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==Aftermath==
==Aftermath==
On 31 January, the Soviet offensive was voluntarily halted, though Berlin was undefended and only approximately {{convert|70|km|mi|abbr=on}} away from the Soviet bridgeheads across the [[Oder]] river. After the war a debate raged, mainly between [[Vasily Chuikov]] and [[Georgy Zhukov]] whether it was wise to stop the offensive. Chuikov argued Berlin should have been taken then, while Zhukov defended the decision to stop. The controversy is fueled by the fact that the [[Battle of the Seelow Heights]] (16–19 April) and the battle in the city of Berlin (April until early May) were costly to the Soviets.
On 31 January, the Soviet offensive was voluntarily halted, though Berlin was undefended and only approximately {{convert|70|km|mi|abbr=on}} away from the Soviet bridgeheads across the [[Oder]] river. After the war a debate raged, mainly between [[Vasily Chuikov]] and [[Georgy Zhukov]] whether it was wise to stop the offensive. Chuikov argued Berlin should have been taken then, while Zhukov defended the decision to stop. The controversy is fueled by the fact that the [[Battle of the Seelow Heights]] (16–19 April) and the battle in the city of Berlin (April until early May) were costly to the Soviets.{{fact}}


The German casualties were staggering. About 147,000 German troops were taken prisoner by the Soviets, and the total casualties are estimated to be at least two thirds of a million.<ref name=Mcateer/>
According to Soviet claims, the German losses were 150,000 soldiers killed and 69,600 captured, 1,537 tanks and 341 planes lost through 24 January 1945.<ref>http://9may.ru/26.01.1945/inform/m2929</ref>{{dead link|date=September 2014}}


Controversy aside, what actually followed was a period of several weeks of mopping-up and consolidation on the part of the Soviets, along with ongoing hard fighting in pockets in the North. On April 16 the Red Army jumped off from lines on the [[Battle of the Oder–Neisse|Oder and Neisse Rivers]], the opening phase of the [[Battle of Berlin]], which proved to be the culminating offensive of the war on the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]]. The relatively rapid progress of this new offensive toward the German heartland seems to illustrate the cumulative extent of the erosion of the [[Wehrmacht]]'s capability to defend a broad front. Nevertheless they remained dangerous opponents for a some weeks longer, especially when allowed or forced to concentrate in limited areas.
Controversy aside, what actually followed was a period of several weeks of mopping-up and consolidation on the part of the Soviets, along with ongoing hard fighting in pockets in the North. On April 16 the Red Army jumped off from lines on the [[Battle of the Oder–Neisse|Oder and Neisse Rivers]], the opening phase of the [[Battle of Berlin]], which proved to be the culminating offensive of the war on the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]]. The relatively rapid progress of this new offensive toward the German heartland seems to illustrate the cumulative extent of the erosion of the [[Wehrmacht]]'s capability to defend a broad front. Nevertheless they remained dangerous opponents for a some weeks longer, especially when allowed or forced to concentrate in limited areas.{{fact}


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 04:22, 13 September 2014

Vistula-Oder Offensive
Part of the Eastern Front of World War II

Soviet troops enter Łódź, led by an ISU-122 Self-Propelled Gun
Date12 January – 2 February 1945
Location
Result Strategic Soviet victory
Belligerents
Nazi Germany Germany Soviet Union Soviet Union
Poland Poland
Commanders and leaders
Nazi Germany Ferdinand Schörner
(Army Group A) (from 20 January)
Nazi Germany Josef Harpe
(Army Group A) (until 20 January)
Soviet Union Georgy Zhukov
(1st Belorussian Front)
Soviet Union Ivan Konev
(1st Ukrainian Front)
Strength
450,000 men[1] 2,203,600 men[2]
Casualties and losses
650,000-700,000 total casualties (including 147,000 taken prisoner)[3] 43,476 killed or missing
150,715 wounded and sick[2]

The Vistula–Oder Offensive was a successful Red Army operation on the Eastern Front in the European Theatre of World War II. It took place between 12 January and 2 February 1945. The offensive took Soviet forces from their start lines on the Vistula River almost 300 mi (480 km) to the Oder River; located 70 km (43 mi) from the German capital of Berlin.

