Some issues of breaking through the defense during the transition to the counteroffensive. Breakthrough of the Nazi defense on the Oder and Neisse

Operation "Bagration" Goncharov Vladislav Lvovich

Breaking through enemy defenses

Breaking through enemy defenses

On the night of June 24, our aviation heavily bombarded the front line of the enemy's defenses, and especially the areas of Parichi, Selishche, Gomza, Sekirichi, and Chernin.

As a result of an air raid, fires broke out in the enemy's disposition and strong explosions occurred.

Under the cover of aviation and artillery fire, which began an artillery offensive at 7 o'clock in the morning, the infantry and tanks of the 18th Rifle Corps took up their starting position for the attack.

At 0905, the artillery shifted its fire into the depths, and units of the 18th Corps, on a common signal, attacked enemy positions.

With a strong blow in the general direction of Gomza, infantry and tanks broke into the trenches of the first line and captured them. The enemy, suppressed by artillery fire, put up little resistance. At 12 noon, the 69th Rifle Division of the 18th Rifle Corps captured a strong German stronghold in Rakovichi and began to rapidly move towards Chernin. To the left of it, the 37th Guards Rifle Division was advancing, which at 10.40, having beaten off a counterattack to the enemy infantry battalion, supported by two self-propelled guns from the area northwest of Nikolaevka, captured this settlement. The 15th Rifle Division, meeting strong enemy resistance, repulsed several counterattacks of its small groups, after which it captured Petrovichi and continued to advance on Sekirichi.

Thus, already in the first half of the day, favorable conditions were created for bringing the tank corps into battle and developing its success in the zone of the 18th rifle corps.

By this time, the infantry had penetrated into the location of the enemy defenses up to 4 km, and the 75th Guards Rifle Division, advancing on Selishche, expanded the breakthrough to the right flank to 9 km.

In this situation, the army commander decides to bring the 1st Guards Don Tank Corps into battle and thus speed up the breakthrough of the entire tactical depth of the enemy’s defense.

In the afternoon, the 1st Guards Donskoy Tank Corps, following the order of the army commander, concentrated on its starting positions in the Dubrov area, and at 18 o'clock from the line of Rakovichi, Petrovichi, parts of the corps, under cover of artillery and aviation fire, entered the breakthrough. With a strong blow in the general direction of Gomel, Knyshevichi tanks broke into the rear of the enemy, destroyed his artillery and by the end of the day reached the Gomza-Sekirichi line.

Using the success of the offensive of the tank corps, the infantry accelerated the advance and fought the battle by the end of the day: the 75th Guards Rifle Division - at Grabichi (2 km south of Selishche), with the front to the northeast; The 354th division, led into battle from behind its left flank, captured Zabrodki (2 km east of Chernin), the 69th rifle division captured Chernin; The 37th Guards Rifle Division reached the line 1 km west of Chernin, Glinischa; By the end of the day, the 15th Infantry Division was fighting on the outskirts of Sekirichi.

Thus, by the end of the first day of the offensive, the troops of the 65th Army completely broke through the heavily fortified defensive line of the enemy and went deep into its location up to 8 km, having mastered the large strongholds of Rakovichi, Chernin, Petrovichi, Nikolaevka and others. During the day of the battle, up to 1700 soldiers and officers, 19 guns, 85 machine guns, 17 vehicles, 27 bunkers and 25 enemy dugouts were destroyed.

On June 25, the army troops continued to develop the offensive. The defeated enemy in small groups retreated to the north in disorder, blowing up bridges, gati, mining roads.

By the end of the day, our units, pursuing the retreating enemy, reached his rear defensive line (irrigation canal), and the 15th tank brigade crossed the irrigation canal and fought near the village of Orsichi.

Fight for Parichi

Developing success to the northwest, units of the 65th Army on June 25 went deep into the enemy's position up to 30 km. The tanks of the 1st Guards Don Tank Corps, rapidly advancing, cut the railway near Orsichi, and part of the forces (17th Guards Tank Brigade) broke through to the northeast and reached the Berezina River near Drazhnya, cutting off the escape route of the enemy’s Parichi grouping on North.

The stubborn resistance of the German troops, who retreated to Parichi, created a serious threat to the right flank of the 18th Rifle Corps, which was rapidly advancing towards Bobruisk. The army commander decides, without stopping the pursuit of the enemy to the north, to destroy the Parichi group of Germans, assigning this task to the 105th rifle corps.

During June 26, units of the 105th Rifle Corps fought continuously with the enemy and slowly squeezed the encirclement in the Parichi area.

Offering stubborn resistance, the Germans launched four counterattacks from the Parichi region in the afternoon, with forces up to an infantry battalion each, supported by tanks and self-propelled guns. Particularly strong fighting ensued in the area of ​​​​the Pogantsy stronghold (on the front line of the enemy’s defense), around which the enemy arranged solid forest blockages and laid a large number of minefields. Despite this, our troops, with a decisive blow from several directions, cut the enemy’s battle formations to pieces and, rapidly moving forward, came close to Parichi by 17 o’clock.

The commander of the 105th Rifle Corps ordered his divisions to immediately attack Parichi. With bold and decisive actions from several directions, parts of the corps, following the order, broke into Parichi and, after short but strong street fighting, captured this important enemy stronghold at 18:00. Only on the outskirts of Parichi, up to 500 enemy soldiers and officers were killed and wounded. In Parichi, a lot of equipment, military equipment and a large number of prisoners were captured.

Having liquidated the enemy stronghold in the Parichi area, units of the 105th Rifle Corps began to move rapidly along the western bank of the Berezina River and already in the morning of June 27 reached the southern outskirts of the city of Bobruisk.

Battles for Osipovichi

The city of Osipovichi was an important railway junction of the enemy, linking the Bobruisk-Minsk and Mogilev-Slutsk railways, well-maintained highways converged to it from different directions. In the Osipovichi area, enemy army military depots were located.

The army commander, trying to cover the Bobruisk German grouping from the west as deeply as possible, ordered the commander of the 18th Rifle Corps to rapidly develop the offensive to the northwest and capture the city of Osipovichi.

Fulfilling the order, units of the 18th Rifle Corps, using the rapid advance of the tanks of the 1st Guards Don Tank Corps, continued to develop the offensive to the northwest. On June 27, our units cut the Bobruisk-Slutsk highway in the Glusha area, reaching the Koritno-Simanovichi line by the end of the day.

Given the weak resistance of the enemy, the commander of the 18th Rifle Corps decided to separate two mobile detachments from the 69th and 37th Guards Rifle Divisions and, throwing them forward in vehicles, capture the city of Osipovichi.

With the onset of darkness, a detachment of the 69th division, consisting of a company of submachine gunners, four self-propelled guns, a squad of sappers and communications in vehicles, was quickly thrown out along the highway to Osipovichi. Having reached the southeastern outskirts of the city, the commander of the detachment, Captain Rubashkin, decided to suddenly attack him. With a swift blow, a detachment of the 69th Infantry Division broke into the city. The enemy garrison located in the city, stunned by the suddenness and audacity of the blow of our submachine gunners, was confused and fled from the city in a panic. Soon a mobile detachment of the 37th division approached the Osipovichi, and behind it the main forces of the 69th rifle division with the 251st tank regiment entered the city. Having contacted the mobile detachment, units of the 69th Infantry Division completely cleared the city of the remaining small enemy groups and secured it by the morning of June 28.

The capture of the city of Osipovichi was largely facilitated by the 1st Guards Don Tank Corps, which on June 27 bypassed Bobruisk from the north with its tank formations and cut off all the paths of the Bobruisk enemy grouping to the west and northwest. A strong garrison in Bobruisk, being surrounded, was deprived of the opportunity to help its units defending Osipovichi.

Encirclement and destruction of the Bobruisk enemy grouping

Having captured the strong enemy stronghold in Parichi, units of the 105th Rifle Corps, closely interacting with units of the 1st Guards Don Tank Corps, continued their rapid attack on Bobruisk and by the end of June 27 reached the line:

354th Rifle Division - northern outskirts of Polovets;

115th Rifle Brigade - Konchany;

The 75th Guards Rifle Division, securing the army's right flank, took up defensive positions along the western bank of the Berezina River in the Vasilevka-Domanovo sector.

By this time, the 1st Guards Don Tank Corps had bypassed Bobruisk from the northwest, captured the Miradino railway station (on the Bobruisk-Minsk railway), Sychkovo, and reached the Berezina River north of Bobruisk.

Thus, on June 27, the complete encirclement of the enemy in the Bobruisk area was completed, to which units of the 3rd and 48th armies, as well as the 9th tank corps, approached from the east.

Leaving cover detachments at the line of Shatkovo, Sychkovo, Miradino station, the 1st Guards Donskoy Tank Corps attacked the German garrison in Bobruisk from the northwest: the 16th Guards Tank Brigade started a battle east of Kiselevichi, the 15th Guards motorized rifle brigade - on the northwestern outskirts of Bobruisk. The 17th Guards Tank Brigade, having stumbled upon solid minefields on the southern outskirts of the city, received an order to retreat to the main forces of the corps.

On June 28, in the morning, units of the 105th Rifle and 1st Guards Don Tank Corps launched a decisive offensive to destroy the enemy in the city of Bobruisk. Waging heavy battles with superior enemy forces, the 354th Rifle Division captured the southwestern outskirts of the city by 16:00; The 115th Rifle Brigade was only able to advance slightly and began heavy fighting on the western outskirts; The 356th division, deployed to the area north of Bobruisk, approached its northern outskirts.

The enemy, holding back the advance of our units on the western and southern outskirts of the city, repeatedly went over to counterattacks with large infantry forces supported by assault guns, trying to break out of the encirclement through Sychkovo to the north-west, but with heavy losses each time he was forced to retreat to his original position.

On June 28, the 1st Guards Donskoy Tank Corps, having received a new combat mission from the front commander, surrendered its sector to units of the 356th Infantry Division. On the same day, prisoners captured by reconnaissance of the 356th Infantry Division showed that the German garrison in Bobruisk was again preparing for a breakthrough in the north-western direction, for which shock assault officer battalions were being formed. Around 1 am on June 29, the same reconnaissance established the accumulation of enemy infantry and tanks in the northern part of the city. Throughout the night of June 29, enemy transport aircraft dropped loads of ammunition and food over the city.

At 1.30 on June 29, units of the 356th Rifle Division were unexpectedly fired upon by heavy artillery fire. Under cover of fire, the German garrison with a total strength of 10-15 thousand people with 30 tanks and 12 self-propelled guns went on the offensive along the entire front of the 356th Infantry Division. With officer units, self-propelled guns and tanks in front, the Germans attacked the combat formations of the 356th Infantry Division, but did not achieve success and, leaving up to 1000 of their soldiers and officers on the battlefield, were thrown back into the city. After 30 minutes, the Germans again launched a fierce attack in the same direction. Polls drunk, they climbed forward, suffering heavy losses. Only a small part managed to penetrate the defenses of the 1181st and 1183rd rifle regiments of the 356th division and by 2.30 reach the area of ​​​​artillery firing positions. The remaining forces of the garrison again withdrew to their original position.

At 8 o'clock in the morning on June 29, the German garrison, with forces of up to 10 thousand infantry, counterattacked units of the 356th division for the third time, trying to break out of the encirclement.

Waging heavy battles with an enemy many times superior, experiencing an acute shortage of ammunition, the fighters and officers of the division courageously repelled enemy attacks. In these fierce battles, units of the 356th division destroyed several thousand German soldiers and officers and knocked out 14 tanks. However, this time the enemy managed to cut the division's defenses in several directions and break through to the northwest. One group of up to 1,500 people infiltrated northward and rushed along the western bank of the Berezina River to Shatkovo, but was soon overtaken by units of the 69th Infantry Division in the forests northeast of Osipovichi and completely destroyed. Another group, up to 8 thousand people, dispersed in the forests southeast of Sychkovo, where it was destroyed by units of the 356th division and the 1st motorized rifle brigade.

On the morning of June 29, formations of the 105th Rifle Corps began a decisive assault on the city of Bobruisk from the south, west and north. From the east, crossing the Berezina River, units of the 3rd and 48th armies approached the city. Parts of the 354th division and the 115th rifle brigade destroyed the remnants of the German garrison and at 10 am on June 29, in cooperation with parts of the 3rd and 48th armies, captured the city of Bobruisk.

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On April 15, the Soviet Supreme High Command informed the Allied Command of the resumption of offensive operations by the Red Army. Early in the morning of April 16, the troops of the 1st Belorussian and 1st Ukrainian fronts went on the offensive. Prior to this, Po-2 bombers of the 4th Air Army of the 2nd Belorussian Front operated throughout the night in the zone of the 1st Belorussian Front.

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At first, the enemy, suppressed by artillery preparation and a sudden night attack in the light of searchlights, did not offer organized resistance: the German 309th Infantry Division, for example, defending in the zone of the 3rd shock army, lost up to 60 percent of its composition. Therefore, by 7 o'clock, almost on the entire front, it was possible to break through the first position of the main line of enemy defense. In these battles, Soviet soldiers showed massive heroism and resourcefulness. By the end of the day on April 16, the 23rd Guards Rifle Division of the 3rd Shock Army, completing the battles to break through the enemy's main line of defense, approached the railway track.

In order not to slow down the pace of the offensive, it was decided to capture this line at night. In the evening, after a short artillery preparation, the units went on the attack. The enemy resisted. In the 63rd Guards Rifle Regiment, the commander of the 1st company was out of action. But this did not stop the Soviet soldiers. Senior sergeant Lyudmila Kravets, who was in combat formations, the party organizer of the company, took command of the company and led the attack. The enemy was overthrown. The regiment took possession of the railway track and from this line on the morning of April 17 resumed the offensive. For this feat, L. Kravets was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

Subsequently, enemy resistance increased sharply, especially in the second line of defense, which passed in front of the Kustra bridgehead at the Vritsen-Zelov line. The advance of the Soviet troops slowed down.

