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Operation Spring Awakening

Operation Spring Awakening
Part of the Eastern Front of World War II

German advances during the operation
Date6–15 March 1945
Location46°59′N 18°21′E / 46.983°N 18.350°E / 46.983; 18.350
Result Allied victory
Belligerents
 Germany
Hungary
 Soviet Union
 Bulgaria
Yugoslav Partisans
Commanders and leaders

Otto Wöhler

Max von Weichs

Fyodor Tolbukhin

Rodion Malinovsky

  • Sergei Goryunov
Units involved

Army Group South:

Army Group F:

3rd Ukrainian Front:

2nd Ukrainian Front:

Strength

5 March (for the offensive): [1][2][3]

  • 25 divisions
  • 260,000 men (max)
  • 650 tanks (376 operational)
  • 3,200 assault guns and mortars
  • 850 aircraft (entire Luftflotte 4 for entire Army Group South)

5 March:[1][4][5]

  • 37 divisions (discounting air armies and the Yugoslav 3rd Army)
  • 465,000 men
  • 407 tanks (398 operational)
  • 6,597 assault guns and mortars
  • 293 rocket launchers
  • 965 aircraft (17th Air Army only – 3rd Ukrainian Front)
Casualties and losses

German offensive (6–15 March 1945):
 Germany

: Unknown
Soviet counter-offensive (16 March–15 April 1945): ~210,000 combat casualties

  • 50,000 killed
  • 125,000 captured[8]
  • 1,345 tanks/assault guns lost[9][a]
  • 2,250 guns and mortars lost[9]
  • 446 armour personnel carriers[11]
  • 200+ aircraft

German offensive (6–15 March 1945):

  • 32,899
  • 8,492 killed or missing
  • 24,407 wounded & sick[12]
  • 152 tracked AFVs destroyed[6]
  • 415 anti-tank guns destroyed[6]

Soviet counter-offensive (16 March–15 April 1945):

  • 38,661 killed
  • 129,279 wounded & sick
  • 167,940 overall (including ~135,000 combat casualties)[13]

Bulgarian casualties:

  • 9,805 men[14]
  • 2,698 killed
  • 7,017 wounded & sick

Operation Spring Awakening (German: Unternehmen Frühlingserwachen) was the last major German offensive of World War II. The operation was referred to in Germany as the Plattensee offensive and in the Soviet Union as the Balaton defensive operation. It took place in Western Hungary on the Eastern Front and lasted from 6 March until 15 March, 1945. The objective was to secure the last significant oil reserves still available to the European Axis powers and prevent the Red Army from advancing towards Vienna. The Germans failed in their objectives.

The operation, initially planned for 5 March, began after German units were moved in great secrecy to the Lake Balaton (German: Plattensee) area. Many German units were involved, including the 6th Panzer Army and its subordinate Waffen-SS divisions after being withdrawn from the failed Ardennes offensive on the Western Front. The Germans attacked in three prongs: Frühlingserwachen in the Balaton-Lake Velence-Danube area, Eisbrecher south of Lake Balaton, and Waldteufel south of the Drava-Danube triangle. The advance stalled on 15 March, and on 16 March the Red Army and allied units began their delayed Vienna offensive.

Background Edit

On 12 January Hitler received confirmation that the Soviet Red Army had begun a massive winter offensive through Poland named the Vistula–Oder offensive.[15] Hitler ordered OB West Field Marshal Gerd Von Rundstedt to withdraw the following units from active combat in the Battle of the Bulge: I SS Panzer Corps with 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte and 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend, along with II SS Panzer Corps with 2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich and 9th SS Panzer Division Hohenstaufen.[15] These units were to be refitted by 30 January and attached to the 6th Panzer Army under the command of Sepp Dietrich for the upcoming Operation Spring Awakening. Hitler wanted to secure the extremely vital Nagykanizsa oil fields of southern Hungary, as this was the most strategically valuable asset remaining on the Eastern Front.[16] The deadline of 30 January proved impossible for refitting to be completed.

As Operation Spring Awakening would be of great importance, lengthy preparation and strategic care was taken so as to not reveal the offensive. But while the 6th Panzer Army was refitting in Germany, Hitler ordered a preliminary offensive with a similar object to be conducted,[17] resulting in Operation Konrad III beginning 18 January. The objectives of Konrad III included relieving besieged Budapest and the recapturing of the Transdanubia region. By 21 January, only 5 days into Operation Konrad III, the Germans had taken the towns of Dunapentele and Adony which are on the Western shore of the Danube.[18] Their push resulted in the annihilation of the Soviet 7th Mechanized Corps. This sudden and savage push caused the Soviet command to actually contemplate an evacuation to the opposite shore.[18] Before the end of the 4th day, the Germans had recaptured 400 square kilometers of territory, an achievement comparable to the initial German gains during the Ardennes offensive and the Western Front in December 1944.[19] At the height of Operation Konrad III, February 26, the Axis front lines had reached within 20 km of Budapest's Southern perimeter, and within about 10 km the Northern perimeter, but their forces were exhausted.[17]

From 27 January through 15 February, the Soviets conducted numerous successful counter-attacks, forcing the Germans to give up the greater portion of their territorial gains, pushing the front line back to the area between Lake Velence, the village of Csősz, and Lake Balaton.[20] This area had the Margit Line running right through it, and would see more fighting in the upcoming Operation Spring Awakening.

 
Margit Line in Western Hungary (1944-45)[21]

By mid-February, the Soviet bridgehead across the Garam River (Hron) north of Esztergom was identified as a threat. This bridgehead would jeopardize the upcoming Spring Awakening's South-Eastern push past Lake Balaton to secure the southern Hungarian oilfields while also exposing a straight route towards Vienna. Thus beginning on 17 February, Operation Southwind began the effort to secure the Garam bridgehead from the 2nd Ukrainian Front, and by 24 February the task was successfully achieved, proving to be the very last successful German offensive of the war.

German plan Edit

Creation of Operation Spring Awakening Edit

 
German units during the operation, March 1945

During a Situation Conference on 7 January, 1945 at which both Hermann Göring and OB West Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt were present, Hitler proposed his intention of pulling the 6th SS Panzer Army to form a reserve due to severe Allied air attacks.[22] Von Rundstedt received the withdrawal orders on January 8, and the Panzer Army's divisions began preparations to withdraw from the Front.[23] The slow withdrawal was greatly hampered by Allied air superiority.[24]

On 12 January, the Soviet 1st Ukrainian and 1st Belorussian Fronts began their Vistula–Oder offensive with over 2 million men[25][circular reference] placing considerable new pressure on the Eastern Front. When this news reached Hitler, he immediately began to plan a major offensive on this Front. Meanwhile, during 14 January on the Western Front, the 2nd and 9th SS Panzer divisions had to be recommitted back from reserves due to successful Allied fighting.[23] On 20 January, Hitler ordered Von Rundstedt to withdraw forces from the ongoing Battle of the Bulge; the 1st SS, 2nd SS and 12th SS Divisions managed to disengage and withdraw the same day.[26] Almost all support units of the 6th SS Panzer Army were pulled from the Ardennes by 22 January, while the 9th SS Panzer Division was the last to leave on 23 January.[26]

On this same day, 22 January, Hitler decided that the 6th SS Panzer Army should not be sent back to the Western Front, but rather to Hungary, a view Heinz Guderian (OKH) partially agreed with; Guderian wanted the 6th SS Panzer Army on the Eastern Front, but mainly to protect Berlin.[24] A glimpse of the ensuing verbal exchange during this argument was captured in Alfred Jodl's (OKW) post-war interrogation where he quotes Hitler saying: "You want to attack without oil – good, we'll see what happens when you attempt that".[27]

However, the main reason for sending the 6th SS Panzer Army south into Hungary can be understood through the list of main strategic points listed in a Situation in the East conference held on January 23: 1) The Hungarian oil region and Vienna oil region which made up 80% of reserves, without which the war effort could not be continued; 2) the Danzig estuary vital for U-boat operations and Upper Silesian industrial region for the war economy and coal production.[24] Two quotes illustrate how seriously Hitler viewed this ruling: “Hitler considered the protection of Vienna and Austria as of vital importance and that he would rather see Berlin fall than lose the Hungarian oil area and Austria”,[28] "He [Hitler] accepted the risk of the Russian threat to the Oder east of Berlin".[24]

On 27 January, Guderian was tasked by Hitler to stop the 3rd Ukrainian Front in the vicinity on the Margit Line in order to protect the vital oil fields.[29] The following day, 28 January, this operation received its preliminary name, Operation Süd (G: South).[29] The main objectives of the operation were as follows: 1) the security of vital raw materials such as oil, bauxite, and manganese for iron, 2) arable land for food and crops, the Austrian military industrial complex, and the city of Vienna, 3) to stop the Soviet Advance.[29] Interestingly, an additional side-objective was the hope that serious pressure on the Southern Soviet Fronts in Hungary would force the Soviet Command to divert some forces from its northern offensives headed to Berlin towards Hungary.[29][24]