Background

In the wake of the successful Operation Bagration, the 1st Belorussian Front managed to secure two bridgeheads west of the Vistula river between 27 July and 4 August 1944.[4] The Soviets remained inactive during the failed Warsaw uprising that started on 1 August, though their frontline was not far from the insurgents. The 1st Ukrainian Front captured an additional large bridgehead at Sandomierz (known as the Baranow bridgehead in German accounts), some 200 km south of Warsaw, during the Lvov-Sandomierz Offensive.[5]

Preceding the offensive, the Soviets had built up large amounts of materiel and manpower in the three bridgeheads. The Soviets greatly outnumbered the opposing German army in infantry, artillery, and armour. All this was known to German intelligence. General Reinhard Gehlen, head of Fremde Heere Ost passed his assessment to Heinz Guderian. Guderian in turn presented the intelligence results to Adolf Hitler, who refused to believe them, dismissing the apparent Soviet strength as "the greatest imposter since Genghis Khan".[6] Guderian had proposed to evacuate the divisions of Army Group North trapped in the Courland Pocket to the Reich via the Baltic Sea to get the necessary manpower for the defence, but Hitler forbade it. In addition, Hitler commanded that one major operational reserve, the troops of Sepp Dietrich's 6th SS Panzer Army, were moved to Hungary to support Operation Frühlingserwachen.

Forces Involved

Red Army

Two Fronts of the Red Army were directly involved. The 1st Belorussian Front, holding the sector around Warsaw and southward in the Magnuszew and Puławy bridgeheads, was led by Marshal Georgy Zhukov; the 1st Ukrainian Front, occupying the Sandomierz bridgehead, was led by Marshal Ivan Konev.

Zhukov and Konev had 163 divisions for the operation with a total of:[7]

Deployments

Wehrmacht

Delegation of German officers walking for negotiations before capitulation of Festung Breslau

Soviet forces in this sector were opposed by Army Group A, defending a front which stretched from positions east of Warsaw southwards along the Vistula, almost to the confluence of the San. At that point there was a large Soviet bridgehead over the Vistula in the area of Baranów before the front continued south to Jasło.

There were three Armies in the Group; the 9th Army deployed around Warsaw, the 4th Panzer Army opposite the Baranow salient in the Vistula Bend, and the 17th Army to their south.[8] The force had a total complement of 450,000 soldiers, 4,100 artillery pieces, and 1,150 tanks.[9] Army Group A was led by Colonel-General Josef Harpe (who was replaced, after the offensive had begun, by Colonel-General Ferdinand Schörner on 20 January).[10]

Order of battle

German intelligence had estimated that the Soviet forces had a 3:1 numerical superiority to the German forces; there was in fact a 5:1 superiority.[12] In the large Baranow/Sandomierz bridgehead, the Fourth Panzer Army was required to defend from 'strongpoints' in some areas, as it lacked the infantry to man a continuous front line.[13] In addition, on Hitler's express orders, the two German defence lines (the Grosskampflinie and Hauptkampflinie) were positioned very close to each other, placing the main defences well within striking range of Soviet artillery.[14]

The offensive

File:Attack of the Red Army 1-4 1945.jpg
Eastern front in 1945 (includes the Vistula-Oder offensive)

The offensive commenced in the Baranow bridgehead at 04:35 on 12 January with an intense bombardment by the guns of the 1st Ukrainian Front against the positions of the 4th Panzer Army.[15] Concentrated against the divisions of XLVIII Panzer Corps, which had been deployed across the face of the bridgehead, the bombardment effectively destroyed their capacity to respond; a battalion commander in the 68th Infantry Division stated that "I began the operation with an understrength battalion [...] after the smoke of the Soviet preparation cleared [...] I had only a platoon of combat effective soldiers left".[16]

The initial barrage was followed by probing attacks and a further heavy bombardment at 10:00. By the time the main armored exploitation force of the 3rd Guards and 4th Tank Armies moved forward four hours later, the Fourth Panzer Army had already lost up to ⅔ of its artillery and ¼ of its troops.[17]

The Soviet units made rapid progress, moving to cut off the defenders at Kielce. The armored reserves of the 4th Panzer Army's central corps, the XXIV Panzer Corps, were committed, but had suffered serious damage by the time they reached Kielce, and were already being outflanked. The XLVIII Panzer Corps, on the Fourth Panzer Army's southern flank, had by this time been completely destroyed, along with much of Recknagel's LXII Corps in the north. By 14 January, the 1st Ukrainian Front had forced crossings of the Nida river, and began to exploit towards Radomsko and the Warthe. The 4th Panzer Army's last cohesive formation, the XXIV Panzer Corps held on around Kielce until the night of 16 January, before its commander made the decision to withdraw.

