center of its zone was 35 km, on the right flank it did not exceed 15 km. As a result, it was not possible to carry out the plan to encircle and subsequently encircle the enemy group occupying defenses north of Gorodok.

Fighting to break through the third defensive line, which ran along the southern shore of the lake. Kosho, the Gorozhanka and Palminka rivers and was equipped with full-profile trenches, wire barriers and minefields, began on December 23, were fought all day and were extremely fierce, turning into hand-to-hand combat. Unable to withstand the offensive impulse of the Soviet troops, the enemy, under the cover of rearguards, began to retreat.

The commander of the 11th Guards Army planned to resume the offensive at dawn on December 24. However, the Front Military Council decided to carry out a night assault on the Town. The main argument in favor of this decision was that in the darkness the main advantage of the enemy was minimized - his firepower. At approximately two o'clock in the morning, the 83rd, 26th and 11th Guards Rifle Divisions attacked the town from the west and east. German units, after some consternation caused by the suddenness of the attack, put up strong resistance on both directions with fire and counterattacks using tanks and assault guns. After the fighting on the western and eastern outskirts of the city reached its highest intensity, the 5th Guards Rifle Division began its assault from the north. During the night and morning, the enemy garrison was cut into groups isolated from each other. Gradually his resistance began to weaken. By noon, the town was completely cleared of the enemy, who lost up to 2.5 thousand soldiers and officers in battles for it. In addition, Soviet units captured 29 guns, 2 tanks, 48 ​​mortars, 41 vehicles, many small arms and ammunition.

After the liberation of Gorodok, the front troops continued the offensive without pause in order to capture Vitebsk on the move by December 30-31. By the evening of December 25, formations of the 11th Guards Army, having advanced 4-5 km, reached the first (outer) line of defense of Vitebsk, which ran 25 km from it along the line Belodedovo, Sloboda, Borovka, the Zaluchye, Shpaki junction. 6-8 km to the south there was a second line, stretching from Ovary through Gorodishche to lake. Losvido. The third line was installed 5-8 km from the city. German troops especially thoroughly strengthened the roads leading to Vitebsk from Gorodok, Sirotino, and Polotsk. In addition, the enemy command significantly strengthened the Vitebsk direction by transferring units from other sectors here. By December 26, the 3rd and 4th airfield, 256th and 197th infantry divisions, battle groups of the 87th, 211th and 129th infantry divisions, and part of the forces were operating against the 11th Guards and 4th Shock Armies 12th Infantry Division, a separate tank battalion, a division of heavy assault guns, an artillery division of the RGK, a number of other separate units and subunits.

The front had a slight advantage in infantry, but was inferior to the enemy in the number of tanks. In addition, the problem of supplying it with ammunition was never resolved, since the distance between warehouses and artillery firing positions began to be 180 km. The divisions and regiments, having suffered heavy losses in previous battles, were not replenished with people. The combat potential of the front's strike group has significantly decreased, and the enemy's ability to repel its offensive, on the contrary, has increased.

The 11th Guards Army delivered its main blow along the Gorodok-Vitebsk highway, on which the German command concentrated its main defensive efforts. At the same time, in order to mislead the Soviet troops, it deliberately withdrew its units from northern shore lake Losvido, located west of the highway. After army intelligence established the absence of the enemy in this area, Lieutenant General K.N. Galitsky decided to bypass its strongest strongholds along the ice of the lake, the length of which from north to south was about 8 km. For this purpose, the 11th and 18th Guards Rifle Divisions, as well as a regiment of the 235th Rifle Division, were allocated.

Without encountering enemy resistance, units of three divisions, moving in columns, crossed almost the entire lake. However, when there were several hundred meters left to the southern shore, they were met by concentrated fire from guns, mortars and machine guns. As a result of shell and mine explosions, the ice on the lake was destroyed, and extensive polynyas and areas of open water formed on its surface. The result of the tragedy that unfolded was the death of virtually the entire group. No more than 30 people were able to escape.