Operation Süd was scheduled to start after a path to Budapest had been established.[29] The operation would be considered a success if 1) Operation Konrad III could pin the Soviets between the Vértes mountains and the Danube, 2) the 8th Army could secure its Front in Northern Hungary, 3) if the incoming panzer armies could be refitted during transit to create the advantage of surprise.[29]

Four plans for Operation Süd were produced by high-ranking officials from Army Group South, the 6th SS Panzer Army, and the 6th Army: “Lösung A” by Fritz Krämer of the 6th SS Panzer Army; “Lösung B” and “Lösung C2” by Helmuth Von Grolman of Army Group South; and “Lösung C1” by Heinrich Gaedcke of the 6th Army. There was much fighting and bickering as to which plan should be implemented.[30] The commander of Army Group South, Otto Wöhler, chose “Lösung B”.[30]

The four plans were sent to Guderian on 22 February for review, and Army Group South informed Army Group F commander Maximilian von Weichs on 23 February that the operation would commence on 5 March, in anticipation that Operation Südwind (G: South Wind) would have finished successfully by 24 February.[31] If Operation Südwind was successful, Operation Süd's start could be deferred by 8–9 days.[32] On 25 February, Hitler ordered Otto Wöhler, Maximilian von Weichs, and Sepp Dietrich to personally present the plans for Operation Süd to him, along with Guderian (OKH) and Alfred Jodl (OKW),[33] at the Reich Chancellery in Berlin, where he ultimately chose “Lösung C2”.[32] Guderian then ordered Otto Wöhler to increase the daily fuel allowance from 400 to 500 cubic meters (400k to 500k liters) of fuel on February 26,[34] and by February 28 the specifics of the operation, now officially named “Operation Frühlingserwachen” (G:Spring Awakening), were completed.[32] As per “Lösung C2”, 3 offensive prongs were planned, with the main attack of the 6th Army and 6th SS Panzer Army “Frühlingserwachen” being directed towards the Danube through Lakes Velence and Balaton; the 2nd Panzer Army’s “Eisbrecher” (G: Icebreaker) attacking eastward from the western end of Lake Balaton; and the LXXXXI Corps “Waldteufel” (G: Forest Devil) attacking north from the Drava River.[35]

Overarching German military structure Edit

OKW (Oberkommando der Wehrmacht) was the overarching military command for the German army in WW2, while the OKH (Oberkommando des Heeres) was officially a high command operating under OKW. Adolf Hitler was the Commander-in-chief of OKH, while also being the supreme commander of OKW.[36] Finding itself issuing more and more direct orders, OKW eventually became responsible for Western and Southern commands, while OKH was responsible for Eastern commands.[36] This operational overlap caused by the centralized command led to disagreements, shortages, waste, inefficiencies, and delays, often escalating to the point where Hitler himself would have to give the final ruling on a matter.[36]

For Operation Spring Awakening, the area for the new offensive was set on the borderline between OKW (Army Group F) and OKH (Army Group South), and this would cause troubles.[36] Army Group E wanted to assemble its troops north of the Drava River by February 25, but Army Group South was not prepared to start the offensive this early due to the ongoing Operation Southwind; subsequently, the OKW and Hitler grew more impatient.[37] The chosen course of action on 25 February, "Lösung C2", favored the quicker and farther-reaching joint operation of the 2nd Panzer Army and 6th SS Panzer Army, while "Lösung B" opted to first secure the left flank of the main thrust "Frühlingserwachen" (between Lake Velence and the Danube) before moving south toward the 2nd Panzer army. Guderian was in favor of "Lösung C2" because this plan would shorten the time the 6th SS Panzer Division would need to stay in Hungary. The OKW and OKH did not use common terminology for parts of the offensive, as OKH referred to the entire offensive as Frühlingserwachen, while the OKW referred to the operation attacking north of the Drava as "Waldteufel".[33]

Army Group South and the OKH could not agree on how to best utilize the 1st Cavalry Corps. OKH wanted to send the Corps south-west to the 2nd Panzer army, a move Army Group South Commander Otto Wöhler saw of little use since the 2nd Panzer army would have a lower chance of success compared to the main attacking thrust of “Frühlingserwachen”. Wöhler wanted to use the 1st Cavalry Corps on the eastern shore of Lake Balaton, as German intelligence reported that "the enemy is still the weakest between Lake Balaton and the Sárviz Channel".[38]

To further complicate matters, due to the limited number of newly trained personnel this late in the war, units under Waffen-SS command were often kept at acceptable capacity levels using Wehrmacht personnel. For instance, only 1/3 of the 6th SS Panzer Army's staff were actually from the Waffen-SS.[39]

Arrival into the Hungarian theater Edit

When withdrawing from the Western Front, elements of the III. Flak-Korps were tasked with protecting the 6th SS Panzer Army while en route to Zossen south of Berlin.[26] From here the units' possible de-training locations would seem to be the cities along the Oder River, however this was a calculated misinformation measure to confuse enemy forces who actually attacked these cities.[40] The real plan for the units of 6th SS Panzer Army was to travel south through Vienna to their first Hungarian destination, the city of Győr and its surrounding area.[40] Other units from other armies were also sent to the Hungarian theater, for example the 16th SS Panzer Grenadier Division Reichsführer-SS who was brought up from Italy through the Brenner straight and sent to the 2nd Panzer Army.[41] Some units necessary for the major offensive did not arrive in Hungary until just a few days before its start, the last being the 9th SS Panzer Division Hohenstaufen arriving in Győr at the beginning of March.[38] Many of the incoming units also received cover names to help further mask the build-up of forces from the enemy.

Cover Names[42]
Unit Official name Cover name
6th SS Panzer Army HQ HQ Higher Pioneer Leader Hungary
1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler SS replacement unit "Totenkopf"
2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich SS training group North
9th SS Panzer Division Hohenstaufen SS training group South
12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend SS replacement unit "Wiking"
16th SS Panzer Gren. Division Reichsführer-SS 13th SS Division replacement group

By 7 February, on orders of Hitler, strict secrecy rulings were put into place: death penalty for command infractions, license plates were to be covered, insignia on vehicles and uniforms to be covered, no reconnaissance in forward combat areas, unit movements only by night or overcast conditions, no radio traffic, and the units were not to appear on situation maps.[43]

Prior to these measures, on 30 January, 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte was ordered to follow many of the same secrecy measures, including the temporary removal of their cuff titles.[44]

Objectives of the German forces Edit

As per the selected "Lösung C2", the Germans planned to attack Soviet General Fyodor Tolbukhin's 3rd Ukrainian Front.[45] On 27 February, Army Group South hosted a Chiefs-of-Staff conference to which the Chiefs-of-staff of the 2nd Panzer Army, 6th SS Panzer Army, 6th Army, 8th Army, and Luftflotte 4 attended; here the plans for Operation Spring Awakening were laid out.[38] The offensive would consist of four forces, three were to be attack forces while one was to be a defense force.[38] Below are the units under their respective command as discussed on 27 February.

“Frühlingserwachen” Attack Force[46]
Army Group Commander Army Commander Corps Commander Divisions
Army Group South Otto Wöhler 6th SS Panzer Army Sepp Dietrich I SS Panzer Corps Hermann Priess 1st, 12th SS Panzer Divisions
II SS Panzer Corps Wilhelm Bittrich 2nd 9th SS Panzer Divisions, 23rd Panzer Division, 44th Volksgrenadier Division
1st Cavalry Corps 3rd, 4th Cavalry Divisions
6th Army Hermann Balck III Panzer Corps Hermann Breith 1st, 3rd Panzer Divisions, 356th Infantry Division, 25th Hungarian Infantry Division
“Eisbrecher” Attack Force[46]
Army Group Commander Army Commander Corps Commander Divisions
Army Group South Otto Wöhler 2nd Panzer Army Maximilian de Angelis LXVIII Corps Rudolf Konrad 16th SS Panzergrenadier Division, 71st Infantry Division
XXII Mountain Corps Hubert Lanz 1st Volksgrenadier Division, 118th Jäger Division (elements)
“Waldteufel” Attack Force[46]
Army Group Commander Army Commander Corps Commander Divisions
Army Group F Maximilian von Weichs Army Group E Alexander Löhr LXXXXI Corps Werner von Erdmannsdorff 297th Infantry Division, 104th Jäger Division, 11th Luftwaffe Field Division, 1st Cossack Division,
Defense Force[46]
Army Group Commander Army Commander Corps Commander Divisions
Army Group South Otto Wöhler 6th Army Hermann Balck IV SS Panzer Corps Herbert Gille 3rd, 5th SS Panzer Divisions, 96th, 711st Infantry Divisions
Third Hungarian Army József Heszlényi VIII Corps (Hun.) Dr Gyula Hankovszky 2nd Hungarian Armoured Division, 1st Hussar Division, 6th Panzer Division, 37th SS Cavalry Division
2nd Panzer Army Maximilian de Angelis II Corps (Hun.) Istvan Kudriczy 20th Hungarian Infantry Division (2-3 Battalions)