World War II Eastern Front during the 1945 Vistula-Oder offensive; the map also shows the East Prussian Offensive, Lower Silesian Offensive, the East Pomeranian Offensive, and the battles in Courland. See here for an accurate map.

The 1st Belorussian Front, to Konev's north, opened its attack on the German 9th Army from the Magnuszew and Puławy bridgeheads at 08:30, again commencing with a heavy bombardment.[18] The 33rd and 69th Armies broke out of the Puławy bridgehead to a depth of 30 km (19 mi), while the 5th Shock and 8th Guards Armies broke out of the Magnuszew bridgehead. The 2nd and 1st Guards Tank Armies were committed after them to exploit the breach. The 69th Army's progress from the Puławy bridgehead was especially successful, with the defending LVI Panzer Corps disintegrating after its line of retreat was cut off. Though the 9th Army conducted many local counter-attacks, they were all brushed aside; the 69th Army ruptured the last lines of defence and took Radom, while the 2nd Guards Tank Army moved on Sochaczew and the 1st Guards Tank Army was ordered to seize bridgeheads over the Pilica and attack towards Łódź.[19] In the meantime, the 47th Army had crossed the Vistula and moved towards Warsaw from the north, while the 61st and 1st Polish Armies encircled the city from the south.[20]

The only major German response came on 15 January, when Hitler (against the advice of Guderian) ordered the Grossdeutschland Division of Dietrich von Saucken from East Prussia to cover the breach made in the sector of the 4th Panzer Army, but the advance of Zhukov's forces forced it to detrain at Łódź without even reaching its objective. After covering the 9th Army's retreat, it was forced to withdraw southwest toward the Warthe.[21]

Taking of Kraków; escape of the XXIV Panzer Corps

On 17 January, Konev was given new objectives: to advance towards Breslau using his mechanised forces, and to use the combined-arms forces of the 60th and 59th Armies to open an attack on the southern flank towards the industrial heartland of Upper Silesia through Kraków. Kraków was secured undamaged on 19 January after an encirclement by the 59th and 60th Armies, in conjunction with the 4th Guards Tank Corps, forced the German defenders to withdraw hurriedly.[22]

The second stage of the 1st Ukrainian Front's objective was far more complex, as they were required to encircle and secure the entire industrial region of Upper Silesia, where they were faced by Schulz's 17th Army. Konev ordered that the 59th and 60th Armies advance frontally, while the 21st Army encircled the area from the north. He then ordered Rybalko's 3rd Guards Tank Army, moving on Breslau, to swing southwards along the upper Oder from 20 January, cutting off 17th Army's withdrawal.[23]

In the meantime, the shattered remnants of the 4th Panzer Army were still attempting to reach German lines. By 18 January, Nehring and the XXIV Corps found that their intended route northwards had been blocked, so pulled back to the west, absorbing the remnants of LXII Corps that had escaped encirclement.[24] Much of the remainder of LXII Corps was destroyed after being trapped around Przysucha. Screened by heavy fog, the lead elements of XXIV Panzer Corps reached the Warthe on 22 January, and having linked up with von Saucken, were finally able to cross the Oder, some 350 km (220 mi) from their positions at the start of the Soviet offensive.

Withdrawal of 17th Army from Upper Silesia

On 25 January, Schulz requested that he be allowed to withdraw his 100,000 troops from the developing salient around Katowice/Kattowitz. This was refused, and he repeated the request on 26 January. Schoerner eventually permitted Schulz to pull his forces back on the night of 27 January, while Konev – who had allowed just enough room for the 17th Army to withdraw without putting up serious resistance – secured the area undamaged.[25]

On Konev's northern flank, the 4th Tank Army had spearheaded an advance to the Oder, where it secured a major bridgehead at Steinau. Troops of the 5th Guards Army established a second bridgehead upstream at Ohlau.

