Jump to content

Orsha offensives (1943)

Coordinates: 54°30′N 30°25′E / 54.50°N 30.42°E / 54.50; 30.42
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Orsha offensives
Part of The Eastern Front of World War II
DateOctober 12, 1943 – November 19, 1943
Location54°30′N 30°25′E / 54.50°N 30.42°E / 54.50; 30.42
Result German defensive victory
Belligerents
 Soviet Union Nazi Germany Germany
Commanders and leaders
Soviet Union Vasily Sokolovsky Nazi Germany Gotthard Heinrici
Strength
Western Front
310,900 men, with steady reinforcements
4th Army
193,510 men; heavy fortifications
Casualties and losses
Unknown Unknown

The Orsha offensives were a series of battles fought in Belarus between the Red Army and the Wehrmacht during the autumn of 1943, and into the following winter. Orsha was a main road junction with the north–south route from Leningrad to Kiev and the east–west route from Minsk to Moscow. After the failure of Operation Typhoon in the winter of 1941, Army Group Centre had spent the most part on the defensive in the central sector of the front. The time afforded to them in 1942, a distinct period of inactivity in this area, allowed the Wehrmacht to build formidable defensive positions.

Prelude

[edit]
Panther-Wotan Line

After their defeat in the Battle of Smolensk, the Wehrmacht retreated on a broad front to the Panther-Stellung line. The German 4th Army (Heinrici)—part of Army Group Centre—took defensive positions near Orsha. To the north, the 3rd Panzer Army (Reinhardt) took up defensive lines around Vitebsk, and to the south the 9th Army (Model) held the area east of Bobrujsk. The Soviet Stavka saw the liberation of Ukraine as their primary goal, so the Lower Dnieper Offensive had priority in equipment and reinforcements.

The battles

[edit]

The 4th Army was in retreat to the Panther-Wotan line, pursued by the Soviets. Troops from the Soviet Western Front then launched a heavy attack on both sides of the Minsk-Moscow highway. One thrust was directed at Orsha, a main road junction, and another at Bogushevsk.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Glantz D.M. (1995) The failures of historiography: Forgotten battles of the German‐Soviet war (1941–1945), Journal of Slavic Military Studies 8(4): 768–808

Literature

[edit]

Frieser K-H., Schmider K. & Schönherr K. (2007) Das deutsche Reich und der Zweite Weltkrieg, Vol. 8, Die Ostfront 1943/44, Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, Stuttgart: 1350 pp.