At the height of the fighting, Soviet pilots supporting the offensive of the 8th Guards Army parachuted four large keys, made in the style of the historic keys to Berlin, which Russian troops captured during the Seven Years' War. A plaque was attached to each of them with the inscription: “Friends of the guards, forward to victory! We send you the keys to the Berlin gates! The call of combat comrades-in-arms - pilots spread with lightning speed among the advancing units and aroused great enthusiasm among the guards. With renewed vigor, they rushed to the attack, but they could not overcome the resistance this time either. The enemy had great advantages here. The forward edge of the second line of defense passed along the Zelov Heights, from where the entire area to the Oder was clearly visible. These heights, in the center of which the city of Zelov is located, have steep slopes that are difficult to access not only for tanks, but also for infantry. They were pitted with trenches and trenches, which housed enemy firepower. Here, the Nazis dug an anti-tank ditch up to 3 meters deep and up to 3.5 meters wide. The approaches to the heights were shot through with multi-layered cross artillery and rifle-machine-gun fire. The enemy adapted even individual buildings for defense and turned them into strongholds. Each of them was surrounded by trenches, covered with minefields. On the roads, the Nazis set up barriers of logs and metal beams, and the approaches to them were mined.

In order to stop the offensive of the Soviet troops, the Nazi command reinforced the defending units. Three divisions from the reserve were put into action. Up to 50 tanks and over three artillery battalions operated at the Zelov-Dolgelin line. In addition, on both sides of the highway running from Zelov to the west, four anti-aircraft artillery regiments used for anti-tank defense were in firing positions. This allowed the Nazis to create here a density of about 200 guns per kilometer of the front, and half of them were 88-mm anti-aircraft guns.

That is why stubborn and bloody battles unfolded for the Zelov Heights. To build up the force of the blow, the commander of the troops of the 1st Belorussian Front ordered tank armies to be brought into battle, without waiting for the combined arms formations to break through the main line of enemy defenses, as was envisaged by the plan. However, the interaction of tank formations with combined arms was not organized in advance, and therefore they advanced slowly. The enemy firmly held the occupied lines. Night battles did not give the expected results either.

The front commander ordered to break through the second line of enemy defenses on the morning of April 17. To do this, tanks and artillery were brought up at night. About 800 long-range bombers of the 18th Air Army attacked enemy strongholds. At 1030 hours, after a half-hour artillery preparation, the 8th Guards Army, in cooperation with the 1st Guards Tank Army, resumed the offensive. The Nazis put up fierce resistance. However, they were no longer able to resist the onslaught of the guards.

Along with aviation and tanks, artillery provided enormous assistance to the formations of the 8th Guards Army in mastering the enemy's second line of defense on the Zelov Heights with its massive fire. Artillery Commander of the front, Colonel-General of Artillery V. I. Kazakov, intensified the artillery strike of the 8th Guards Army on the Zelov Heights, concentrating fire on them from several cannon artillery brigades from the 5th shock army and special power divisions from the 69th army.

The commander of the 1st Guards Tank Army, Colonel General of the Tank Forces M. E. Katukov, undertook a maneuver to cover the Zelov defense center: the 11th separate tank corps developed an offensive north of Zelov, and the 11th Guards Tank and 8th Guards Mechanized Corps - south. As a result, the enemy defense was disorganized. Tankers began to successfully move to the west. On April 17, the 8th Guards Army under the command of Colonel General V.I. Chuikov captured Zelov. So the second line of defense of the Nazis was broken through here. The right-flank armies of the shock group (47th and 3rd shock) broke through the second line of defense only on the morning of April 18.

Thus, the task set for April 16 - to break through the entire tactical defense zone of the enemy - was completed only by the beginning of the third day of the offensive. The slow advance of the troops of the 1st Belorussian Front threatened to delay the operation to capture Berlin. Taking this into account, the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command somewhat changed the task of the 1st Ukrainian and 2nd Belorussian fronts. According to the directive of April 17, the tank armies of the 1st Ukrainian Front were to develop an offensive against Berlin from the south. In a directive dated April 18, the commander of the 2nd Belorussian Front was ordered, after crossing the Oder, no later than April 22, with the main forces to develop an offensive to the southwest (according to the directive dated April 6, the offensive was supposed to be carried out to the northwest), striking around Berlin from the north Thus, in the course of the operation, a maneuver was planned to envelop the Berlin grouping of the enemy from the north and south with the forces of three fronts.

On the 1st Ukrainian Front on April 16, at 6:15 a.m., a powerful artillery preparation began, under the cover of which the sappers pulled up pre-prepared materials for the construction of crossings and began to guide them across the Neisse River. Tanks of direct support entered the combat formations of the infantry, which took up their starting positions to force the river.

At 0615 hours, the artillery and aviation of the 1st and 2nd Guards Assault Air Corps of the 2nd Air Army placed a smokescreen over the entire front. This deprived the enemy of the opportunity to monitor the actions of the Soviet troops and hid from him the areas where a breakthrough was being prepared. Fighter aircraft provided ground troops with air cover.

Under the cover of a smoke screen, powerful artillery fire and with the support of aviation, infantrymen and gunners began to cross the Neisse. The fighters crossed on boats, rafts, on assault bridges, or even just by swimming. During the crossing of the Neisse River, aircraft of the 6th Guards and 4th Bomber Aviation Corps appeared over the enemy defenses. They attacked resistance centers, communication centers and command posts.

The guardsmen of the 175th Guards Rifle Regiment of the 58th Guards Rifle Division of the 5th Guards Army, commanded by Colonel-General A. S. Zhadov, without waiting for boats and crossings, rushed ford. The soldiers of the 1st battalion of the guards of Captain P.F. Rudenko acted especially boldly and decisively. The companies of the guard lieutenants G. S. Goloborodko and G. I. Vishnyakova were the first to cross the river ford. Machine gunners carried machine guns on their hands, installed them on the river bank and provided fire for the crossing of rifle squads. Along with the infantry, escort artillery also crossed. The sappers also acted energetically. At the site of the 178th Guards Rifle Regiment of the same division, one of its links was carried away by the sappers during the construction of the assault bridge. The guards-sappers, standing in cold water, held boards on their shoulders, replacing this part of the bridge that had floated away, which ensured the crossing of more than 300 people.

Soon the infantry reached the enemy shore and shot down the guards of the Nazis. The sappers made passages in the minefields of the enemy. With the support of artillery and aviation, Soviet soldiers captured a number of strongholds.

At the same time, engineer-sapper and pontoon-bridge units began building crossings and building bridges across the Neisse River. Some of them were ready by 9 o'clock. This made it possible to begin the crossing of the second echelons of rifle troops and artillery. The onslaught of the Red Army was growing. In response, the enemy launched repeated counterattacks, but all of them were successfully repulsed by the advancing units. By noon on April 16, several bridges with a carrying capacity of 60 tons were built across the Neisse, which made it possible to bring forward detachments of tank armies into battle and transport heavy artillery. Soviet troops moved further and further west. By the end of the day, the strike force of the 1st Ukrainian Front approached the second line of enemy defense, which ran along the line east of

Cottbus - Weiswasser - Niski. Three enemy tank divisions (the 21st, "Protection of the Fuhrer", "Bohemia") and several separate units and subunits were defending here.

Despite the fierce resistance of the Nazis, by the end of April 17, the second line of their defense was also broken through. The troops of the shock group of the front began to move towards the third defensive zone, which ran along the line of the Spree River. The enemy did not have free forces to hold the defense on this line. Therefore, it was mainly the troops that retreated under the onslaught of the Red Army who defended themselves here. True, the Nazis managed to transfer part of the forces here from other sectors of the front. So, on April 17, the 275th Infantry Division and the 70th Engineer Brigade were transferred to the area southeast of Cottbus from near Guben, that is, from an unattacked sector in the zone of the 1st Belorussian Front.

Having agreed with the Headquarters on the issue of turning the tank armies to Berlin, the commander of the 1st Ukrainian Front assigned the 3rd Guards Tank Army, commanded by Colonel-General P.S. offensive on the southern outskirts of Berlin, on the night of April 21, break into the city. The 4th Guards Tank Army under the command of Colonel General D. D. Lelyushenko, advancing in the direction of Luckenwalde, was supposed to capture Potsdam and the southwestern part of Berlin by this time. Marshal I. S. Konev demanded that the tankers and all troops of the shock group of the front force the Spree on the move at night, preventing the enemy from gaining a foothold on its line.

During this period, political workers, party and Komsomol organizations explained to the troops their new tasks in the upcoming battles. Company party organizations, which suffered heavy losses, were replenished with communists from the rear units. Party and Komsomol meetings were briefly held in companies and batteries, at which the results of past battles were summed up and the experience of forcing the Neisse River was summarized. The leaflets "Pass the chain" described the exploits of the heroes. War sheets were issued. Short, concise slogans: “Give the Spree!”, “Give Berlin!” - were heard at meetings, at rallies. The soldiers wrote them on the towers of tanks, on the shields of guns, on the sides of aircraft. Hundreds of road posters indicated the remaining kilometers to Berlin. The glorious Soviet soldiers were filled with an ardent desire to fulfill the order of the Motherland - to complete the defeat of the enemy.

In the struggle to overcome the third line of defense of the Germans, the 2nd Air Army provided active assistance to the ground forces. Bombers of the 6th Guards Corps on April 17, with their attacks on the enemy, prevented him from taking up defenses in the Cottbus-Spremberg sector. Soviet attack aircraft attacked fascist troops and artillery at the crossing points, preventing the enemy from retreating to the left bank of the Spree.

By the morning of April 18, the troops of the shock group, overcoming enemy resistance, reached the Spree River. The Nazi units fought most fiercely in the area of ​​​​the cities of Cottbus and Spremberg. Between them, in the offensive zone of the 13th Army, commanded by Colonel-General N.P. Pukhov, the enemy defenses and grouping were weak. Therefore, the Soviet command threw the main forces of the tank armies here. In the afternoon they crossed the Spree and began to successfully advance in a north-westerly direction.

By the end of April 18, the enemy's third line of defense was broken through, and Soviet troops reached the line northwest of Forst, southeast of Cottbus, ( east of Drebkau, Spremberg and Burghammer; further, the front line went east, to the Neisse River. In view of this, the left flank of the strike force was greatly stretched, which put it at risk of a flank attack by the enemy.

The Hitlerite command took all measures to ensure not only to delay the offensive of the troops of the 1st Ukrainian Front, but also to disrupt it. To this end, it began active hostilities from the Görlitz region in a northern direction against a grouping of Soviet troops advancing on Dresden. Here, during the first three days of the operation, formations of the 2nd Army of the Polish Army and the right-flank formations of the 52nd Army (commanded by Colonel-General K. A. Koroteev) crossed the Neisse River, broke through the tactical zone of enemy defense and by the end of April 18 approached the third lane . Attempts by the Nazis to disrupt the offensive of the Soviet troops were unsuccessful. The enemy managed only to temporarily stop their advance.

Thus, as a result of three days of stubborn fighting, the 1st Ukrainian Front achieved significant success. The troops of his main strike group, having defeated the opposing enemy, broke through the tactical zone of the German defense to the full depth, and part of the forces - and the third line of defense of the Nazis. This created favorable conditions for the development of the offensive of the tank armies in the north-western direction, which were able to strike at Berlin from the south and, together with the troops of the 1st Belorussian Front, capture Berlin.

During the fighting, the Nazis suffered heavy losses. The Red Army defeated several fascist formations, including the Fuhrer's Guard and Bohemia tank divisions. The enemy was forced to use up operational reserves, which further contributed to the development of success by our troops. The 4th German Panzer Army was divided into three parts. Successful combat operations of the entire front were ensured by the excellent organization of forcing the Neisse River and breaking through the enemy defenses and good interaction between the troops.

The offensive of the troops of the 1st Belorussian Front developed more slowly. This was explained mainly by the fact that the strike force of the front had to meet with a deeper, well-equipped and densely occupied enemy defense. Parts and formations of this front had to overcome a large number of water obstacles and fortified settlements. Under such conditions, tank armies, unable to break into the operational space and build on the success of the offensive, acted in infantry combat formations and suffered heavy losses. Shortcomings in the organization of breaking through the enemy defenses, incomplete knowledge of the enemy's defensive system and grouping, and insufficiently effective use of artillery and aviation also had a negative effect.

On April 19, the 1st Belorussian and 1st Ukrainian fronts continued their offensive. The command of the 1st Belorussian Front, concerned about the situation, sought to speed up the advance of the troops. It demanded from the commanders of the armies, commanders of corps and divisions a more precise organization of the offensive. Taking into account the success that was emerging on the right flank of the strike force in the bands of the 47th and 3rd shock armies, the command changed the direction of the offensive of the troops of the right wing of the 1st Belorussian Front in order to bypass Berlin from the north and northwest.

The 61st Army, commanded by Colonel General P. A. Belov, was to continue the offensive along the Hohenzollern Canal, securing its right flank from possible enemy counterattacks.

The 1st Army of the Polish Army, the 47th Army, the 3rd and 5th Shock Armies received the task of advancing not directly to the west, but in a southwestern direction in order to bypass Berlin and capture the northern part of the city. At the same time, it was necessary to conduct battles not only during the day, but also at night, in order to prevent the enemy from organizing defense on new lines.

In the meantime, the Hitlerite command was taking measures to detain the troops of the 1st Belorussian Front in the third lane. It entrusted the defense of Berlin to the 9th Army, in connection with which an order was issued according to which all the armed forces available in the Berlin area were reassigned to the command of the 9th Army. On the night of April 19, the enemy advanced the 11th SS motorized division "Nordland" from the strip of the 2nd Belorussian Front, several separate units and subunits with a total number of more than three infantry divisions, part of the anti-aircraft artillery of the air defense zone of Berlin.