Advance of 1st Belorussian Front; taking of Warsaw by Soviets

In the northern sector of the offensive, Zhukov's 1st Belorussian Front also made rapid progress, as 9th Army was no longer able to offer coherent resistance. Its XXXVI Panzer Corps, which was positioned behind Warsaw, was pushed over the Vistula into the neighbouring Second Army sector.[26] Warsaw was taken on 17 January, as Army Group A's headquarters issued orders for the city to be abandoned; units of the 2nd Guards and 3rd Shock Armies entering the city were profoundly affected by the devastation wrought by German forces after the Warsaw Uprising.[27] Hitler, on the other hand, was furious at the abandonment of the 'fortress', arresting Colonel Bogislaw von Bonin, head of the Operations Branch of OKH, and sacking both the 9th Army and XXXVI Panzer Corps commanders; Generals Smilo Freiherr von Lüttwitz and Walter Fries.

The 2nd Guards Tank Army pressed forward to the Oder, while to the south the 8th Guards Army reached Łódź by 18 January, and took it by 19 January. The 1st Guards Tank Army moved to encircle Poznań by 25 January, and the 8th Guards Army began to fight its way into the city on the following day, though there was protracted and intense fighting in the Siege of Poznań before the city would finally be taken.

To the northeast of Zhukov's 1st Belorussian Front, the lead elements of Marshal Rokossovsky's 2nd Belorussian Front taking part in the East Prussian Offensive had reached the Baltic coast of the Vistula delta by 24 January and so succeeded in isolating Army Group Centre in East Prussia.[28] On January 27, the abandoned Wolf's Lair - Hitler's former headquarters on the Eastern Front, was captured.

Zhukov's advance to the Oder

After encircling Poznań, the 1st Guards Tank Army advanced deep into the fortified region around the Obra River against patchy resistance from a variety of Volkssturm and Wehrmacht units. There was heavier resistance, however, on the approaches to the fortress of Küstrin.

The German reorganisation of command structure that resulted in the creation of Army Group Vistula was accompanied by the release of a few extra formations for the defense; the V SS Mountain Corps, with two reserve infantry divisions, was deployed along the Obra and the prewar border fortifications known as the Tierschtigel Riegel, while the Panzergrenadier-Division Kurmark was ordered to reinforce it.[29]

The military historian Earl Ziemke described the advance thus:

On the 25th, Zhukov's main force passed Poznań heading due west towards Kuestrin, on the Oder forty miles east of Berlin. The path of the Soviet advance looked like the work of a gigantic snowplough, its point aimed on a line from Warsaw to Poznań, to Berlin. All of Army Group A was being caught up by the point and the left blade and thrown across the Oder. On the right the German had nothing except a skeleton army group that Hitler had created some days earlier and named Army Group Vistula.

— Earl Ziemke[30]

On 25 January, Hitler renamed three army groups. Army Group North became Army Group Courland; Army Group Centre became Army Group North and Army Group A became Army Group Centre.[31]

The 2nd Guards Tank and 5th Shock Armies reached the Oder almost unopposed; a unit of the 5th Shock Army crossed the river ice and took the town of Kienitz as early as 31 January.[32]

Stavka declared the operation complete on 2 February. Zhukov had initially hoped to advance directly on Berlin, as the German defences had largely collapsed. However the exposed northern flank of 1st Belorussian Front in Pomerania, along with a German counter-attack (Operation Solstice) against its spearheads, convinced the Soviet command that it was essential to clear German forces from Pomerania in the East Pomeranian Offensive before the Berlin offensive could proceed.

Liberation of Nazi concentration camps

By mid January, the SS and Nazi-controlled police units had begun forcing thousands of camp prisoners from Poland, East Prussia, Silesia and Pomerania to walk westward away from the advancing Russian offensives. The death marches, which took place over hundreds of kilometers in sub-zero conditions, resulted in large numbers of concentration camp prisoners and allied POWs dying on route.

On 27 January, troops from Konev's First Ukrainian Front (322nd Rifle Division, 60th Army) liberated the Auschwitz concentration camp. Despite attempts by retreating SS units to destroy parts of the camp, the Soviets found still graphic evidence of the Holocaust.

Flight of ethnic Germans

As the Red Army entered former Nazi-occupied areas, they looted and committed many atrocities against the Volksdeutsche. Millions of ethnic German refugees fled west to escape the Soviet advance seeking safety in central or western Germany, or in the custody of the American and British west of the Rhine.[33]

Outcome

The Vistula–Oder Offensive was a major success for the Soviet military. Within a matter of days the forces involved had advanced hundreds of kilometers, taking much of Poland and striking deep within the borders of the Reich. The offensive broke Army Group A, and much of Germany's remaining capacity for military resistance. However the stubborn resistance of German forces in Silesia and Pomerania, as well as continuing fighting in East Prussia, meant that the final offensive towards Berlin was delayed by two months, by which time the Wehrmacht had once again built up a substantial force on this axis.