On 28 February, the start date for Operation Spring Awakening was finally moved back to 6 March, though many commanders felt that a greater delay was necessary.[47] During the first days of March, alarming reports about road and terrain conditions due to the spring thaw flooded Army Group South Headquarters. Such thaws had previously badly affected 3 other operations in the area: planned Operation Spätlese in December, Operation Southwind, and the “Waldteufel” attack forcing a change of location for the attack bridgehead from Osijek to Donji Miholjac.[48] Despite the start of the operation being so close, some additional plans were thought up to help the sluggish assembly speeds of incoming units. On 3 March, the 6th SS Panzer Army suggested that a naval assault across Lake Balaton itself could be implemented to help the 1st Cavalry Corps on the southeastern edge, but this turned out to be impossible as the spring storms had blown the pack ice against the southern shore.[49] On 5 March, the 6th SS Panzer Army took over command of the Hungarian II Corps, along with its 20th Hungarian Division and 9th replacement Division, hereby becoming responsible for the northern shore of Lake Balaton.[50]

The 6th Panzer Army was responsible for the primary thrust of the offensive, “Frühlingserwachen”. It was to advance from an area north of Lake Balaton, through the two lakes (Balaton and Velence), and southeast to capture territory from the Sió Channel to the Danube. After reaching the Danube, one part of the army would turn north creating a northern spearhead and move along the Danube River to retake Budapest, which had been captured on 13 February 1945. Another part of 6th SS Panzer Army would then turn south and create a southern spearhead. The southern spearhead would move along the Sió to link up with units from German Army Group E, which was to thrust north through Mohács. However, the commanding staff of Army Group E was pessimistic about the LXXXXI Corps' ability to reach Mohács due to the unfavorable terrain and sole dependence on infantry.[51] Nonetheless, if successful, it was envisioned that the meeting of Army Group E's “Waldteufel” and the 6th SS Panzer Army's “Frühlingserwachen” would encircle both the Soviet 26th Army and the Soviet 57th Army.[45]

The 6th Army would join the 6th SS Panzer Army in its thrust southeast to the Danube, then turn north to cover the flank of “Frühlingserwachen”. The 2nd Panzer Army's “Eisbrecher” would advance from an area southwest of Lake Balaton and progress towards Kaposvár to engage the Soviet 57th Army. All this time, the Hungarian Third Army would hold the area west of Budapest along the Vértes Mountains.[45]

Soviet preparation Edit

Interrupted Soviet offensive preparations Edit

On 17 February 1945, the Stavka of the Supreme High Command instructed the 2nd and 3rd Ukrainian Fronts to prepare for an offensive towards Vienna which would begin on March 15.[52] However, from 17 to 18 February, the 2nd Ukrainian Front noticed the 1st SS Panzer division Leibstandarte and the 12th SS Panzer division Hitlerjugend fighting at the Garam River (S:Hron) during the German Operation Southwind.[23] Knowing that German Panzer divisions were not created for defensive purposes, the Soviet Fronts in Hungary became suspicious of the enemy's intentions. Prisoners taken during Operation Southwind testified that the Germans were in fact preparing to gather a large offensive force.[23] By 20 February, the Soviet fronts in Hungary began to understand what the Germans planned to do.[52] The security of the lands West of the River Danube, particularly in the south which held the Hungarian oil fields, was the Germans' main priority at this stage of the war.

Soviet defensive preparations Edit

As the 2nd Ukrainian Front held the territory of Budapest and the lands north of the Hungarian capital, defensive preparations in this sector were not paid much attention due to the lower likelihood of attack, but this was not the same in the south. 3rd Ukrainian Front marshal Fyodor Tolbukhin ordered his armies to prepare for a German offensive on his entire Front, preparation of which would have to be completed no later then 3 March.[53] To ensure sufficient supply of war materials and fuel, stockpiles were set up on either side of the Danube, a ferry was put into use and additional temporary bridges and gas pipelines were built on the Danube River.[54][45]

Tolbukhin's plan was to initially slow down the German advance to rob their offensive of momentum, then begin grinding down the attacking armies, then initiate the planned Soviet offensive to finish off the remaining German forces.[53] This plan, along with the strategic deployment of the Soviet forces, was quite similar to that of the Battle of Kursk, although it utilized experiences learned in 1943.[55] The 3rd Ukrainian Front worked on digging in, creating extensive trench networks ideal for anti-tank defenses, along with defensive earthworks for the artillery and infantry.[55] The main differences between the Soviet defenses during the Battle of Kursk and the Balaton defensive operation (the Russian name for Operation Spring Awakening) was the relative short time frame allowed for defensive preparations (half a month), the smaller number of Soviet forces partaking in the defensive, and a reduced focus on perfecting the defensive lines as after all the 3rd Ukrainian Front would need to start its offensive from these lines.[55] Other minor differences included the lack or limited use of barbed wire installations, anti-tank obstacles, and bunkers,[55] although the 4th Guards Army command did suggest to place the burnt out wrecks of 38 previously destroyed German tanks into advantageous positions; it is unclear how many were actually set up.[23]

Tolbukhin's 3rd Ukrainian Front had 5 Armies plus 1 Air Army, in addition it also had the 1st Bulgarian Army[56] with the 3rd Yugoslav Partisan Army also partaking in the defense. The 3rd Ukrainian Front would be set up in a two echelon defensive layout, with the 4th Guards Army, 26th Army, and 57th Army, and the 1st Bulgarian Army in the first echelon, while the 27th Army would be held back in the second echelon for reserve.[56] The 4th Guards Army's three Guards Rifle Corps and one Guards Fortified District would be spread out over a 39 km front and reach 30 km deep, broken into two belts with one behind the other.[56] The 26th Army, which was expected to take the brunt of the German offensive, arranged its three Rifle Corps along a 44 km front but only 10–15 km deep.[57] The 26th Army's Corps' would be layered in two belts whose defensive preparations had originally begun back on 11 February,[57] prior to any sign of German offensive intentions. The 57th Army's one Guards Rifle and one Rifle Corps were spread along a 60 km front and 10–15 km deep; the Army would receive another Rifle Corps during the fighting.[58] The 27th Army's one Guards Rifle and two Rifle Corps would remain in reserve unless the situation in the 26th Army called for its use.[58] Held in reserve, the 3rd Ukrainian Front also had the 18th Tank Corps and 23rd Tanks Corps, along with the 1st Guards Mechanized Corps and the 5th Guards Cavalry Corps.[59] While these Armies were preparing for the imminent offensive, the 17th Air Army was busy flying reconnaissance missions, although they could not report on much due to excellent German camouflage.[60]

Because of the serious tank losses of January–February along the Margit line, Marshal Tolbukhin ordered that no Front/Army level counter-attacks were to take place, and local tactical attacks should be very limited; the only objective was to hold the Front and grind down the German offensive.[55] The two tanks Corps would remain under the 26th and 27th Armies to be utilized only in dire need.[55] The defensive strategy of the 3rd Ukrainian Front was one of anti-tank defense as this was what the Germans were going to use. On average for every kilometer of Front, 700+ anti-tank and 600+ anti-infantry mines were placed, with these numbers rising to 2,700 and 2,900 respectively in the 26th Army's sector.[61] Between the 4th Guards Army and 26th Guards Army, 66 anti-tank zones were created whose depth reached 30–35 km.[61] Each anti-tank position had 8-16 artillery guns and a similar number of anti-tank guns.[61] A prime example of the scale of defensive installments can be seen in the 26th Army's 135th Rifle Corps. Between 18 February and 3 March the 233rd Rifle Division had dug 27 kilometers of trenches, 130 gun and mortar positions, 113 dugouts, 70 command posts and observation points, and laid 4,249 antitank and 5,058 antipersonnel mines, all this on a frontage of 5 kilometers. Although there were no tanks in this defensive zone, there was an average of 17 anti-tank guns per kilometer forming 23 tank killing grounds.[17]

Overarching Soviet military structure Edit

The Soviet Forces, contrary to the Germans, did not have such odd structural complications as the Soviet Armies could make independent decisions while the Stavka could intervene when asked or if necessary;[62] a much more straight forward military structure with clear boundaries. This is an example of a de-centralized command. It was not uncommon for the Soviets to actually search out and exploit the boundaries between the OKW and OKH as they knew these areas would suffer from poorer military command;[62] the advance to Budapest is an example.[36]

Order of battle for 6 - 15 March, 1945 Edit

These are the main units that were a part of the Army Groups/Front which saw combat in Operation Spring Awakening.[23][63][64][65][66] Please note that the units below are subordinate to the commanding structure under which they spent the most time during the offensive. Units during the final months of the war were very prone to location reassignments as the front situation evolved. Reserve units are not included in the list.