After this, the solution to the problem of capturing Vitebsk by the new year, 1944, was unlikely. And indeed, despite the efforts made, the formations of the 11th Guards and 4th Shock Armies until the end of December 1943 covered only 5 to 7 km in certain directions, after which they went on the defensive. This completed the Gorodok offensive operation. During its course, Soviet troops eliminated the threat of encirclement by the enemy of the 3rd and 4th shock armies, liberated over 1220 settlements, captured 3.3 thousand German soldiers and officers, and captured a lot of military equipment and military equipment.

In his memoirs, Marshal of the Soviet Union I.Kh. Bagramyan called this operation “one of the most difficult” among those that were carried out under his leadership during the war. He motivated this by the fact that “firstly, the operation was prepared and carried out in extremely difficult conditions against large enemy forces, which, with purely German scrupulousness, fortified themselves in an area favorable for defense, which dominated the initial position of our troops. Because of bad weather and limited visibility, the operation took place with very little participation from aviation and artillery. Secondly, we did not have a significant superiority over the enemy, especially in the second phase of the operation. The possibilities for maneuvering troops, especially mobile formations, during the entire operation were also extremely meager. Thirdly, the front, having a powerful defensive system in front of it, was extremely poorly supplied with ammunition and fuel. Fourthly, our troops carried out active offensive operations at a time when our neighbors - the 2nd Baltic Front to the north and the Western Front to the south - having failed to achieve success in the offensive, went on the defensive.”

Overall in recent months 1943 The 1st Baltic Front was forced to conduct an offensive in extremely difficult conditions, essentially at the limit of its strength. As I.Kh. Bagramyan later noted: “Setting up tasks that exceeded the capabilities of the troops in scope was a kind of method special welcome leadership, which aimed to achieve maximum activity of our offensive actions in Belarus…". This caused large losses of people at the front. During October - December they amounted to 168,902 people, including 43,551 people - irrevocably.

Considering further prospects for armed struggle, the Supreme Command Headquarters planned to launch a large-scale offensive in the northwestern and southwestern directions during the winter and spring of 1944. At the same time, the troops operating in the central sector of the Soviet-German front were assigned a supporting role. They were supposed to attract the main forces of Army Group Center and prevent them from maneuvering to strengthen the Wehrmacht grouping on Right Bank Ukraine. To this end, the 1st Baltic, Western and Belarusian fronts received the task of continuing the offensive operations begun in the fall of 1943 to liberate the eastern regions of Belarus and reach the line of Polotsk, Lepel, Mogilev, r. Bird. The total depth of the planned advance to the west did not exceed 50-150 km. At the same time, front-line and army formations had to operate in the previous grouping of forces and means, without receiving additional reinforcement from Headquarters, all of whose reserves were deployed near Leningrad, Novgorod and Ukraine.

The immediate task of the 1st Baltic Front was still to capture Vitebsk, which was considered by the command of Army Group Center as the “gateway to the Baltic states.” Attaching great importance to holding the city, it concentrated the 3rd Tank Army on the approaches to it, which included fifteen divisions, including one tank, seventeen separate divisions RGK field artillery, six mortar battalions, five brigades of assault guns, two battalions of Tiger tanks and two divisions of heavy anti-tank guns.

By the beginning of January 1944, the front united the 4th Shock (Lieutenant General P.F. Malyshev), the 11th Guards (Lieutenant General K.N. Galitsky), the 39th (Lieutenant General N. E. Berzarin), 43rd (Lieutenant General K.D. Golubev) and 3rd Air (Lieutenant General of Aviation N.F. Papivin) armies. In accordance with the plan of the new offensive operation, it was planned to deliver the main blow with the forces of the 11th Guards and 4th Shock Armies. They were opposed by up to eight to nine enemy divisions. Taking into account the low staffing of formations and units of both armies with people, the Military Council of the Front ordered the creation in all rifle regiments of one assault battalion, reinforced with tanks (eight to ten units), two to three batteries of 45-mm and 76-mm guns, one to two guns 122 mm caliber and a sapper company.

Combat operations in the Vitebsk direction resumed on January 3 with the 4th Shock Army going on the offensive. During the day, its formations broke through the enemy’s defenses to a depth of 5 km and reached the line of the Pestunitsa and Zaronok rivers. Here their advance slowed down, and the next day, as a result of stubborn resistance from parts of the German 9th Army Corps, it was completely stopped. The 84th and 5th Guards Rifle Corps (Major Generals E.V. Dobrovolsky and I.S. Bezugly) from the 39th Army, which carried out an auxiliary attack, also failed to achieve success. Their penetration through the Vitebsk-Orsha highway to the west was eliminated by counterattacks of German units.

