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Belgrade offensive

The Belgrade offensive or the Belgrade strategic offensive operation (Serbo-Croatian: Beogradska operacija / Београдска операција; Russian: Белградская стратегическая наступательная операция, Belgradskaya strategicheskaya nastupatel'naya operatsiya) (15 September 1944 – 24 November 1944)[6] was a military operation during World War II in Yugoslavia in which Belgrade was liberated from the German Wehrmacht through the joint efforts of the Soviet Red Army, Yugoslav Partisans, and the Bulgarian Army.[7] Soviet forces and local militias launched separate but loosely cooperative operations that undermined German control of Belgrade and ultimately forced a retreat.[8] Martial planning was coordinated evenly among command leaders, and the operation was largely enabled through tactical cooperation between Josip Broz Tito and Joseph Stalin that began in September 1944.[9][10] These martial provisions allowed Bulgarian forces to engage in operations throughout Yugoslav territory, which furthered tactical success while increasing diplomatic friction.[11]

Belgrade offensive
Part of the Yugoslav and Eastern fronts of World War II

Destroyed Soviet Red Army T-34/85 tank in Belgrade (Palace Albanija in the background)
Date15 September 1944 – 24 November 1944[2]
Location
Result Allied victory
Belligerents
Allies
 Soviet Union
Yugoslav Partisans
Bulgaria

Axis
 Germany

Commanders and leaders
Fyodor Tolbukhin
Nikolai Gagen
Vladimir Zhdanov
Peko Dapčević
Danilo Lekić
Vladimir Stoychev
Kiril Stanchev
Asen Sirakov
Maximilian von Weichs
Wilhelm Schneckenburger 
Hans Felber
Alexander Löhr
Units involved
3rd Ukrainian Front
1st Corps
12th Corps
1st Army
2nd Army
4th Army
Army Group F
2nd Panzer Army
Serbian State Guard[citation needed]
Strength
580,000 troops
3,640 artillery pieces
520 tanks and assault guns
1,420 aircraft
80 ships
150,000 troops
(mostly 2nd tier infantry & non-German support troops)
2,100 artillery pieces
125 tanks and assault guns
350 aircraft
70 ships
Casualties and losses

Soviets:
4,350 killed or missing
14,488 wounded or sick
18,838 overall[3]
Bulgarian Army:
Over 3,000 killed[4]

Yugoslav Partisans:
2,953 dead
(assault on Belgrade only)[5]
45,000[citation needed]

The primary objectives of the Belgrade offensive centered on lifting the German occupation of Serbia, seizing Belgrade as a strategic holdout in the Balkans, and severing German communication lines between Greece and Hungary.[12] The spearhead of the offensive was executed by the Soviet 3rd Ukrainian Front in coordination with the Yugoslav 1st Army Corps. Simultaneous operations in the south involved the Bulgarian 2nd Army and Yugoslav XIII Army Corps, and the incursion of the 2nd Ukrainian Front northwards from the Yugoslav-Bulgarian border placed additional pressure on German command.[13] There were additional skirmishes between Bulgarian forces and German anti-partisan regiments in Macedonia that represented the campaign's southernmost combat operations.[14][15]

Background

Developments in Yugoslavia

By the summer of 1944, the Germans had not only lost control of practically all the mountainous area of Yugoslavia but were no longer able to protect their own essential lines of communication. Another general offensive on their front was unthinkable, and by September it was clear that Belgrade and the whole of Serbia must shortly be free of them. These summer months were the best the movement had ever seen; there were more recruits than could be armed or trained, desertions from the enemy reached high numbers; one by one the objectives of resistance were reached and taken.[16]

In August 1943, the German Wehrmacht had two army formations deployed in the Balkans: Army Group E in Greece and the 2nd Panzer Army in Yugoslavia and Albania. Army Group F headquarters (Generalfeldmarschall von Weichs) in Belgrade acted as a joint high command for these formations, as well as for Bulgarian and Quisling formations.

After the collapse of the uprising in December 1941, anti-Axis activity in Serbia decreased significantly, and the focus of resistance moved to other, less populated areas. Consequently, although Serbia had great significance to the Germans, very few troops actually remained there; according to Schmider only about 10,000 in June 1944.[17] In the following years, Tito repeatedly tried to reinforce the partisan forces in Serbia with experienced units from Bosnia and Montenegro. From the spring of 1944, the Allied command had assisted in these efforts.[18] The Germans actively opposed these efforts by concentrating forces in the border regions of Bosnia and Montenegro, in order to disturb Partisan concentrations, to inflict casualties on Partisan units, and to push them back with a series of large-scale assaults.

In July 1944, German defenses began to fail. After the failure of Operation Draufgänger (Daredevil) – a 1944 anti-partisan operation in Montenegro, Yugoslavia, and Northern Albania – three divisions of the Narodnooslobodilačka vojska Jugoslavije (the People's Liberation Army of Yugoslavia) (NOVJ) – managed to cross the Ibar River to the east and threaten the main railroad lines. After the failure of Operation Rübezahl in Montenegro in August 1944, two additional NOVJ divisions broke through the German blockade, successfully entrenching themselves in western Serbia. Army Group F command responded by deploying additional forces: the 1st Mountain Division arrived in Serbia in early August, followed by the 4th SS Panzergrenadier Division from the Thessaloniki area.

Developments in Romania in late August 1944 confronted Army Group F command with the necessity of an immediate large-scale concentration of troops and weapons in Serbia in order to cope with a threat from the east. The Allied command, and the NOVJ supreme command, predicted this scenario and developed a plan for the occasion. On 1 September 1944, a general attack from the ground and from the air on the German transport lines and installations (Operation Ratweek) began.[19] These attacks largely hindered German troop movements, with units disassembled and tied to the ground.[20]

In the meantime, the 1st Proletarian Corps, the main partisan formation in Serbia, continued with reinforcing and developing its forces and with seizing positions for the assault on Belgrade. On 18 September Valjevo was taken, and on 20 September Aranđelovac. Partisans achieved control of a large area south and southwest of Belgrade, thus forming the basis for the future advance towards Belgrade.

In response to the defeat of German forces in the Second Jassy–Kishinev offensive in late August 1944, which forced Bulgaria and Romania to switch sides, and to the advance of Red Army troops into the Balkans, Berlin ordered Army Group E to withdraw into Hungary. But the combined actions of Yugoslav partisans and Allied air forces impeded German movements with Ratweek. With the Red Army on Serbia's borders, the Wehrmacht put together another provisional army formation from available elements of Army Group E and the 2nd Panzer Army for the defense of Serbia, called "Army Group Serbia" (German: Armeeabteilung Serbien).

Regional developments

As a result of the Bulgarian coup d'état of 1944, the pro-Axis regime in Bulgaria was overthrown and replaced with a government of the Fatherland Front led by Kimon Georgiev. Once the new government came to power, Bulgaria declared war on Germany. Under the new pro-Soviet government, four Bulgarian armies, 455,000 strong were mobilized and reorganized. In early October 1944, three Bulgarian armies, consisting of around 340,000 men,[14] were located on the Yugoslav – Bulgarian border.[21][22]

By the end of September, the Red Army 3rd Ukrainian Front troops under the command of Marshal Fyodor Tolbukhin were concentrated at the Bulgarian-Yugoslav border. The Soviet 57th Army was stationed in the Vidin area, while the Bulgarian 2nd Army[23] (General Kiril Stanchev commanding under the operational command of the 3rd Ukrainian Front) was stationed to the south on the Niš rail line at the junction of the Bulgarian, Yugoslav, and Greek borders. This allowed the arrival of the Partisans 1st Army from Yugoslav territory, in order to provide support to their 13th and 14th Corps collaborating in the liberation of Niš and supporting the 57th Army's advance to Belgrade, respectively. The Red Army 2nd Ukrainian Front's 46th Army was deployed in the area of the Teregova river (Romania), poised to cut the rail link between Belgrade and Hungary to the north of Vršac.

Pre-operations were coordinated between the Soviets and the commander-in-chief of the Yugoslav Partisans, Marshal Josip Broz Tito. Tito arrived in Soviet-controlled Romania on 21 September, and from there flew to Moscow where he met with Soviet premier Joseph Stalin. The meeting was a success, in particular because the two allies reached an agreement concerning the participation of Bulgarian troops in the operation that would be conducted on Yugoslav territory.

The offensive

Before the start of ground operations, the Soviet 17th Air Army (3rd Ukrainian Front) was ordered to impede the withdrawal of German troops from Greece and southern regions of Yugoslavia. To do so, it carried out air attacks on the railroad bridges and other important facilities in the areas of Niš, Skopje, and Kruševo lasting from 15 to 21 September.

Plan of the offensive

 
Map of the Balkan military theater during September 1944 – January 1945.
 
Map of the offensive.
 
Map of the offensive of the Bulgarian troops in Yugoslavia in the autumn of 1944 (October–November). Its main task was to cover up the Soviet advance to Belgrade.
 
Russian map of the offensive.

It was necessary for the Yugoslavs to break through German defensive positions on the Yugoslav-Bulgarian border to gain control of roads and mountain passages through eastern Serbia, to penetrate into the valley of the Great Morava river, and to secure the bridgehead on the western bank. This task was to be executed mainly by the 57th Army, and the Yugoslav XIV Army Corps was ordered to co-operate and support the Red Army attack behind the front line.[24]

After the successful completion of the first stage, the plan was to deploy the 4th Guards Mechanized Corps to the bridgehead on the west bank. This Corps with its tanks, heavy weapons, and impressive firepower was compatible with the Yugoslav 1st Army Corps, which had significant, concentrated manpower, but was armed mainly with light infantry weapons. Once joined, these two formations were ordered to execute the main attack on Belgrade from the south.[25] The advantages of this plan were the possibility of the rapid deployment of forces in the critical final stage of the offensive, and the possibility of cutting off German troops in eastern Serbia from their main forces.

