Stalin's Revenge: Operation Bagration & the Annihilation of Army Group Centre
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Anthony Tucker-Jones
Anthony Tucker-Jones, a former intelligence officer, is a highly prolific writer and military historian with well over 50 books to his name. His work has also been published in an array of magazines and online. He regularly appears on television and radio commenting on current and historical military matters.
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Reviews for Stalin's Revenge
2 ratings1 review
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Considering the scope of the operation described, the book was too short.
The frequent changing of German commanders, overwhelming details on forces
employed, their composition and equipment, maneuvering, etc. left me
wondering what had occurred on the previous page.
This book should have come with a very large map to follow actions on
the Army level.
Appendices on the tanks of both nations were filled with good info.
Zaloga's Operation Bagration might be a good "starting point "
on this topic.
Book preview
Stalin's Revenge - Anthony Tucker-Jones
First published in Great Britain in 2009 by
Pen and Sword Military
an imprint of
Pen and Sword Books Ltd
47 Church Street, Barnsley
South Yorkshire S70 2AS
Copyright © Anthony Tucker-Jones 2009
ISBN 978-1-84415-866-9
eISBN 9781844685448
The right of Anthony Tucker-Jones to be identified as Author of this Work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission from the Publisher in writing.
Typeset in 10pt Palatino by
Mac Style, Beverley, East Yorkshire
Printed and bound in the UK
by the MPG Books Group
Pen and Sword Books Ltd incorporates the imprints of Pen and Sword Aviation, Pen and Sword Maritime, Pen and Sword Military, Wharncliffe Local History, Pen and Sword Select, Pen and Sword Military Classics, Leo Cooper, Remember When, Seaforth Publishing and Frontline Publishing.
For a complete list of Pen and Sword titles please contact
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Contents
List of Illustrations
Maps
Preface and Acknowledgements
Dramatis Personae
Source Notes
Bibliography
List of Illustrations
Stalin
Generalfeldmarschall Busch
Hitler’s occupation
Winter of 1943–44 on the Eastern Front
A German flak unit
A dusty German motorized column
Generalfeldmarschall Busch’s command
The Sturmgeschütz III assault gun
A Luftwaffe infantryman
A Stuka Ju 87 dive-bomber
Freshly dug German trenches
Stalin’s Red Army
The T-34/76 medium tank
A column of T-34/85s
Soviet ‘tank riders’
The famous Ilyushin ‘Flying Tank’ or Il-2 Shturmovik
Red Army rifle division reconnaissance
Soviet partisans
A Red Army mortar crew
Entrenched German troops
Apprehensive-looking German troops
Soviet assault troops and a knocked-out StuG III
Soviet infantry liberating a Russian village
An MG34 machine-gun crew
Cumbersome German heavy artillery
An exposed German 105mm field gun
German officers planning a counter-attack
Another model T-34/76 that came to grief in the swamps
A grim-faced Generalfeldmarschall Busch
Soviet infantrymen attack across a railway line
A German column withdrawing
Army Group Centre lost 55,000 men
Abandoned German motor vehicles
Generaloberst Lindemann
A Soviet soldier shot through the head
One of the Wehrmacht’s 670,000 casualties
Grim-faced retreating German troops
Triumphant-looking Soviet troops
German PoWs await an uncertain fate
Bagration cost the Red Army 178,000 casualties
In the summer of 1944 Stalin wanted not only to liberate Byelorussia but also to smash Hitler’s Army Group Centre, which formed the very heart of the Wehrmacht on the Eastern Front. (Scott Pick collection)
Generalfeldmarschall Busch (centre) in happier days with Generalfeldmarschall von Rundstedt (left). He was appointed to command Army Group Centre in October 1943. (Author’s collection)
Despite the smiles for the camera, Hitler’s occupation of both Byelorussia and Ukraine was brutal. By the time the former had been liberated up to 3 million of its population were dead. (Scott Pick collection)
Throughout the winter of 1943–44 the German army was pushed back on the Eastern Front. Come the summer the question was whether Stalin’s main blow would fall first in Byelorussia or Ukraine. (Scott Pick collection)
A German flak unit guarding one of the vital crossings over the Dnepr or Berezina, which provided natural defensive lines, though Hitler chose to ignore them. (Scott Pick collection)
A dusty German motorized column in the midst of Byelorussia. Defending Army Group Centre’s extended lines of communication from constant partisan attack proved a major problem during 1943–44. (Scott Pick collection)
