East Prussian offensive

{{Short description|1945 Soviet offensive on the Eastern Front in World War II}}

{{For |the Imperial Russian invasion of East Prussia during the beginning of the First World War|Russian invasion of East Prussia (1914)}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2019}}

{{Infobox military conflict

| conflict = East Prussian offensive

| image = Карта Восточно-Прусской операции.jpg

| image_size = 300px

| caption = Soviet offensive in East Prussia

| partof = the Eastern Front of World War II

| place = East Prussia

| date = 13 January – 25 April 1945

| result = Soviet victory

| territory = Most of East Prussia is annexed by Poland and the Soviet Union annexes Königsberg, Memel and their surrounding areas.

| combatant1 = {{flag|Soviet Union|1936}}
{{flagicon|German Empire}} Kampfgruppen{{cite book|author=Willy Wolff|title=An der Seite der Roten Armee|script-title=ru:На стороне Красной армии|date=1976|orig-date = 1973|url=https://djvu.online/file/4OoaLzxp0kvKH}}

| combatant2 = {{flagcountry|Nazi Germany}}
{{flagcountry|Italian Social Republic}}

| commander1 = Konstantin Rokossovsky
Aleksandr Vasilevsky
Ivan Bagramyan
Ivan Isakov

| commander2 = Georg-Hans Reinhardt
Lothar Rendulic
Friedrich Hossbach
Friedrich-Wilhelm Müller
Erhard Raus
Walter Weiß
Dietrich von Saucken

| strength1 = 1,669,100 men,This covers all personnel of the 3rd and 2nd Belorussian Fronts, and the elements of 1st Baltic Front involved{{harv|Glantz|House|1995|p=300}}
3,000 tanks
25,000 guns and 3,000 aircraft

| strength2 = 580,000 men

  • 200,000 Volkssturm troopers
    700 tanks
    8,200 guns and 700 aircraft

| units1 = {{flagicon image|Red Army flag.svg}} Red Army

{{flagicon|Soviet Union|naval-1935}} Soviet Navy

| units2 = {{flagicon|Nazi Germany|army}} Wehrmacht

30px Volkssturm

IX Settembre Battalion{{cite web | url=https://www.maxafiero.it/articolo1.htm | title=Battaglione IX Settembre }}

| casualties1 = 126,464 dead or missing
458,314 wounded and sick{{sfn|Glantz|House|1995|p=300}}

| casualties2 = Unknown killed or wounded
220,000 captured{{cite web|url=http://geroiros.narod.ru/wwsoldat/OPER/ARTICLES/037-vostpruss.htm|title=Восточно-Прусская стратегическая наступательная операция (13.01—25.04.1945)|first=Пигарев Ростислав|last=Владимирович|website=geroiros.narod.ru}}

| campaignbox = {{Campaignbox Axis-Soviet War}}

{{Campaignbox Poland 1944-1945}}

{{Template:Campaignbox Campaign of Germany (WW2)}}

}}

The East Prussian offensive{{langx|ru|Восточно-Прусская стратегическая наступательная операция}} was a strategic offensive by the Soviet Red Army against the German Wehrmacht on the Eastern Front (World War II). It lasted from 13 January to 25 April 1945, though some German units did not surrender until 9 May. The Battle of Königsberg was a major part of the offensive, which ended in victory for the Red Army.

The East Prussian offensive is known to German historians as the second East Prussian offensive. The first East Prussian offensive (also known as the Gumbinnen Operation), took place from 16 to 27 October 1944, and was carried out by the 3rd Belorussian Front under General I.D. Chernyakhovsky as part of the Memel offensive{{langx|ru|Мемельская операция}}) of the 1st Baltic Front. The Soviet forces took heavy casualties while penetrating {{convert|30|-|60|km|mi|abbr=on}} into east-northern part of Poland, and the offensive was postponed until greater reserves could be gathered.

The offensive

The main thrust of the offensive was to be conducted by the 3rd Belorussian Front under Ivan Chernyakhovsky. His forces were tasked with driving westwards towards Königsberg, against the defensive positions of the 3rd Panzer Army and 4th Army, the northern armies of Generaloberst Georg-Hans Reinhardt's Army Group Centre.{{sfn|Beevor|2002|p=29}}

From the north, on Chernyakhovsky's right flank, General Hovhannes Bagramyan's 1st Baltic Front would attack the positions of the 3rd Panzer Army on the Neman, as well as crushing its small bridgehead at Memel. Chernyakhovsky's left flank would be supported by the 2nd Belorussian Front of Marshal Konstantin Rokossovsky, which was initially ordered to push north-west to the Vistula, through the lines of the 2nd Army, thereby sealing off the whole of East Prussia.{{sfn|Beevor|2002|p=27}}

=Opening of the offensive=

File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-J28805, Ostpreußen, Volkssturmmänner an MG.jpg militiamen in Königsberg during the offensive ]]

The Soviet offensive began on 13 January with a heavy preparatory bombardment. At first, the Red Army made disappointing progress; the 3rd Belorussian Front gained just 1.5 km on the first day. Over the next five days, the Soviets managed to advance only a further 20 km, at the cost of very high casualties. Eventually, after almost two weeks of severe fighting, the Red Army began making steady progress, although again, this came at the price of high losses; the defenders having the advantage of substantial fortifications in the Insterburg Gap east of Königsberg, and around Heilsberg. Over the next few days, the 3rd Panzer Army of Generaloberst Erhard Raus was largely destroyed or withdrew into Königsberg, while General der Infanterie Friedrich Hossbach′s 4th Army began to find itself outflanked.