Only on January 6, the rifle divisions of the 11th Guards Army together with the brigades of the 1st Tank Corps joined the offensive of the 4th Shock and 39th armies. In some areas they were able to overcome 1-2 km, however, the very next day, as a result of heavy enemy artillery fire, they suffered heavy losses in people and tanks. Thus, in the 89th Tank Brigade, 43 out of 50 combat vehicles were disabled.

The advance of the advancing formations and units was restrained by tank ambushes and individual tanks that frequently changed firing positions, heavy mortars and guns deployed for direct fire, which were widely used by the enemy command. Where Soviet troops achieved success, the enemy immediately launched counterattacks. For example, on January 8, the 29th Infantry Division, Major General Ya.L. Shteiman was liberated by Zapolye, but in the evening German units forced her to leave this settlement.

Until January 18, the divisions of the 4th Shock, 11th Guards, 39th and additionally brought into the battle 43rd armies fought heavy battles. They managed to break through the enemy’s defenses north of Vitebsk, reach the closest approaches to the city, cut a section of the Polotsk-Vitebsk railway and envelop the Vitebsk group of the German 3rd Tank Army from the north-west. But this time the troops of the 1st Baltic Front were unable to capture the city. Army General I.Kh. Bagramyan again had to order a temporary cessation of the offensive “in order to better preparation and replenishment of troops...".

To carry out the next offensive operation, by decision of the Supreme High Command Headquarters, troops were involved not only from the 1st Baltic Front, but also from the Western Front. It was planned that their strike groups, concentrated on adjacent wings, would strike in directions converging on Zaozerye (southwest of Vitebsk), surround the enemy in the Vitebsk salient and in a short time complete his defeat. From the 1st Baltic Front, the 4th Shock and 11th Guards Armies were involved in the operation, which were supposed to operate in the same zones, practically without reinforcement with additional forces and means. Only rifle companies and battalions of the first echelon were slightly replenished with people, and even those at the expense of the rear and special units regiments and divisions.

The fighting began on February 3. On that day, formations of the two armies attacked the front line of the enemy’s defense in a zone up to 12 km wide, in some directions they penetrated 5-6 km deep and captured heavily fortified strongholds - Volkovo, Zapolye, Gurki, Toporino, Kislyaki, Mashkino, Bondarevo. On this occasion, the commander of the German 3rd Tank Army, Colonel General G. Reinhardt, in his order, was forced to admit that “today’s very difficult combat day, unfortunately, brought us a significant loss of territory.” In an effort to make a difference in the situation, he immediately began to move infantry units, tank battalions, heavy anti-tank and mortar divisions, batteries of assault guns, and engineer units to the threatened direction. In the following days, the reserves of Army Group Center also began to arrive here.

After this, the advantage in forces and means passed to the side of the enemy. The 4th Shock and 11th Guards armies simply did not have the real capabilities to carry out the assigned task. Until mid-February rifle formations and units repelled numerous counterattacks by German troops, trying to hold the captured lines. Gradually, positional forms of struggle began to dominate in the actions of the parties, and soon the situation in the zone of the 1st Baltic Front stabilized. It remained almost unchanged until the summer of 1944.

Valery Abaturov,
leading Researcher Research
Institute (military history) of the Military Academy
General Staff of the RF Armed Forces, Candidate of Historical Sciences

The Nazi Army Group North, operating in the Baltics on a thousand-kilometer front, found itself in an extremely unfavorable operational-strategic position. However, Hitler’s command did not think of withdrawing her. It attached great importance to keeping the Baltic states in its hands and took measures to strengthen its grouping. Several infantry and tank divisions, a large number of tanks and assault guns from Germany and other sectors of the front were transferred here. The total number of German troops here was over 700 thousand people. They had 1,210 tanks and assault guns. Their actions were supported by 300,400 aircraft of the 1st and 6th Air Fleets.

The troops of the Leningrad, three Baltic fronts and the 39th Army of the 3rd Belorussian Front acted against this German group.