German offensive Edit

 
German troops at the beginning of Operation Spring Awakening

The offensive units did not start in unison owing to complications, thus the units of the 6th SS Panzer Army began their attack at 04:00 while the 2nd SS Panzer Corps attacked at 18:30.[67] On the 6 March 1945, the German 6th Army, joined by the 6th SS Panzer Army launched a pincer movement north and south of Lake Balaton. Ten armoured (Panzer) and five infantry divisions, including a large number of new heavy Tiger II tanks, struck 3rd Ukrainian Front, hoping to reach the Danube and link up with the German 2nd Panzer Army forces attacking south of Lake Balaton.[68] The attack was spearheaded by the 6th SS Panzer Army and included elite units such as the LSSAH division. Dietrich's army made "good progress" at first, but as they drew near the Danube, the combination of the muddy terrain and strong Soviet resistance had ground the German advance to a halt.[69]

On 10 March, the Axis forces fighting under Operation Spring Awakening around Lake Balaton had a total of 230 operational tanks and 167 operational assault guns between their 17 divisions.[70] A single fully equipped late 1944 Panzer division would officially have held no fewer than 136 tanks, meaning that by 10 March the entire offensive immediately surrounding Lake Balaton had enough tanks for only 1.7 Panzer divisions as opposed to the 11 which were in action.

By the 14 March, Operation Spring Awakening was at risk of failure. The 6th SS Panzer Army was well short of its goals. The 2nd Panzer Army did not advance as far on the southern side of Lake Balaton as the 6th SS Panzer Army had on the northern side. Army Group E met fierce resistance from the Bulgarian First Army and Josip Broz Tito's Yugoslav Partisans, and failed to reach its objective of Mohács. German losses were heavy. Heeresgruppe Süd lost 15,117 casualties in the first eight days of the offensive.

On the 15 March, strength returns on this day show the Hohenstaufen Division with 35 Panther tanks, 20 Panzer IVs, 32 Jagdpanzers, 25 Sturmgeschützes and 220 other self-propelled weapons and armoured cars. 42% of these vehicles were damaged, under short or long-term repair. The Das Reich Division had 27 Panthers, 22 Panzer IVs, 28 Jagdpanzers and 26 Sturmgeschützes on hand (the number of those under repair is not available).[17]

Soviet counterattack – Vienna offensive Edit

 
Soviet counterattack

On 16 March, the Soviets forces counterattacked in strength. The Germans were driven back to the positions they had held before Operation Spring Awakening began.[71] The overwhelming numerical superiority of the Red Army made any defense impossible, but Hitler believed victory was attainable.[72]

On 22 March, the remnants of the 6th SS Panzer Army withdrew towards Vienna. By 30 March, the Soviet 3rd Ukrainian Front crossed from Hungary into Austria. By 4 April, the 6th SS Panzer Army was already in the Vienna area desperately setting up defensive lines against the anticipated Soviet Vienna offensive. Approaching and encircling the Austrian capital were the Soviet 4th and 6th Guards Tank, 9th Guards, and 46th Armies.[71]

The Soviet's Vienna Offensive ended with the fall of the city on 13 April. By 15 April, the remnants of the 6th SS Panzer Army were north of Vienna, facing the Soviet 9th Guards and 46th Armies. By 15 April, the depleted German 6th Army was north of Graz, facing the Soviet 26th and 27th Armies. The remnants of the German 2nd Panzer Army were south of Graz in the Maribor area, facing the Soviet 57th Army and the Bulgarian First Army. Between 25 April and 4 May, the 2nd Panzer Army was attacked near Nagykanizsa during the Nagykanizsa–Körmend offensive.

 
German casualties

Some Hungarian units survived the fall of Budapest and the destruction which followed when the Soviets counterattacked after Operation Spring Awakening. The Hungarian Szent László Infantry Division was still indicated to be attached to the German 2nd Panzer Army as late as 30 April. Between 16 and 25 March, the Hungarian Third Army had been destroyed about 40 kilometres (25 mi) west of Budapest by the Soviet 46th Army which was driving towards Bratislava and the Vienna area.

On 19 March, the Red Army recaptured the last territories lost during the 13‑day Axis offensive. Sepp Dietrich, commander of the Sixth SS Panzer Army tasked with defending the last sources of petroleum controlled by the Germans, joked that “6th Panzer Army is well named—we have just six tanks left.”[73]

Armband Order Edit

The failure of the operation resulted in the "armband order" that was issued to Sepp Dietrich by Adolf Hitler, who claimed that the troops, and more importantly, the Leibstandarte, "did not fight as the situation demanded."[74] As a mark of disgrace, the Waffen-SS units involved in the battle were ordered to remove their cuff titles. Dietrich did not relay the order to his troops.[69] The reason for not relaying this order was twofold; firstly the order had already been partially previously completed as cuff tiles were already removed from the uniforms as per a secrecy measure ordered on 30 January 1945,[44] secondly there was no need to further disgrace his men beyond the fatal loss they had just suffered.

Trophy Tanks Edit

 
Panther in Hungary – Spring 1945 – trophy number 77

After new territory had been captured, Soviet collection teams scoured the countryside and towns to document and photograph knocked out Axis vehicles and tanks. This was an effort to document not only the sudden buildup of Axis forces and to gain intelligence, but also an opportunity to assess the quality of their opponent's technology. Four main commissions were formed by the HQ of the artillery of the 3rd Ukrainian Front, the 17th Air Army, the 9th Guards Army, and the 18th Tank corps.[75] Hundreds of tanks and armored fighting vehicles were documented.

See also Edit

 
Soviet memorial today in Székesfehérvár

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Many were abandoned due to a lack of fuel. [10]

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b Frieser et al. 2007, p. 930.
  2. ^ Számvéber 2017, pp. 567–569.
  3. ^ Maksim & Kolomiets 2014.
  4. ^ Számvéber 2017, pp. 22, 574–575.
  5. ^ Great Patriotic War without Secracy 2010, p. 184.
  6. ^ a b c d Frieser et al. 2007, p. 941.
  7. ^ Frieser et al. 2007, p. 942.
  8. ^ Tucker-Jones, Anthony (2016). The Battle for Budapest. Pen & Sword Books Limited. ISBN 978-1473877320.
  9. ^ a b Frieser et al. 2007, p. 953.
  10. ^ Frieser et al. 2007, p. 952.
  11. ^ O. Baronov, Balaton Defense Operation, Moscow, 2001, P.82-106
  12. ^ G.F. Krivosheyev, 'Soviet Casualties and Combat Losses in the twentieth century', London, Greenhill Books, 1997, ISBN 1-85367-280-7, Page 110
  13. ^ G.F. Krivosheyev, 'Soviet Casualties and Combat Losses in the twentieth century', London, Greenhill Books, 1997, p. 156-7
  14. ^ G.F. Krivosheyev, 'Soviet Casualties and Combat Losses in the twentieth century', London, Greenhill Books, 1997, p.156-7
  15. ^ a b "Hitler's Last Offensive: Operation Spring Awakening". Warfare History Network. 2016-10-31. Retrieved 2020-05-05.
  16. ^ Duffy, Christopher (July 2002). Red Storm on the Reich: The Soviet March on Germany, 1945. Edison, NJ: Castle Books. ISBN 0-7858-1624-0.
  17. ^ a b c d . Archived from the original on 2017-04-14.
  18. ^ a b Számvéber, Norbert (2013). Kard a Pajzs Mögött – A "Konrád" hadműveletek története,1945 2.bővített kiadás. Budapest: PeKo Publishing. pp. 221–222. ISBN 978-963-89623-7-9.
  19. ^ Frieser, Karl-Heinz (2007). The Eastern Front 1943–1944: The War in the East and on the Neighbouring Fronts. Germany and the Second World War. VIII. München. p. 913. ISBN 978-3-421-06235-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  20. ^ Számvéber, Norbert (2013). Kard a Pajzs Mögött – A "Konrád" hadműveletek története, 1945 2.bővített kiadás. Budapest: PeKo Publishing. p. 456. ISBN 978-963-89623-7-9.
  21. ^ Juhász, Attila. "New achievements in WW II. military historical reconstruction with GIS". ResearchGate.
  22. ^ Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 112. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  23. ^ a b c d e f Aleksei Maksim; Isaev Kolomiets (2014). Tomb of the Panzerwaffe The Defeat of the 6th SS Panzer Army in Hungary 1945. Moscow: Helion & Company. ISBN 978-1-909982-16-1.
  24. ^ a b c d e Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 113. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  25. ^ "Vistula–Oder Offensive". Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  26. ^ a b c Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 115. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  27. ^ Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 120. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  28. ^ Warlimont, Walter (1990). Inside Hitler's Headquarters. p. 499.
  29. ^ a b c d e f Számvéber 2017, p. 13.
  30. ^ a b Számvéber 2017, pp. 15–17.
  31. ^ Számvéber 2017, p. 17.
  32. ^ a b c Számvéber 2017, p. 18.
  33. ^ a b Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 152. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  34. ^ Számvéber 2017, p. 20.
  35. ^ Számvéber 2017, pp. 19–20.
  36. ^ a b c d e Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 4. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  37. ^ Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 148. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  38. ^ a b c d Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 155. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  39. ^ Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 9. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  40. ^ a b Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 116. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  41. ^ Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 124. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  42. ^ Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 125. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  43. ^ Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. p. 419. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  44. ^ a b Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 425. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  45. ^ a b c d Higgins, David R. (2014). Jagdpanther vs SU-100. Eastern Front 1945. Osprey Publishing.
  46. ^ a b c d Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. pp. 156–157. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  47. ^ Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 161. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  48. ^ Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 164. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  49. ^ Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 169. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  50. ^ Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 172. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  51. ^ Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 166. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  52. ^ a b Számvéber 2017, p. 21.
  53. ^ a b Számvéber 2017, pp. 21–22.
  54. ^ Frieser, Karl-Heinz (2017). Germany and the Second World War – The Eastern Front 1943-1944: The War in the East and on the Neighbouring Fronts. Volume VIII. Great Britain: Oxford University Press. p. 930. ISBN 9780198723462.
  55. ^ a b c d e f Számvéber 2017, p. 26.
  56. ^ a b c Számvéber 2017, p. 22.
  57. ^ a b Számvéber 2017, p. 23.
  58. ^ a b Számvéber 2017, p. 24.
  59. ^ Számvéber 2017, p. 25.
  60. ^ Számvéber 2017, p. 30.
  61. ^ a b c Számvéber 2017, p. 27.
  62. ^ a b Maier, Georg (2004). Drama Between Budapest and Vienna. Canada: J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. p. 5. ISBN 0-921991-78-9.
  63. ^ Horváth, Gábor (2013). Bostonok a Magyar Égen és Földben (1944-1945). Szolnok: Self-Published.
  64. ^ "Lexicon der Wehrmacht".
  65. ^ "TsAMO – pamyat-naroda (memory of the people)".
  66. ^ Számvéber 2017, p. [page needed].
  67. ^ Norbert, Norbert (2017). Páncélosok a Dunántúlon – Az utolsó páncélosütközetek Magyarországon 1945 tavaszán. Hungary: PeKo Publishing. p. 57. ISBN 978-963-454-083-0.
  68. ^ Glantz & House 1995, p. 253.
  69. ^ a b Stein 1984, p. 238.
  70. ^ Nevenkin, Kamen (2020). Bloody Vienna: The Soviet Offensive Operations in Western Hungary and Austria, March – May 1945. Keszthely, Hungary: PeKo Publishing Kft. pp. 10–12. ISBN 978-615-5583-26-1.
  71. ^ a b Dollinger 1967, p. 182.
  72. ^ Ziemke 1968, p. 450.
  73. ^ "Germans Trapped in Hungarian Capital". 4 January 2014.
  74. ^ Dollinger 1967, p. 198.
  75. ^ Lee Archer, Kamen Nevenkin (2016). Panzerwrecks 20: Ostfront 3. Sussex: Panzerwrecks publishing. pp. 4–5. ISBN 978-1-908032-14-0.