First stage

Local situation

In January 1944, partisan operational units left the northern part of east Serbia under pressure from occupiers and auxiliary forces. Bulgarian garrisons, some German police forces, and Serbian Quisling troops, all under German command, and Chetniks, mostly commanded by agreements with the Germans, remained in the area. Partisan forces made up of the 23rd and 25th Divisions returned to the central parts of east Serbia in July and August 1944, forming a free territory with a makeshift runway in Soko Banja, thus securing both air supply of arms and ammunition, and allowing evacuation of the wounded. After the coup in Romania, the importance of the northern part of east Serbia had grown for both sides. In a race against each other the Partisans were better positioned and faster. 23rd Division, in a fierce battle with Order Police battalions and auxiliary forces, took Zaječar on 7 September, and on 12 September entered Negotin, while the 25th Division unsuccessfully attacked Donji Milanovac at the same time. Volunteers were joining the units in large numbers increasing their size. A new, 45th Serbian Division was formed on 3 September, and on 6 September, 14 Corps headquarters was established as a high command for the area of operations.

The Germans intervened with the 1st Mountain Division, reaching Zaječar on 9 September. Over the next week Partisans launched defensive attacks trying to deny the Germans access to the Danube at Negotin. On 16 September, when Red Army forces did not cross over from Romania as expected, the 14th Corps decided to abandon its defense of the Danube coastline, and to focus on attacking German columns maneuvering elsewhere.

On 12 September, near Negotin, a NOVJ delegation led by Colonel Ljubodrag Đurić crossed the Danube to the Romanian side, and establish contact with the Red Army 74th Rifle Division. The delegation was accompanied to Romanian territory by the 1st Battalion of the 9th Serbian Brigade; the 1st Battalion would fight with the 109th Regiment of 74th Rifle Division until 7 October.

In August 1944, Army Group F Commander Feldmarschall Maximilian von Weichs ordered the concentration of his mobile forces in Serbia to combat the Partisans. This included: the 4th SS Police Division, the 1st Mountain Division, the 92nd Motorized Regiment, the 4th Brandenburg Regiment, the 191st Assault Brigade, and the 486th Armored Reconnaissance Troop. As a counter-measure to the events in Romania and Bulgaria, he ordered the 11th Luftwaffe Field Division, the 22nd Infantry, the 117th, the 104th Jäger Division, and the 18th SS Mountain Police Regiment to advance to Macedonia.

The 1st Mountain Division was withdrawn from operations against partisans in Montenegro, and was transported to the Niš area. On 6 September, it was placed under the command of General Hans Felber, tasked with establishing control on the Bulgarian border. By mid-September, the division won control of Zaječar and reached the Danube, at the area where the main attack was expected. The 7th SS Division under the command of the 2nd Panzer Army, attacked partisan units moving to Serbia from eastern Bosnia and Sandžak. This Division was subordinated to General Felber on 21 September, with the intention of launching an offensive against the partisans in western Serbia. However, due to the deteriorating situation on the eastern border, this offensive was canceled. Beginning at the end of September, the division was transferred to southeast Serbia, to guard the southern part of the Serbian front-line between Zaječar and Vranje. This enabled the 1st Mountain Division to concentrate on the north, in the area between Zaječar and Iron Gates. The 1st Mountain Division was strengthened by the 92 Motorized Regiment, the 2nd Brandenburg, and the 18th SS Mountain Police Regiment. Both divisions added men from sections of German units withdrawn from Romania, and Bulgaria, as well as from local formations. On 22 September, the 1st Mountain Division mounted an attack on the left bank of the Danube in order to gain control of the Iron Gates, but the plan failed when the 75th Corps of the Red Army, advancing in the opposite direction, launched an attack on the division.

Attack of the 57th Army

 
Troops of the 3rd Ukrainian Front on the offensive near Belgrade.

After the Second Jassy–Kishinev Offensive, a wide and deep area of possible advancement opened up in front of the Red Army. This started a race between the Soviets and the Germans to the "Blue Line", an intended front-line running from the southern slopes of the Carpathians over the Iron Gates down the Yugoslav-Bulgarian border. By the end of September, both the 2nd and the 3rd Ukrainian Front managed to deploy some 19 Rifle Divisions with supporting units to the line (compared to 91 Rifle Divisions in the Second Jassy–Kishinev Offensive).[2] Vast terrain with poor and damaged roads, uncertainty over local forces, and logistical difficulties dispersed the German groups and slowed down their advancement. On the other side, Army Group F encountered much larger problems in concentrating their forces. This resulted in the Red Army achieving substantial superiority in numbers on the Blue Line by the end of September. Given this fact, and the prospect of cooperation with NOVJ, the offensive was launched.

First to reach the Iron Gates area were reconnaissance elements of the 75th Rifle Corps. On 12 September, they established contact with the partisans on the other side of the Danube. However, in the following days, the Germans succeeded in pushing out the partisans from the river bank, and launched a limited attack on Red Army elements across the Danube. According to the general plan, the 75th Corps was to be included in the composition of the 57th Army during its attack south of the Danube, and the completion of the 57th Army transfer to the Vidin area was not expected before 30 September. Having a fluid situation on the Yugoslav side of the Iron Gates, and a German attack across the Danube, 75th Corps launched its attack earlier, crossing the Danube on 22 September. After initial success, in the next days, the German 1st Mountain Division undertook a vigorous counter-attack, pushing the Soviets back to the shores of the Danube. Because of this, the 57th Army attack was launched on 27 and 28 September with troops brought in over night. Divisions of the 68th and the 64th Rifle Corps were introduced to the area from Negotin to Zaječar.

This attack by three Army Corps allowed the Red Army to gain supremacy on the combat line and to advance in spite of the stubborn German defense. On 30 September, Negotin was liberated and heavy fighting erupted in Zaječar.

Army Group F Command in Belgrade sought to bring more units to Belgrade as soon as possible. Commander-in-Chief Maximilian von Weichs ordered the 104th Jäger Division to be transported immediately as soon as transport of the 117th Jäger Division was completed. However, transport from the south was hindered by partisan operations and Allied Air Force attacks. The 117th Jäger Division had been boarded on forty-four trains in Athens on 19 September, but only seventeen of them had reached Belgrade by 8 October. The 104th Jäger Division remained blocked in Macedonia. Because of the lack of troops at the front-line, on 29 September, Army Group F Command ordered a defensive assault by the 1st Mountain Division and the 92nd Motorized Brigade in an attempt to buy time. Assault Regiment Rhodes was transported to Belgrade by air without heavy weapons, but this method of transport could not meet the army's needs.

The attack on the German forces by three Soviet Rifle Corps, supported by the 14th Corps NOVJ, stretched between Donji Milanovac and Zaječar, gradually progressed, despite persistent resistance. The fight broke down into a number of skirmishes for the strong points in towns and on the crossroads and passes, and the Germans were forced to withdraw gradually. The 14th Corps NOVJ won control over communications behind the front-line, and the commander of the 57th Army sent his Chief of Staff Major General Verkholovich (Russian: Верхолович) to the 14th Corps Headquarters to coordinate actions.[26] On 1 October, after a fierce battle, the 223rd Division of the 68th Corps seized an important crossroad in the village of Rgotina, 10 km to the north of Zaječar. Another important crossroad in Štubik fell on 2 October after a bitter battle. On 3 October, parts of the 223rd Division and the 7th and 9th Serbian Brigade of the 23rd Division NOVJ liberated Bor, important for its large copper mine. In Bor the 7th and 9th Brigade liberated some 1,700 forced laborers, mostly Jews from Hungary.[citation needed]

Because of successful attacks, by 4 October, German forces in front of the Soviet 57th Army were separated into three battle groups with no contact with each other. Battle group Groth holding Zaječar was the southernmost, battle group Fisher held positions in the middle, and battle group Stettner (named after the 1st Mountain Division commander) held grounds in mountains further to the north. Having firm control of the crossroads in their area, Soviet command decided to postpone a decisive attack on the German battle groups and to exploit the open roads with mobile forces for deeper penetration. On 7 October, the 5th Guards Motorized Rifle Brigade, reinforced with a self-propelled artillery regiment and an anti-tank regiment, marched from Negotin over Rgotina and Žagubica to Svilajnac. In twenty-four hours the brigade performed a 120 km long march-maneuver, reaching the Great Morava valley on 8 October, leaving German frontline forces far behind. The next day, 9 October, the 93rd Rifle Division broke into the Great Morava valley through Petrovac. The division commander formed a special task force under Captain Liskov, to capture the only 30-ton bridge over the river near the village of Donje Livadice. Captain Liskov's group successfully neutralized German guards and prevented them from mining the bridge which held great importance for the remaining course of the offensive. On 10 October, the 93rd Rifle Division and the 5th Motorized Brigade secured the bridgehead on the west bank of the Great Morava river.[27]

On 7 October 64th Rifle Corps units, together with elements of 45th Division NOVJ, finally managed to break the steadfast resistance of battle group Groth and took Zaječar. At the same time, owing to great efforts by engineering units, the 4th Guards Mechanized Corps' transports reached the Vidin area. On 9 October, the Corps moved through Zaječar heading to the bridge over the Great Morava. After crossing the bridge, on 12 October, in the area of Natalinci, 12 km east of Topola, the Corps met the 4th Brigade of the 21st Serbian Division.[28] The 4th Guards Mechanized Corps, with its 160 tanks, 21 self-propelled guns, 31 armored cars, and 366 guns and mortars,[29] had impressive firepower. Together with the Yugoslav 1st Proletarian Corps concentrated in the area, the 4th Guards Mechanized Corps formed the main attack force for the direct assault on Belgrade. With this concentration of forces in the area west of Great Morava, the first phase of the offensive was successfully concluded.

Second stage

German counter-measures

On 2 October, the German command structure was reorganized and General Friedrich-Wilhelm Müller, former commander of German forces on Crete, resumed command over the front-line south of the Danube. His Corps headquarters was located in Kraljevo. General Wilhelm Schneckenburger retained command of the forces north of the Danube and was tasked with the immediate defense of Belgrade. Both Corps commands were subordinated to General Felber's Army Detachment Serbia command, under Commander-in-Chief, South-east (Army Group F) High Command.

As Belgrade became a more unstable combat zone, on 5 October, Army Group F headquarters was relocated from Belgrade to Vukovar. Felber and Schneckenburger remained in Belgrade.