Stubborn battles unfolded in the offensive zone of the 3rd and 5th shock armies during the breakthrough of an intermediate position in the Batslov area. The troops of the 3rd Shock Army on their left flank approached the German stronghold Batslov, where the enemy took up defensive positions on the commanding heights. The roads leading to Batslov were heavily covered by artillery and mortar fire. The attacks on this point on the afternoon of April 18 did not produce positive results. The commander of the 12th Guards Rifle Corps, Lieutenant-General A.F. Kazankin, decided to attack the stronghold at night. The offensive was supposed to begin with all the forces of the corps after a thirty-minute artillery preparation. The main blow was delivered by two divisions at the weakest point in the enemy's defense north of Batslov. One rifle division was to partly bypass the stronghold from the south, and partly attack it from the front. At 11 p.m. on April 18, after artillery preparation, rifle formations, supported by tanks and self-propelled artillery mounts, went on the attack. The fight took on a fierce character. Only in the morning it was possible to break the resistance of the Nazis, and at 5 o'clock Batslov was taken. The troops of the 5th Shock Army under the command of Colonel-General N. E. Berzarin completed the breakthrough of this position in their lane.

On the afternoon of April 19, the enemy was still fiercely resisting. The fascist German aviation increased its activity. In groups of 30 or more aircraft, she attacked the advancing Soviet troops. However, the Nazis could not hold the occupied lines. During the day, the right-flank armies of the shock group broke through the enemy's third line of defense in a sector 14 kilometers wide. The Red Army with stubborn battles moved irresistibly towards Berlin. The artillery did not lag behind the infantry. Aviation actively supported ground units, striking at accumulations of enemy manpower and equipment. The tank armies advanced in close cooperation with the combined arms armies.

During the night and day of April 20, our troops developed the offensive. Formations of the 47th Army, commanded by Lieutenant-General F.I. Perkhorovich, and the 3rd Shock Army, commanded by Colonel-General V.I. the Guards Tank Army under the command of Colonel-General of Tank Forces S.I. Bogdanov broke away from the infantry and reached the Ladeburg-Tsepernik line, bypassing Berlin from the north. At 1350 hours the long-range artillery of the 79th Rifle Corps of the 3rd Shock Army fired two volleys at the fascist capital. Then the systematic shelling of the city began. The next day, April 21, the troops of the 47th Army, the 3rd Shock Army, the 9th Guards Tank Corps and the 1st Mechanized Corps of the 2nd Guards Tank Army cut the Berlin ring road and broke into the northern outskirts of Berlin. At the same time, the 5th Shock Army and the 12th Guards Tank Corps reached the northeastern outskirts of the city. So the war came to the streets of the city in which it was conceived and prepared.

The 8th Guards and 1st Guards Tank Armies advanced in the most difficult conditions. On April 19 and 20, they were still fighting to break through the enemy's third line of defense. The Hitlerite command, fearing for the communications of its 9th Army, made every effort to contain the offensive of the Soviet troops. It transferred here the 23rd SS Motorized Division "Netherlands" from the 2nd Belorussian Front, five Volkssturm battalions, a tank destroyer brigade and other units from the reserve. Enemy resistance increased. In the Fürstenwalde area, the fascist German troops repeatedly launched counterattacks. This slowed down the advance of the Soviet armies. By the end of April 21, only a part of our forces had penetrated the city defensive bypass in the area of ​​Petershagen and Erkner.

The right-flank strike force (61st Army and 1st Army of the Polish Army), overcoming the stubborn resistance of the retreating enemy units and the newly introduced 156th Infantry Training Division, slowly moved forward. She lagged behind the 47th Army, which threatened the right flank of the entire shock group of the front. In order to close this gap, by decision of the front commander, the 7th Guards Cavalry Corps was brought into battle, which by the end of April 21 reached the Wandlitz-Basdorf line. This reliably covered the right wing of the main strike force of the front. There was no need to change the direction of combat operations of the troops of the 2nd Belorussian Front. The Headquarters of the Supreme High Command canceled its directive of 18 April. The left-flank strike force (69th and 33rd armies) sought to complete the breakthrough of the Oder defensive line of the enemy defense. As a result of stubborn fighting, she managed to bypass the Frankfurt fortified area and thereby create a threat to its encirclement.

Troops of the 1st Ukrainian Front advanced successfully. In an effort to thwart the offensive, the fascist German command transferred the 10th SS Panzer Division from the Görlitz region, which was introduced in parts into the battle for Cottbus and Spremberg. South of Cottbus, the Nazis brought into battle the 22nd anti-tank brigade, formed in January in Cottbus itself. However, they could not resist the swift and powerful onslaught of the Soviet troops.

On the morning of April 19, the 3rd and 4th Guards Tank Armies resumed their offensive. Each of them was supported by assault and fighter aviation corps. Guardsmen of the 3rd Panzer Army captured the Fetschau highway and railway junction, defeating the headquarters and rear of the 21st German Panzer Division. Enemy attempts by counterattacks to disrupt the offensive of the tank armies from the Cottbus area were successfully repelled by the 16th self-propelled artillery brigade. By the end of the day, the advanced brigades of the army started fighting for Lübbenau. The 4th Guards Tank Army approached Luccau. Having advanced up to 50 kilometers in a northwestern direction, the tank armies broke away from the combined arms armies. With a further offensive on Berlin, they met more and more stubborn resistance from the enemy. On April 20, Soviet tankers approached the powerful Zossen defensive area, which covered the approaches to the German capital from the south.

In the area of ​​the city of Zossen, before the start of the Soviet offensive, there was a command post of the General Staff of the Nazi ground forces. A whole underground city was built here, which housed the departments and services of the headquarters. Therefore, the Nazis fenced Zossen with four lanes of powerful defensive structures. The depth of the Tsossensky defensive region reached 15 kilometers. The terrain, replete with wetlands, forests, lakes, favored the creation of a strong defense. On the roads, in inter-lake defiles, blockages were arranged, pillboxes were built, tanks were dug into the ground. The enemy turned the settlements into centers of resistance. The Tsossensky district was defended by troops with a total strength of up to an infantry division.

By 12 o'clock on April 20, the brigade of the 6th Tank Corps of the 3rd Guards Tank Army approached the city of Barut. An attempt by the forward detachments to seize the city on the move was not successful. Then the corps commander decided to allocate two brigades - the 53rd and 52nd, of which the first was to attack Barut from the southeast, and the second from the west, going behind enemy lines. After a short artillery raid, the tankers attacked the enemy. The Nazis could not withstand the onslaught, and at 13 o'clock Barut fell. With further advance north of Barut in the direction of Zossen, the tankers again met organized resistance. They had to successively break through the defensive lines of the enemy. The terrain limited the maneuver of tank units and made it difficult for them to advance. Only by the end of April 21, the entire defensive area was overcome, and on the night of April 22, Zossen was taken. When leaving Zossen, the Nazis blew up and flooded the underground structures that housed the headquarters.

The 4th Guards Tank Army broke away from the combined arms armies and reached the Luckenwalde-Juterbog line. Combined-arms formations continued the liquidation of the Cottbus and Spremberg enemy groupings. The 3rd Guards Army under the command of Colonel General V.N. Gordov fought stubborn battles with the Cottbus group of the enemy. The Nazis, relying on strongholds on the outskirts of Kot-bus, offered fierce resistance. Therefore, the troops of the army moved forward slowly. By the end of the day, they reached the eastern outskirts of the city, and part of the forces went around it from the southwest. But the right flank of the entire strike force from Zossen to Cottbus remained open. As a result of this, a real opportunity was created for the Frankfurt-Guben grouping of the enemy to withdraw to the west or to Berlin. It was necessary to immediately close the resulting gap and complete the encirclement of the enemy southeast of Berlin. To this end, the commander of the 1st Ukrainian Front brought his second echelon into battle here - the 28th Army, commanded by Lieutenant General A. A. Luchinsky, who had just approached the battle area from the rear. Part of its troops was sent to reinforce the 3rd Guards Tank Army, and the main forces were sent to complete the encirclement of the enemy grouping.

Stubborn battles unfolded for Spremberg. By bringing into battle the 344th Infantry Division, which had been transferred here from the right flank of the 17th Army, and using the remnants of units that had withdrawn from the front, the enemy increased resistance. The city was well prepared for defense. In preparation for the defeat of the enemy's Spremberg grouping, the front command attracted a large number of artillery - 14 artillery brigades, numbering 1104 guns and mortars and 143 guards mortars. On the night of April 20, Spremberg was bombed by Po-2 aircraft of the 208th Night Bomber Aviation Division. At 11 o'clock, after a thirty-minute artillery preparation, units of the 33rd Guards Rifle Corps of the 5th Guards Army went on the attack. The enemy fiercely resisted, but could not withstand the onslaught of the Soviet troops. Spremberg was taken. After that, other formations of the 5th Guards Army began to advance more successfully.

Significant results these days were achieved by the troops of the 13th Army, which operated in the zone between Cottbus and Spremberg. They approached the Finster Walde, advancing more than 50 kilometers west of the Spree. The 5th Guards Army, having passed 30 kilometers west of Spremberg, reached the line west of Senftenberg - Hoyerswerd.

The offensive of the left-flank grouping of the 1st Ukrainian Front in the Dresden direction developed slowly due to stubborn resistance and repeated enemy counterattacks. In order to accelerate the pace of the offensive, the front command strengthened this grouping: the defense zone of the 52nd Army was narrowed, and units of the newly arrived 31st Army deployed to the left of this army. The command of the 52nd Army was able in the coming days to transfer the 48th Rifle Corps to the Dresden direction. However, the Nazis also sent fresh forces to the Dresden direction. These days, units of the Brandenburg Motorized Division, the 615th Special Purpose Infantry Division, up to ten separate battalions, the 20th Panzer Division, the 1st Parachute Panzer Division Hermann Goering, the 464th Special Purpose Infantry Division and the newly introduced 72nd Infantry Division. To increase the depth of defense south of Görlitz, the 404th and 193rd Infantry Divisions were deployed, transferred from the Dresden area. The fighting in the Dresden direction took on a fierce character.

The Nazis repeatedly launched counterattacks with the forces of the 20th Panzer Division, striking at the left flank of the 2nd Army of the Polish Army from the area south of Diza. Glorious Polish zholnezhi repulsed these attacks of the enemy. To repel the enemy counterattack northwest of Görlitz, the 1st Tank Corps of the Polish Army was transferred here and the 48th Rifle Corps of the 52nd Army was brought into battle. All attempts by the Nazis to advance in a northwestern direction failed.

Aviation provided great assistance to ground troops in repulsing enemy attacks, although bad weather often interfered with its operations. In the afternoon of April 21 alone, when the weather improved, the 2nd Guards Assault Aviation Corps made 265 sorties, striking enemy tanks northwest of Görlitz. Fighter aircraft were also active. On April 21, she carried out 20 air battles, in which Soviet pilots shot down 24 Nazi aircraft.

Part of the forces of the left-flank strike force of the 1st Ukrainian Front successfully developed an offensive in a southwestern direction. The 1st Guards Cavalry Corps advanced on Ortrand. He fought northwest of Kamenets. The 7th Guards Mechanized Corps, in cooperation with the 254th Rifle Division of the 52nd Army, captured the city of Bautzen. The 2nd Army of the Polish Army, overcoming the fierce resistance of the enemy, reached the Königswart - Doberschütz - Burkau line. In three-day battles, Soviet troops repulsed the enemy's counterattack and part of the forces advanced to the southwest (towards Dresden) by 20 kilometers and to the west - up to 45 kilometers. The 1st Guards Cavalry Corps, having entered the area north of Kamenets, significantly improved the position of the 5th Guards Army, securing its left flank.

Thus, by the end of April 21, the troops of the 1st Belorussian and 1st Ukrainian fronts achieved major successes in the struggle for Berlin. The left-flank armies of the shock group of the 1st Belorussian Front, having overcome the outer defensive line, broke into the outskirts of the fascist capital and started fighting in the city itself. The mobile troops of the 1st Ukrainian Front, having carried out a brilliant maneuver in a northwestern direction, reached the approaches to Berlin from the south. As a result of the joint actions of both fronts, it became possible to cut off the enemy Frankfurt-Guben grouping from the Berlin group itself, to surround and destroy them.

To complete the defeat of the Berlin grouping, the military operations of the 2nd Belorussian Front against the 3rd Nazi Panzer Army, which occupied the defense north of Berlin, were of great importance. Five hours before the start of the offensive, rallies were held in all units, at which the appeal of the Front's Military Council to soldiers, sergeants, officers and generals was read. “The motherland expects from the soldiers of the Red Army the final victory over fascist Germany! ..,” the appeal said. “The strength of the enemy is running out. He cannot resist for a long time!.. Wider heroic step, Soviet heroes! Victory awaits you! .. Forward, for the final defeat of the enemy! Soviet soldiers swore with honor to fulfill the order of the Motherland.

On the night of April 20, bomber aircraft bombed the enemy's main line of defense, and in the morning, after artillery preparation, which lasted from 45 to 60 minutes in various sectors, the troops went over to the attack.

The 65th Army, commanded by Colonel-General P.I. Batov, under cover of artillery fire, at 0630 hours began to force the western branch of the river. The enemy offered stubborn fire resistance. However, he failed to disrupt the crossing of the river. Soon, the Soviet soldiers reached the opposite bank and, in the course of a fierce battle, broke through the first position of the main line of enemy defense, captured several strongholds and created a small foothold. The 70th Army, commanded by Colonel General V.S. Popov, made little progress. The troops of the 49th Army under the command of Colonel-General I.T. Grishin also had no success, which was explained by shortcomings in the organization of the battle, as well as by the fact that the command and staff had poorly studied the defense and grouping of the enemy, his fire system. Therefore, during the artillery preparation, which lasted 60 minutes, the enemy's firing points were not suppressed. The situation for the troops of the front was also complicated by the fact that aviation operations were limited due to poor meteorological conditions.

The Nazis conducted intense artillery and rifle-machine-gun fire. Having introduced the 27th SS Infantry Division "Langemark" and several tank battalions into battle, the enemy repeatedly launched counterattacks. In total, on the day of April 20, they launched 25 counterattacks. Hand-to-hand fighting broke out in enemy trenches in many areas. However, the Nazis could not push back the Soviet troops beyond the Oder. Breaking the fierce resistance of the enemy, courageous warriors won back position after position from him.