The troops of the 1st Baltic Front occupied the defense from the Western Dvina River to Fliornanishka. It included: 4th Shock, 41st and 43rd Armies, 2nd and 6th Guards Combined Arms, 5th Guards Tank, 3rd air army and the 1st Separate Tank Corps.

The enemy prepared in advance his powerful defense, consisting of three defensive lines. Wire barriers were installed in front of the front line, tank-hazardous areas were mined, and all main roads were dug with anti-tank ditches.

The second line of defense consisted of 2-3 trenches with communication passages. In addition, the Nazis prepared a defensive line in operational depth, located in

1520 kilometers from the second defense line.

The fascist German command created a particularly deep defense in the Memel direction. Here it consisted of six defensive lines and two city contours around Memel. However, the Nazis did not have the necessary forces to simultaneously occupy all defensive lines. They expected to occupy them with retreating forces in the event of the Red Army breaking through the tactical defense.

The Red Army troops had a significant superiority over the enemy in forces and means and occupied a more advantageous operational position. However, the multi-line enemy defense, combined with the wooded and swampy terrain, required the Soviet command to carefully prepare an offensive operation.

The 5th Guards Tank Army, which transferred to the 1st Baltic Front on August 17, 1944, was withdrawn from the battle on August 24 in the Siauliai region. The 29th Tank Corps, having completed a thirty-kilometer night march, concentrated in the area of ​​Trumpatel, Stanuliai, Jakiskiai, Linkaichai in readiness to launch powerful counterattacks in the direction of Darguzhyai, ​​Jelgava, Siauliai. Here the corps units remained until September 13, where they were replenished with personnel and supplies, conducted training and prepared military equipment for the upcoming battles. By this time, the corps had: 120 tanks, 53 self-propelled artillery installations, 13 guards rocket artillery installations.

On September 13, the 29th Tank Corps received the task, after breaking through the enemy defenses with units of the 1st Rifle Corps, to enter the breakthrough and develop an offensive in two directions, defeat the opposing enemy units and reach the area east of Zhdukote.

Hitler's command sought to break through the defenses of the Red Army troops in the direction of Dobele and thereby provide a wide passage for Army Group North to connect with the troops of Army Group Center. The German strike force pushed back units of the 6th Guards Army. There was a threat of enemy capture of Dobele and communications of Soviet troops.

On the night of September 20, 1944, formations of the 5th Guards Tank Army rushed to the aid of the riflemen. The 29th Tank Corps took up defense north and west of Dobele at the Laukanlzhas, Tsiruli, Tynni line, began engineering work and strengthened reconnaissance.

32nd Tank Brigade under the command of Lieutenant Colonel S.G. Kolesnikov. was in the Laukanjas area on the northwestern outskirts of Dobele and was preparing to repel enemy attacks. But the tankers did not have to engage in battle and the German troops were overthrown by the advanced rifle units.

The 5th Guards Tank Army returned to its original area. Only the 32nd Tank Brigade remained on the defensive.

In order to disorient the enemy, large radio exercises began on the night of September 27, 1944, during which the approach of new formations to this area was demonstrated. In fact, only a partial regrouping of some units took place. The 32nd Tank Brigade withdrew from defense and redeployed to the forest northeast of Kaire in two night marches. Here she temporarily became subordinate to the commander of the 43rd Army.

During the regrouping of troops, the 5th Guards Tank Army received the task of moving to a new concentration area. Having completed a hundred-kilometer march over two nights, the 29th Tank Corps concentrated in the area of ​​Lepsha, Tula Sloboda, Karveliai, Taurugiai by the morning of September 30 and began preparing for military operations.

At noon on September 3, the corps received the order: without the 32nd Tank Brigade and the 1223rd Light Self-Propelled Artillery Regiment with the 14th Heavy Tank Regiment, the 366th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment after breaking through the enemy defenses and units of the 43rd Army reaching the line Gudminki-Stefanishki enter the breakthrough and develop an offensive in two directions towards Gedyntsi, Stefanishki, Zhorany and towards Pokurshenai, Yanopol, Andreevo.

The 31st Tank Brigade crossed the Venta River in an organized manner in the Kursenai area and, rapidly moving along the indicated route, reached the forest east of Stefanishka by the end of the day.

