Draft:Siege of Budapest order of battle
{{Short description|Order of battle for the Siege of Budapest during World War II}}
{{Draft topics|eastern-europe|military-and-warfare}}
{{AfC topic|other}}
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This is the order of battle for the Siege of Budapest, which took place from 24 December 1944 to 13 February 1945, for Allied forces of the Armed Forces of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, the Hungarian Democratic Army, and the Romanian Land Forces versus the Axis forces of the German Wehrmacht, Royal Hungarian Air Force, and the Royal Hungarian Army.
Allied forces
= 2nd Ukrainian Front =
- 22px 2nd Ukrainian Front – Marshal Rodion MalinovskyDavid M. Glantz, The Siege of Budapest: 100 Days in World War II, University Press of Kansas, 2009, ISBN 978-0-7006-1687-6.
- 5th Air Army – Colonel-General Sergey GoryunovEarl F. Ziemke, Stalingrad to Berlin: The German Defeat in the East, U.S. Army Center of Military History, 1968, CMH Pub 20-9-1.
- 22px 6th Guards Tank Army – Colonel-General Andrei KravchenkoCharles C. Sharp, "Red Guards": Soviet Guards Units 1941–45, Nafziger Collection, 1995, ISBN 978-1-58545-051-6.
- 22px 7th Guards Army – Colonel-General Mikhail Shumilov
- 37th Guards Rifle Corps
- 75th Guards Rifle Corps
- 27th Army – Lieutenant-General Sergei Trofimenko
- 40th Army – Colonel-General Filipp Zhmachenko
- 46th Army – Lieutenant-General Ivan Shlemin
- 2nd Guards Mechanized Corps – Major-General Ivan Korchagin
- 53rd Army – Lieutenant-General Ivan Managarov
== Fourth Army (Romania) ==
== Volunteer Regiment of Buda ==
= 3rd Ukrainian Front =
- 22px 3rd Ukrainian Front – Marshal Fyodor TolbukhinJohn Erickson, The Road to Berlin: Stalin's War with Germany, Volume Two, Yale University Press, 1983, ISBN 978-0-300-03100-6.
- 22px 4th Guards Army – Colonel-General Ivan Galanin
- 17th Air Army – Colonel-General Vladimir Sudets
- 57th Army – Lieutenant-General Nikolai Gagen
== First Army (Romania) ==
- First Army – Lieutenant-General Nicolae Dăscălescu
- Romanian VII Army Corps – Major-General Corneliu Teodorini
- 2nd Infantry Division
- 9th Cavalry Division
- 19th Infantry Division
= Danube Flotilla =
Axis forces
= 9th SS Mountain Corps (Hungarian No. 1) =
- 9th SS Mountain Corps (Hungarian No. 1) – SS-Obergruppenführer Karl Pfeffer-Wildenbruch
- 22px 8th SS Cavalry Division "Florian Geyer"
- 22px 13th Panzer Division
- 22px 22nd SS Volunteer Cavalry Division "Maria Theresia"
- 22px Panzergrenadier Division Feldherrnhalle
- Royal Hungarian I Corps – Lieutenant-General Iván HindySándor Szakály, The Hungarian Army and Its Military Leadership in World War II, Atlantic Research and Publications, 2002, ISBN 978-0-88033-481-5.
- 1st Armored Division (remnants)
- 10th Infantry Division
- 12th Reserve Division
- {{flagicon image|Flag of the Hungarist Movement.svg}} Arrow Cross Party paramilitaries
- Budapest Police
- Royal Hungarian Gendarmerie
- University Assault Battalions
- Vannay Battalion
= Fourth Air Fleet =
= Royal Hungarian Air Force =
References
{{Reflist}}
{{Draft categories|
Category:World War II orders of battle
Category:Battles and operations of World War II involving Hungary
Category:Battles and operations of World War II involving Germany
Category:Battles and operations of World War II involving the Soviet Union
Category:Battles and operations of World War II involving Romania
}}
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