On 10 October, Army Group F command acknowledged that the Red Army had opened a hole in their front line and had penetrated the Great Morava valley. These Soviet forces threatened to proceed with a direct attack on Belgrade, cutting off the 1st Mountain Division, still stuck in combat in east Serbia, and to attack it from the rear. German Command stated its determination to close the hole with a counter-attack, but lacked troops for such an undertaking. With the impossibility of reinforcements coming from the south finally acknowledged, German Command was forced to seek more troops from 2nd Panzer Army. Previous deployment of forces to the front-line in Serbia had already cost 2nd Panzer Army the loss of a number of important towns, some permanently: (Drvar, Gacko, Prijedor, Jajce, Donji Vakuf, Bugojno, Gornji Vakuf, Tuzla, Hvar, Brač, Pelješac, Berane, Nikšić, Bileća, Trebinje, Benkovac, Livno), and some temporarily: (Užice, Tešanj, Teslić, Slavonska Požega, Zvornik, Daruvar, Pakrac, Kolašin, Bijelo Polje, Banja Luka, Pljevlja, Virovitica, Višegrad, and Travnik). A new defensive plan, put into operation on 10 October, allowed the 2nd Panzer Army to abandon most of the Adriatic coast, and to form a new defensive line from the mouth of Zrmanja eastwards, relying on mountain ranges and fortified towns. This defensive line was to be held with three 'legionnaire' divisions (the 369th, the 373rd and the 392nd), and it was to allow Germans to draw out two divisions (the 118th and the 264th) for use in critical areas. However, due to the failure of the 369th Division, only two battalion-strong battle-groups of the 118th Division were sent to Belgrade, while the 264th was caught in the offensive of the 8th Yugoslav Corps, and was eventually destroyed in the Knin area.

Activities on the flanks

Operations began on the far southern flank of the front with an offensive by the 2nd Bulgarian Army into the Leskovac-Niš area, which almost immediately engaged the infamous 7th SS Mountain Division "Prinz Eugen". Two days later, having encountered the Yugoslav partisans, the Army with partisan participation defeated a combined force of Chetniks and Serbian Frontier Guards and occupied Vlasotince. Using its Armored Brigade as a spearhead, the Bulgarian Army then engaged German positions on 8 October at Bela Palanka, reaching Vlasotince two days later. On 12 October, the Armored Brigade, supported by the 15th Brigade of the 47th Partisan Division, was able to take Leskovac, with the Bulgarian reconnaissance battalion crossing the Morava and probing toward Niš. The goal of this was to not so much to pursue the remnants of the "Prinz Eugen" Division withdrawing northwest, but for the Bulgarian 2nd Army to begin the liberation of Kosovo which would have finally cut the route north for the German Army Group E withdrawing from Greece. On 17 October, the leading units of the Bulgarian Army reached Kursumlija, and proceeded to Kuršumlijska Banja. On 5 November, after negotiating the Prepolac Pass with heavy losses, the Brigade occupied Podujevo, but was unable to reach Pristina until the 21st.[30]

On the northern face of the offensive, the Red Army 2nd Ukrainian Front's supporting 46th Army advanced in an attempt to outflank the German Belgrade defensive position from the north, by cutting the river and rail supply lines running along the Tisa. Supported by the 5th Air Army, its 10th Guards Rifle Corps was able to rapidly perform assault crossings of the rivers Tamiš and Tisa north of Pančevo to threaten the Belgrade-Novi Sad railroad. Further to the north the Red Army 31st Guards Rifle Corps advanced toward Petrovgrad, and the 37th Rifle Corps advanced toward, and crossed the Tisa to threaten the stretch of railway between Novi Sad and Subotica, and to prepare for the planned Budapest strategic offensive operation.[31]

Assault on Belgrade

Approaching Belgrade

 
Fighting around Belgrade.
 
Belgrade operation.
 
Yugoslav Partisans in liberated Belgrade, October 1944.

On 12 October, of the whole area between Kragujevac and Sava, with the exception of Belgrade, the Germans held only solitary strongholds in Šabac, Obrenovac, Topola and Mladenovac, while the areas in between were under the control of NOVJ. After the liberation of Valjevo, divisions of the 12th Corps, and the 6th (Lika) Division, and scattered Chetniks, pushed back German battle-group von Jungenfeld south of Šabac, and entered the area between Belgrade and Obrenovac. Chetnik elements that had retreated to Belgrade were transported to Kraljevo by the Germans on 3–5 October. 1st and 5th (Krajina) Division held Topola and Mladenovac under pressure, and were reinforced by the 21st Division, which marched in from the south.

On that day, all of the 4th Guards Mechanized Corps was concentrated to the west of Topola. The Germans formed two combat groups to defend against an attack intended to force them back across the Great Morava. The attack of the southern combat group from Kragujevac was easily blocked, and the northern battle group was dealt with by the Corps along its advancement towards Belgrade. The main direction of attack, along a line between Topola and Belgrade, was entrusted to the 36th Tank Brigade, the 13th and 14th Guards Mechanized Brigade of Red Army, and to the 1st, 5th, and 21st division NOVJ. The task of penetrating the line in an additional direction, on the right flank, towards the Danube and Smederevo, was given to the 15th Guards Mechanized Brigade, reinforced by the 5th Independent Mechanized Brigade, two artillery regiments, and the 1st Brigade of 5th Division NOVJ.

The final run towards Belgrade started on 12 October. An auxiliary right flank attack on the 15th Guards Mechanized Brigade, and the 1st Brigade of 5th Division, allowed NOVJ to reach the Danube near Boleč late in the evening of 13 October, after a charge through the positions of the Brandenburgers.[32] With this success, German forces were split into two separate groups: the Belgrade garrison to the west, and the battle-group retreating from eastern Serbia, which was then in the Smederevo area. The latter, consisting of the 1st Mountain Division, the 2nd Brandenburg Regiment, and elements of other units, under General Walter Stettner, was cut off from all other German units, and faced destruction. Efforts by this group to break through and to establish a link with the Belgrade garrison resulted in fierce fighting. In the following days, the 21st and 23 Division NOVJ were deployed to strengthen positions and to prevent the Germans from reuniting.

The 36th Tank Brigade led an attack in the main direction. With the 4th Battalion of the 4th Serbian Brigade boarded on tanks, the 36th headed towards Topola. Parts of the 5th Division NOVJ (10th Krajina Brigade) were attacking the Topola garrison from the west when tanks of 36th Tank Brigade suddenly appeared from the east. After a short but intense artillery bombardment, the German garrison was overrun with a joint charge. The 36th Tank Brigade continued northwards without delay, and 9 kilometers north of Topola encountered a German assault gun battalion marching in the opposite direction. After a short but fierce clash, with serious losses on both sides, the 36th Tank Brigade overran the Germans on the move, and proceeded to the north. Before 12 October was over, with the assistance of the 3rd and 4th Krajina Brigade NOVJ, the 36th Tank Brigade also overran the garrison at Mladenovac, the last important obstacle before Belgrade, in a manner similar to the action at Topola.[33] With Mladenovac cleared, the way to Belgrade was wide open.

On the streets of Belgrade

The 4th Guards Mechanized Corps of the Red Army broke through the enemy resistance south of Belgrade on 14 October, and approached the city. The Yugoslavs advanced along the roads in the direction of Belgrade south of the Sava River, while the Red Army engaged in fighting on the northern bank outskirts.[citation needed] The assault on the city was delayed due to the diversion of forces for the elimination of thousands of German troops surrounded between Belgrade and Smederevo to the south-east. On 20 October, Belgrade had been completely overrun by joint Soviet and Yugoslav forces.

The Yugoslav 13th Corps, in cooperation with the Bulgarian 2nd Army,[34] advanced from the south-east. They were responsible for the area of Niš and Leskovac. They were also responsible for cutting off the main evacuation route of Army Group E along the South Morava and Morava Rivers. Army Group E was forced to retreat through the mountains of Montenegro and Bosnia and was unable to re-enforce German units in Hungary.

The Soviet 10th Guards Rifle Corps of the 46th Army (2nd Ukrainian Front), together with units of the Yugoslav Partisans moving via the Danube, provided more offensive strength from the north-east against the Wehrmacht's position in Belgrade. They cleared the left bank of the Tisa and Danube (in Yugoslavia) and took the town of Pančevo.

Allied forces

Participating in the assault on the capital of Yugoslavia were:[35]

Soviet Union

 
The Liberation of Belgrade Medal was awarded to c. 70,000 Soviet and allied service personnel who took part in the battle of Belgrade.
 
Boris Tadić and Dmitry Medvedev during celebrations for 65th anniversary
  • 3rd Ukrainian Front (Marshal of the Soviet Union Fyodor Tolbukhin)
    • 4th Guards Mechanised Corps (General Lieutenant Vladimir Zhdanov)
      • 13th Guards Mechanised Brigade (Lieutenant Colonel Gennady Obaturov)
      • 14th Guards Mechanised Brigade (Colonel Nikodim Alekseyevich Nikitin)
      • 15th Guards Mechanised Brigade (Lieutenant Colonel Mikhail Alekseyevich Andrianov)
      • 36th Guards Tank Brigade (Colonel Pyotr Semyonovich Zhukov)
      • 292nd Guards Self-propelled Artillery Regiment (Lieutenant Colonel Semyon Kondratevich Shakhmetov)
    • 352nd Guards Heavy Self-propelled Artillery Regiment (Colonel Ivan Markovich Tiberkov);
    • 5th Guards Motor Rifle Brigade (Colonel Nikolai Ivanovich Zavyalov);
    • 23rd Howitzer Artillery Brigade (Colonel Savva Kirillovich Karpenko) of the 9th Breakthrough Artillery Division (Major General of Artillery Andrey Ivanovich Ratov)
    • 42nd Anti-tank destroyer artillery Brigade (Colonel Konstantin Alekseyevich Leonov)
    • 22nd Anti-aircraft Artillery Division (Colonel Igor Danshin)
  • 57th Army (Colonel General Nikolai Gagen)
    • 75th Rifle Corps (Major General Andrian Zakharovich Akimenko)
    • 223rd Rifle Division (Colonel Akhnav Gaynutdinovich Sagitov)
      • 236th Rifle Division (Colonel Pyotr Ivanovich Kulizhskiy)
    • 68th Rifle Corps (Major General Nikolai Nikolayevich Shkodunovich)
  • Danube Military Flotilla
    • Brigade of Armoured Boats (Captain Second Rank Pavel Ivanovich Derzhavin)
      • 1st Guards Armoured Boats Division (Lieutenant Commander Sergey Ignatevich Barbotko)
      • 4th Guards Armoured Boats Division (Senior Lieutenant Kuzma [Iosifovich] Butvin)
    • Coastal escort force (Major Klementiy Timofeevich Zidr)
  • 17th Air Army (Vladimir Sudets)
    • 10th Assault Air Corps (lieutenant general of aviation Oleg Viktorovich Tolstyakov)
      • 295th Fighter Air Division (Colonel Anatoly Alexandrovich Silvestrov)
      • 306th Assault Air Division (Colonel Alexander Viktorovich Ivanov),
      • 136th Assault Air Division (part, Colonel Nikolai Pavlovich Terekhov)
      • 10th Guards Assault Air Division (Major General of Aviation Andrey Nikiforovich Vitruk)
      • 236th Fighter Air Division (Colonel Vasiliy Yakovlevich Kudryashov)
      • 288th Fighter Air Division (part, Colonel Boris Alexandrovich Smirnov)

Yugoslavia

Bulgaria

 
Bulgarian troops entering Leskovac.