Bibliography Edit

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  • Dollinger, Hans (1967) [1965]. The Decline and Fall of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan. New York: Bonanza. ISBN 978-0-517-01313-7.
  • Duffy, Christopher (2002). Red Storm on the Reich: The Soviet March on Germany, 1945. Edison, NJ: Castle Books. ISBN 0-7858-1624-0.
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  • Fritz, Stephen (2011). Ostkrieg: Hitler's War of Extermination in the East. Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0-81313-416-1.
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  • Számvéber, Norbert (2017). Páncélosok a Dunantulon – Az Utolsó Páncélosütközetek Magyarországon 1945 Tavaszán. Budapest: PeKo Publishing. ISBN 978-963-454-083-0.
  • Ziemke, Earl F. (1968). Stalingrad to Berlin: The German Defeat in the East. Washington: Office of the Chief of Military History – U.S. Army. ASIN B002E5VBSE.

operation, spring, awakening, part, eastern, front, world, iigerman, advances, during, operationdate6, march, 1945locationlake, balaton, kingdom, hungary46, 350resultallied, victorybelligerents, germany, hungary, soviet, union, bulgaria, yugoslav, partisanscom. Operation Spring AwakeningPart of the Eastern Front of World War IIGerman advances during the operationDate6 15 March 1945LocationLake Balaton Kingdom of Hungary46 59 N 18 21 E 46 983 N 18 350 E 46 983 18 350ResultAllied victoryBelligerents Germany Hungary Soviet Union Bulgaria Yugoslav PartisansCommanders and leadersOtto Wohler Hermann Balck Max de Angelis Sepp Dietrich Jozsef Heszlenyi Otto DesslochMax von Weichs Alexander LohrFyodor Tolbukhin Nikanor Zakhvatayev Nikolai Gagen Sergei Trofimenko Mikhail Sharokhin Vladimir Stoychev Kosta Nađ Vladimir SudetsRodion Malinovsky Sergei GoryunovUnits involvedArmy Group South 6th Army 6th SS Panzer Army 2nd Panzer Army 3rd Army Luftflotte 4Army Group F Army Group E3rd Ukrainian Front 4th Guards Army 26th Army 27th Army 57th Army 1st Army 3rd Army 17th Air Army2nd Ukrainian Front 5th Air ArmyStrength5 March for the offensive 1 2 3 25 divisions 260 000 men max 650 tanks 376 operational 3 200 assault guns and mortars 850 aircraft entire Luftflotte 4 for entire Army Group South 5 March 1 4 5 37 divisions discounting air armies and the Yugoslav 3rd Army 465 000 men 407 tanks 398 operational 6 597 assault guns and mortars 293 rocket launchers 965 aircraft 17th Air Army only 3rd Ukrainian Front Casualties and lossesGerman offensive 6 15 March 1945 Germany Army Group South 12 358 men 6 31 tracked AFVs destroyed 6 1 APC destroyed 7 Army Group F Unknown UnknownSoviet counter offensive 16 March 15 April 1945 210 000 combat casualties 50 000 killed 125 000 captured 8 1 345 tanks assault guns lost 9 a 2 250 guns and mortars lost 9 446 armour personnel carriers 11 200 aircraftGerman offensive 6 15 March 1945 32 899 8 492 killed or missing 24 407 wounded amp sick 12 152 tracked AFVs destroyed 6 415 anti tank guns destroyed 6 Soviet counter offensive 16 March 15 April 1945 38 661 killed 129 279 wounded amp sick 167 940 overall including 135 000 combat casualties 13 Bulgarian casualties 9 805 men 14 2 698 killed 7 017 wounded amp sick Operation Spring Awakening German Unternehmen Fruhlingserwachen was the last major German offensive of World War II The operation was referred to in Germany as the Plattensee offensive and in the Soviet Union as the Balaton defensive operation It took place in Western Hungary on the Eastern Front and lasted from 6 March until 15 March 1945 The objective was to secure the last significant oil reserves still available to the European Axis powers and prevent the Red Army from advancing towards Vienna The Germans failed in their objectives The operation initially planned for 5 March began after German units were moved in great secrecy to the Lake Balaton German Plattensee area Many German units were involved including the 6th Panzer Army and its subordinate Waffen SS divisions after being withdrawn from the failed Ardennes offensive on the Western Front The Germans attacked in three prongs Fruhlingserwachen in the Balaton Lake Velence Danube area Eisbrecher south of Lake Balaton and Waldteufel south of the Drava Danube triangle The advance stalled on 15 March and on 16 March the Red Army and allied units began their delayed Vienna offensive Contents 1 Background 2 German plan 2 1 Creation of Operation Spring Awakening 2 2 Overarching German military structure 2 3 Arrival into the Hungarian theater 2 4 Objectives of the German forces 3 Soviet preparation 3 1 Interrupted Soviet offensive preparations 3 2 Soviet defensive preparations 3 3 Overarching Soviet military structure 4 Order of battle for 6 15 March 1945 5 German offensive 6 Soviet counterattack Vienna offensive 7 Armband Order 8 Trophy Tanks 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 BibliographyBackground EditOn 12 January Hitler received confirmation that the Soviet Red Army had begun a massive winter offensive through Poland named the Vistula Oder offensive 15 Hitler ordered OB West Field Marshal Gerd Von Rundstedt to withdraw the following units from active combat in the Battle of the Bulge I SS Panzer Corps with 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte and 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend along with II SS Panzer Corps with 2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich and 9th SS Panzer Division Hohenstaufen 15 These units were to be refitted by 30 January and attached to the 6th Panzer Army under the command of Sepp Dietrich for the upcoming Operation Spring Awakening Hitler wanted to secure the extremely vital Nagykanizsa oil fields of southern Hungary as this was the most strategically valuable asset remaining on the Eastern Front 16 The deadline of 30 January proved impossible for refitting to be completed As Operation Spring Awakening would be of great importance lengthy preparation and strategic care was taken so as to not reveal the offensive But while the 6th Panzer Army was refitting in Germany Hitler ordered a preliminary offensive with a similar object to be conducted 17 resulting in Operation Konrad III beginning 18 January The objectives of Konrad III included relieving besieged Budapest and the recapturing of the Transdanubia region By 21 January only 5 days into Operation Konrad III the Germans had taken the towns of Dunapentele and Adony which are on the Western shore of the Danube 18 Their push resulted in the annihilation of the Soviet 7th Mechanized Corps This sudden and savage push caused the Soviet command to actually contemplate an evacuation to the opposite shore 18 Before the end of the 4th day the Germans had recaptured 400 square kilometers of territory an achievement comparable to the initial German gains during the Ardennes offensive and the Western Front in December 1944 19 At the height of Operation Konrad III February 26 the Axis front lines had reached within 20 km of Budapest s Southern perimeter and within about 10 km the Northern perimeter but their forces were exhausted 17 From 27 January through 15 February the Soviets conducted numerous successful counter attacks forcing the Germans to give up the greater portion of their territorial gains pushing the front line back to the area between Lake Velence the village of Csosz and Lake Balaton 20 This area had the Margit Line running right through it and would see more fighting in the upcoming Operation Spring Awakening nbsp Margit Line in Western Hungary 1944 45 21 By mid February the Soviet bridgehead across the Garam River Hron north of Esztergom was identified as a threat This bridgehead would jeopardize the upcoming Spring Awakening s South Eastern push past Lake Balaton to secure the southern Hungarian oilfields while also exposing a straight route towards Vienna Thus beginning on 17 February Operation Southwind began the effort to secure the Garam bridgehead from the 2nd Ukrainian Front and by 24 February the task was successfully achieved proving to be the very last successful German offensive of the war German plan EditCreation of Operation Spring Awakening Edit nbsp German units during the operation March 1945During a Situation Conference on 7 January 1945 at which both Hermann Goring and OB West Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt were present Hitler proposed his intention of pulling the 6th SS Panzer Army to form a reserve due to severe Allied air attacks 22 Von Rundstedt received the withdrawal orders on January 8 and the Panzer Army s divisions began preparations to withdraw from the Front 23 The slow withdrawal was greatly hampered by Allied air superiority 24 On 12 January the Soviet 1st Ukrainian and 1st Belorussian Fronts began their Vistula Oder offensive with over 2 million men 25 circular reference placing