Against fierce resistance, Rokossovsky attacked across the Narew on 14 January; on 20 January, he received orders to swing the axis of his advance northward toward Elbing.{{sfn|Duffy|1991|p=170}} This sudden change of direction caught Reinhardt and Hossbach by surprise; on Rokossovsky's right flank, the 3rd Guards Cavalry Corps captured the major town of Allenstein on 22 January, threatening the rear of Hossbach's formation.{{sfn|Duffy|1991|p=171}} On 24 January, Rokossovsky's leading tank units had reached the shore of the Vistula Lagoon, severing land communications with the rest of German armed forces for the entire 4th Army along with several divisions of the 2nd Army which were now trapped in a pocket centered on East Prussia. On the same day, Hossbach began to pull his units back from the fortified town of Lötzen—a center of the East Prussian defence system—and through a series of forced marches attempted to break out westward.{{sfn|Duffy|1991|p=172}}

In the meantime, Chernyakhovsky had succeeded in rolling up the defences from the East, pushing the remnants of the 3rd Panzer Army into Königsberg and Samland. On 28 January, Bagramyan's forces captured Memel; the remnants of the three divisions defending the town were evacuated and redeployed in Samland to reinforce the defence there.

=The siege of Königsberg and the Heiligenbeil pocket=

File:Battle Of Königsberg Begin.png from 6–9 April 1945.]]

With the remnants of Army Group Centre effectively contained, Soviet forces could concentrate on reducing the German forces in Pomerania and eliminating any possible threat to the northern flank of their eventual advance on Berlin. Reinhardt and Hossbach—who had attempted to break out of East Prussia and save their troops—were relieved of command, and the Army Group (redesignated Army Group North) was placed under the command of Generaloberst Lothar Rendulic. Reinhardt gave up his command with the words "There is nothing more to say".{{sfn|Duffy|1991|p=173}} Raus and the staff of the destroyed 3rd Panzer Army were assigned to a new formation. The defending forces, in the meantime, were besieged in three pockets by Chernyakhovsky's armies:

Even after this time, German forces continued to resist on the Vistula Spit, the long sandbar enclosing the Vistula Lagoon, until the end of the war.

See also

Notes

{{Reflist|2}}

References

  • {{citation |last=Beevor |first=Antony |author-link=Antony Beevor |year=2002 |title=Berlin: The Downfall 1945 |publisher=Penguin Books |isbn=0-670-88695-5}}
  • {{citation |last=Duffy |first=Christopher |year=1991 |title=Red Storm on the Reich: The Soviet March on Germany, 1945 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=0-415-22829-8}}
  • {{citation |last1=Glantz |first1=David M. |author-link=David M. Glantz |last2=House |first2=Jonathan |year=1995 |title=When Titans Clashed: How the Red Army Stopped Hitler |location=Lawrence, Kansas |publisher=University Press of Kansas |isbn=0-7006-0899-0 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/whentitansclashe00glan_0 }}

Further reading

  • {{citation |ref=none |url=http://www.onwar.com/maps/wwii/eastfront2/eprussia45.htm |title=Map of the Soviet Advance into East Prussia & Siege of Königsberg January 13 - May 9, 1945 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060410214910/http://www.onwar.com/maps/wwii/eastfront2/eprussia45.htm |archive-date=April 10, 2006 }}
  • {{citation |ref=none |last=Glantz |first= David M. |author-link=David M. Glantz|url=http://www.strom.clemson.edu/publications/sg-war41-45.pdf |title=The Soviet-German War 1941–45]: Myths and Realities: A Survey Essay |pages=84–87 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110709141048/http://www.strom.clemson.edu/publications/sg-war41-45.pdf |archive-date=9 July 2011}}
  • {{Cite book |last=Popov |first=Grigory |title=Красный шторм зимой 1945 г. Восточно-Прусская наступательная операция |publisher=Veche |year=2020 |isbn=978-5-4484-2371-0 |location=Moscow |language=ru |trans-title=Red Storm in winter 1945: The East Prussian offensive operation}}

=Memoirs=

  • {{citation |ref=none |last=Kopelev |first=Lev |author-link=Lev Kopelev |year=1977 |title=To Be Preserved Forever (Russian: Хранить вечно) |publisher=Lippincott |edition=English translation by A. Austin, Lippincott |isbn=978-0-397-01140-7}} — Includes his experiences in East Prussia during the offensive
  • {{citation |ref=none |last=Lasch |first=Otto |author-link=Otto Lasch |year=2002 |orig-year=1958 |title=So fiel Königsberg ({{langx|en|Thus fell Königsberg}}) |publisher=Motorbuch Verlag |isbn=978-3-613-02207-2}} — Otto Lasch was the commander of Festung Königsberg (fortress Königsberg) during the siege.
  • {{citation |ref=none |last=Solzhenitsyn |first=leksandr |author-link=Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn |title=Prussian Nights}}
  • {{citation |ref=none |last=Vasilevsky |first=Aleksandr |author-link=Aleksandr Vasilevsky |year=1981 |title=A Lifelong Cause |edition=translation by J. Riordan |publisher=Progress}} — His memoirs cover his role in the offensive.

{{coord missing|Germany}}

{{Authority control}}

Category:East Prussia in World War II

Category:Conflicts in 1945

Category:Battles and operations of the Soviet–German War

Category:Strategic operations of the Red Army in World War II

Category:World War II aerial operations and battles of the Eastern Front

Category:Invasions of Germany

Category:January 1945 in Europe

Category:February 1945 in Europe

Category:March 1945 in Europe

Category:April 1945 in Europe