By the end of the September, the First Army, together with the Bulgarian Second and Fourth Armies, was in full-scale combat against the German Army along the Bulgaria-Yugoslavia border, with Yugoslavian guerrillas on their left flank and a Soviet force on their right. They consisted of around 340,000 men. By December 1944, the First Army numbered 100,000 men. The First Army took part in the Bulgarian Army's advance northwards into the Balkan Peninsula with logistical support and under the command of the Red Army. The First Army, advanced into Serbia, Hungary and Austria in the spring of 1945, despite heavy casualties and bad conditions in the winter. During 1944–45, the Bulgarian First Army was commanded by Lieutenant-General Vladimir Stoychev.

Aftermath

Upon completion of the Belgrade operation by the 57th Army with the Yugoslav 51st division in November, the bridgehead in Baranja, on the left bank of Danube was taken, causing an acute crisis for the German defense. The bridgehead served as a platform for the massive concentration of the 3rd Ukrainian Front troops for the Budapest offensive. The Red Army 68th Rifle Corps participated in the battles on the Kraljevo bridgehead and the Syrmian Front until mid-December, and were then transferred to Baranja. The Red Army Air Force Group "Vitruk" provided air support on the Yugoslav Front until the end of December.

The Yugoslav 1st Army Corps continued to push German forces westwards for some 100 km through Srem, where the Germans managed to stabilize a front in mid-December.

Having lost Belgrade and the Great Morava Valley, German Army Group E was forced to fight for a passage through the mountains of Sandžak and Bosnia, and its first echelons did not reach Drava until mid-February 1945.

Commemoration of the battle

 
The Serbian Guards Unit during the final dress rehearsals of the Belgrade Military Parade.

A Medal "For the Liberation of Belgrade" was established by a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet on 19 June 1945. The Yugoslav People's Army held its second military parade on Revolution Boulevard (now Bulevar kralja Aleksandra) in honor of the one year anniversary of the end of the offensive.[36] Since then, the country there has only been two military parades and high level celebrations in honor of the occasion in the SFR Yugoslavia and the Republic of Serbia, with the first one, the March of the Victor, being held on Nikola Tesla Boulevard with Russian President Vladimir Putin as the guest of honour.[37]

Every jubilee anniversary is met with a significant Russian presence, often coming in the form of a state visit by the President of Russia or another high-ranking official to Belgrade. Beginning with Dmitry Medvedev in 2009 and continued with Vladimir Putin as aforementioned, the laying of wreaths of the President of Serbia and the leader of Russia takes place at the Liberators of Belgrade Memorial, which contains the remains of over 3,500 Yugoslav Partisans and Red Army soldiers who died during the offensive. In 2019, Medvedev represented Russia at the 75th anniversary celebrations in his position as Prime Minister instead of President Putin.[38][39][40]

See also

References

  1. ^ Tomasevich, Jozo (2001). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration. 2. San Francisco: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-3615-4. pp. 222–228.
  2. ^ a b Krivosheyev 1997.
  3. ^ Glantz (1995), p. 299
  4. ^ Иво Антонов, началник на отдел „Военни паметници и военно-патриотично възпитание“ при МО. В-к „Труд“, 05.11.2016 г.
  5. ^ Biryuzov & Hamović 1964, p. 260.
  6. ^ p.1116, Dupuy; Belgrade itself was taken on 20 October
  7. ^ Ivan Laković, Dmitar Tasić, The Tito–Stalin Split and Yugoslavia's Military Opening toward the West, 1950–1954: In NATO's Backyard, The Harvard Cold War Studies Book Series Authors, Lexington Books, 2016, ISBN 1498539343, p. 203.
  8. ^ p.615, Wilmot "[the Red Army] entered Belgrade ... at the same time as Tito's partisans."; p.152, Seaton; "The Russians had no interest in the German occupation forces in Greece and appear to have had very little interest in those retiring northwards through Yugoslavia...Stalin was content to leave to Tito and the Bulgarians the clearing of Yugoslav territory from the enemy."; Library of Congress Country Studies citing "information from Documents on German Foreign Policy, 1919–1945, Arlington, Virginia, 1976": "...Soviet troops crossed the border on October 1, and a joint Partisan-Soviet force liberated Belgrade on October 20."
  9. ^ Biryuzov & Hamović 1964, p. 83.
  10. ^ Biryuzov & Hamović 1964, p. 270.
  11. ^ Tomasevich 2002, p. 168.
  12. ^ Biryuzov & Hamović 1964, pp. 103–104.
  13. ^ Biryuzov & Hamović 1964, pp. 103, 124.
  14. ^ a b The Oxford companion to World War II, Ian Dear, Michael Richard Daniell Foot, Oxford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-19-860446-7, p. 134.
  15. ^ Biryuzov & Hamović 1964, p. 124.
  16. ^ Basil Davidson: PARTISAN PICTURE
  17. ^ Schmider 2002, p. 587.
  18. ^ Maclean 2002, pp. 437–438.
  19. ^ Maclean 2002, pp. 470–497.
  20. ^ Report of the High Commander of the Army Group F to the High Command of Wehrmacht Chief of Staff, dated 20 September 1944, National Archive Washington, Record Group 242, T311, Roll 191, frames 637–642.
  21. ^ Axis Forces in Yugoslavia 1941–45, Nigel Thomas, K. Mikulan, Darko Pavlović, Osprey Publishing, 1995, ISBN 1-85532-473-3, p. 33.
  22. ^ World War II: The Mediterranean 1940–1945, World War II: Essential Histories, Paul Collier, Robert O'Neill, The Rosen Publishing Group, 2010, ISBN 1-4358-9132-5, p. 77.
  23. ^ this Army included the Bulgarian Armored Brigade previously equipped and trained by the Wehrmacht
  24. ^ Biryuzov & Hamović 1964, p. 103.
  25. ^ Biryuzov & Hamović 1964, p. 104.
  26. ^ Biryuzov & Hamović 1964, p. 160.
  27. ^ Biryuzov & Hamović 1964, pp. 168–169.
  28. ^ Biryuzov & Hamović 1964, p. 200.
  29. ^ Biryuzov & Hamović 1964, p. 196.
  30. ^ pp.215–56, Mitrovski
  31. ^ p.666, Glantz
  32. ^ Biryuzov & Hamović 1964, p. 199.
  33. ^ Biryuzov & Hamović 1964, pp. 203–204.
  34. ^ The composition of the 2nd Army was: Bulgarian Armored Brigade, 8th Infantry Division, 4th Infantry Division, 6th Infantry Division, 12th Infantry Division, parts of the 24th and 26th Infantry Divisions, and the 1st Assault Gun Detachment, pp.166–208, Grechko
  35. ^ http://www.soldat.ru/spravka/freedom/12-yugoslavia.html Dudarenko, M.L., Perechnev, Yu.G., Yeliseev, V.T., et.el., Reference guide "Liberation of cities": reference for liberation of cities during the period of the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945, Moscow, 1985 (Дударенко, М.Л., Перечнев, Ю.Г., Елисеев, В.Т. и др., сост. Справочник «Освобождение городов: Справочник по освобождению городов в период Великой Отечественной войны 1941–1945»)
  36. ^ Radulovic, Mladen (10 October 2014). "Force of the Yugoslav National Army: Belgrade Thundered in the Last Military Parade in 1985! (Video)". kurir.rs (in Bosnian). Retrieved 19 October 2019.
  37. ^ "Putin guest of honour at Serbia military parade". BBC News. 16 October 2014.
  38. ^ . The New York Times. Associated Press. 19 October 2019. Archived from the original on 21 October 2019.
  39. ^ "Russia, Serbia vow to boost ties despite Belgrade's EU bid". The Washington Post. Associated Press. 19 October 2019. from the original on 20 October 2019.
  40. ^ "Russia's Medvedev Attends Military Parade in Belgrade". www.rferl.org. 19 October 2019.

Sources

  • Biryuzov, Sergeĭ Semenovich; Hamović, Rade (1964). BEOGRADSKA OPERACIJA. Beograd: Vojni istoriski institut Jugoslovenske narodne armije.
  • Dudarenko, M.L., Perechnev, Yu.G., Yeliseev, V.T., et.el., Reference guide "Liberation of cities": reference for liberation of cities during the period of the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945, Moscow, 1985
  • Glantz, David, 1986 Art of War symposium, From the Vistula to the Oder: Soviet Offensive Operations – October 1944 – March 1945, A transcript of Proceedings, Center for Land Warfare, US Army War College, 19–23 May 1986
  • Glantz, David M. & House, Jonathan (1995), When Titans Clashed: How the Red Army Stopped Hitler, Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas, ISBN 0-7006-0899-0.
  • Krivosheyev, Grigoriy Fedotovich (1997). Soviet Casualties and Combat Losses in the Twentieth Century. Greenhill Books. ISBN 9781853672804.
  • Maclean, Fitzroy (2002) [1949]. Eastern Approaches. Penguin Group. ISBN 9780140132717.
  • Seaton, Albert, The fall of Fortress Europe 1943–1945, B.T.Batsford Ltd., London, 1981 ISBN 0-7134-1968-7
  • Schmider, Klaus (2002). PARTISANENKRIEG IN JUGOSLAWIEN 1941–1944. Hamburg, Berlin, Bonn: Verlag E.S. Mittler & Sohn GmbH. ISBN 3-8132-0794-3.
  • Tomasevich, Jozo (2002). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia: 1941 – 1945. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-0857-6.
  • Dupuy, Ernest R., and Dupuy, Trevor N., The encyclopedia of Military History from 3500 B.C. to the present (revised edition), Jane's Publishing Company, London, 1980
  • Mitrovski, Boro, Venceslav Glišić and Tomo Ristovski, The Bulgarian Army in Yugoslavia 1941–1945, Belgrade, Medunarodna Politika, 1971
  • Wilmot, Chester, The Struggle for Europe, Collins, 1952
  • Grechko, A.A., (ed.), Liberation Mission of the Soviet Armed Forces in the Second World War, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1975