The 3rd Tank Battalion, operating in the vanguard of the advance detachment, met stubborn enemy resistance in the Upin area and began a battle with it. In an effort to hold an important road junction, the enemy concentrated the retreating units of the 551st and 547th Infantry Divisions here. Despite the courage of the tankers, they were unable to break through. The battle became protracted. The brigade commander, Colonel Pokolov, in order not to delay the movement of the main forces, left the 3rd battalion to cover the units from the front, and decided to bypass the enemy from the south with an advance detachment. This maneuver paid off. Having bypassed the swampy area, the brigade reached Vidsodis by 19 o'clock, crossed a number of water obstacles and, under the cover of darkness, quickly burst into Patumshai. The enemy, stunned by the audacity of the tankers, did not offer serious resistance and, having suffered losses in manpower and equipment, hastily retreated to the west. Pursuing the retreating battered units of the Nazis, the brigade approached Lukniki at 21 o'clock. Covering the highway junction, the enemy built a number of engineering structures here and concentrated a significant number of tanks and artillery, which met the tankers with organized fire and forced them to stop. Suddenly the German artillerymen stopped firing. The reason is this: a tank tractor led by technical lieutenant Gubaidullin was moving behind the advanced units of the brigade. He fell behind and tried to catch up with his own. Moving at maximum speed, he lost his route and decided to catch up with his battalion by shortening the path through the bushes and jumped out to a high-rise where there was a German battery and began to crush its guns with its tracks. The Germans, mistaking the rapidly moving tank tractor for a unit of advancing tankers, rushed in all directions. The brigade commander took advantage of this moment, developed an offensive, bypassed the high-rise building and continued the offensive in the direction of Yanopol. At 11 o'clock the brigade approached Vekshele, with a blow it broke through the defenses at the junction between the 551st and 547th enemy divisions and entered the operational space.

The enemy tried with small groups of infantry, supported by two or three tanks and several guns, to delay the advance of the 31st Tank Brigade. But these attempts were unsuccessful. The tankers, skillfully maneuvering, bypassing knots of resistance, quickly moved forward and by 20 o'clock they approached Retovo. In a short but hot battle, the forward detachment of the brigade defeated up to a regiment of enemy infantry and captured this large highway junction. Over two days of fighting, the brigade covered about 135 kilometers of wooded and swampy terrain, inflicting significant damage on the enemy and spreading panic among his units, while suffering minor losses.

The 25th Tank Brigade maneuvered north to bypass strong point enemy in the Lukniki area and at noon reached the eastern outskirts of Zhorana. The brigade's reconnaissance discovered a concentration of enemy infantry, tanks and artillery. In order not to get involved in protracted battles, the brigade commander, Colonel Stanislavsky I.O., covered with one battalion from the front, with the main forces bypassed the settlement from the south and, with the 1446th self-propelled artillery regiment, launched an attack on Medingany and by 18 o’clock captured it.

Warriors distinguished themselves in battles these days tank company under the command of senior lieutenant Parfenov A.G. During the offensive battles from October 5 to October 10, 1944, the company was in the vanguard of the 25th Tank Brigade and acted decisively and boldly, paving the way for the brigade on its way to the Baltic Sea coast. In the Plunglyany area in battle, senior lieutenant A.G. Parfenov. with his crew, destroyed 3 tanks, 39 Nazi soldiers, destroyed a convoy with military equipment, captured a food warehouse, liberated German captivity 50 Soviet citizens. Tankers under the command of Senior Lieutenant A.G. Parfenov with a swift rush we reached the Siauliai-Klaipeda railway, which ensured successful actions brigades and corps.

By Decree of the Presidium Supreme Council USSR on March 24, 1945, senior lieutenant Afanasy Georgievich Parfenov was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. Continuing to participate in the battles for the liberation of Latvia, senior lieutenant Parfenov A.G. On November 1, 1944 he died a brave death in battle.

Soviet troops advanced to the shores of the Baltic Sea.

By the end of the day, the 29th Tank Corps was at the Keturaki-Kentrokalne line. His 25th Tank Brigade occupied a perimeter defense in the Medingyan area. The 31st Tank Brigade, advancing in the forward detachment of the corps, occupied a perimeter defense in the Retovo area and conducted reconnaissance in the direction of Endriejavas. The 53rd Motorized Rifle Brigade was located in Yanopol, supporting the actions of tank brigades from the flanks and rear.