The next day, April 21, the troops of the front continued fighting to expand the bridgehead. The Nazis fought desperately. Reinforcing their grouping with two infantry divisions from the reserve of the 3rd Panzer Army, they launched 53 counterattacks from two companies to an infantry regiment, supported by 3-15 tanks and self-propelled guns. At the same time, the 281st division, according to the testimony of prisoners, was intended to be transferred to the Berlin area, but on the night of April 21 it was thrown against the troops of the 2nd Belorussian Front.

Soviet soldiers beat off all counterattacks. The bridgeheads were expanded. Having crossed the Oder in the lower reaches and seized bridgeheads on its left bank, units of the 2nd Belorussian Front pinned down the enemy's 3rd Panzer Army and thereby provided significant assistance to the troops of the 1st Belorussian Front, which began the assault on Berlin.

In the days when Soviet troops broke through the enemy defenses beyond the Oder and the Neisse, the Nazis feverishly continued to fortify Berlin and increase the size of its garrison. Hitler and his inner circle tried at all costs to stop the advance of the Red Army. The formation of Volkssturm detachments did not stop in the city. On April 22, criminals were released from civilian and military prisons, who were also involved in the defense. In addition to 200 Volkssturm battalions, there were up to 80,000 soldiers from units that had withdrawn here and 32,000 policemen in Berlin. The total number of the garrison by this time exceeded 300 thousand people.

In an effort to save Berlin, the fascist German command intended to open a front in the West and throw the released forces against the Red Army. To repel the offensive of the Soviet troops, it was supposed to use the group of General Steiner, the 9th Army and the newly formed 12th Army of General Wenck. Steiner's group was to strike south from the Eberswalde region, the 12th Army was to advance east in the direction of Juterbog, link up with the 9th Army, which was making its way to the west, in order to then go on the offensive together with it and liberate Berlin. At the same time, the 4th Panzer Army was to launch a counterattack on the troops of the 1st Ukrainian Front. On the night of April 23, Keitel visited the headquarters of the 12th Army to prepare it for the new task.

Thus, the Nazis were not going to stop fighting. Hitler announced that he would remain in the capital to defend it to the last man. Goebbels called on the soldiers and residents of Berlin to staunch resistance, assuring that this would bring victory. But nothing could save the Nazis from inevitable defeat. A powerful avalanche of Soviet troops moved irresistibly towards the city center - towards the Reichstag and the Imperial Chancellery, where plans to continue the war were still hatched.

The position of the Berlin garrison worsened every day. With the loss of the outskirts of the city, the enemy lost most of the warehouses, especially food. Therefore, by April 22, strict norms for supplying the population were established. A week per person was given 800 grams of bread, 800 grams of potatoes, 150 grams of meat, 75 grams of fat. Sometimes it happened that women standing in lines burst into shops and took away food. Since April 21, work has completely stopped at all enterprises, as coal reserves have been used up, the supply of electricity and gas has been cut off. Stopped trams, trolleybuses, metro. The water supply and sewerage did not work. Panic broke out in the city. According to the captive Wolf Heirichsdorf, a former state adviser to the Propaganda Ministry, "from among the leaders, everyone who could escape ... There was no order" x. Even Hitler's closest henchmen, Goering and Himmler, left the capital.

With the advent of the Red Army troops on the outskirts of Berlin, the situation for the Nazis defending it became catastrophic. Few believed in the success of the struggle even among the fascist elite. For the German people, the best way out of this situation would not be resistance, leading to senseless casualties and destruction, but an end to this bloody and hopeless war. The struggle on the streets of the city could not bring the Germans any honor, glory or victory. Now the inhabitants of Berlin understood how cruelly they had been deceived by the fascist rulers, who told them that everyone was protecting “his own home” here. However, Hitler, Goebbels and other leaders of fascist Germany succeeded, relying on the party and state apparatus, especially officers and generals of the armed forces, to force the Berlin garrison to continue organized resistance to the Red Army.

The advancing troops met more and more enemy units and subunits. Only in the zone of the 1st Belorussian Front on the night of April 22 and during the day, the Nazis again brought into battle 6 different regiments and up to 40 separate battalions. The difficulties for the Soviet soldiers were aggravated by the fact that many of them had no experience of fighting in a large city. One of the features of such a battle was limited observation of the actions of the enemy. Observation was hindered by fires, the smoke from which covered the streets. The defense of Berlin did not have a continuous front, it consisted of individual nodes of resistance and many strongholds. Under such conditions, the struggle of small groups acquired decisive importance, which, being more maneuverable, could infiltrate between the centers of enemy defenses and strike at them from the rear and flanks.

The role of artillery, which fires direct fire at observed targets, has increased. Infantry units, when attacking strongholds and resistance centers, needed the help of individual guns. Large-caliber artillery systems were needed to destroy the thick stone walls of houses and basements where the enemy was hiding. Tanks, entering the streets of Berlin, lost one of their main advantages - maneuverability, which made them easy prey for anti-tank artillery. Therefore, tanks alone, without infantry, could not fight in the city. When conducting combat in the city, engineer-sapper units and subunits were of great importance. That which did not succumb to artillery fire (thick walls, reinforced concrete buildings, barricades) was blown up by sappers. Finally, the possibilities of aviation were limited. In the conditions of the city it is difficult to make out where they are and where they are strangers, therefore, the closer the troops approached the center of Berlin, the less intensively aviation could operate.

It is also necessary to take into account the fact that Soviet soldiers entered the boundaries of a huge city unfamiliar to them, and the enemy knew every street, every house perfectly. In addition, in Berlin there were many water barriers (rivers, canals) with steep granite banks. That is why the advance of the Soviet troops was slow. However, they approached the city center step by step, while bypassing Berlin from the northwest. The troops of the 47th Army, in cooperation with the 9th Tank Corps of the 2nd Guards Tank Army, advanced to the Havel River and on April 22 crossed it in the Hennigsdorf area. Conditions were created for an offensive to the south (on Potsdam) towards the troops of the 1st Ukrainian Front in order to completely encircle Berlin.

The 3rd shock army started fighting for the city defensive bypass. The 5th shock and part of the forces of the 8th Guards Army broke through the internal defensive bypass. The troops that provided the flanks of the shock grouping of the front operated successfully. The right-flank strike force - the 61st Army, the 1st Army of the Polish Army and the 7th Guards Cavalry Corps brought into battle here - advanced westward up to 20-30 kilometers, firmly providing troops that stormed Berlin from the north.

The left-flank strike group ran into especially fierce enemy resistance, since its success threatened to cut off the entire Nazi 9th Army from Berlin. With great difficulty, the 69th Army captured the large Nazi resistance center Fürstenwalde.

As before, the offensive of the troops of the 1st Ukrainian Front, operating in the Berlin direction, continued at a high pace. The 3rd Guards Tank Army, reinforced by artillery, aviation and two rifle divisions of the 28th Army, on the night of April 22, broke through the outer defensive bypass. During the day, tank corps broke into the southern outskirts of Berlin and by the end of the day reached the Teltow Canal. There was a real threat of the encirclement of Berlin and cutting it off from the main forces of the 9th Army. Between the troops of the 8th Guards Army, which approached here from the east, and the right-flank corps of the 3rd Guards Tank Army, there was a narrow corridor, only 10-12 kilometers long. As a result of the withdrawal of the 4th Guards Tank Army to the Sarmund area (10 kilometers southeast of Potsdam), the escape routes of the Berlin grouping to the southwest were cut off. The troops of the 47th Army, advancing on Potsdam from the north, were 30-35 kilometers from the right-flank units of the 4th Guards Tank Army.

On April 22, the 3rd Guards Army, after stubborn fighting, captured a large enemy resistance center - the city of Cottbus. Army troops firmly blocked the Frankfurt-Guben grouping of the enemy from the south. The 13th and 5th Guards armies, crushing separate groups of the Nazis, were rapidly advancing towards the Elbe. By the end of April 22, the 13th Army reached the Yuterbog - Tsana - Essen line, and the 5th Guards - to the Kirchhain - Elsterwerda line. At the junction between them, the 4th Guards Tank Corps advanced. Their successful actions pushed the front further and further west. This deprived the Nazi command of the opportunity to provide any assistance to the almost surrounded Frankfurt-Guben grouping.

The headquarters of the Supreme High Command demanded that the commanders of the 1st Belorussian and 1st Ukrainian fronts, no later than April 24, completely surround the Frankfurt-Guben grouping of the enemy and prevent it from breaking out of the ring. To do this, the commander of the troops of the 1st Belorussian Front brought into battle his second echelon - the 3rd Army, commanded by Colonel General A.V. Gorbatov. She received the task of advancing at the junction between the 8th Guards and 69th Armies from the area north of Fürstenwalde to Michendorf.

In preparation for the capture of Berlin, the troops improved the methods of warfare in the city. The main role was assigned to assault groups and detachments. The assault group was a platoon, more often a company, reinforced with artillery, tanks, sappers, and the assault detachment was a rifle battalion with appropriate reinforcements. Thanks to this reinforcement, assault groups and detachments were able to capture individual enemy strongholds and centers of resistance.

Before the decisive battle in Berlin, a large agitation and propaganda work unfolded among the troops. On April 23, the Military Council of the 1st Belorussian Front addressed an appeal to the soldiers, sergeants, officers and generals. It said: “... in front of you, Soviet heroes, Berlin. You must take Berlin, and take it as quickly as possible, so as not to let the enemy come to his senses.„. Attack Berlin! To complete and final victory, comrades! In conclusion, the Military Council expressed full confidence that the glorious soldiers of the 1st Belorussian Front would honorably fulfill the task entrusted to them. Political workers, party and Komsomol organizations used every respite in the battles to familiarize the soldiers with this document. The main attention was paid to work in assault groups. The Red Army newspapers called on the troops to storm the fascist capital: “Forward, for a complete victory over the enemy”, “Let us raise the banner of our victory over Berlin.”

At the same time, the Headquarters issued a directive "On changing attitudes towards the Germans." This directive proposed to observe humanity towards the rank and file members of the National Socialist Party, who were loyal to the Red Army, and to detain only leaders; to create a German administration in the regions of Germany, to install German burgomasters in the cities. At the same time, the Headquarters warned that improved attitudes towards the Germans should not lead to a decrease in vigilance.

Late in the evening of April 23, our entire country learned about the significant combat successes achieved by the troops of the 1st Belorussian and 1st Ukrainian fronts, which broke through the enemy’s defenses on the Oder and Neisse and broke into Berlin. Moscow saluted the valiant soldiers with artillery volleys. The news of this spread through the troops with the speed of lightning. The radio operators were the first to learn about it and brought it to the entire personnel through the telephone network. Agitators in the divisions held conversations. The soldiers were in a fighting mood. Everyone was eager to finish off the enemy. The offensive unfolded with renewed vigor.

On April 24, the troops of the 8th Guards and 1st Guards Tank Armies of the 1st Belorussian Front joined in the southeastern part of Berlin with the 3rd Guards Tank and 28th Armies of the 1st Ukrainian Front "This completed the encirclement of the Frankfurt-Guben enemy groups. On April 25, at 12 noon, the 328th Rifle Division of the 47th Army and the 65th Tank Brigade of the 2nd Guards Tank Army, advancing west of Berlin, reached the Ketzin area, where they connected with units of the 6th Guards Mechanized Corps of the 4th Guards Tank Army of the 1st Ukrainian Front. Now the Berlin grouping of the enemy was completely surrounded by Soviet troops. It turned out to be divided into two groups - the Berlin proper (the garrison of Berlin) and the Frankfurt-Guben (the main forces of the 9th Army and part of the forces of the 4th Panzer Army). For this major success, the Motherland again saluted the valiant soldiers of the 1st Belorussian and 1st Ukrainian fronts with twenty artillery volleys. In the south, in the direction of Dresden, the Nazis continued to intensify their operations. By April 23, they had created a strike force southeast of Bautzen consisting of two divisions (one of them, the 29th motorized, was transferred from Italy), reinforced with more than 100 tanks and assault guns with the aim of striking along the Spree River in the general direction of Spremberg. The second grouping was concentrated in the area northeast of Weisenberg. On the morning of April 23, both of these groups, with the support of aviation, went on the offensive against the troops of the 52nd Army. Fierce battles ensued. As a result of numerical superiority, the Nazis managed to break through the front and move forward somewhat.

To eliminate the impending threat, the command of the 1st Ukrainian Front transferred here part of the forces of the 5th Guards Army, the 2nd Army of the Polish Army and the 2nd Air Army. Thanks to the courage of the Soviet and Polish fighters, the enemy offensive was suspended. Enemy counterattacks north of Berlin were successfully repulsed by the 1st Army of the Polish Army. Despite unfavorable weather conditions, the aviation of the fronts provided substantial assistance to their ground forces. She destroyed the crossings over the Spree in the area of ​​the Frankfurt-Guben grouping, preventing it from retreating to the west, inflicted bombing and assault strikes on enemy clusters and columns, and conducted reconnaissance.

On the outer front of the encirclement, the Red Army moved irresistibly to the west, from where the allies advanced towards it. In order to coordinate actions in the fight against a common enemy and avoid mixing the Allied forces, the command of the Red Army and the command of the Western Allies on April 20 installed signs and signals to identify Soviet and American-British troops. On April 24, it was agreed that the border of the meeting would be the Elbe and Mulde rivers. And the next day, April 25, in the center of Germany there was a historic meeting on the Elbe of two allied armies - the Red Army with the American army.

In the area of ​​the city of Torgau, advanced units of the 58th Guards Rifle Division of the 5th Guards Army of the 1st Ukrainian Front met with patrols of the 69th Infantry Division of the 1st American Army. Soon, Soviet troops reached the Elbe in the strip from Torgau to the city of Riesa. Thus the front of the fascist German troops was torn apart: the enemy armies in Northern Germany were cut off from the troops in Southern Germany. On the occasion of this significant event, Moscow saluted the troops of the 1st Ukrainian Front with twenty-four artillery volleys. The meeting on the Elbe was a meeting of two friendly armies fighting shoulder to shoulder against a common enemy - Nazi Germany. Then there were several friendly meetings between representatives of the Red Army and representatives of the allied armies. On April 28, the heads of government of the USSR, the USA and Great Britain made their appeals to the soldiers of the allied armies and, welcoming them in connection with their outstanding successes, expressed confidence in a speedy and final victory over the enemy.