Further reading

  • Majstorović, Vojin (2016). "The Red Army in Yugoslavia, 1944–1945". Slavic Review. 75 (2): 396–421. doi:10.5612/slavicreview.75.2.396.

belgrade, offensive, belgrade, strategic, offensive, operation, serbo, croatian, beogradska, operacija, Београдска, операција, russian, Белградская, стратегическая, наступательная, операция, belgradskaya, strategicheskaya, nastupatel, naya, operatsiya, septemb. The Belgrade offensive or the Belgrade strategic offensive operation Serbo Croatian Beogradska operacija Beogradska operaciјa Russian Belgradskaya strategicheskaya nastupatelnaya operaciya Belgradskaya strategicheskaya nastupatel naya operatsiya 15 September 1944 24 November 1944 6 was a military operation during World War II in Yugoslavia in which Belgrade was liberated from the German Wehrmacht through the joint efforts of the Soviet Red Army Yugoslav Partisans and the Bulgarian Army 7 Soviet forces and local militias launched separate but loosely cooperative operations that undermined German control of Belgrade and ultimately forced a retreat 8 Martial planning was coordinated evenly among command leaders and the operation was largely enabled through tactical cooperation between Josip Broz Tito and Joseph Stalin that began in September 1944 9 10 These martial provisions allowed Bulgarian forces to engage in operations throughout Yugoslav territory which furthered tactical success while increasing diplomatic friction 11 Belgrade offensivePart of the Yugoslav and Eastern fronts of World War IIDestroyed Soviet Red Army T 34 85 tank in Belgrade Palace Albanija in the background Date15 September 1944 24 November 1944 2 LocationBelgrade YugoslaviaResultAllied victoryBelligerentsAllies Soviet Union Yugoslav Partisans BulgariaAxis Germany Government of National Salvation 1 Commanders and leadersFyodor Tolbukhin Nikolai Gagen Vladimir Zhdanov Peko DapcevicDanilo Lekic Vladimir Stoychev Kiril Stanchev Asen SirakovMaximilian von Weichs Wilhelm Schneckenburger Hans Felber Alexander LohrUnits involved3rd Ukrainian Front1st Corps 12th Corps 1st Army 2nd Army 4th ArmyArmy Group F 2nd Panzer Army Serbian State Guard citation needed Strength580 000 troops3 640 artillery pieces520 tanks and assault guns1 420 aircraft80 ships150 000 troops mostly 2nd tier infantry amp non German support troops 2 100 artillery pieces125 tanks and assault guns350 aircraft70 shipsCasualties and lossesSoviets 4 350 killed or missing14 488 wounded or sick18 838 overall 3 Bulgarian Army Over 3 000 killed 4 Yugoslav Partisans 2 953 dead assault on Belgrade only 5 45 000 citation needed The primary objectives of the Belgrade offensive centered on lifting the German occupation of Serbia seizing Belgrade as a strategic holdout in the Balkans and severing German communication lines between Greece and Hungary 12 The spearhead of the offensive was executed by the Soviet 3rd Ukrainian Front in coordination with the Yugoslav 1st Army Corps Simultaneous operations in the south involved the Bulgarian 2nd Army and Yugoslav XIII Army Corps and the incursion of the 2nd Ukrainian Front northwards from the Yugoslav Bulgarian border placed additional pressure on German command 13 There were additional skirmishes between Bulgarian forces and German anti partisan regiments in Macedonia that represented the campaign s southernmost combat operations 14 15 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Developments in Yugoslavia 1 2 Regional developments 2 The offensive 2 1 Plan of the offensive 2 2 First stage 2 2 1 Local situation 2 2 2 Attack of the 57th Army 2 3 Second stage 2 3 1 German counter measures 2 3 2 Activities on the flanks 3 Assault on Belgrade 3 1 Approaching Belgrade 3 2 On the streets of Belgrade 4 Allied forces 4 1 Soviet Union 4 2 Yugoslavia 4 3 Bulgaria 5 Aftermath 6 Commemoration of the battle 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further readingBackground EditDevelopments in Yugoslavia Edit By the summer of 1944 the Germans had not only lost control of practically all the mountainous area of Yugoslavia but were no longer able to protect their own essential lines of communication Another general offensive on their front was unthinkable and by September it was clear that Belgrade and the whole of Serbia must shortly be free of them These summer months were the best the movement had ever seen there were more recruits than could be armed or trained desertions from the enemy reached high numbers one by one the objectives of resistance were reached and taken 16 Basil Davidson In August 1943 the German Wehrmacht had two army formations deployed in the Balkans Army Group E in Greece and the 2nd Panzer Army in Yugoslavia and Albania Army Group F headquarters Generalfeldmarschall von Weichs in Belgrade acted as a joint high command for these formations as well as for Bulgarian and Quisling formations After the collapse of the uprising in December 1941 anti Axis activity in Serbia decreased significantly and the focus of resistance moved to other less populated areas Consequently although Serbia had great significance to the Germans very few troops actually remained there according to Schmider only about 10 000 in June 1944 17 In the following years Tito repeatedly tried to reinforce the partisan forces in Serbia with experienced units from Bosnia and Montenegro From the spring of 1944 the Allied command had assisted in these efforts 18 The Germans actively opposed these efforts by concentrating forces in the border regions of Bosnia and Montenegro in order to disturb Partisan concentrations to inflict casualties on Partisan units and to push them back with a series of large scale assaults In July 1944 German defenses began to fail After the failure of Operation Draufganger Daredevil a 1944 anti partisan operation in Montenegro Yugoslavia and Northern Albania three divisions of the Narodnooslobodilacka vojska Jugoslavije the People s Liberation Army of Yugoslavia NOVJ managed to cross the Ibar River to the east and threaten the main railroad lines After the failure of Operation Rubezahl in Montenegro in August 1944 two additional NOVJ divisions broke through the German blockade successfully entrenching themselves in western Serbia Army Group F command responded by deploying additional forces the 1st Mountain Division arrived in Serbia in early August followed by the 4th SS Panzergrenadier Division from the Thessaloniki area Developments in Romania in late August 1944 confronted Army Group F command with the necessity of an immediate large scale concentration of troops and weapons in Serbia in order to cope with a threat from the east The Allied command and the NOVJ supreme command predicted this scenario and developed a plan for the occasion On 1 September 1944 a general attack from the ground and from the air on the German transport lines and installations Operation Ratweek began 19 These attacks largely hindered German troop movements with units disassembled and tied to the ground 20 In the meantime the 1st Proletarian Corps the main partisan formation in Serbia continued with reinforcing and developing its forces and with seizing positions for the assault on Belgrade On 18 September Valjevo was taken and on 20 September Aranđelovac Partisans achieved control of a large area south and southwest of Belgrade thus forming the basis for the future advance towards Belgrade In response to the defeat of German forces in the Second Jassy Kishinev offensive in late August 1944 which forced Bulgaria and Romania to switch sides and to the advance of Red Army troops into the Balkans Berlin ordered Army Group E to withdraw into Hungary But the combined actions of Yugoslav partisans and Allied air forces impeded German movements with Ratweek With the Red Army on Serbia s borders the Wehrmacht put together another provisional army formation from available elements of Army Group E and the 2nd Panzer Army for the defense of Serbia called Army Group Serbia German Armeeabteilung Serbien Regional developments Edit As a result of the Bulgarian coup d etat of 1944 the pro Axis regime in Bulgaria was overthrown and replaced with a government of the Fatherland Front led by Kimon Georgiev Once the new government came to power Bulgaria declared war on Germany Under the new pro Soviet government four Bulgarian armies 455 000 strong were mobilized and reorganized In early October 1944 three Bulgarian armies consisting of around 340 000 men 14 were located on the Yugoslav Bulgarian border 21 22 By the end of September the Red Army 3rd Ukrainian Front troops under the command of Marshal Fyodor Tolbukhin were concentrated at the Bulgarian Yugoslav border The Soviet 57th Army was stationed in the Vidin area while the Bulgarian 2nd Army 23 General Kiril Stanchev commanding under the operational command of the 3rd Ukrainian Front was stationed to the south on the Nis rail line at the junction of the Bulgarian Yugoslav and Greek borders This allowed the arrival of the Partisans 1st Army from Yugoslav territory in order to provide support to their 13th and 14th Corps collaborating in the liberation of Nis and supporting the 57th Army s advance to Belgrade respectively The Red Army 2nd Ukrainian Front s 46th Army was deployed in the area of the Teregova river Romania poised to cut the rail link between Belgrade and Hungary to the north of Vrsac Pre operations were coordinated between the Soviets and the commander in chief of the Yugoslav Partisans Marshal Josip Broz Tito Tito arrived in Soviet controlled Romania on 21 September and from there flew to Moscow where he met with Soviet premier Joseph Stalin The meeting was a success in particular because the two allies reached an agreement concerning the participation of Bulgarian troops in the operation that would be conducted on Yugoslav territory The offensive EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Belgrade offensive news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Before the start of ground operations the Soviet 17th Air Army 3rd Ukrainian Front was ordered to impede the withdrawal of German troops from Greece and southern regions of Yugoslavia To do so it carried out air attacks on the railroad bridges and other important facilities in the areas of Nis Skopje and Krusevo lasting from 15 to 21 September Plan of the offensive Edit Map of the Balkan military theater during September 1944 January 1945 Map of the offensive Map of the offensive of the Bulgarian troops in Yugoslavia in the autumn of 1944 October November Its main task was to cover up the Soviet advance to Belgrade Russian map of the offensive It was necessary for the Yugoslavs to break through German defensive positions on the Yugoslav Bulgarian border to gain control of roads and mountain passages through eastern Serbia to penetrate into the valley of the Great Morava river and to secure the bridgehead on the western bank This task was to be executed mainly by the 57th Army and the Yugoslav XIV Army Corps was ordered to co operate and support the Red Army attack behind the front line 24 After the successful completion of the first stage the plan was to deploy the 4th