Generalfeldmarschall Busch’s command was entirely a defensive formation by June 1944; although it included a panzer army and two panzer corps it had no actual panzer divisions apart from 20th Panzer. (Scott Pick collection)
Army Group Centre’s panzergrenadier divisions were equipped with the Sturmgeschütz III assault gun rather than panzers. (Author’s collection)
A Luftwaffe infantryman keeps watch. The 4th and 6th Luftwaffe Field Divisions played a key role in the defence of Vitebsk. (Scott Pick collection)
Once it had become evident that the Stuka Ju 87 dive-bomber (seen here) was too slow to survive combat conditions, units were re-equipped with the Focke-Wulfe 190 – though this did not start until the spring of 1944. (Scott Pick collection)
Freshly dug German trenches: such defences were enhanced by barbed wire, mines, antitank ditches, and anti-tank and anti-aircraft gun positions. The weapon in the foreground is a tripod-mounted MG34 machine gun. (Scott Pick collection)
By 1944, despite its massive losses in killed, wounded and captured during the previous three years, Stalin’s Red Army was at the height of its combat power. (Scott Pick collection)
The T-34/76 medium tank (this particular one was knocked out in the forests of Byelorussia) was supplemented by the up-gunned T-34/85 just in time for Operation Bagration. (Scott Pick collection)
A column of T-34/85s waiting to go into action. During the spring of 1944 Soviet Guards armoured brigades were issued with this new tank for the first time. (via Nick Cornish)
Soviet ‘tank riders’ such as Evgeni Bessonov, because of the Red Army’s lack of transport, had to hitch a ride on the tanks, where they were dangerously exposed to enemy fire. (via author)
By far the Red Air Force’s best ground-attack aircraft was the famous Ilyushin ‘Flying Tank’ or Il-2 Shturmovik. Pilots employed the ‘circle of death’ for attacking panzers. (Scott Pick collection)
The reconnaissance companies of the Red Army’s rifle divisions were equipped with rubber rafts and rubber swimming suits for tackling river crossings and securing bridges. (via author)
Soviet partisans played a key role in disrupting Army Group Centre’s lines of communication both prior to and during Bagration. (via author)
A Red Army mortar crew soften up the enemy’s defences. The density of the opening Soviet barrage in support of Bagration was truly shocking, involving 24,000 guns and mortars. (via author)
Entrenched German troops watch an advancing Soviet barrage: some 17,000 guns and mortars were concentrated on Stalin’s breakthrough points on 23 June 1944. (Scott Pick collection)
Apprehensive-looking German troops watch the opening of a Soviet attack; they had little means of stemming the flow of angry steel unleashed upon them. (Scott Pick collection)
Soviet assault troops hurry past a knocked-out StuG III. There was little the panzergrenadiers’ armour could do to stop Stalin’s Red tide. (via Nick Cornish)
Soviet infantry liberating a Russian village in a clearly staged propaganda photo. Outlying German positions were swiftly overrun just prior to Bagration. (via author)
An MG34 machine-gun crew laying down fire on attacking Soviet troops: this weapon could manage up to 900 rounds per minute and was one of the Germans’ key infantry-support weapons. (Scott Pick collection)
Cumbersome German heavy artillery engaged in counter-battery fire with Soviet guns: the Red Army swiftly overran such weapons. (Scott Pick collection)
This exposed German 105mm field gun is providing covering fire for the front lines that were rapidly abandoned in the face of Soviet bombardment and heavy assault. (Scott Pick collection)
German officers planning what would be a futile counter-attack. Army Group Centre’s lack of reserves and Hitler’s refusal to yield ground left them with no strategic flexibility. (Scott Pick collection)
Another model T-34/76 that came to grief in the swamps of Byelorussia. In the opening stages of Bagration the Soviets threw 4,000 tanks and assault guns against Busch’s 550 assault guns. (Scott Pick collection)
A grim-faced Generalfeldmarschall Busch (far left) receives bad news; within just a week of Bagration commencing Hitler replaced him with Walter Model. (Scott Pick collection)
Soviet infantrymen attack across a railway line. Once the line had been cut north and south of Minsk on 2 July 1944 the city was swiftly liberated. (via author)
A German column withdrawing through a burnt-out Russian city; the Byelorussian capital Minsk was cleared by the Red Army on 3 July 1944. (Scott Pick collection)