And in Berlin there was still a fierce struggle. The Nazis brought more and more new forces into battle. The Soviet troops were in very difficult conditions and suffered heavy losses. In many rifle companies, 20-30 fighters remained. In order to increase their combat effectiveness, it was often necessary to bring soldiers from three companies into two in battalions, bringing their number to 50 people in each. In many regiments, instead of three battalions, there were two. Not having a numerical superiority over the enemy in manpower, the Soviet troops had an overwhelming advantage in artillery and tanks. Acting in assault groups and detachments and making extensive use of detours of individual strongholds, the Red Army, with the support of artillery, crushed the enemy and advanced step by step.

Before the start of the fighting for the central part of Berlin, the bomber aircraft of the 16th and 18th air armies delivered powerful massive strikes against government institutions and the main strongholds of the Nazi defense. In accordance with the plan, which had the code name "Salyut", on April 25, the aircraft of the 16th Air Army made two massive raids on Berlin, in which 1486 aircraft took part. On the night of April 26, the 18th Air Army made 563 sorties, dropping Berlin 569 tons of bombs. After these powerful air strikes, the battles of the ground troops for the central quarters of the city unfolded. Having taken possession of several buildings and overcome water barriers (the Berlin-Spandauer, Teltow canals, the Spree and Dame rivers), the Soviet soldiers approached the city center.

The withdrawal of the troops of the 1st Belorussian Front to the area north of Berlin made it possible for the troops of the 2nd Belorussian Front to continue the offensive in a westerly direction in accordance with the tasks set by the directive of the Headquarters of April 6. The offensive was carried out in difficult conditions. The flooded waters of the Oder cut off the artillery from the infantry and could not provide it with the necessary fire support. The tanks were still on the right bank of the river. Nevertheless, the infantry formations of the front moved forward. By the end of April 25, they broke through the main line of the Nazi defense and approached the second line along the Randow River. During these battles, the troops of the 2nd Belorussian Front, with the support of aviation of the 4th Air Army, inflicted significant damage on the enemy: not only the units defending on the Oder were defeated, but also operational reserves. The enemy lost the opportunity to transfer his forces from the offensive zone of the 2nd Belorussian Front against the troops of the 1st Belorussian Front.

Thus, as a result of the successful combat operations of the three fronts, favorable conditions were created for the final defeat of the encircled enemy groupings in Berlin and southeast of it. This task was solved by the Soviet troops in the period from April 26 to May 2, 1945.

MILITARY THOUGHT No. 2/1992

OPERATIONAL ART

Some issues of breaking through the defense during the transition to the counteroffensive

(Historical experience and modernity)

Retired ColonelA. F. BULATOV ,

Candidate of Military Sciences, Associate Professor

A COUNTEROFFENSIVE is a special type of offensive undertaken by the defending troops during or after repelling an enemy offensive. Its goals are to defeat the enemy's main grouping, disrupt his offensive, capture important areas and lines, seize the strategic or operational initiative, and create conditions for a transition to a general offensive.

The experience of the Great Patriotic War shows that the success of the counteroffensive was ensured by actions against enemy groupings that did not have time to take up defense and gain a foothold on an advantageous line or were forced to create it under the blows of Soviet troops. At the same time, in the largest counter-offensive operations (near Moscow, Stalingrad, Kursk), many fronts and armies had to break through enemy defenses in varying degrees of readiness. In particular, by the beginning of the counter-offensive near Moscow, the enemy was active only near Solnechnogorsk, Naro-Fominsk and Tula. In the remaining areas, he was stopped and in a few days he was able to create defenses in the form of separate strongholds and centers of resistance. The counteroffensive near Stalingrad began immediately after the completion of the defensive operation, when the Nazi hordes had exhausted their offensive capabilities. In the Battle of Kursk, the formations of five fronts launched a counteroffensive in various situations: the troops of the Western and Bryansk fronts, which did not take part in the defensive battle, struck on July 12, 1943 in order to break through the prepared enemy defenses. The counteroffensive of the Central Front began on July 15, that is, three days after the formations of the Wehrmacht were stopped by stubborn defense and counterattacks. The troops of the Voronezh and Steppe fronts went on the offensive on August 3 (after the restoration of the position occupied by the beginning of the defensive battle).

After the war, the capabilities of the troops to create a solid defense in a short time increased significantly. Significantly increased its depth and anti-tank stability, the ability to inflict effective fire damage to all elements of the operational formation of the attackers. The previously existing sharp line between prepared and hastily taken up defense is becoming more and more blurred. Increasing the combat capabilities of weapons and troops contributes to the stability and activity of the defense, and makes it possible to quickly change the balance of forces and assets in threatened sectors through maneuver and deep fire impact. Therefore, there is every reason to believe that modern counteroffensive operations can also begin with a breakthrough of the defense, i.e., with the creation of a gap in prepared defensive zones (lines) occupied by enemy troops.

Breaking through the defense is the initial, most difficult and crucial stage of a counteroffensive operation. It is prepared, as a rule, in a short time, in the course of a forced defense, in an extremely complex, dynamic and rapidly changing situation, in conditions of a tense struggle to seize and retain the operational and strategic initiative. Therefore, the preparation and implementation of a breakthrough require enormous efforts and high skill of the command, staffs and troops. Analyzing past experience, we can conclude that in order to successfully break through the defense during the transition to a counteroffensive, it is necessary: ​​to choose the best way to defeat the enemy grouping; to prepare in advance the appropriate forces and means, to skillfully concentrate them on the chosen directions; skillfully organize a fire defeat; to achieve a surprise transition to the offensive, to build up the efforts of the advancing troops without delay and to ensure a high rate of penetration of the defense; timely expand areas of breakthrough, prevent the influx of fresh enemy forces from other directions and from the depths; create conditions for the development of tactical success in operational.

All this largely depends on the chosen method of defeating the defending enemy. During the war years, it was determined by the commands of the fronts and armies, depending on the quantity and quality of means of destruction, the presence of troops, as well as on the goal, the balance of forces, the condition and position of the enemy, the outline of the front line, the nature of the terrain and other conditions of the situation. At the same time, the Soviet command showed a creative character, tried not to repeat itself either in the plans of operations or in the methods of action. So, in the counteroffensive near Moscow, the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command did not have significant reserves. In the conditions of the enemy's numerical superiority, the main way to defeat him was to break through the defenses in certain directions. At Stalingrad, a more decisive method was chosen - the encirclement and destruction of its most important groups. This was facilitated by such factors as the approximate equality of forces of the parties, the availability of reserves, the convenient configuration of the front, and a more favorable general situation. The Battle of Kursk was characterized by a series of cutting blows inflicted in a strip significantly exceeding it at the first stage of the battle - in a defensive battle. At the same time, the weakest areas of the Wehrmacht's defense were used (low density of forces and means, an insufficiently developed system of engineering equipment of the area, employment by formations with low morale and combat qualities) and accessible to all types of troops.

The main blows in counter-offensive operations were usually struck at weak points in the enemy's defenses, in the directions leading to the flank and rear of his main forces. In individual operations, based on the specific situation, they were also carried out in fairly strong areas of defense. This was used in conditions when it was necessary to avoid the regrouping of a large number of troops, prepare an offensive in a short time and deprive the Nazi command of the opportunity to strengthen the defense. Sometimes the directions of strikes were chosen taking into account bridgeheads on the coast of large water barriers. Near Stalingrad, for example, they were on the Don and between the lakes Sarpa, Tsatsa and Barmantsak (on the flanks of the enemy grouping).

The width of breakthrough areas during the war years was determined depending on the nature of the enemy’s defense, the number and condition of combined arms formations, forces and means of fire destruction, and in such a way that within each of them it was possible to equip a convenient starting position for placing a strike force and its covert deployment . In the counteroffensive near Moscow, the combined-arms army broke through the defenses in one or three sections, each 6 to 20 km wide, the front sections of the breakthrough were divided into several army ones. On the one hand, this eliminated complex regroupings and reduced the time for preparing a breakthrough, and on the other hand, it reduced the results of the offensive being undertaken) with a weakened combat composition of the armies and many breakthrough areas, it was difficult to count on success. Therefore, during the war years, there was a tendency to reduce the number of breakthrough areas and reduce their width. In the second and especially in its third period, the armies, as a rule, delivered one blow and mainly as part of the front's shock grouping, which made a breakthrough in one sector. The number of strikes in front-line counteroffensive operations was reduced to one or two. So, in the counteroffensive near Kursk, the Western, Central and Steppe fronts delivered one blow each, the Bryansk and Voronezh fronts - two each.

Experience has shown that in all cases the success of a breakthrough was determined by the degree of massing of forces and means in the chosen directions. This was not achieved immediately during the war years. In the first period, when the strategic initiative belonged to the enemy, and the Soviet troops fought heavy defensive battles without a sufficient number of reserves, it was not easy to put this principle of military art into practice. In addition, the fear of weakening one of the directions led to the fact that forces and means were distributed relatively evenly throughout the entire zone. In breakthrough areas, the total width of which was 30 percent or more. from the width of the offensive zone of the front, about half of the forces and means were concentrated. Operational densities were extremely low: about one division per 5-7 km, 30 guns and mortars, 6-8 tanks per 1 km of the breakthrough area, which did not allow to quickly break through the defenses and develop an offensive to great depths.

These shortcomings, on the basis of the directive letter of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command No. 03 of January 10, 1942, began to be persistently eliminated. The decisive transition to the creation of powerful strike groupings with a massing of forces and means in the main directions was the defining trend in subsequent counteroffensive operations. While near Moscow the shock group of the front consisted of 3-7 divisions, 35-125 tanks, 160-600 guns, then near Kursk its composition increased; in terms of personnel - 1.5 times, guns and mortars - 4.6 times, tanks - 6 times, aircraft - 2.5 times. Due With with this, operational densities amounted to 1.3-1.9 km per division, 105-230 guns, 30-70 tanks and self-propelled guns per 1 km of the breakthrough area.

Of paramount importance for the success of breaking through the defenses of a counter-offensive operation are the advance preparation of forces and means and their covert concentration on the chosen directions of strikes. This task was one of the most important and difficult during the Great Patriotic War. It should be noted that on the eve of the counteroffensive, the Soviet command sought to accumulate and maintain reserves as the basis of strike groups. Therefore, in the course of a defensive battle, it was necessary to act in such a way as to, on the one hand, prevent an excessive weakening of the defending troops, replenishing them in a timely manner with the minimum necessary forces, and, on the other hand, to create shock groups. They usually included troops of the first (second) echelon that had retained their combat capability, unused reserves, formations and formations that came from the reserve of the Supreme High Command. In a number of cases, especially in a favorable operational situation, the first echelons of strike groupings were created at the expense of intra-front regroupings, and the second - already during the counteroffensive at the expense of troops withdrawn from secondary sectors or released after the completion of the defensive operation, as well as transferred from the reserve of the Supreme High Command.

During the war years, the breakthrough of the defense was carried out, as a rule, from a position of direct contact with the enemy. This ensured more organized troop operations, the most complete use of their fire and strike capabilities, as well as better protection against enemy weapons. This method of going over to the offensive can find application in modern conditions. With a poorly developed defense in open areas and when troops are brought into battle from other directions, a breakthrough of the defense can also be carried out by advancing from the depths.

During the war years, troops could be in direct contact with the enemy for a relatively long time, but now the situation has changed: strikes with modern high-precision weapons against troop concentrations can lead to heavy losses. In this regard, the speed and secrecy of the creation of strike groupings, their dispersed location, reliable air cover, as well as other measures to prevent enemy strikes and reduce their effectiveness, are of paramount importance.

In order to shorten the time needed to prepare a breakthrough, it is expedient to regroup and concentrate troops well in advance, even during a defensive battle, without waiting for the completion of the enemy offensive. In this case, first of all, it will be necessary to advance second-echelon troops (if no counterattack was launched) and reserves to the direction of the main strike, and then maneuver with first-echelon formations from less active sectors. It is extremely important to prevent the enemy from capturing the areas of concentration of the counteroffensive grouping. Its formations, intended for operations in the first echelon, should not be prematurely drawn into battle, they need to maintain combat readiness for delivering a powerful blow.

When regrouping troops, an important role is played by the optimal choice of movement routes. Their skilful preparation and rational distribution among the formations allow the troops to carry out an organized exit to the designated areas and on time. Before launching a counteroffensive, formations must be positioned in such a way that, on the one hand, the enemy is misled as to their intentions to use them, and, on the other hand, they must be optimally dispersed to ensure their resistance to modern weapons.

Taking into account the increased capabilities of the enemy to detect counterstrike groupings, it is necessary to carefully prepare and timely carry out measures to: counter enemy reconnaissance; infliction of preemptive massive strikes against its means of deep destruction, disabling their control systems; creation of a reliable air defense system for troops; skilful use of the camouflage and protective properties of the terrain, its engineering equipment, early organization of the restoration of the combat capability of troops, etc. The areas where counterattack groups are located should ensure their transition to the offensive without overcoming serious natural obstacles.

During the preparation of the counteroffensive, the fight against enemy groupings operating in the rear of the defending troops should be intensified. By the start of the counteroffensive, it is necessary to defeat or securely localize those of them that can threaten strikes in the rear of the counterattack grouping, disrupt the command and control system and material support, and also prevent the advance of troops intended to develop the offensive.

The experience of the war shows that the success of breaking through the defenses depended to a decisive extent on the effectiveness of the fire engagement of the enemy. To this end, powerful artillery and aviation preparation and attack support, continuous fire support of the troops were carried out. Fire was the main means of destroying the enemy's manpower and firepower, destroying his various structures and barriers, and suppressing the will to resist. Fire defeat had its own characteristics, which were predetermined by the high density of forces and means in the tactical defense zone. In order to achieve the proper degree of destruction of the enemy defenses with a constant increase in its strength, along with an increase in the density of fire weapons and an increase in the consumption of ammunition, it was necessary to increase the duration of the artillery preparation of the attack. For example, in the counteroffensive near Kursk, it was 1.5-3 hours. However, its long duration had a negative effect on the course of the breakthrough. During this time, the enemy managed to determine the areas of the breakthrough and take the necessary measures to strengthen their defense. Therefore, already in the course of hostilities, searches were made for ways to reduce the duration of artillery and air preparation for an attack without reducing its effectiveness.