Guards Mechanized Corps to the bridgehead on the west bank This Corps with its tanks heavy weapons and impressive firepower was compatible with the Yugoslav 1st Army Corps which had significant concentrated manpower but was armed mainly with light infantry weapons Once joined these two formations were ordered to execute the main attack on Belgrade from the south 25 The advantages of this plan were the possibility of the rapid deployment of forces in the critical final stage of the offensive and the possibility of cutting off German troops in eastern Serbia from their main forces First stage Edit Local situation Edit In January 1944 partisan operational units left the northern part of east Serbia under pressure from occupiers and auxiliary forces Bulgarian garrisons some German police forces and Serbian Quisling troops all under German command and Chetniks mostly commanded by agreements with the Germans remained in the area Partisan forces made up of the 23rd and 25th Divisions returned to the central parts of east Serbia in July and August 1944 forming a free territory with a makeshift runway in Soko Banja thus securing both air supply of arms and ammunition and allowing evacuation of the wounded After the coup in Romania the importance of the northern part of east Serbia had grown for both sides In a race against each other the Partisans were better positioned and faster 23rd Division in a fierce battle with Order Police battalions and auxiliary forces took Zajecar on 7 September and on 12 September entered Negotin while the 25th Division unsuccessfully attacked Donji Milanovac at the same time Volunteers were joining the units in large numbers increasing their size A new 45th Serbian Division was formed on 3 September and on 6 September 14 Corps headquarters was established as a high command for the area of operations The Germans intervened with the 1st Mountain Division reaching Zajecar on 9 September Over the next week Partisans launched defensive attacks trying to deny the Germans access to the Danube at Negotin On 16 September when Red Army forces did not cross over from Romania as expected the 14th Corps decided to abandon its defense of the Danube coastline and to focus on attacking German columns maneuvering elsewhere On 12 September near Negotin a NOVJ delegation led by Colonel Ljubodrag Đuric crossed the Danube to the Romanian side and establish contact with the Red Army 74th Rifle Division The delegation was accompanied to Romanian territory by the 1st Battalion of the 9th Serbian Brigade the 1st Battalion would fight with the 109th Regiment of 74th Rifle Division until 7 October In August 1944 Army Group F Commander Feldmarschall Maximilian von Weichs ordered the concentration of his mobile forces in Serbia to combat the Partisans This included the 4th SS Police Division the 1st Mountain Division the 92nd Motorized Regiment the 4th Brandenburg Regiment the 191st Assault Brigade and the 486th Armored Reconnaissance Troop As a counter measure to the events in Romania and Bulgaria he ordered the 11th Luftwaffe Field Division the 22nd Infantry the 117th the 104th Jager Division and the 18th SS Mountain Police Regiment to advance to Macedonia The 1st Mountain Division was withdrawn from operations against partisans in Montenegro and was transported to the Nis area On 6 September it was placed under the command of General Hans Felber tasked with establishing control on the Bulgarian border By mid September the division won control of Zajecar and reached the Danube at the area where the main attack was expected The 7th SS Division under the command of the 2nd Panzer Army attacked partisan units moving to Serbia from eastern Bosnia and Sandzak This Division was subordinated to General Felber on 21 September with the intention of launching an offensive against the partisans in western Serbia However due to the deteriorating situation on the eastern border this offensive was canceled Beginning at the end of September the division was transferred to southeast Serbia to guard the southern part of the Serbian front line between Zajecar and Vranje This enabled the 1st Mountain Division to concentrate on the north in the area between Zajecar and Iron Gates The 1st Mountain Division was strengthened by the 92 Motorized Regiment the 2nd Brandenburg and the 18th SS Mountain Police Regiment Both divisions added men from sections of German units withdrawn from Romania and Bulgaria as well as from local formations On 22 September the 1st Mountain Division mounted an attack on the left bank of the Danube in order to gain control of the Iron Gates but the plan failed when the 75th Corps of the Red Army advancing in the opposite direction launched an attack on the division Attack of the 57th Army Edit Troops of the 3rd Ukrainian Front on the offensive near Belgrade After the Second Jassy Kishinev Offensive a wide and deep area of possible advancement opened up in front of the Red Army This started a race between the Soviets and the Germans to the Blue Line an intended front line running from the southern slopes of the Carpathians over the Iron Gates down the Yugoslav Bulgarian border By the end of September both the 2nd and the 3rd Ukrainian Front managed to deploy some 19 Rifle Divisions with supporting units to the line compared to 91 Rifle Divisions in the Second Jassy Kishinev Offensive 2 Vast terrain with poor and damaged roads uncertainty over local forces and logistical difficulties dispersed the German groups and slowed down their advancement On the other side Army Group F encountered much larger problems in concentrating their forces This resulted in the Red Army achieving substantial superiority in numbers on the Blue Line by the end of September Given this fact and the prospect of cooperation with NOVJ the offensive was launched First to reach the Iron Gates area were reconnaissance elements of the 75th Rifle Corps On 12 September they established contact with the partisans on the other side of the Danube However in the following days the Germans succeeded in pushing out the partisans from the river bank and launched a limited attack on Red Army elements across the Danube According to the general plan the 75th Corps was to be included in the composition of the 57th Army during its attack south of the Danube and the completion of the 57th Army transfer to the Vidin area was not expected before 30 September Having a fluid situation on the Yugoslav side of the Iron Gates and a German attack across the Danube 75th Corps launched its attack earlier crossing the Danube on 22 September After initial success in the next days the German 1st Mountain Division undertook a vigorous counter attack pushing the Soviets back to the shores of the Danube Because of this the 57th Army attack was launched on 27 and 28 September with troops brought in over night Divisions of the 68th and the 64th Rifle Corps were introduced to the area from Negotin to Zajecar This attack by three Army Corps allowed the Red Army to gain supremacy on the combat line and to advance in spite of the stubborn German defense On 30 September Negotin was liberated and heavy fighting erupted in Zajecar Army Group F Command in Belgrade sought to bring more units to Belgrade as soon as possible Commander in Chief Maximilian von Weichs ordered the 104th Jager Division to be transported immediately as soon as transport of the 117th Jager Division was completed However transport from the south was hindered by partisan operations and Allied Air Force attacks The 117th Jager Division had been boarded on forty four trains in Athens on 19 September but only seventeen of them had reached Belgrade by 8 October The 104th Jager Division remained blocked in Macedonia Because of the lack of troops at the front line on 29 September Army Group F Command ordered a defensive assault by the 1st Mountain Division and the 92nd Motorized Brigade in an attempt to buy time Assault Regiment Rhodes was transported to Belgrade by air without heavy weapons but this method of transport could not meet the army s needs The attack on the German forces by three Soviet Rifle Corps supported by the 14th Corps NOVJ stretched between Donji Milanovac and Zajecar gradually progressed despite persistent resistance The fight broke down into a number of skirmishes for the strong points in towns and on the crossroads and passes and the Germans were forced to withdraw gradually The 14th Corps NOVJ won control over communications behind the front line and the commander of the 57th Army sent his Chief of Staff Major General Verkholovich Russian Verholovich to the 14th Corps Headquarters to coordinate actions 26 On 1 October after a fierce battle the 223rd Division of the 68th Corps seized an important crossroad in the village of Rgotina 10 km to the north of Zajecar Another important crossroad in Stubik fell on 2 October after a bitter battle On 3 October parts of the 223rd Division and the 7th and 9th Serbian Brigade of the 23rd Division NOVJ liberated Bor important for its large copper mine In Bor the 7th and 9th Brigade liberated some 1 700 forced laborers mostly Jews from Hungary citation needed Because of successful attacks by 4 October German forces in front of the Soviet 57th Army were separated into three battle groups with no contact with each other Battle group Groth holding Zajecar was the southernmost battle group Fisher held positions in the middle and battle group Stettner named after the 1st Mountain Division commander held grounds in mountains further to the north Having firm control of the crossroads in their area Soviet command decided to postpone a decisive attack on the German battle groups and to exploit the open roads with mobile forces for deeper penetration On 7 October the 5th Guards Motorized Rifle Brigade reinforced with a self propelled artillery regiment and an anti tank regiment marched from Negotin over Rgotina and Zagubica to Svilajnac In twenty four hours the brigade performed a 120 km long march maneuver reaching the Great Morava valley on 8 October leaving German frontline forces far behind The next day 9 October the 93rd Rifle Division broke into the Great Morava valley through Petrovac The division commander formed a special task force under Captain Liskov to capture the only 30 ton bridge over the river near the village of Donje Livadice Captain Liskov s group successfully neutralized German guards and prevented them from mining the bridge which held great importance for the remaining course of the offensive On 10 October the 93rd Rifle Division and the 5th Motorized Brigade secured the bridgehead on the west bank of the Great Morava river 27 On 7 October 64th Rifle Corps units together with elements of 45th Division NOVJ finally managed to break the steadfast resistance of battle group Groth and took Zajecar At the same time owing to great efforts by engineering units the 4th Guards Mechanized Corps transports reached the Vidin area On 9 October the Corps moved through Zajecar heading to the bridge over the Great Morava After crossing the bridge on 12 October in the area of Natalinci 12 km east of Topola the