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33rd Army (Soviet Union)

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[[Category:Wikipedia articles needing cleanup after translation from Russian]]

33rd Army
ActiveJuly 1941 - August 1945
CountryUSSR
TypeInfantry
Part ofWestern Front
Reserve Front
2nd Belorussian Front
3rd Belorussian Front
1st Belorussian Front
EngagementsBattle of Moscow
Ржевско-Вяземская operation
Battle of Smolensk (1943)
Battle of Lenino
Operation Bagration
Варшавско-Познаньская operation
Battle of Berlin

The Red Army's 33rd Army was a Soviet field army during the Second World War. It was disbanded by being redesignated HQ Smolensk Military District in 1945.

Initial Operations

It was initially formed in the Moscow Military District in July 1941, consisting of the 1st, 5th, 9th, 17th, and 21st territorial home guard divisions, plus artillery and other support units.[1] Kombrig D.N.Onuprienko (July — on October, 25th 1941) took command. It conducted defensive operations as a part of the Mozhaisk Defence Line and the Soviet Reserve Front.

It was at Naro-Fominsk under General Lieutenant M.G. Yefremov in October 1941.

With the arrival of the 4th German Panzer Group to the Moscow-Volga channel and 2nd Panzer Army to Kashira, the conditions for the German capture of Moscow were created.[2] But on December 1, the Germans hit the centre of the Soviet front. Two German divisions with 70 tanks broke through in the 33rd Army's sector in the 222nd Rifle Division's area to the north of Naro-Fominsk. On December 2, in the second half of day in the 110th Rifle Division's sector the Wehrmacht went over to the offensive and attacked in the direction of Mogutovo. At 16:00, the 113th Rifle Division together with a regiment from 43rd Army led a counteroffensive on Klotovo and Kamenskoe with the task of hitting the rear of the German grouping to facilitate situation of 110th Rifle Division. As a result of this counterstroke, the opponent was routed. The Soviets captured 47 tanks and about 50 guns. From the west at Naro Fominsk Germans have directed on Kubinka along a highway, and then to Golitcin and Aprelevka, threatening rears of 33rd and 5th Soviet Armies. At Akulovo village German forces have met with 32nd Rifle Division and artillery fire. It was last German attempt to break through to Moscow.

When the 33rd Army was surrounded in 1942 (during Operation Mars?) Yefremov committed suicide rather than be captured.

Smolensk 1943

At the Battle of Smolensk (1943), after a day of probing, the goal of which was to determine whether German troops would choose to withdraw or not from the first set of trenches, the offensive started on 7 August 1943 at 06:30 am (with a preliminary bombardment starting at 04:40 am) with a breakthrough towards Roslavl. Three armies (apparently under the control of Soviet Western Front) were committed to this offensive: the 5th Army, the 10th Guards Army and the 33rd Army, now under General V.I. Gordov.

However, the attack quickly encountered heavy opposition and stalled. German troops attempted numerous counterattacks from their well-prepared defense positions, supported by tanks, assault guns, and the fire of heavy guns and mortars. As Konstantin Rokossovsky recalls, "we literally had to tear ourselves through German lines, one by one".[3] On the first day, the Soviet troops advanced only 4 kilometers (2.5 mi),[4] with all available troops (including artillery, communications men and engineers) committed to battle.[5]

1944-45

From April 1944 the 33rd Army, now under General Lieutenant V.D. Kryuchenkin, as part of the 2nd Belorussian Front, participated in Operation Bagration, clearing Belarus. During the Mogilyov Offensive it successfully forced the rivers Pronya, and Dnepr, and liberated Shklov on June 27, 1944. During the Minsk Offensive the army, in conjunction with the 50th and 49th Armies participated in rout of the surrounded Wehrmacht grouping to the east of Minsk. In the end of July-August the Army participated in the Kaunas Offensive during which it cleared the approaches to East Prussia. On September 10, it was released from VGK reserve, and from October 19 it joined the 1st Belorussian Front in preparation for the Warsaw-Poznan Offensive.

On 25 December 1944 the Army consisted of the 16th Rifle Corps (89th "Tamanyan" Rifle Division, 339th Rifle Division, 383rd Rifle Division), the 38th Rifle Corps (64th Rifle Division, 95th Rifle Division, 323rd Rifle Division), the 62nd Rifle Corps (49th Rifle Division, 222nd Rifle Division, 362nd Rifle Division), the 115th Fortified Region, the 5th Artillery Division, and other support formations and units, including the 35 мбр, 1091 daddies, 20 иптабр, 25 гмбр, 305 гмп, 56 гмп, the 64th Anti-Aircraft Division, the 9th Tank Corps, the 244th and 257th Tank Regiments, the 360 & 361 сап (Self-Propelled Artillery Regiments?) and the 33 обхз.

On 1 May 1945 during the Battle of Berlin, the Army, part of the 1st Belorussian Front, consisted of the 16th Rifle Corps (323, 339, 383 сд), 62 ск (95, 222, 362 сд), 49th Rifle Division, 115th, 119th Fortified Region, and other support formations and units.[6] After the initial Berlin breakthrough, 33rd Army, alongside other armies of the 1st Belorussian and 1st Ukrainian Fronts helped to rout the surrounded German forces to the east of Berlin. Military operation for 33rd Army concluded on 6 May. The Army HQ was redesignated HQ Smolensk Military District in August 1945.[7]

Army Commanders

  • KomBrig Onuprienko
  • General-Lieutenant Mikhail Yefremov (October, 25th 1941 — April 1942)
  • General Kirill Meretskov (May — June 1942)
  • The general-lieutenant of M. S.Khozin (June — October 1942)
  • The general-colonel of Century N. Gordov (October 1942 — March 1944)
  • General-lieutenant Ivan Yefimovich Petrov (March — April 1944)
  • The general-lieutenant of Century D.Kryuchenkin (April — July 1944)
  • General-lieutenant S.I.Morozov (July — September 1944)
  • General-Colonel of Century D.Tsvetaev (October 1944 — May 1945)

Sources and References

  1. ^ See also Irregular RKKA formations
  2. ^ Naro-Fominsk Defensive Operation, accessed April 2008
  3. ^ K. Rokossovsky, Soldier's duty, Moscow, Politizdat, 1988, p. 218.
  4. ^ V.P. Istomin, Smolensk offensive operation, 1943, Moscow, Mil. Lib., 1975, pp. 81–82
  5. ^ V.P. Istomin, p.84
  6. ^ http://www.tashv.nm.ru/BoevojSostavSA/1945/19450501.html
  7. ^ http://www.victory.mil.ru/rkka/units/03/44.html