After the Great Patriotic War, in connection with the complete renewal of the means of armed struggle, profound changes took place in views on the fire support of a breakthrough. First, with a sharp increase in the effectiveness of fire and strike weapons, the requirements for the reliability of their destruction increased. Now the defender is able to disrupt the attack of the attacker with a much smaller number of them. Secondly, the nature of the targets on the battlefield has changed. Basically, they became armored and highly mobile, more resistant to weapons. All this requires the solution of fire missions in a shorter time than in the past. Of particular importance is the speed of reaction to detected high-speed precision weapons, the destruction of which must be carried out on a time scale close to real. Thirdly, the echeloned disposition of fire and strike assets of the defenders requires an increase in the depth of their destruction in the course of fire preparation and attack support. This applies primarily to tactical and army aviation at airfields, missile systems, long-range artillery, air defense system facilities, command posts, reserves in concentration areas, etc. The suppression of these objects is especially important for gaining fire superiority over the enemy when going over to the counteroffensive. . Fourthly, during the years of the Great Patriotic War, the main volume (80-90 percent) of fire missions in breaking through the defenses was carried out by artillery. In modern conditions, as the experience of local wars shows, the tasks of gaining fire superiority over the enemy and creating conditions for breaking through his defenses can be successfully solved only with strictly coordinated efforts of all means of fire destruction - missile troops, artillery, aviation, combat helicopters, tanks, infantry fighting vehicles, etc.

Combat practice has confirmed that the achievement of surprise during the transition to a counteroffensive provides significant advantages and makes it possible to compensate for the lack of forces and means. It was achieved by misleading the enemy about the scale, timing of the start and methods of conducting the operation. In the interests of ensuring the safety of friendly troops for a decisive strike in chosen directions, special importance was attached to taking the enemy by surprise, forcing him to use firepower against false targets and objects.

This was facilitated, in particular, by secrecy in the preparation of operations. For example, correspondence and telephone conversations related to the upcoming counteroffensive. All orders were given orally and only to direct executors. The concentration of reserves and all intra-front regroupings were carried out only at night with the strictest observance of camouflage measures. False troop concentrations were simulated to mislead the enemy. Thus, when preparing a counteroffensive near Kursk, the Voronezh Front simulated on its right flank, in the Sudzha area, the concentration of two armies "(tank and combined arms) and preparing them for an offensive in the Sumy direction. To distract the enemy's attention from the directions of the planned strikes, private offensive operations were carried out on other sectors of the front (near Tikhvin and Rostov during the preparation of the counteroffensive near Moscow; in the regions of Velikiye Luki, Rzhev, Mozdok and Nalchik before the start of the counteroffensive near Stalingrad; in the Izyum region and on the Mius River during the battle of Kursk). With the increased effectiveness of reconnaissance, means of destruction, and also the high mobility of troops, surprise becomes even more important.

One of the most important and difficult tasks in counteroffensive operations during the war years was to break through the tactical defense zone. By the beginning of such an operation, the enemy was usually in a grouping transitional from offensive to defensive, and had a compacted operational formation of armies. Its unused reserves were brought closer to the troops of the first echelon, as a result of which 80-90 percent of the troops ended up in the tactical defense zone. forces and means. Here he created a powerful system of fire and obstacles, carried out the most complete engineering equipment of the area. Therefore, the breakthrough of this zone largely predetermined the success of the operation, which, as the experience of the Great Patriotic War showed, was largely determined by the pace of advance of the troops. Only their rapid and unstoppable advance made it impossible for the enemy to occupy pre-prepared lines in depth and organize defense on them. High rates of penetration of the defense were achieved by inflicting fire strikes on the enemy, decisive actions of formations of the first echelons of the armies (fronts), bringing the second echelons (reserves) into battle, as well as maneuvering troops in areas where success was indicated.

The timely build-up of the efforts of the advancing troops is of great importance. During the war years, in the initial formation, the attacking battalions usually captured only the first two trenches. To complete the breakthrough of the first position and capture the second, the second echelons of regiments and divisions were brought into battle. Second echelons of corps, mobile army groups, and sometimes fronts were usually used to break through the eye line of defense and develop an offensive in depth. With the advent of high-precision weapons, the problem of the survivability of the second echelons (reserves), which can be subjected to effective fire strikes both in areas of concentration and when advancing to the line of engagement, has acquired particular relevance. In addition, the capabilities of the defenders in remote mining of the terrain, including advance routes, have now immeasurably increased. All this requires the implementation of the most energetic measures to: disorganize the system of command and control of enemy troops and weapons, timely detection and destruction of long-range fire and strike weapons; skillful dispersal and advancement of second echelons and reserves to the lines of entry into battle; reliable cover for them from air strikes; skillful and swift overcoming of various obstacles, especially minefields; ensuring secrecy of troop actions; misleading the enemy.

The timely expansion of breakthrough areas should also be attributed to the most important factors. If for some reason the Soviet troops failed to do this during the last war, the enemy delivered counterattacks (counterattacks) under the base of the wedging in a narrow sector and restored the situation. And, conversely, the rapid expansion of the breakthrough deprived him of such an opportunity. Because of this, special attention was paid to the planning and implementation of "rolling down" the enemy's defenses on the flanks. When breaking through a focal shallow defense, this was done in the course of overcoming the first position, and continuous positional defense - usually after breaking through the main line or the entire tactical defense zone.

During the war years, it was not possible to completely solve the problem of isolating breakthrough areas from the influx of enemy troops from the depths and from less active directions. This was due mainly to the lack of long-range weapons. Therefore, the advancing troops during the period of breaking through the defense often had to engage in a fierce struggle with the enemy's reserves, by putting into action which he sought to change the situation in his favor. At present, the solution to this problem is conceived by delivering a series of auxiliary and distracting blows; fettering the actions of the defender to a great depth; prohibition of organized maneuver by the second echelons (reserves) due to the massive mining of the relevant areas, lines and routes, the destruction of road structures on them; destruction of army aviation in order to exclude the mass use of transport helicopters for the transfer of troops.

During the war years, in the interests of completing a tactical breakthrough and developing it into an operational one, it was practiced to capture the second line of defense on the move. The main forces seized important objects on this zone and created conditions for quickly overcoming it by the forward detachments of divisions and corps, as well as by mobile groups of armies and fronts. If this strip could not be overcome on the move, the method of breaking through it was used with preparation in a short time (no more than a day). This time was used for additional reconnaissance of the enemy's defense, clarification of tasks, carrying out the necessary regrouping and training of troops. A breakthrough with planned preparation "(usually 1-2 days) was used in cases where the second lane was occupied in advance by strong reserves. In modern conditions, troops have much greater opportunities for delivering fire strikes on the second lane and timely use of their results. The depth of impact has increased The accuracy of strikes has been increased, and the possibilities for tactical and operational airborne landings have been expanded.All this allows the advancing troops to overcome on the move not only the second line of defense, but also subsequent defensive lines, and quickly develop a breakthrough in depth.

In conclusion, it should be emphasized that the article touches upon only some of the provisions for the preparation and implementation of a breakthrough of defense during the transition to a counteroffensive, developed during the Great Patriotic War and retaining their significance in modern conditions. Other equally important issues of this topic may be the subject of independent consideration.

Radzievsky A. I. Breakthrough (On the experience of the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945). -M.: Military Publishing House, 1979.-S 11.

There. -FROM. 164.

T a m e. - S, 56.

T a m e. - S, 57.

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The general offensive of the troops of the 3rd Belorussian Front was scheduled for the morning of June 23. But also 22nd of June in the afternoon, the forward battalions of the divisions of the first echelon of the 5th Army, supported by powerful artillery fire, went on the offensive with the task of capturing and securing the first line of enemy trenches and revealing the tactical depth of his defense.

With a sudden and coordinated strike, the forward battalions of the 5th Army broke into the first German trench, captured it and, building on success, deepened 2–4 km. At the same time, in the direction of the main attack of the army, the advanced battalions of the 72nd and 65th rifle corps overcame not only the first trench with all the barriers placed in front of it, but also captured the second and third trenches. The enemy tried to restore the situation with counterattacks by infantry groups reinforced with tanks, but was not successful. Repulsing the counterattacks, the advanced battalions of the 5th Army defeated the 550th penal battalion of the Germans, two regiments of the 299th Infantry Division, captured prisoners from these units and held the captured positions.

At the same time, the advanced battalions of the 11th Guards Army, advancing on both sides of the Minsk highway, broke into the first trenches of the 78th German assault infantry division in areas 1.5 km northeast of Ostrov-Yuriev, Kireev, but, having met strong resistance and powerful, deeply developed barriers, they could not advance further. The forward battalions of the 31st Army tried to break into the German trenches northwest of Gormany and south of Zagvazdino, but under the influence of strong artillery and mortar fire, as well as fierce counterattacks, they were forced to retreat to their original position.

The battle of the advanced battalions showed that the weakest defense of the Germans was in the Bogushev direction. All five advanced battalions of the 5th Army, operating on a front of 18 km, were successful here. She not only violated the enemy's defensive system at the forefront, but, having penetrated into the depths, captured bridgeheads on the southern bank of the Sukhodrovka River in a number of sectors, providing an advantageous starting position for the offensive of the main forces of the army. Taking advantage of the success of the advanced battalions, on the night of June 23, the engineering units of the 5th Army built three 60-ton bridges across the Sukhodrovka River for the crossing of heavy tanks and artillery, and three bridges for vehicles.

These battles had another meaning as well. The enemy, having taken the actions of the forward battalions as the beginning of a general offensive of our troops, already on the 22nd used up part of his nearest reserves. In the zone of the 5th Army, he brought into battle not only divisional reserves, but also parts of the 14th Infantry Division, which constituted the reserve of the 6th Army Corps. As a result, he did not have enough fresh forces nearby in this direction with which he could fend off the blow of the main forces of the 5th Army in the following days.

June 23 the offensive of our troops began with powerful artillery preparation along the entire front. Artillery preparation was carried out according to the following schedule: the first 5 minutes - a fire raid of all artillery, then 105 minutes - the period of destruction of enemy defenses by aimed fire and control of sighting, followed by 20 minutes - the destruction of direct fire guns by fire and, finally, 40 minutes - suppression leading edge and nearest depth. To avoid a gap between the end of the artillery preparation and the beginning of the attack, only three minutes before the attack, the artillery fire began to gradually move (“creep”) to the next line, and its pace did not decrease. At the same time, the infantry was brought directly to the explosions of their shells.

In the 5th Army, in view of the successful operations of the forward battalions, which had captured the first three lines of enemy trenches the day before, the artillery offensive was rescheduled on the night of June 23. Due to the fact that a number of fire missions at the forefront of the German defense were eliminated, the first two periods (artillery preparation and artillery support for infantry attacks) were moved in space, artillery fire was shifted into the depth of the enemy defense.

15 minutes before the start of the attack, despite the low cloudiness and the beginning of rain, our aircraft, with eighteen Il-2s, launched a bombing and assault strike on the headquarters of the 78th assault German infantry division. As a result of the strike, fires broke out in the area where the German headquarters were located. At the same time, 160 Pe-2 bombers bombarded the Ostrov-Yuriev, Lasyrytsiki, Zavolny, Lobany area in front of the front of the 11th Guards Army. 5 minutes before the infantry attack, our attack aircraft began to act to destroy the artillery, mortar batteries of the enemy and his manpower on the battlefield. German fighters in groups of 4-6 aircraft tried to counteract the blows of our pilots, but were unsuccessful. Air supremacy was firmly held by the 1st Air Army.

At 9 o'clock, an attack by infantry and tanks began along the entire front. The 39th Army of Lieutenant General Lyudnikov, inflicting the main blow on the left flank with the forces of the 5th Guards Rifle Corps, broke through the German defenses on the front of Makarov, Yazykovo, 6 km long, broke the resistance of the 347th Regiment of the 197th Infantry Division of the Germans defending here and crossed the Luchesa River in the area south of Perevoz. Developing success in the western direction, on the very first day of the offensive, the 5th Guards Rifle Corps cut the Vitebsk-Orsha railway near the Zamostochye station and by the end of the day reached the Tishkovo-Lyadenki line with the main forces, advancing to a depth of 12–13 km. During the battle, the corps defeated the 197th German Infantry Division, pushing its remnants to Lake Skryblovo. The enemy tried to stop the rapid advance of the left-flank units of the 39th Army by the forces of the 280th regiment of the 95th Infantry Division, which had come to the aid of the Vitebsk grouping, but had no success. This regiment, with significant losses, was also thrown back to the west.

On June 24, the commander of the 39th Army ordered the 5th Guards Rifle Corps to cut the Vitebsk-Moshkany road with advanced battalions by morning and be ready for an offensive in the general direction of Ostrovno. To develop the success achieved, the army commander decided to send his reserve from behind the flanks of the 5th Guards Rifle Corps with the task of delivering a strike with the 164th Rifle Division in the direction of Dobrino and the 251st Rifle Division in the direction of Zadorozhye.

At the same time, the commander of the 84th Rifle Corps was ordered to concentrate the 158th Rifle Division in the Arzhalov area and, on the night of June 24, strike at Vitebsk from the east with the task of capturing the city.

Lieutenant General Krylov's 5th Army dealt the main blow with its right flank with the forces of the 72nd and 65th Rifle Corps. Building on the success achieved the day before by the forward battalions, the army troops broke through the German defenses in the Kuzmentsy, Osetki sector, defeated the opposing units of the enemy’s 299th Infantry Division, and by the end of the day reached the Savchenko, Ponizovye, Bol front. Kalinovichi, Boston, advancing to a depth of 10 km and expanding the breakthrough along the front to 35 km. On the right flank, units of the army crossed Luchesa and cut the Vitebsk-Orsha railway west of Savchenka. At the same time, the forward battalions of the army operating in the Center also crossed Luchesa in several sectors.