Corps met the 4th Brigade of the 21st Serbian Division 28 The 4th Guards Mechanized Corps with its 160 tanks 21 self propelled guns 31 armored cars and 366 guns and mortars 29 had impressive firepower Together with the Yugoslav 1st Proletarian Corps concentrated in the area the 4th Guards Mechanized Corps formed the main attack force for the direct assault on Belgrade With this concentration of forces in the area west of Great Morava the first phase of the offensive was successfully concluded Second stage Edit German counter measures Edit On 2 October the German command structure was reorganized and General Friedrich Wilhelm Muller former commander of German forces on Crete resumed command over the front line south of the Danube His Corps headquarters was located in Kraljevo General Wilhelm Schneckenburger retained command of the forces north of the Danube and was tasked with the immediate defense of Belgrade Both Corps commands were subordinated to General Felber s Army Detachment Serbia command under Commander in Chief South east Army Group F High Command As Belgrade became a more unstable combat zone on 5 October Army Group F headquarters was relocated from Belgrade to Vukovar Felber and Schneckenburger remained in Belgrade On 10 October Army Group F command acknowledged that the Red Army had opened a hole in their front line and had penetrated the Great Morava valley These Soviet forces threatened to proceed with a direct attack on Belgrade cutting off the 1st Mountain Division still stuck in combat in east Serbia and to attack it from the rear German Command stated its determination to close the hole with a counter attack but lacked troops for such an undertaking With the impossibility of reinforcements coming from the south finally acknowledged German Command was forced to seek more troops from 2nd Panzer Army Previous deployment of forces to the front line in Serbia had already cost 2nd Panzer Army the loss of a number of important towns some permanently Drvar Gacko Prijedor Jajce Donji Vakuf Bugojno Gornji Vakuf Tuzla Hvar Brac Peljesac Berane Niksic Bileca Trebinje Benkovac Livno and some temporarily Uzice Tesanj Teslic Slavonska Pozega Zvornik Daruvar Pakrac Kolasin Bijelo Polje Banja Luka Pljevlja Virovitica Visegrad and Travnik A new defensive plan put into operation on 10 October allowed the 2nd Panzer Army to abandon most of the Adriatic coast and to form a new defensive line from the mouth of Zrmanja eastwards relying on mountain ranges and fortified towns This defensive line was to be held with three legionnaire divisions the 369th the 373rd and the 392nd and it was to allow Germans to draw out two divisions the 118th and the 264th for use in critical areas However due to the failure of the 369th Division only two battalion strong battle groups of the 118th Division were sent to Belgrade while the 264th was caught in the offensive of the 8th Yugoslav Corps and was eventually destroyed in the Knin area Activities on the flanks Edit Operations began on the far southern flank of the front with an offensive by the 2nd Bulgarian Army into the Leskovac Nis area which almost immediately engaged the infamous 7th SS Mountain Division Prinz Eugen Two days later having encountered the Yugoslav partisans the Army with partisan participation defeated a combined force of Chetniks and Serbian Frontier Guards and occupied Vlasotince Using its Armored Brigade as a spearhead the Bulgarian Army then engaged German positions on 8 October at Bela Palanka reaching Vlasotince two days later On 12 October the Armored Brigade supported by the 15th Brigade of the 47th Partisan Division was able to take Leskovac with the Bulgarian reconnaissance battalion crossing the Morava and probing toward Nis The goal of this was to not so much to pursue the remnants of the Prinz Eugen Division withdrawing northwest but for the Bulgarian 2nd Army to begin the liberation of Kosovo which would have finally cut the route north for the German Army Group E withdrawing from Greece On 17 October the leading units of the Bulgarian Army reached Kursumlija and proceeded to Kursumlijska Banja On 5 November after negotiating the Prepolac Pass with heavy losses the Brigade occupied Podujevo but was unable to reach Pristina until the 21st 30 On the northern face of the offensive the Red Army 2nd Ukrainian Front s supporting 46th Army advanced in an attempt to outflank the German Belgrade defensive position from the north by cutting the river and rail supply lines running along the Tisa Supported by the 5th Air Army its 10th Guards Rifle Corps was able to rapidly perform assault crossings of the rivers Tamis and Tisa north of Pancevo to threaten the Belgrade Novi Sad railroad Further to the north the Red Army 31st Guards Rifle Corps advanced toward Petrovgrad and the 37th Rifle Corps advanced toward and crossed the Tisa to threaten the stretch of railway between Novi Sad and Subotica and to prepare for the planned Budapest strategic offensive operation 31 Assault on Belgrade EditApproaching Belgrade Edit Fighting around Belgrade Belgrade operation Yugoslav Partisans in liberated Belgrade October 1944 On 12 October of the whole area between Kragujevac and Sava with the exception of Belgrade the Germans held only solitary strongholds in Sabac Obrenovac Topola and Mladenovac while the areas in between were under the control of NOVJ After the liberation of Valjevo divisions of the 12th Corps and the 6th Lika Division and scattered Chetniks pushed back German battle group von Jungenfeld south of Sabac and entered the area between Belgrade and Obrenovac Chetnik elements that had retreated to Belgrade were transported to Kraljevo by the Germans on 3 5 October 1st and 5th Krajina Division held Topola and Mladenovac under pressure and were reinforced by the 21st Division which marched in from the south On that day all of the 4th Guards Mechanized Corps was concentrated to the west of Topola The Germans formed two combat groups to defend against an attack intended to force them back across the Great Morava The attack of the southern combat group from Kragujevac was easily blocked and the northern battle group was dealt with by the Corps along its advancement towards Belgrade The main direction of attack along a line between Topola and Belgrade was entrusted to the 36th Tank Brigade the 13th and 14th Guards Mechanized Brigade of Red Army and to the 1st 5th and 21st division NOVJ The task of penetrating the line in an additional direction on the right flank towards the Danube and Smederevo was given to the 15th Guards Mechanized Brigade reinforced by the 5th Independent Mechanized Brigade two artillery regiments and the 1st Brigade of 5th Division NOVJ The final run towards Belgrade started on 12 October An auxiliary right flank attack on the 15th Guards Mechanized Brigade and the 1st Brigade of 5th Division allowed NOVJ to reach the Danube near Bolec late in the evening of 13 October after a charge through the positions of the Brandenburgers 32 With this success German forces were split into two separate groups the Belgrade garrison to the west and the battle group retreating from eastern Serbia which was then in the Smederevo area The latter consisting of the 1st Mountain Division the 2nd Brandenburg Regiment and elements of other units under General Walter Stettner was cut off from all other German units and faced destruction Efforts by this group to break through and to establish a link with the Belgrade garrison resulted in fierce fighting In the following days the 21st and 23 Division NOVJ were deployed to strengthen positions and to prevent the Germans from reuniting The 36th Tank Brigade led an attack in the main direction With the 4th Battalion of the 4th Serbian Brigade boarded on tanks the 36th headed towards Topola Parts of the 5th Division NOVJ 10th Krajina Brigade were attacking the Topola garrison from the west when tanks of 36th Tank Brigade suddenly appeared from the east After a short but intense artillery bombardment the German garrison was overrun with a joint charge The 36th Tank Brigade continued northwards without delay and 9 kilometers north of Topola encountered a German assault gun battalion marching in the opposite direction After a short but fierce clash with serious losses on both sides the 36th Tank Brigade overran the Germans on the move and proceeded to the north Before 12 October was over with the assistance of the 3rd and 4th Krajina Brigade NOVJ the 36th Tank Brigade also overran the garrison at Mladenovac the last important obstacle before Belgrade in a manner similar to the action at Topola 33 With Mladenovac cleared the way to Belgrade was wide open On the streets of Belgrade Edit The 4th Guards Mechanized Corps of the Red Army broke through the enemy resistance south of Belgrade on 14 October and approached the city The Yugoslavs advanced along the roads in the direction of Belgrade south of the Sava River while the Red Army engaged in fighting on the northern bank outskirts citation needed The assault on the city was delayed due to the diversion of forces for the elimination of thousands of German troops surrounded between Belgrade and Smederevo to the south east On 20 October Belgrade had been completely overrun by joint Soviet and Yugoslav forces The Yugoslav 13th Corps in cooperation with the Bulgarian 2nd Army 34 advanced from the south east They were responsible for the area of Nis and Leskovac They were also responsible for cutting off the main evacuation route of Army Group E along the South Morava and Morava Rivers Army Group E was forced to retreat through the mountains of Montenegro and Bosnia and was unable to re enforce German units in Hungary The Soviet 10th Guards Rifle Corps of the 46th Army 2nd Ukrainian Front together with units of the Yugoslav Partisans moving via the Danube provided more offensive strength from the north east against the Wehrmacht s position in Belgrade They cleared the left bank of the Tisa and Danube in Yugoslavia and took the town of Pancevo Allied forces EditParticipating in the assault on the capital of Yugoslavia were 35 Soviet Union Edit The Liberation of Belgrade Medal was awarded to c 70 000 Soviet and allied service personnel who took part in the battle of Belgrade Boris Tadic and Dmitry Medvedev during celebrations for 65th anniversary 3rd Ukrainian Front Marshal of the Soviet Union Fyodor Tolbukhin 4th Guards Mechanised Corps General Lieutenant Vladimir Zhdanov 13th Guards Mechanised Brigade Lieutenant Colonel Gennady Obaturov 14th Guards Mechanised Brigade Colonel Nikodim Alekseyevich Nikitin 15th Guards Mechanised Brigade Lieutenant Colonel Mikhail Alekseyevich Andrianov 36th Guards Tank Brigade Colonel Pyotr Semyonovich Zhukov 292nd Guards Self propelled Artillery Regiment Lieutenant Colonel Semyon Kondratevich Shakhmetov 352nd Guards Heavy Self propelled Artillery Regiment Colonel Ivan Markovich Tiberkov 5th Guards Motor Rifle Brigade Colonel Nikolai Ivanovich Zavyalov 23rd Howitzer Artillery Brigade Colonel Savva Kirillovich Karpenko of the 9th Breakthrough Artillery Division Major General of Artillery Andrey