Army Group Centre lost 55,000 men killed and wounded in the Minsk area alone during 5–11 July 1944. (Scott Pick collection)
Abandoned German motor vehicles: in the first eight days of Bagration the Red Army claimed to have destroyed or captured almost 26,000 vehicles. (Author’s collection)
In the wake of Bagration Generaloberst Lindemann (centre left), commander of Army Group North, was replaced by Friessner for failing to close the gap with Model’s Army Group Centre. (Author’s collection)
Death of a Soviet soldier shot through the head. Such casualties did not hinder Stalin’s quest for revenge on Hitler. (Scott Pick collection)
During June and July 1944 the Wehrmacht suffered over 670,000 casualties, half of whom were lost by Army Group Centre. (Scott Pick collection)
Grim-faced retreating German troops: the loss of so much equipment in Byelorussia was major disaster for the Wehrmacht, which was already reliant on horsedrawn transport. (Scott Pick collection)
Triumphant-looking Soviet troops pass a knocked-out Panzer Mk IV – the summer of 1944 was an unimaginable success for Stalin and his warlords. (via Nick Cornish)
German PoWs await an uncertain fate; most would die in Stalin’s brutal Gulag. Hitler’s forces suffered well over half a million killed and wounded – another 120,000 men were captured. (Scott Pick collection)
Bagration cost the Red Army 178,000 casualties, and during the Lvov–Sandomierz offensive it suffered a further 198,000 casualties. Stalin viewed this as a small price to pay for the annihilation of Army Group Centre and the mauling of Army Groups North and North Ukraine. (Scott Pick collection)
Maps
The Eastern Front, June–August 1944
Dispositions on the eve of Operation Bagration, 22 June 1944
Operation Bagration, June–August 1944
The Lvov–Sandomierz offensive, July–August 1944
Preface and Acknowledgements
Commencing at 0500 on 23 June 1944, General Hans Traut’s 78th Sturm (Assault) Division, guarding the vital Smolensk–Minsk–Moscow Highway, endured over two hours of heavy artillery bombardment and aerial attack. His men sat in their protective bunkers, weapons on their knees or resting between their legs, as the earth shook violently about them. Dust and clods of earth fell from the roof boards as they prayed they would avoid a direct hit. Operation Bagration, Joseph Stalin’s revenge for Adolf Hitler’s rape of the Soviet Union, had begun.
The Soviet Union’s German-occupied north-western frontier republic of Byelorussia, or White Russia, was like a land of Norse legend, inundated with lakes and swamps, with great swathes blanketed in dense, impenetrable forests (much of it infested by hostile Soviet partisans), bisected by large rivers. All this was ideal for defence, though it was an inhospitable landscape, and provided many lonely and miserable places to die.
Traut’s men sheltering from death had glazed expressions; sweat beaded on their foreheads. Soon, those that survived this deluge of angry metal would have to face the oncoming Soviet tanks and infantry. They had no way of knowing it, but they were in fact at the very forefront of the steel storm being unleashed on Generalfeldmarschall Ernst Busch’s Army Group Centre. Their job was to hold the highway and the city of Orsha at all costs – the question was whether they would withstand the Red Army’s steamroller now bearing down on them.
‘The Great Russian summer offensive started a little over a fortnight after D-Day in the West,’ recalled American war correspondent Alexander Werth, ‘and, somewhat symbolically, on 23 June, the day after the third anniversary of the German invasion of the Soviet Union. The roles had now been reversed.’
Famed Red Star war correspondent Vasily Grossman, who was with the Red Army during Bagration said, ‘To Bobruisk led the road to revenge!…A cauldron of death was boiling here, where the revenge was carried out – a ruthless, terrible revenge.’
A sense of unease, even dread, permeated Hitler’s high command by the summer of 1944. There was no hiding the fact that the Soviets outnumbered the Germans, were out-producing them and on the whole were outfighting them. A growing Soviet confidence born of bitter experience was also matched by a growing technological edge over Germany. The combination of all these factors ultimately meant defeat for Adolf Hitler on the Eastern Front.
There could be no denying the impact of growing Red Army competence coupled to resources that Hitler simply could not match. His refusal to face up to the harsh reality of the situation was exemplified by his dismissal of Generalfeldmarschall Erich von Manstein, one of his most outstanding generals, who had the temerity to point out that Hitler could not win a straight fight.