The 11th Guards Army of Lieutenant General Galitsky broke into the enemy defenses in the areas of Lake Zelenskoye, Ostrov-Yuriev, Kiriev and, overcoming the stubborn resistance of the Germans, advanced to a depth of 2 to 8 km. The greatest success was achieved by the right-flank units of the army south of Lake Zelenskoye. Here the battalions of the 152nd Fortified Region and the 11th Guards Rifle Division, skillfully operating in the wooded and swampy terrain, made significant progress. At the same time, on the left flank, in the strip of the Minsk highway, the offensive of our troops was greatly delayed by the stubborn resistance of the enemy and defense in depth.

The 31st Army of Lieutenant General Glagolev wedged its right flank to a depth of 3 km and by the end of the day was fighting enemy counterattacking infantry and tanks southwest of Kiriev, northeast Zagvazdino. Against the advancing units of the 31st Army, the Germans advanced from the reserve up to two infantry regiments with tanks and artillery (from the 260th Infantry and 286th Security Divisions).

The actions of our aviation were hampered by unfavorable meteorological conditions. But still, she blocked enemy airfields, conducted 28 air battles, as a result of which 15 German aircraft were shot down. In the afternoon, a massive bombing strike was carried out by 162 Pe-2 bombers on the enemy's position in the offensive zone of the 11th Guards Army. In total, during the day of the battle, the aviation of the front made 1,769 sorties, completely retaining air supremacy.


Breakthrough by the 11th Guards Army of the 3rd Belorussian Front of the enemy’s defense northwest of Orsha on June 23–24


As a result of the first day of the offensive, the greatest success was achieved on the right wing of the front. Here the troops of the 39th and 5th armies broke through the German defenses to a depth of 10-13 km and expanded the breakthrough to 30 km.

The troops operating in the center and on the left wing, encountering more stubborn resistance and deeply developed defensive structures, wedged into the enemy defenses in separate sectors on a front of up to 20 km, but could not completely overcome it.

June 24 The 39th Army, building on the success achieved, with its left flank came out fighting in the Ostrovno area, cutting off the Germans' escape routes from Vitebsk to the southwest. At the same time, units of the 84th Rifle Corps, operating on the right flank, approached directly the eastern outskirts of the city. The enemy, trying to prevent encirclement, put up stubborn resistance on the outskirts of Vitebsk and southwest of it.

The 5th Army, overcoming the resistance of the remnants of the 299th, 250th and units of the 95th and 14th Infantry Divisions newly introduced by the enemy, advanced 10–14 km. At 21:00, its 144th and 215th rifle divisions, advanced from the second echelon, after a massive raid by 270 of our bombers and attack aircraft, broke through three lines of trenches from the north and captured Bogushevsky by storm, capturing 24 German guns. Continuing to press the defeated enemy, by the end of the day, parts of the army were fighting at the line of Gosmir, Zamoshche, Chudnya, west and south-west of Bogushevsk, lake Serokorotnya.

The 11th Guards Army, using the success achieved on the eve of its right flank, captured, in cooperation with the left-flank units of the 5th Army, the district center of Bobinovichi and defeated the 480th regiment of the 260th infantry division, the 215th regiment in the forests south of this settlement and an assault battalion of the 78th Assault Infantry Division.

By the end of the day, the troops of the 11th Guards Army expanded the breakthrough to 30 km and advanced on the right flank to a depth of 14 km, reaching the front of Lapitsky, Levadnichi, Nuts-Vydritsa. On the left flank, the offensive developed less successfully. Here, units of the army advanced only 4-6 km, reaching the line north of Shalashino and the Osipovka station (on the Krasnoye - Orsha railway).

Due to the fact that the advance of the left-flank units of the 11th Guards Army developed slowly and during June 24 there were no conditions for introducing mobile formations into the breakthrough, the 2nd Guards Tatsinsky Tank Corps on the night of June 25 was regrouped north of the Minsk highway .

The 31st Army, continuing to beat off the fierce counterattacks of the enemy, made little progress.

In connection with the success achieved by the 5th Army, a cavalry-mechanized group was introduced into its offensive zone, which already on the evening of June 24 crossed the Vitebsk-Orsha railway in the Luchkovskoye, Bogushevsk section, throwing forward detachments to the line of Moshkany, Chudnya, west of Bogushevsk .

During June 25 Front troops continued to successfully develop the offensive. The left-flank formations of the 39th Army reached the southern bank of the Western Dvina in the area of ​​Dorogokupovo, Gnezdilovichi and joined the troops of the 43rd Army of the 1st Baltic Front, closing the encirclement ring of the Vitebsk group of Germans. At the same time, the units operating in the center of the army captured the eastern sector and the center of Vitebsk with a decisive attack. The enemy, trying to break through to the west and southwest, launched up to 18 counterattacks against the 5th Guards Rifle Corps, but all his attacks were repulsed.

The cavalry-mechanized group, rapidly advancing westward, captured the city of Senno, while defeating two regiments of the 299th Infantry Division in the forests northeast of Aleksinich with units of the 3rd Guards Cavalry Corps. The forward detachments of the cavalry-mechanized group cut the Lepel-Orsha railway in the Uzdornikov area.

The troops of the 5th Army, building on the success of the cavalry-mechanized group, advanced 20 km on June 25. Destroying small, disparate enemy groups, units of the army liberated over 100 settlements and by the end of the day reached the Luginovichi front, Lake Berezovskoye, Aleksinichi.

At the same time, the 11th Guards Army broke through two intermediate fortified lines and, with the forces of the 16th and 8th Guards Rifle Corps, reached the Monkovo-Mukhanovo line, having the 36th Guards Rifle Corps behind the left flank at the Korobishche-Khlyustino line.

The 2nd Guards Tatsinsky Tank Corps, which concentrated by the morning of June 25 in the Star area. Hills, in the first half of the day, was introduced into a breakthrough in the direction of Klyukovka with the task of cutting the Orsha-Lepel railway and reaching the Repokhovo, Salniki, Zadrovye region (southeast of Salniki), intercepting the Minsk highway northwest of Orsha.

The 31st Army, with its right-flank corps, broke through the German defenses on the northern bank of the Dnieper and, having bypassed the heavily fortified Dubrovno resistance center from the north, reached the road leading from Dubrovno to Vysokoye.

In view of the major success achieved on the front of the 5th Army (where our troops, having broken through all the enemy’s defensive lines, entered the operational space), the 5th Guards Tank Army, on the instructions of the representative of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command, Marshal Vasilevsky, it was decided to use in the Bogushevsky direction.

Having come under the command of the commander of the 3rd Belorussian Front from 20:00 on June 24, by the morning of June 25, the 5th Guards Tank Army concentrated west of Liozno (in the area of ​​​​Pogostishche, Krynki, Dobromysl) and at 14:00 began to move in the general direction to Bogushevsk, pushing forward detachments to the area of ​​Bogushevsk and to the north.

Thus, as a result of the first three days of the offensive, the troops of the 3rd Belorussian Front completely broke through the German defenses from the Western Dvina to the Dnieper for 100 km and advanced in depth from 30 to 50 km. With a quick advance in the central direction, the troops of the front separated the Vitebsk and Orsha enemy groups and with their right wing, in cooperation with the 43rd Army of the 1st Baltic Front, surrounded five German divisions from the 9th, 53rd and 6th army corps in the Vitebsk region. During the offensive, our troops defeated and inflicted significant losses on seven German divisions (197th, 95th, 299th, 256th, 260th, 78th infantry and 25th motorized divisions), while destroying more than 16 thousand soldiers and officers of the enemy.

Aviation of the 1st Air Army all the time firmly held air supremacy and, ensuring the actions of ground troops, in the first three days of the offensive, only to attack and bombard the enemy, made more than 2,500 sorties, while destroying 52 German aircraft in air battles. During the same time, no more than 65 enemy aircraft sorties were registered.

Driven out of the main defensive line and defeated in the Vitebsk and Bogushev directions, the enemy began to withdraw the rear of the 3rd Panzer and 4th Armies to the line of the Berezina River.

At the same time, in order to reinforce the defeated units and delay the advance of our troops on intermediate lines, the German command began to commit operational reserves into battle. The enemy continued to offer particularly stubborn resistance in the Orsha direction. In an effort to keep in their hands the main highway - the Minsk Highway - and to secure the flank of the grouping of their troops opposing the 2nd Belorussian Front, the Germans introduced the 260th Infantry Division from the Kopys region and the 286th security division from the Tolochin region in this direction.

Details

Page 6 of 13

Defense breakthrough on the Molochnaya River

In parts of the division, preparations were in full swing for redeployment, for a long march to a new direction.

The medical battalion was unloaded: convalescents were discharged to units, the wounded requiring long-term treatment were sent to an army hospital.

Soldiers, sergeants and officers, who are being treated in the medical battalion, proved to the doctors in every possible way that they feel very well and it is time for them to return to their units. Everyone wanted to keep up with the division and return to their military teams.

A dense ring surrounded the wounded head of the political department of the division, Lieutenant Colonel B. Martirosov, who arrived at the medical battalion to visit the wounded. It was difficult for him to convince them that the division would have to carry out combat missions in the coming days and the medical battalion could not take with it the wounded requiring long-term treatment, that the division would move towards the front and the command could not take responsibility for their lives, and that you must agree to move to an army hospital for treatment.

It was difficult to part with them, there were still long roads of war ahead. Some of them will eventually return to the division, while others will not be able to. Parted with friends, brothers in arms. The glory of the division was born in the battle for the Caucasus, its traditions were formed and no one wanted to part with it.

The 109th Guards Rifle Division received the task of immersing itself in the railway echelons and, as part of the 10th Guards Rifle Corps, to march by rail across the Don, to the territory of the Rostov Region. The echelons moved across the spacious fields of the Krasnodar Territory. The liberated land returned to life. The fields were harvested, the railway was restored and worked normally.

Among the personnel of the division, a fighting enthusiasm was felt. People were pleased with the redeployment of the division, anticipating new big battles to liberate their native land. The mirror-like surface of the Quiet Don appeared in the night distance. The soldiers did not sleep. The warm September night made me think. Here it is, the legendary Don! So many historical events are associated with it, its banks were abundantly watered with blood.

Here, on these shores, in the hot summer of 1942, our army in the battles against the Nazi invaders experienced a new and final tragedy. From here the enemy broke through to the Volga, broke through far to the foothills of the Caucasus. How much people's energy and blood was required to drive the enemy back beyond the Don!

On September 10, units of the division as part of the 10th Rifle Corps unloaded from the echelons and concentrated in the Novoshakhtinsk area. The division is part of the 44th Army (commanded by Lieutenant General V. A. Khomenko) of the Southern Front.

Here the division was understaffed with weapons, received a large replenishment of personnel in the amount of 2631 people (of which 81% are Russians, 7% are Ukrainians and 12% are of other nationalities).

Among the replenishment there were many Siberians and Urals. Many of them - experienced soldiers - took part in the battles on the Volga, on the Don, fought as part of the Siberian divisions, and now, after being wounded, they returned to duty again. The commanders of units and divisions were frankly glad of such replenishment. The fame of Siberians, steadfast and hardy warriors, spread along the entire front, throughout the country. They also knew about the heroism of the Siberians in the division, there were many of them in units and subunits. Among them were Guards Senior Sergeant Tsarkov, Guards Sergeant Belykh, Guards Captain Vetlugin, Guards Lieutenant Akhlyustin, Guards Private Krinitsyn, Guards Private Turnichev and many other bravely fought guardsmen.

Among the replenishment were the workers of the liberated Donbass and Taganrog. From the workers called up from Krasnodon, the personnel of the division first learned about the heroic activities of the underground youth organization "Young Guard".

The 109th Guards Division, fully equipped and put on alert, received a combat mission: to make a 400-kilometer march from Novoshakhtinsk to the area northeast of Melitopol to the Molochnaya River.

For 13 days, the division makes forced marches in the Rostov, Voroshilovgrad and Stalin regions of Ukraine.

Donetsk land was war-torn, pitted with trenches and trenches, plowed up by tanks. Burnt and dust wafted from the steppe. Abandoned military equipment and equipment of the retreating enemy were scattered along the roadsides: boxes with shells, gas masks, wagons, dead horses, cars of various brands, looted by the Germans throughout Europe and overturned from the road to the roadside by the advancing units of our army. Here passed the victorious troops of the Southern Front, who won the great battle on the Volga and liberated the Donbass. The division made a march through the destroyed industrial cities of Donbass. The German fascist invaders, retreating, took out all the valuables, and what could not be taken out was destroyed. It was a cemetery of cities and factories, a camp for the destruction of human labor. But people were already working on these factory ruins, returning factories and mines to life. Soldiers of the 312th Rifle Regiment at one of the halts saw two gray-haired miners crying near the destroyed mine. For them, the mine was never a dead, inanimate object. She was close to them, she was their life. Their labor, the labor of their fathers and grandfathers, was invested in it.

Experienced soldiers on the roads of war have already seen a lot of human grief, they have seen a lot of tears, both children's and women's. Here, in the Donbass, the soldiers saw for the first time old workers crying.

Those terrible tears!

The division parted with the Donbass as with a seriously wounded friend. The guardsmen looked at the lifeless factory chimneys, at the skeletons of the destroyed workshops, and went further along broken glass and brick, further west to avenge the Donbass. They took with them into the new battle a heavy feeling of people's grief, a new charge of rage.

During the march to the Molochnaya River, the division received replenishment of girls in the amount of 200 people. All of them in the reserve training regiment underwent military training in various specialties.

Among them were nurses, medical instructors, telephone operators, cooks and seamstresses. This was a great help to the division in solving combat and economic tasks. Many of these large female replacements marched with the division along military roads until the end of the war with Nazi Germany and imperialist Japan.