Ivanovich Ratov 42nd Anti tank destroyer artillery Brigade Colonel Konstantin Alekseyevich Leonov 22nd Anti aircraft Artillery Division Colonel Igor Danshin 57th Army Colonel General Nikolai Gagen 75th Rifle Corps Major General Andrian Zakharovich Akimenko 223rd Rifle Division Colonel Akhnav Gaynutdinovich Sagitov 236th Rifle Division Colonel Pyotr Ivanovich Kulizhskiy 68th Rifle Corps Major General Nikolai Nikolayevich Shkodunovich 73rd Guards Rifle Division Major General Semyon Kozak Danube Military Flotilla Brigade of Armoured Boats Captain Second Rank Pavel Ivanovich Derzhavin 1st Guards Armoured Boats Division Lieutenant Commander Sergey Ignatevich Barbotko 4th Guards Armoured Boats Division Senior Lieutenant Kuzma Iosifovich Butvin Coastal escort force Major Klementiy Timofeevich Zidr 17th Air Army Vladimir Sudets 10th Assault Air Corps lieutenant general of aviation Oleg Viktorovich Tolstyakov 295th Fighter Air Division Colonel Anatoly Alexandrovich Silvestrov 306th Assault Air Division Colonel Alexander Viktorovich Ivanov 136th Assault Air Division part Colonel Nikolai Pavlovich Terekhov 10th Guards Assault Air Division Major General of Aviation Andrey Nikiforovich Vitruk 236th Fighter Air Division Colonel Vasiliy Yakovlevich Kudryashov 288th Fighter Air Division part Colonel Boris Alexandrovich Smirnov Yugoslavia Edit 1st Army Corps General Lieutenant Colonel Peko Dapcevic 1st Proletarian Division Colonel Vaso Jovanovic 6th Proletarian Division Colonel Đoko Jovanic 5th Assault Division Colonel Milutin Moraca 21st Assault Division Colonel Miloje Milojevic 12th Army Corps General Lieutenant Danilo Lekic 11th Krajina Division 16th Vojvodina Division 28th Slavonian Division 36th Vojvodina DivisionBulgaria Edit Bulgarian troops entering Leskovac First Army Bulgaria Vladimir Stoychev Second Army Bulgaria Kiril Stanchev Fourth Army Bulgaria Asen Sirakov By the end of the September the First Army together with the Bulgarian Second and Fourth Armies was in full scale combat against the German Army along the Bulgaria Yugoslavia border with Yugoslavian guerrillas on their left flank and a Soviet force on their right They consisted of around 340 000 men By December 1944 the First Army numbered 100 000 men The First Army took part in the Bulgarian Army s advance northwards into the Balkan Peninsula with logistical support and under the command of the Red Army The First Army advanced into Serbia Hungary and Austria in the spring of 1945 despite heavy casualties and bad conditions in the winter During 1944 45 the Bulgarian First Army was commanded by Lieutenant General Vladimir Stoychev Aftermath EditUpon completion of the Belgrade operation by the 57th Army with the Yugoslav 51st division in November the bridgehead in Baranja on the left bank of Danube was taken causing an acute crisis for the German defense The bridgehead served as a platform for the massive concentration of the 3rd Ukrainian Front troops for the Budapest offensive The Red Army 68th Rifle Corps participated in the battles on the Kraljevo bridgehead and the Syrmian Front until mid December and were then transferred to Baranja The Red Army Air Force Group Vitruk provided air support on the Yugoslav Front until the end of December The Yugoslav 1st Army Corps continued to push German forces westwards for some 100 km through Srem where the Germans managed to stabilize a front in mid December Having lost Belgrade and the Great Morava Valley German Army Group E was forced to fight for a passage through the mountains of Sandzak and Bosnia and its first echelons did not reach Drava until mid February 1945 Commemoration of the battle Edit The Serbian Guards Unit during the final dress rehearsals of the Belgrade Military Parade A Medal For the Liberation of Belgrade was established by a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet on 19 June 1945 The Yugoslav People s Army held its second military parade on Revolution Boulevard now Bulevar kralja Aleksandra in honor of the one year anniversary of the end of the offensive 36 Since then the country there has only been two military parades and high level celebrations in honor of the occasion in the SFR Yugoslavia and the Republic of Serbia with the first one the March of the Victor being held on Nikola Tesla Boulevard with Russian President Vladimir Putin as the guest of honour 37 Every jubilee anniversary is met with a significant Russian presence often coming in the form of a state visit by the President of Russia or another high ranking official to Belgrade Beginning with Dmitry Medvedev in 2009 and continued with Vladimir Putin as aforementioned the laying of wreaths of the President of Serbia and the leader of Russia takes place at the Liberators of Belgrade Memorial which contains the remains of over 3 500 Yugoslav Partisans and Red Army soldiers who died during the offensive In 2019 Medvedev represented Russia at the 75th anniversary celebrations in his position as Prime Minister instead of President Putin 38 39 40 See also EditWorld War II in Yugoslavia Seven anti Partisan offensives Lothar Rendulic Resistance during World War II Nis operation Kosovo Operation 1944 References Edit Tomasevich Jozo 2001 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Occupation and Collaboration 2 San Francisco Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 3615 4 pp 222 228 a b Krivosheyev 1997 Glantz 1995 p 299 Ivo Antonov nachalnik na otdel Voenni pametnici i voenno patriotichno vzpitanie pri MO V k Trud 05 11 2016 g Biryuzov amp Hamovic 1964 p 260 p 1116 Dupuy Belgrade itself was taken on 20 October Ivan Lakovic Dmitar Tasic The Tito Stalin Split and Yugoslavia s Military Opening toward the West 1950 1954 In NATO s Backyard The Harvard Cold War Studies Book Series Authors Lexington Books 2016 ISBN 1498539343 p 203 p 615 Wilmot the Red Army entered Belgrade at the same time as Tito s partisans p 152 Seaton The Russians had no interest in the German occupation forces in Greece and appear to have had very little interest in those retiring northwards through Yugoslavia Stalin was content to leave to Tito and the Bulgarians the clearing of Yugoslav territory from the enemy Library of Congress Country Studies citing information from Documents on German Foreign Policy 1919 1945 Arlington Virginia 1976 Soviet troops crossed the border on October 1 and a joint Partisan Soviet force liberated Belgrade on October 20 Biryuzov amp Hamovic 1964 p 83 Biryuzov amp Hamovic 1964 p 270 Tomasevich 2002 p 168 Biryuzov amp Hamovic 1964 pp 103 104 Biryuzov amp Hamovic 1964 pp 103 124 a b The Oxford companion to World War II Ian Dear Michael Richard Daniell Foot Oxford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 19 860446 7 p 134 Biryuzov amp Hamovic 1964 p 124 Basil Davidson PARTISAN PICTURE Schmider 2002 p 587 Maclean 2002 pp 437 438 Maclean 2002 pp 470 497 Report of the High Commander of the Army Group F to the High Command of Wehrmacht Chief of Staff dated 20 September 1944 National Archive Washington Record Group 242 T311 Roll 191 frames 637 642 Axis Forces in Yugoslavia 1941 45 Nigel Thomas K Mikulan Darko Pavlovic Osprey Publishing 1995 ISBN 1 85532 473 3 p 33 World War II The Mediterranean 1940 1945 World War II Essential Histories Paul Collier Robert O Neill The Rosen Publishing Group 2010 ISBN 1 4358 9132 5 p 77 this Army included the Bulgarian Armored Brigade previously equipped and trained by the Wehrmacht Biryuzov amp Hamovic 1964 p 103 Biryuzov amp Hamovic 1964 p 104 Biryuzov amp Hamovic 1964 p 160 Biryuzov amp Hamovic 1964 pp 168 169 Biryuzov amp Hamovic 1964 p 200 Biryuzov amp Hamovic 1964 p 196 pp 215 56 Mitrovski p 666 Glantz Biryuzov amp Hamovic 1964 p 199 Biryuzov amp Hamovic 1964 pp 203 204 The composition of the 2nd Army was Bulgarian Armored Brigade 8th Infantry Division 4th Infantry Division 6th Infantry Division 12th Infantry Division parts of the 24th and 26th Infantry Divisions and the 1st Assault Gun Detachment pp 166 208 Grechko http www soldat ru spravka freedom 12 yugoslavia html Dudarenko M L Perechnev Yu G Yeliseev V T et el Reference guide Liberation of cities reference for liberation of cities during the period of the Great Patriotic War 1941 1945 Moscow 1985 Dudarenko M L Perechnev Yu G Eliseev V T i dr sost Spravochnik Osvobozhdenie gorodov Spravochnik po osvobozhdeniyu gorodov v period Velikoj Otechestvennoj vojny 1941 1945 Radulovic Mladen 10 October 2014 Force of the Yugoslav National Army Belgrade Thundered in the Last Military Parade in 1985 Video kurir rs in Bosnian Retrieved 19 October 2019 Putin guest of honour at Serbia military parade BBC News 16 October 2014 Russia Serbia Vow to Boost Ties Despite Belgrade s EU Bid The New York Times Associated Press 19 October 2019 Archived from the original on 21 October 2019 Russia Serbia vow to boost ties despite Belgrade s EU bid The Washington Post Associated Press 19 October 2019 Archived from the original on 20 October 2019 Russia s Medvedev Attends Military Parade in Belgrade www rferl org 19 October 2019 Sources EditBiryuzov Sergeĭ Semenovich Hamovic Rade 1964 BEOGRADSKA OPERACIJA Beograd Vojni istoriski institut Jugoslovenske narodne armije Dudarenko M L Perechnev Yu G Yeliseev V T et el Reference guide Liberation of cities reference for liberation of cities during the period of the Great Patriotic War 1941 1945 Moscow 1985 Glantz David 1986 Art of War symposium From the Vistula to the Oder Soviet Offensive Operations October 1944 March 1945 A transcript of Proceedings Center for Land Warfare US Army War College 19 23 May 1986 Glantz David M amp House Jonathan 1995 When Titans Clashed How the Red Army Stopped Hitler Lawrence Kansas University Press of Kansas ISBN 0 7006 0899 0 Krivosheyev Grigoriy Fedotovich 1997 Soviet Casualties and Combat Losses in the Twentieth Century Greenhill Books ISBN 9781853672804 Maclean Fitzroy 2002 1949 Eastern Approaches Penguin Group ISBN 9780140132717 Seaton Albert The fall of Fortress Europe 1943 1945 B T Batsford Ltd London 1981 ISBN 0 7134 1968 7 Schmider Klaus 2002 PARTISANENKRIEG IN JUGOSLAWIEN 1941 1944 Hamburg Berlin Bonn Verlag E S Mittler amp Sohn GmbH ISBN 3 8132 0794 3 Tomasevich Jozo 2002 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 0857 6 Dupuy Ernest R and Dupuy Trevor N The encyclopedia of Military History from 3500 B C to the present revised edition Jane s Publishing Company London 1980 Mitrovski Boro Venceslav Glisic and Tomo Ristovski The Bulgarian Army in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Belgrade Medunarodna Politika 1971 Wilmot Chester The Struggle for Europe Collins 1952 Grechko A A ed Liberation Mission of the Soviet Armed Forces in the Second World War Progress Publishers Moscow 1975Further reading Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Belgrade Offensive 1944 Majstorovic Vojin 2016 The Red Army in Yugoslavia 1944 1945 Slavic Review 75 2 396 421 doi 10 5612 slavicreview 75 2 396 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Belgrade offensive amp oldid 1117420946, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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