The 32nd Tank Brigade, withdrawn from the command of the 43rd Army, concentrated in the Yanopol area by the end of the day and formed the reserve of the corps commander.

By this time, the defeated units of the 551st Infantry Division, the 201st Security Division, the Lauchert combat group, the 303rd and 846th assault gun brigades were retreating to the west under attacks from Soviet troops. In front of the army front, they covered their retreat with small groups of infantry and tanks. Came to the Telšiai region tank division « Greater Germany"and together with the 201st Security Division held back the rapid advance of the Red Army formations.

During offensive operations, the 31st Tank Brigade approached the village of Blindaki, which the Nazis turned into a stronghold. Along the heights north and east of Blindaki, the enemy dug full-profile trenches, installed wire barriers and minefields, in the depths of the defense he dug an anti-tank ditch. But even here the Nazis were unable to provide serious resistance. After a short battle, the 31st Tank Brigade burst into the populated area and, without stopping, overtaking and smashing convoys and convoys, reached Budryai and captured it. Leaving the 3rd Tank Battalion to cover the right flank, the brigade commander led the main forces to the crossing of the Miniya River in the Rogovishki area.

This water barrier presented a serious obstacle for the attackers. It had three sleeves. Between them stretched a marshy area more than a kilometer wide. The West Bank dominated the East. Full-profile trenches were dug along its heights, bunkers were equipped, wire barriers and minefields were installed in five stakes, and there was an anti-tank ditch. The bridges through each branch were mined. This powerful defensive line, covering the approaches to the Baltic Sea in the Rogovishki area, was defended by a battalion of enemy infantry, supported by an artillery battalion and 15 tanks of the Grossdeutschland division.

But nothing could stop the offensive impulse of the Soviet troops. Acting swiftly and boldly, they overcame this defensive line. The first to reach the river was the reconnaissance platoon of the 31st tank brigade in two armored personnel carriers with three motorcycles, led by the chief of reconnaissance, senior lieutenant Zinoviev. The Germans were in no hurry to blow up bridges. They hoped to lift them into the air at the moment when a significant number of Soviet troops and equipment appeared on them. The intelligence chief figured out this enemy plan and decided at all costs to preserve the bridges for crossing our troops. Scout senior sergeant Shvetskov I.A., having overcome a 45-meter sleeve under enemy fire, climbed ashore and, using bushes, secretly crawled to the first bridge. Here he discovered about 600 kilograms of explosives, found wires leading to the explosion mechanism, and cut them. Overcoming the cold while crossing the sleeves, camouflaging in the bushes, supporting scouts from the shore with machine guns, the senior sergeant, one by one, found and neutralized all the bridges. For the bravery, courage, courage shown during the clearance of bridges, senior sergeant Ivan Andreevich Shvetskov was awarded the Order of Glory, 3rd degree.

After a short but hot battle, the tankers crossed the river and captured a bridgehead. During October 8, 1944, formations and corps units successfully completed their task. The advanced units crossed the Miniya River and captured a bridgehead on its western bank. As part of these units, a tank platoon fought under the command of Lieutenant A.P. Baschenko, who was the first to cross the river, captured the crossing and held it until the main forces of the 31st Tank Brigade arrived. Continuing the offensive, the platoon broke into the Kretinga railway station, destroyed a lot of enemy personnel and captured 2 trains with military equipment. The next day, while on reconnaissance northeast of the village of Karklininkai, he boldly entered into battle with superior enemy forces. During the battle, Lieutenant A.P. Baschenko died a heroic death on the battlefield.

By decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR dated March 24, 1945, the tank platoon commander, Lieutenant Alexander Petrovich Bashchenko, was posthumously awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

During the offensive battles, favorable conditions were created for breaking through the second and third defensive lines on the approaches to Memel.

For the capture of the cities of Plunge and Telshai and the breakthrough of a number of defensive lines on this day, the Supreme Commander-in-Chief expressed gratitude to the entire personnel of the corps.