considerable new pressure on the Eastern Front When this news reached Hitler he immediately began to plan a major offensive on this Front Meanwhile during 14 January on the Western Front the 2nd and 9th SS Panzer divisions had to be recommitted back from reserves due to successful Allied fighting 23 On 20 January Hitler ordered Von Rundstedt to withdraw forces from the ongoing Battle of the Bulge the 1st SS 2nd SS and 12th SS Divisions managed to disengage and withdraw the same day 26 Almost all support units of the 6th SS Panzer Army were pulled from the Ardennes by 22 January while the 9th SS Panzer Division was the last to leave on 23 January 26 On this same day 22 January Hitler decided that the 6th SS Panzer Army should not be sent back to the Western Front but rather to Hungary a view Heinz Guderian OKH partially agreed with Guderian wanted the 6th SS Panzer Army on the Eastern Front but mainly to protect Berlin 24 A glimpse of the ensuing verbal exchange during this argument was captured in Alfred Jodl s OKW post war interrogation where he quotes Hitler saying You want to attack without oil good we ll see what happens when you attempt that 27 However the main reason for sending the 6th SS Panzer Army south into Hungary can be understood through the list of main strategic points listed in a Situation in the East conference held on January 23 1 The Hungarian oil region and Vienna oil region which made up 80 of reserves without which the war effort could not be continued 2 the Danzig estuary vital for U boat operations and Upper Silesian industrial region for the war economy and coal production 24 Two quotes illustrate how seriously Hitler viewed this ruling Hitler considered the protection of Vienna and Austria as of vital importance and that he would rather see Berlin fall than lose the Hungarian oil area and Austria 28 He Hitler accepted the risk of the Russian threat to the Oder east of Berlin 24 On 27 January Guderian was tasked by Hitler to stop the 3rd Ukrainian Front in the vicinity on the Margit Line in order to protect the vital oil fields 29 The following day 28 January this operation received its preliminary name Operation Sud G South 29 The main objectives of the operation were as follows 1 the security of vital raw materials such as oil bauxite and manganese for iron 2 arable land for food and crops the Austrian military industrial complex and the city of Vienna 3 to stop the Soviet Advance 29 Interestingly an additional side objective was the hope that serious pressure on the Southern Soviet Fronts in Hungary would force the Soviet Command to divert some forces from its northern offensives headed to Berlin towards Hungary 29 24 Operation Sud was scheduled to start after a path to Budapest had been established 29 The operation would be considered a success if 1 Operation Konrad III could pin the Soviets between the Vertes mountains and the Danube 2 the 8th Army could secure its Front in Northern Hungary 3 if the incoming panzer armies could be refitted during transit to create the advantage of surprise 29 Four plans for Operation Sud were produced by high ranking officials from Army Group South the 6th SS Panzer Army and the 6th Army Losung A by Fritz Kramer of the 6th SS Panzer Army Losung B and Losung C2 by Helmuth Von Grolman of Army Group South and Losung C1 by Heinrich Gaedcke of the 6th Army There was much fighting and bickering as to which plan should be implemented 30 The commander of Army Group South Otto Wohler chose Losung B 30 The four plans were sent to Guderian on 22 February for review and Army Group South informed Army Group F commander Maximilian von Weichs on 23 February that the operation would commence on 5 March in anticipation that Operation Sudwind G South Wind would have finished successfully by 24 February 31 If Operation Sudwind was successful Operation Sud s start could be deferred by 8 9 days 32 On 25 February Hitler ordered Otto Wohler Maximilian von Weichs and Sepp Dietrich to personally present the plans for Operation Sud to him along with Guderian OKH and Alfred Jodl OKW 33 at the Reich Chancellery in Berlin where he ultimately chose Losung C2 32 Guderian then ordered Otto Wohler to increase the daily fuel allowance from 400 to 500 cubic meters 400k to 500k liters of fuel on February 26 34 and by February 28 the specifics of the operation now officially named Operation Fruhlingserwachen G Spring Awakening were completed 32 As per Losung C2 3 offensive prongs were planned with the main attack of the 6th Army and 6th SS Panzer Army Fruhlingserwachen being directed towards the Danube through Lakes Velence and Balaton the 2nd Panzer Army s Eisbrecher G Icebreaker attacking eastward from the western end of Lake Balaton and the LXXXXI Corps Waldteufel G Forest Devil attacking north from the Drava River 35 Overarching German military structure Edit OKW Oberkommando der Wehrmacht was the overarching military command for the German army in WW2 while the OKH Oberkommando des Heeres was officially a high command operating under OKW Adolf Hitler was the Commander in chief of OKH while also being the supreme commander of OKW 36 Finding itself issuing more and more direct orders OKW eventually became responsible for Western and Southern commands while OKH was responsible for Eastern commands 36 This operational overlap caused by the centralized command led to disagreements shortages waste inefficiencies and delays often escalating to the point where Hitler himself would have to give the final ruling on a matter 36 For Operation Spring Awakening the area for the new offensive was set on the borderline between OKW Army Group F and OKH Army Group South and this would cause troubles 36 Army Group E wanted to assemble its troops north of the Drava River by February 25 but Army Group South was not prepared to start the offensive this early due to the ongoing Operation Southwind subsequently the OKW and Hitler grew more impatient 37 The chosen course of action on 25 February Losung C2 favored the quicker and farther reaching joint operation of the 2nd Panzer Army and 6th SS Panzer Army while Losung B opted to first secure the left flank of the main thrust Fruhlingserwachen between Lake Velence and the Danube before moving south toward the 2nd Panzer army Guderian was in favor of Losung C2 because this plan would shorten the time the 6th SS Panzer Division would need to stay in Hungary The OKW and OKH did not use common terminology for parts of the offensive as OKH referred to the entire offensive as Fruhlingserwachen while the OKW referred to the operation attacking north of the Drava as Waldteufel 33 Army Group South and the OKH could not agree on how to best utilize the 1st Cavalry Corps OKH wanted to send the Corps south west to the 2nd Panzer army a move Army Group South Commander Otto Wohler saw of little use since the 2nd Panzer army would have a lower chance of success compared to the main attacking thrust of Fruhlingserwachen Wohler wanted to use the 1st Cavalry Corps on the eastern shore of Lake Balaton as German intelligence reported that the enemy is still the weakest between Lake Balaton and the Sarviz Channel 38 To further complicate matters due to the limited number of newly trained personnel this late in the war units under Waffen SS command were often kept at acceptable capacity levels using Wehrmacht personnel For instance only 1 3 of the 6th SS Panzer Army s staff were actually from the Waffen SS 39 Arrival into the Hungarian theater Edit When withdrawing from the Western Front elements of the III Flak Korps were tasked with protecting the 6th SS Panzer Army while en route to Zossen south of Berlin 26 From here the units possible de training locations would seem to be the cities along the Oder River however this was a calculated misinformation measure to confuse enemy forces who actually attacked these cities 40 The real plan for the units of 6th SS Panzer Army was to travel south through Vienna to their first Hungarian destination the city of Gyor and its surrounding area 40 Other units from other armies were also sent to the Hungarian theater for example the 16th SS Panzer Grenadier Division Reichsfuhrer SS who was brought up from Italy through the Brenner straight and sent to the 2nd Panzer Army 41 Some units necessary for the major offensive did not arrive in Hungary until just a few days before its start the last being the 9th SS Panzer Division Hohenstaufen arriving in Gyor at the beginning of March 38 Many of the incoming units also received cover names to help further mask the build up of forces from the enemy Cover Names 42 Unit Official name Cover name6th SS Panzer Army HQ HQ Higher Pioneer Leader Hungary1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler SS replacement unit Totenkopf 2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich SS training group North9th SS Panzer Division Hohenstaufen SS training group South12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend SS replacement unit Wiking 16th SS Panzer Gren Division Reichsfuhrer SS 13th SS Division replacement groupBy 7 February on orders of Hitler strict secrecy rulings were put into place death penalty for command infractions license plates were to be covered insignia on vehicles and uniforms to be covered no reconnaissance in forward combat areas unit movements only by night or overcast conditions no radio traffic and the units were not to appear on situation maps 43 Prior to these measures on 30 January 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte was ordered to follow many of the same secrecy measures including the temporary removal of their cuff titles 44 Objectives of the German forces Edit As per the selected Losung C2 the Germans planned to attack Soviet General Fyodor Tolbukhin s 3rd Ukrainian Front 45 On 27 February Army Group South hosted a Chiefs of Staff conference to which the Chiefs of staff of the 2nd Panzer Army 6th SS Panzer Army 6th Army 8th Army and Luftflotte 4 attended here the plans for Operation Spring Awakening were laid out 38 The offensive would consist of four forces three were to be attack forces while one was to be a defense force 38 Below are the units under their respective command as discussed on 27 February Fruhlingserwachen Attack Force 46 Army Group Commander Army Commander Corps Commander DivisionsArmy Group South Otto Wohler 6th SS Panzer Army Sepp Dietrich I SS Panzer Corps Hermann Priess 1st 12th SS Panzer DivisionsII SS Panzer Corps Wilhelm Bittrich 2nd 9th SS Panzer Divisions 23rd Panzer Division 44th Volksgrenadier Division1st Cavalry Corps 3rd 4th Cavalry Divisions6th Army Hermann Balck III Panzer Corps Hermann Breith 1st 3rd Panzer Divisions 356th Infantry Division 25th Hungarian Infantry Division Eisbrecher Attack Force 46 Army Group Commander Army Commander Corps Commander DivisionsArmy Group South Otto Wohler 2nd Panzer Army Maximilian de Angelis LXVIII Corps Rudolf Konrad 16th SS Panzergrenadier Division 71st Infantry DivisionXXII Mountain Corps Hubert Lanz 1st Volksgrenadier Division 118th Jager Division elements Waldteufel Attack Force 46 Army Group Commander Army Commander Corps Commander DivisionsArmy Group F Maximilian von Weichs Army Group E Alexander Lohr LXXXXI Corps Werner von Erdmannsdorff 297th Infantry Division 104th Jager Division 11th Luftwaffe Field Division 1st Cossack Division Defense Force 46 Army Group Commander Army Commander Corps Commander DivisionsArmy Group South Otto Wohler 6th Army Hermann Balck IV SS Panzer Corps Herbert Gille 3rd 5th SS Panzer Divisions 96th 711st Infantry DivisionsThird Hungarian Army Jozsef Heszlenyi VIII Corps Hun Dr Gyula Hankovszky 2nd Hungarian Armoured Division 1st Hussar Division 6th Panzer Division 37th SS Cavalry Division2nd Panzer Army Maximilian de Angelis II Corps Hun Istvan Kudriczy 20th Hungarian Infantry Division 2 3 Battalions On 28 February the start date for Operation Spring Awakening was finally moved back to 6 March though many commanders felt that a greater delay was necessary 47 During the first days of March alarming reports about road and terrain conditions due to the spring thaw flooded Army Group South Headquarters Such thaws had previously badly affected 3 other operations in the area planned Operation Spatlese in December Operation Southwind and the Waldteufel attack forcing a change of location for the attack bridgehead from Osijek to Donji Miholjac 48 Despite the start of the operation being so close some additional plans were thought up to help the sluggish assembly speeds of incoming units On 3 March the 6th SS Panzer Army suggested that a naval assault across Lake Balaton itself could be implemented to help the 1st Cavalry Corps on the southeastern edge but this turned out to be impossible as the spring storms had blown the pack ice against the southern shore 49 On 5 March the 6th SS Panzer Army took over command of the Hungarian II Corps along with its 20th Hungarian Division and 9th replacement Division hereby becoming responsible for the northern shore of Lake Balaton 50 The 6th Panzer Army was responsible for the primary thrust of the offensive Fruhlingserwachen It was to advance from an area north of Lake Balaton through the two lakes Balaton and Velence and southeast to capture territory from the Sio Channel to the Danube After reaching the Danube one part of the army would turn north creating a northern spearhead and move along the Danube River to retake Budapest which had been captured on 13 February 1945 Another part of 6th SS Panzer Army would then turn south and create a southern spearhead The southern spearhead would move along the Sio to link up with units from German Army Group E which was to thrust north through Mohacs However the commanding staff of Army Group E was pessimistic about the LXXXXI Corps ability to reach Mohacs due to the unfavorable terrain and sole dependence on infantry 51 Nonetheless if successful it was envisioned that the meeting of Army Group E s Waldteufel and the 6th SS Panzer Army s Fruhlingserwachen would encircle both the Soviet 26th Army and the Soviet 57th Army 45 The 6th Army would join the 6th SS Panzer Army in its thrust southeast to the Danube then turn north to cover the flank of Fruhlingserwachen The 2nd Panzer Army s Eisbrecher would advance from an area southwest of Lake Balaton and progress towards Kaposvar to engage the Soviet 57th Army All this time the Hungarian Third Army would hold the area west of Budapest along the Vertes Mountains 45 Soviet preparation EditInterrupted Soviet offensive preparations Edit On 17 February 1945 the Stavka of the Supreme High Command instructed the 2nd and 3rd Ukrainian Fronts to prepare for an offensive towards Vienna which would begin on March 15 52 However from 17 to 18 February the 2nd Ukrainian Front noticed the 1st SS Panzer division Leibstandarte and the 12th SS Panzer division Hitlerjugend fighting at the Garam River S Hron during the German Operation Southwind 23 Knowing that German Panzer divisions were not created for defensive purposes the Soviet Fronts in Hungary became suspicious of the enemy s intentions Prisoners taken during Operation Southwind testified that the Germans were in fact preparing to gather a large offensive force 23 By 20 February the Soviet fronts in Hungary began to understand what the Germans planned to do 52 The security of the lands West of the River Danube particularly in the south which held the Hungarian oil fields was the Germans main priority at this stage of the war Soviet defensive preparations Edit As the 2nd Ukrainian Front held the territory of Budapest and the lands north of the Hungarian capital defensive preparations in this sector were not paid much attention due to the lower likelihood of attack but this was not the same in the south 3rd Ukrainian Front marshal Fyodor Tolbukhin ordered his armies to prepare for a German offensive on his entire Front preparation of which would have to be completed no later then 3 March 53 To ensure sufficient supply of war materials and fuel stockpiles were set up on either side of the Danube a ferry was put into use and additional temporary bridges and gas pipelines were built on the Danube River 54 45 Tolbukhin s plan was to initially slow down the German advance to rob their offensive of momentum then begin grinding down the attacking armies then initiate the planned Soviet offensive to finish off the remaining German forces 53 This plan along with the strategic deployment of the Soviet forces was quite similar to that of the Battle of Kursk although it utilized experiences learned in 1943 55 The 3rd Ukrainian Front worked on digging in creating extensive trench networks ideal for anti tank defenses along with defensive earthworks for the artillery and infantry 55 The main differences between the Soviet defenses during the Battle of Kursk and the Balaton defensive operation the Russian name for Operation Spring Awakening was the relative short time frame allowed for defensive preparations half a month the smaller number of Soviet forces partaking in the defensive and a reduced focus on perfecting the defensive lines as after all the 3rd Ukrainian Front would need to start its offensive from these lines 55 Other minor differences included the lack or limited use of barbed wire installations anti tank obstacles and bunkers 55 although the 4th Guards Army command did suggest to place the burnt out wrecks of 38 previously destroyed German tanks into advantageous positions it is unclear how many were actually set up 23 Tolbukhin s 3rd Ukrainian Front had 5 Armies plus 1 Air Army in addition it also had the 1st Bulgarian Army 56 with the 3rd Yugoslav