Aftermath

On 31 January, the Soviet offensive was voluntarily halted, though Berlin was undefended and only approximately 70 km (43 mi) away from the Soviet bridgeheads across the Oder river. After the war a debate raged, mainly between Vasily Chuikov and Georgy Zhukov whether it was wise to stop the offensive. Chuikov argued Berlin should have been taken then, while Zhukov defended the decision to stop. The controversy is fueled by the fact that the Battle of the Seelow Heights (16–19 April) and the battle in the city of Berlin (April until early May) were costly to the Soviets.[citation needed]

The German casualties were staggering. About 147,000 German troops were taken prisoner by the Soviets, and the total casualties are estimated to be at least two thirds of a million.[3]

Controversy aside, what actually followed was a period of several weeks of mopping-up and consolidation on the part of the Soviets, along with ongoing hard fighting in pockets in the North. On April 16 the Red Army jumped off from lines on the Oder and Neisse Rivers, the opening phase of the Battle of Berlin, which proved to be the culminating offensive of the war on the Eastern Front. The relatively rapid progress of this new offensive toward the German heartland seems to illustrate the cumulative extent of the erosion of the Wehrmacht's capability to defend a broad front. Nevertheless they remained dangerous opponents for a some weeks longer, especially when allowed or forced to concentrate in limited areas.{{fact}

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Duffy pp. 51, 59
  2. ^ a b Glantz (1995), p. 300
  3. ^ a b Mcateer, p. 334
  4. ^ Duffy, p. 11
  5. ^ Duffy, p. 12
  6. ^ Beevor, pp. 6, 7
  7. ^ Duffy pp. 24, 25
  8. ^ Web map copy of Ziemke p. 26
  9. ^ Ziemke, p. 23
  10. ^ Duffy[page needed]
  11. ^ Only two divisions of this corps, the 16th and 17th Panzer Divisions, were allocated to Fourth Panzer Army, where they were committed in the attempted defence of Kielce. The remaining two formations, the 19th and 25th Panzer Divisions constituted Army Group A's general reserve, and were committed in support of 9th Army.
  12. ^ Duffy, pp. 51, 59
  13. ^ Sims and Schilling, p. 23
  14. ^ Duffy [page needed]
  15. ^ Duffy, p. 67
  16. ^ Captain Reinhardt Mueller, interviewed in Sims and Schilling, p. 24
  17. ^ Hastings, p. 280
  18. ^ Duffy, p. 72
  19. ^ Duffy, p. 75
  20. ^ Duffy, p. 78
  21. ^ Duffy, p. 80
  22. ^ Duffy, p. 88
  23. ^ Duffy, p. 91
  24. ^ Duffy, p. 82
  25. ^ Beevor, p. 60
  26. ^ Duffy, p. 103
  27. ^ Duffy, p. 104
  28. ^ Ziemke p. 31
  29. ^ Le Tissier, p. 32
  30. ^ Ziemke pp. 30, 31
  31. ^ Ziemke p. 32
  32. ^ Hastings, p. 295
  33. ^ Beevor, pp. 28, 29, 30-37, 46-51

References

  • Beevor, A. Berlin: The Downfall 1945, Penguin Books, 2002, ISBN 0-670-88695-5
  • Duffy, C. Red Storm on the Reich: The Soviet March on Germany, 1945 Routledge 1991 ISBN 0-415-22829-8
  • Glantz, David M. & House, Jonathan (1995), When Titans Clashed: How the Red Army Stopped Hitler, Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas, ISBN 0-7006-0899-0
  • Hastings, Max (2004). Armageddon. New York: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-333-90836-5.
  • Le Tissier, T. Zhukov at the Oder, Greenwood, 1996, ISBN 0-275-95230-4
  • Mcateer, Sean M. (2009). 500 Days: The War in Eastern Europe, 1944–1945. Pittsburgh: Dorrance Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4349-6159-4.
  • Rees, Laurence (2005). Auschwitz. London: BBC Books. ISBN 978-0-563-52296-6.
  • Sims, D; Schilling, A (October 1990), "Breakout from the Sandomierz Bridgehead" (PDF), Field Artillery
  • Ziemke, Earl (1969). Battle for Berlin. London: Macdonald. ISBN 978-0-356-02960-3.