On the morning of October 9, 1944, the army commander ordered the 29th Tank Corps, operating ahead of the main forces of the army, to launch a decisive offensive, with the main forces to cross the Minija River in the Kartena, Ragaviski sector and by 14:00 to capture the city of Kretinga. The advance detachment had to reach the coast and capture the cities of Palanga and Karklininkai, providing itself with strong cover from the north and northwest.

1st Tank Battalion of the 25th Tank Brigade under the command of Captain N.M. Reshetnikov. was advancing rapidly. When approaching the Miniya River, the battalion defeated a three times superior enemy, crossed the river, captured a bridgehead and cut off the enemy’s escape route to East Prussia. During the offensive battles, the battalion overtook and defeated a German motorized column, liberated a large number of settlements, destroyed more than 250 enemy soldiers and officers, 18 tanks and self-propelled guns, 7 mortar batteries and much other enemy equipment. The battalion commander's crew alone destroyed 4 tanks and 12 vehicles with fire and tracks.

By decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR dated March 24, 1945, the battalion commander, Captain Nikolai Mikhailovich Reshetnikov, was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

The 31st Tank Brigade with a daring blow broke through the enemy's second defensive line south of Kretinga. Its vanguard, moving through wooded and swampy terrain, bypassing populated areas, by ten o'clock approached the crossing of the Akmena River in the Eglischke area and met fire resistance from the Nazis. After a two-hour battle, the brigade pushed back the enemy along its entire offensive sector.

The 53rd motorized rifle brigade, after a short artillery preparation, in which guards mortars took part, in cooperation with the 1223rd light self-propelled artillery regiment, launched an offensive on Kretinga and, without encountering serious resistance, captured this important junction of highways and railways.

All parts and formations of the corps were approaching the sea. Having made a twelve-kilometer throw, two rifle companies of the 53rd motorized rifle brigade with the support of tankers and self-propelled guns, at 13:30 they stormed the city of Palanga and reached its western outskirts.

The tank company commander, Senior Lieutenant Shabalin B.S., acting as part of the advance detachment of the 25th Tank Brigade, broke through behind enemy lines and on October 19, 1944, was the first to enter the city of Palanga. During the battle, the company destroyed more than a hundred German soldiers and officers, set fire to 15 tanks and other equipment. With its decisive actions, the company ensured that the main forces of the corps reached the Baltic Sea.

By decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR dated March 24, 1945, the tank company commander, Captain Boris Sergeevich Shabalin, was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

One of the first, on October 10, 1944, fought its way to the shores of the Baltic Sea in the area settlement Karolininkai of the Lithuanian SSR and ensured that the main forces of the 31st Tank Brigade reached there, a tank platoon commanded by junior lieutenant G.I. Pegov.

Being on the reconnaissance patrol of the brigade, the platoon acted boldly, proactively and decisively, promptly discovering weak areas in the enemy’s defenses and reporting to brigade headquarters. While smashing the enemy, the platoon commander's crew destroyed up to 150 fascists, 2 tanks, 3 self-propelled guns, an artillery battery on the march, 2 armored personnel carriers and much other equipment.

By decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR dated March 24, 1945, the tank platoon commander, junior lieutenant Grigory Ivanovich Pegov, was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

At 14:00 the 32nd Tank Brigade reached the Palanga area. By 15 o'clock the remaining formations of the corps reached the sea on a fifteen-kilometer front.

The enemy group in the Baltics was divided into two parts.

The corps, like the entire 5th Guards Tank Army, had to operate in forested and swampy terrain with a significant number of lakes and small rivers and streams. The beginning of the rains and the autumn thaw turned the roads impassable. The high tempo of the offensive was achieved at the cost of high moral and physical strength Total personnel. And the pace of advance averaged 50 kilometers per day.

As a result of the rapid advance of the Red Army units, the Germans were unable to use 5 previously prepared lines. They intended to occupy them with departing units. But the Soviet advancing units reached these lines before the retreating ones Nazi troops and overcame them relatively easily.

After reaching the sea, the 29th Tank Corps received the task of taking up defense on the lines of Darataychay, Derbenai, Shventai with a front to the north.

The experience of the operation has shown that if the enemy has defensive lines in the depths of the defense, the task can be successfully completed only with a rapid offensive, forestalling the enemy in their occupation.