By 1943 Stalin had wrested the initiative from Hitler at Stalingrad and Kursk, heralding a turn in the tide. The following year Stalin’s retribution for the German violation of the Soviet Union began to gather full momentum. In total he launched ten separate offensives with the revitalized Red Army along various sectors of the 2,000-mile-long front, made possible through Mother Russia’s abundant labour reserves and the unrelenting toil of her factory workers.
During January 1944 Stalin had secured Leningrad and the Leningrad–Moscow railway. Then in February and March the Red Army moved to eject German forces from the southern and eastern parts of Ukraine, and the Soviets reached the River Bug. A third offensive liberated the Crimea and cleared the Germans from the Black Sea ports of Odessa and Sevastopol.
In the far north Stalin then sought to punish the Finns for their alliance with Hitler, and in early June his forces attacked along the Karelian isthmus. Within just two days the Finnish-German defences had been broken and the Mannerheim Line had been pierced. Another Red Army thrust was launched north of Lake Onega, and by the end of July the Finns had been driven right back. The fifth offensive, Operation Bagration, was aimed at Byelorussia, and the sixth was to clear western Ukraine and eastern Poland. Following these, attacks would be made into Romania, then the Baltic States, Hungary and finally Lapland.
Operation Bagration annihilated Hitler’s Army Group Centre and trapped Army Group North, neutralizing almost a million men. Launched almost three years to the day of the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union, this was Stalin’s retribution for Hitler’s Operation Barbarossa. Bagration, in combination with the Lvov–Sandomierz and Lublin–Brest operations launched a few weeks later, saw the Red Army recapture practically all territory within the Soviet Union’s 1941 borders, advance into East Prussia and reach the very outskirts of Warsaw after gaining control of Poland east of the Vistula River. In one fell swoop the Wehrmacht lost a quarter of its strength on the Eastern Front.
The vast statistics involved in Operation Bagration are almost beyond comprehension, offering little more than relative totals for the opposing armies. The realities of the losses no matter how exaggerated are almost impossible to grasp; the best analogy perhaps is if you imagine the populations of entire towns and cities simply being wiped off the face of the earth in a matter of weeks or even days.
While Stalin and his generals hold centre stage, this is also the story of the German Führer, Adolf Hitler, and Generalfeldmarschall Ernst Busch, who followed Hitler’s orders slavishly to the detriment of his command. Likewise, Generaloberst Georg-Hans Reinhardt, commander of 3rd Panzer Army, was prepared to needlessly sacrifice part of his command in the name of following orders. In contrast, General Kurt von Tippelskirch did all he could to salvage his 4th Army from the Red Army’s fatal grasp.
Siegfried von Westphal, one of Hitler’s leading generals, summed up Bagration succinctly: ‘During the summer and autumn of 1944, the German armies suffered the greatest disaster of their history, which even surpassed the catastrophe of Stalingrad.’ There could be no more damning indictment. Alexander Werth called it ‘one of the greatest victories of the war’.
While Stalingrad and Kursk paved the way for Soviet victory, Bagration ensured that Hitler would never regain the strategic initiative. Bagration was a much greater death-blow than the defeat of Army Group B in Normandy by the Western Allies, which occurred at the same time. The laurels of victory went to marshals Georgi Zhukov and Konstantin Rokossovsky, while the defeated Ernst Busch was swiftly sacked in disgrace. Only before Warsaw was Generalfeldmarschall Model able to retrieve the disastrous situation.
All seemed lost for the Nazi cause, and yet the bloodletting was to drag on interminably. Bagration was a staggering blow to Hitler’s military effort, yet the exhausted Wehrmacht managed to fend off the advancing Red Army for almost a year. In the face of determined resistance on the part of the Germans, Stalin was obliged to launch another four major offensives to drive them out of Eastern Europe and reach Berlin. Ultimately Soviet manpower proved a major problem, as the Red Army had peaked by the end of 1944.
Even more remarkably, in the spring of 1945, after Hitler’s abortive winter counter-offensive on the Western Front, he was able to launch a massive counterattack in Hungary. This was unsuccessful, wilting in the face of well-prepared Soviet defences and a subsequent counter-offensive, yet it showed the Germans never lost the ability or will to resist, despite Bagration.
During the 1980s I spent a considerable time monitoring the Soviet threat, based in part on the overwhelming superiority of their ground forces, particularly the Soviet groups of forces stationed in Eastern Europe and the other armies of the Warsaw Pact. The myth of the Red menace had arisen from those very achievements of the Red Army in 1944–45, and even by this