In difficult front-line conditions, the girls performed many glorious military feats, with their work they helped to carry out difficult combat missions. They, along with everyone else, endured the hardships of military life and endangered their lives, shed their blood and died for their homeland. All of them are worthy of kind words for their experiences at the front, for their self-sacrifice, for their kind souls. Everyone in the division knew the therapist Krasnobrodskaya Anna Solomonovna well. The attentive and tactful woman was loved by everyone who only knew her, and the people who met her remembered for a long time. She put all her energy, all the warmth of her soul into the struggle for the health and life of the soldiers.

Many people knew the sanitary instructor of the company of the 309th rifle regiment of the guard, foreman Irina Zhukovskaya. She carried many wounded from the battlefield, saved the lives of many soldiers.

A disciplined and diligent telephone operator, Maria Popova, was always where the rifle battalion was: she knew the price of communication in battle. Masha's photo has always been on the honor roll among courageous female warriors.

The caring female hand in the life of the division's soldiers was visible everywhere: in caring for the wounded, and in cooking, and in sleepless duty at the switchboards, and in darned, timely washed uniforms. Fellow soldiers were grateful for their work, their courageous patience.

At the same time, disaster struck in the division: an outbreak of malaria occurred among the personnel.

The disease was received in the Kuban in the area of ​​​​the village of Angelinskaya, where the division was located for several days in the thickets of reeds, and was preparing for loading.

A desperate situation arose: the division went on to carry out a combat mission, and hundreds of people with a temperature of up to 40 ° were out of order. On the first day, 55 people were diagnosed with the disease, on the second day another 150 people could not move on the march, and on the third day up to 300 people were out of order. It was necessary to take urgent measures.

The fight against malaria in the division was aggravated by the fact that there was neither time nor opportunity for inpatient treatment of such a mass of people: the division received a short time to complete the march, and upon reaching the Molochnaya River, it had to immediately join the battle. There was no question of slowing down the pace of the march.

The head of the medical service of the division of the guard, major of the medical service Danilov and the commander of the medical battalion, the captain of the medical service Bogatyrev, created 6 medical posts at a distance of 30 kilometers from one another on the way of the division.

Those with malaria stayed at these points, took antimalarial injections, then, overcoming these short distances, took a short break, took injections again and moved to the next point in order to receive treatment at the new point and move on.

Meanwhile, the division moved forward without stopping.

So, thanks to the decisive measures taken by the medical workers of the division to combat malaria in difficult field conditions, in conditions of a non-stop march, the division fulfilled its task: it arrived in the designated area on time and retained its combat capability.

To meet the formation and units of the 10th Guards Rifle Corps, making a march, arrived the chief of staff of the Southern Front, Lieutenant General Biryuzov S.S. and Commander of the 44th Army, Lieutenant General Khomenko V.A.

By this time, the troops of the Southern Front had approached the enemy's powerful defensive line along the Molochnaya River and were now preparing for new offensive battles.

Formations and parts of the corps were concentrated in the area of ​​​​the village of Kopon, 50 kilometers from the front line. In this area, the leadership of the corps, divisions, regiments was assembled.

Lieutenant General Biryuzov S. S. made a report on the tasks performed by the troops of the front, gave a detailed description of the enemy troops defending on the Molochnaya River, spoke about the upcoming tasks of formations and units of the 10th Corps.

The 44th Army had the task of breaking through the enemy's defenses on the Molochnaya River near Melitopol, crossing the river and rapidly pursuing the enemy beyond the Dnieper. The battles for Molochnaya and its forcing were supposed to precede the big battle for the Dnieper. The German command had high hopes for the Dnieper. The German military press defined the Dnieper as the "border between Germany and Russia" and urged to keep this "border" at all costs, called this water barrier the "Dnieper rampart", "the line of defense of their own home."

The German command understood that if the Soviet troops were beyond the Dnieper, behind this powerful water barrier, then nothing would hold them on the plains of the right-bank Ukraine. Trying to delay the advance of our troops to the Dnieper and towards the Crimea, the German command transferred a significant part of the forces of the 11th Field Army to the Molochnaya River from the Crimea.

At a meeting with the chief of staff of the Southern Front, it was emphasized that the enemy would resist strongly on Molochnaya, even stronger on the Dnieper. Therefore, the task was set: to exterminate the enemy more in the battles on Molochnaya, and breaking through the defenses, quickly drive him away, to prevent him from being able to transport his equipment and rear forces across the Dnieper and Sivash through the autumn thaw.

The division began a thorough preparation for the upcoming offensive. The units were replenished with weapons and ammunition, a lot of work was done to mobilize personnel for the successful completion of the tasks facing the division.

On the night of September 24, the division took up its starting position for an offensive at the Gendelberg-Voroshilovsk line. The defensive line of the enemy was heavily fortified in terms of engineering: three defensive lines with several trenches each, connected by communications, anti-tank ditches, minefields and barbed wire. Settlements were turned into strong strongholds.

On September 26, 1943, the division, as part of the 10th Guards Rifle Corps, went on the offensive in the main direction of the army. Waging fierce battles, repelling counterattacks by enemy tanks and infantry, in three days the division broke through the defensive line and captured strong centers of resistance: Gendelberg, Andreburg, Novomuntal.

The unceasing rumble stood in the air and on the ground for many days. Here was the main multi-lane, heavily equipped with firepower, enemy defense. In these battles, hundreds of soldiers of the division showed courage and heroism in defeating the insidious enemy, and increased the glory of the guards of their native unit. The glory of the heroic deeds accomplished by three soldiers of the 309th Guards Rifle Regiment thundered along the entire front.

The battle, in which the loud glory of the guard Captain Nesterenko I.M., was born, lasted three days. It so happened that thirty guardsmen, led by the deputy commander of the battalion of the 309th Guards Rifle Regiment of the Guard, Captain Nesterenko Ivan Maksimovich, ended up at a line far removed from our main forces in the area of ​​the village of Zeleny Gai (Tokmak district of the Zaporozhye region). Letting the enemy through here means creating a threat to your flanks.

The trench was on a hillock. The position is very advantageous. Drunken German submachine gunners, trying to recapture the advantageous line they had lost, marched in a disorderly crowd at full height to the line of the guards.

There were still enough ammo. Two machine guns from the flanks opened fire, shooting the Nazis point-blank. With rapture, the machine gunner Levchenko fired burst after burst. About 150 meters away, the Germans lay down, and then, when the guards hit even harder, the Nazis randomly began to crawl away, to run back. This was repeated several times.

The second day, the guards repel the attacks of the Germans. September 26 came. Before the last enemy attack of the messenger guards, Private Kiryanov brought a box of cartridges, but they did not last long. Guards observer Sergeant Garnik Arevshetyan warned that many tanks were approaching. The tanks appeared to the right and went first in a column to the line of the guards. Submachine gunners ran between them. The guardsmen counted the cartridges. Captain Nesterenko walked along the trench trench, warned:

Do not shoot! Wait until they come closer. Every bullet is on target!

A mortar was installed in the trench compartment. Lieutenant Adyrkhanov stood at the ready of the guards near him and waited for the captain's order. In the previous attacks of the Germans, he did not fire a single shot. There were very few mines and they were kept to a more difficult situation. Now Captain Nesterenko ordered Adyrkhanov:

Turning around, the tanks began to bypass the hillock, and the German machine gunners walked along the trench. One of the tanks climbed on the right side of the trench. The air trembled with the roar of engines. Guards Private Nesterenko (namesake of Captain Nesterenko) quickly jumped onto the parapet of the trench. Rising up, he managed to throw a grenade under the tracks of an oncoming tank. There was an explosion, the tank backed up and froze. The party organizer Smirnov was mortally wounded, the guardsmen Kiryanov, Nesterenko, Levchenko lay dead at their positions, and the Germans continue to besiege the brave.

One after another, brave warriors went out of action, but even at this tragic moment, when death tried to close their eyes, they continued to strike at the enemy with their last strength.

German submachine gunners, under the cover of tanks, managed to get so close that they were about to break into the trenches of the guards. Only some of the guards had rifles with bayonets, the rest had machine guns with empty discs. When it seemed there was no way out, Captain Nesterenko said:

The guardsman does not give up and does not retreat. Then he commanded:

Follow me guys! For our Motherland, forward! - And the first jumped on the parapet of the trench.

Such strength was in his call that everyone began to jump out of the trench, even the wounded, and they crawled forward, some with a rifle, a machine gun, and some with the remaining grenade ...

Such a daring attack of the guards stunned the Germans. Our fighters ran towards them in order to quickly grapple with the hated enemy in hand-to-hand combat. The Nazis lay down, and at this time, Lieutenant Adyrkhanov began firing from a mortar at the lying Germans.

Enemy tanks, in turn, opened fire, cutting off the path of those who had not yet reached the battlefield. Guardsmen

Arevshetyan and Zhukan were stunned and shell-shocked by the shell explosion. A group of fighters still managed to get close to the enemy and start hand-to-hand combat. They beat and died standing, clinging to the enemy. When Zhukan and Arevshetyan came to their senses, it was already dark. Their first thought was: “Where is the commander, what about the comrades?” They searched for the dead captain Nesterenko and their fighters. The Germans never managed to step over the trench of the brave guardsmen.

In an unequal battle, Captain Nesterenko I. M. and his friends died. They died, but they did not give up the frontier to the enemy, they steadfastly defended the sacred land.

By a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR dated November 1, 1943, Captain I.M. Nesterenko was posthumously awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

He was buried in a mass grave on the Pokaznaya farm in the Tokmak district of the Zaporozhye region.

On the same day, September 26, the commander of the fire platoon of the 309th Guards Rifle Regiment, Lieutenant Mikhail Illarionovich Moskalenko, accomplished his heroic deed. The battle also took place near the village of Zeleny Gay. During the battle of the guard, Lieutenant Moskalenko M.I. personally commanded an artillery battery. With fierce counterattacks by the Germans, the personnel of the battery destroyed the enemy's firing points and inflicted significant damage on him. When repelling one of the counterattacks of the enemy guards, Lieutenant Moskalenko M.I. died. By decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of November 1, 1943, Guards Lieutenant Moskalenko M.I. was posthumously awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

The Hero was buried in a mass grave in the village of Zeleny Gay.

In the battle north of Melitopol on September 26, the mortar gunner of the 309th Guards Rifle Regiment of the Guard, Sergeant Mikhail Ilyich Bakalov, showed not only courage, but also exceptional courage and stamina.

The battalion of the Guards, Major Nikolai Penkov, received an order to move forward, to level the front line of the regiment. The advancing riflemen were supported by their fire from the mortar battery of Captain Lovpache's guard. In this battle, the calculation of the guard sergeant Mikhail Bakalov especially distinguished himself.

After recovering from artillery fire, the enemy launched a counterattack. He managed to throw back the battalion of Major N. Penkov. Calculation of mortars under the command of a sergeant

Bakalova continued to hold the occupied line, restrain the enemy, hitting him with well-aimed fire.

Every attempt by the Germans to capture the frontier of the brave mortarmen did not bring success. But the forces were unequal. One by one, all the fighters of the calculation died. Only Sergeant Bakalov remained at the line. At the end of the mine, the enemy pressed on. Bakalov, being seriously wounded himself, found the strength to collect the weapons of his dead comrades and wage an unequal battle with the enemy alone, giving the impression that he was not fighting alone. He fought boldly and skillfully, to the last bullet. But every hour the strength left the hero. Bleeding, losing consciousness, he took documents from the pocket of his tunic and covered them with earth. After some time, the enemies broke into the line of mortars. They start beating Sergeant Bakalov's guards with boots and machine guns. He comes to consciousness. Around the Germans. They demand that they be informed of the location of fire weapons, the name of the unit, the name of the commander. The guard is silent. Not having obtained the necessary information, the Germans continue to torture him further, cut off his fingers on his right hand. But the hero is silent. This infuriated the Nazis. They perform a monstrous act on the guardsman - they cut off his tongue. But this atrocity of the executioners did not shake the courage of the patriot. He steadfastly withstood all the torments, not betraying military secrets. Bakalov believed that help would come soon, his comrades would not leave him in trouble. And he was not wrong. The comrades arrived in time to recapture their tormented hero from the Nazis. As soon as he regained consciousness, he pointed to the place where the documents were buried. After providing first aid, he was taken to the hospital.

The news of the brutal torture of the brave guard sergeant Bakalov spread around the entire front. The Military Council of the front, reporting on the brutal mockery of our warrior, called on the soldiers, sergeants and officers to avenge the torment of the brave mortarman Bakalov, to speed up the defeat of the enemy on Ukrainian soil. Bakalov's friends on all fronts opened accounts of revenge for the torment of the hero-guardsman.

The Soviet people who worked in the rear learned from the Pravda newspaper about the monstrous torture of the courageous hero. At the enterprises of Moscow, in the homeland of the hero - in the Chernyakhovsky district of the Zhytomyr region and other enterprises of the country, front-line shock brigades named after Mikhail Bakalov were created.

The motherland highly appreciated the feat and courage of the Guards Sergeant Mikhail Ilyich Bakalov. By decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of March 19, 1944, he was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

Unfortunately, later fellow soldiers learned about the death of the hero. He died in May 1944 in the Melitopol hospital. He could not overcome death from the suffering and severe wounds.

Guards Sergeant M. I. Bakalov was buried in a mass grave in Melitopol.

After 3 days of fighting near the Molochnaya River, having regrouped, the division resumed the offensive. Leading heavy booms, repelling fierce counterattacks of the enemy, the division successively takes possession of two more fortified defensive lines. The first - on the line of Lyubimovka, Dunaev, Shevchenko, and by October 24, 1943, breaks through the enemy's defenses to the full depth and begins to pursue him.

Pursuing the retreating enemy, the division fights to capture the large settlements of Friedrichsveld, Prishiv, Mikhailovka, Rozovka, Timoshevka, Vorobyovka, Novospenovka, Chistopolye, Demyanovka, Novoaleksandrovka, Novoukrainka, Antonovka, Western Kairi, Gornostaevka, Zavadovka and 26 more settlements. Having destroyed 28 German tanks, up to 4,000 soldiers and officers, taking 30 people prisoner and capturing a lot of trophies, on November 2, 1943, the division reached the Dnieper River at the turn: Sredny, Zavadovka, Gornostaevka, Western Kairi.