Partisan Army also partaking in the defense The 3rd Ukrainian Front would be set up in a two echelon defensive layout with the 4th Guards Army 26th Army and 57th Army and the 1st Bulgarian Army in the first echelon while the 27th Army would be held back in the second echelon for reserve 56 The 4th Guards Army s three Guards Rifle Corps and one Guards Fortified District would be spread out over a 39 km front and reach 30 km deep broken into two belts with one behind the other 56 The 26th Army which was expected to take the brunt of the German offensive arranged its three Rifle Corps along a 44 km front but only 10 15 km deep 57 The 26th Army s Corps would be layered in two belts whose defensive preparations had originally begun back on 11 February 57 prior to any sign of German offensive intentions The 57th Army s one Guards Rifle and one Rifle Corps were spread along a 60 km front and 10 15 km deep the Army would receive another Rifle Corps during the fighting 58 The 27th Army s one Guards Rifle and two Rifle Corps would remain in reserve unless the situation in the 26th Army called for its use 58 Held in reserve the 3rd Ukrainian Front also had the 18th Tank Corps and 23rd Tanks Corps along with the 1st Guards Mechanized Corps and the 5th Guards Cavalry Corps 59 While these Armies were preparing for the imminent offensive the 17th Air Army was busy flying reconnaissance missions although they could not report on much due to excellent German camouflage 60 Because of the serious tank losses of January February along the Margit line Marshal Tolbukhin ordered that no Front Army level counter attacks were to take place and local tactical attacks should be very limited the only objective was to hold the Front and grind down the German offensive 55 The two tanks Corps would remain under the 26th and 27th Armies to be utilized only in dire need 55 The defensive strategy of the 3rd Ukrainian Front was one of anti tank defense as this was what the Germans were going to use On average for every kilometer of Front 700 anti tank and 600 anti infantry mines were placed with these numbers rising to 2 700 and 2 900 respectively in the 26th Army s sector 61 Between the 4th Guards Army and 26th Guards Army 66 anti tank zones were created whose depth reached 30 35 km 61 Each anti tank position had 8 16 artillery guns and a similar number of anti tank guns 61 A prime example of the scale of defensive installments can be seen in the 26th Army s 135th Rifle Corps Between 18 February and 3 March the 233rd Rifle Division had dug 27 kilometers of trenches 130 gun and mortar positions 113 dugouts 70 command posts and observation points and laid 4 249 antitank and 5 058 antipersonnel mines all this on a frontage of 5 kilometers Although there were no tanks in this defensive zone there was an average of 17 anti tank guns per kilometer forming 23 tank killing grounds 17 Overarching Soviet military structure Edit The Soviet Forces contrary to the Germans did not have such odd structural complications as the Soviet Armies could make independent decisions while the Stavka could intervene when asked or if necessary 62 a much more straight forward military structure with clear boundaries This is an example of a de centralized command It was not uncommon for the Soviets to actually search out and exploit the boundaries between the OKW and OKH as they knew these areas would suffer from poorer military command 62 the advance to Budapest is an example 36 Order of battle for 6 15 March 1945 EditThese are the main units that were a part of the Army Groups Front which saw combat in Operation Spring Awakening 23 63 64 65 66 Please note that the units below are subordinate to the commanding structure under which they spent the most time during the offensive Units during the final months of the war were very prone to location reassignments as the front situation evolved Reserve units are not included in the list nbsp German Forces Army Group South 6th Army Army Group Balck III Panzer Corps 1st Panzer Division I Pz Rgt 24 Panther Ausf G e g No 121 at Borgond Pz Art Rgt 73 Pz IV Pz Beob Wg IV 3rd Panzer Division Pz Rgt 6 Panther Ausf G e g No 200 Pz IV e g No 723 Pz Art Rgt 75 Pz Beob Wg III Wespe e g No 508 510 6th Panzer Division s Pz Abt 509 Tiger II Sturm Pz Abt 219 Brummbar 356th Infantry Division IV SS Panzer Corps 3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf SS Pz Rgt 3 Panther Ausf G Pz IV Tiger I SS Pz Jg Abt 3 Pz IV L 70 V Heers Sturm Art Brig 303 StuG III e g No 3202 3212 at Lake Balaton E 5th SS Panzer Division Wiking SS Pz Rgt 5 Panther Ausf A D Pz IV Ausf J StuG IV 6th SS Panzer Army Beute Pz Verband Jaguar captured T 34 85 e g in diamond No A 99 I SS Panzer Corps 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler SS Pz Rgt 1 Panther Ausf G e g No 121 212 213 Pz IV Ausf J SS Pz Jg Abt 1 Pz IV L 70 V s SS Pz Abt 501 Tiger II 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend SS Pz Rgt 12 Panther Ausf G Pz IV Ausf J Flakpanzer IV Wirbelwind SS Pz Jg Abt 12 Pz IV L70 s H Pz Jg Abt 560 Jagdpanther e g No 102 at Tes 25th Hungarian Infantry Division 20th Royal Hungarian Sturm Artillery Jagdpanzer 38 t Hetzer e g K 022 K 025 at Balatonszabadi II SS Panzer Corps 2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich SS Pz Rgt 2 Panther Ausf G Pz IV Ausf J StuG III 9th SS Panzer Division Hohenstaufen SS Pz Rgt 9 Panther Ausf G e g AJ9 at Vilonya Pz IV StuG III StuG 40 Ausf G e g No 712 at Devecser 23rd Panzer Division Pz Rgt 23 Panther Pz IV JPz IV L70 A e g No 454 at Szentkiralyszabadja Pz Jg Abt 128 Pz IV 70 V 44th Volksgrenadier Division Reichsgrenadier Division Hoch und Deutschmeister I Cavalry Corps Mainly horses 3rd Cavalry Division Pz Jg Abt 69 StuH 42 4th Cavalry Division 2nd Panzer Army LXVIII Corps 1st Gebirgs Division 13th Waffen Gebirds der SS Division Handschar 16th SS Panzer Grenadier Division Reichsfuhrer SS 71st Infantry Division XXII Gebirgs Corps 2nd Hungarian Tank Division 118th Jager Division Luftflotte 4 II JG 51 Bf 109G II JG 52 Bf 109G I JG 53 Bf 109G Bf 108 I III SG 2 Fw 190F Ju 87G 10 Pz SG 2 I II III SG 10 Fw 190F G I NSGr 5 Go 145A Ar 66D I NSGr 10 Ju 87D I NAGr 14 Bf 109G Stab JG 76 JGr 101 Royal Hungarian Air Force Bf 109G Fi 156 102 Royal Hungarian Air Force Fw 190F Army Group E subordinate to Army Group F until March 25 1945 LXXXXI Corps 1st Cossack Division 11th Luftwaffe Field Division 104th Jager Division 297th Infantry Division nbsp Soviet Forces 3rd Ukrainian Front Independent Separate Units Temporarily transferred from other Fronts 209th Self prop Artillery Brigade 1951st Self prop Artillery Regiment SU 100 markings 4xx e g white 415 Chassis No 41195 1952nd Self prop Artillery Regiment SU 100 markings 4xx 1953rd Self prop Artillery Regiment SU 100 markings 4xx e g white 480 Chassis No 41184 Separate Recce Company T48 SU 57 e g U S A 4021593 and Harley Davidson 42WLA motorcycle e g U S A 679183 at Simontornya 4th Guards Army 20th Guards Rifle Corps 5th Guards Airborne Division 13th Guards Airborne Self prop Artillery Battalion SU 76M 7th Guards Airborne Division 80th Guards Rifle Division 85th Guards Self prop Artillery Battalion SU 76M 84th Rifle Division 122nd Separate Self prop Artillery Battalion SU 76M 21st Guards Rifle Corps 7th Guards Airborne Division 8th Separate Guards Air landing Self prop Artillery Battalion SU 76M 41st Guards Rifle Division 44th Guards Self prop Artillery Battalion SU 76M 62nd Guards Rifle Division 69th Guards Self prop Artillery Battalion SU 76M e g No 140 142 69th Guards Rifle Division 75th Guards Self prop Artillery Battalion SU 76M 252nd Rifle Division 310th Separate Self prop Artillery Battalion SU 76M 31st Guards Rifle Corps 4th Guards Rifle Division 34th Guards Rifle Division 40th Guards Rifle Division 23rd Tank Corps 3rd Tank Brigade T 34 85 markings B in diamond and xx e g white new B 28 old B 143 at Tukrospuszta 39th Tank Brigade T 34 85 markings G in diamond and xx e g white G 67 at Bonyretalap 135th Tank Brigade T 34 85 markings D in diamond and xx e g white D 56 207th Self prop Artillery Brigade 912nd Self prop Artillery Regiment SU 100 e g red G 146 in Vienna 1004th Self Prop Artillery Regiment SU 100 1011th Self Prop Artillery Regiment SU 100 56th Mechanized Brigade 1443rd Self prop Artillery Regiment ISU 122 366th Guards Heavy Self prop Artillery Regiment ISU 152 captured Hummels e g white No 51 53 near Balatonaliga 26th Army 30th Rifle Corps 21st Rifle Division 36th Guards Rifle Division 68th Guards Rifle Division 155th Rifle Division 1202nd Self prop Artillery Regiment SU 76M No 411083 411662 104th Rifle Corps 66th Guards Rifle Division 22nd Separate Training Tank Regiment T 34 and a single old KV 1S 93rd Rifle Division 151st Rifle Division 135th Rifle Corps 74th Rifle Division 233rd Rifle Division 236th Rifle Division 18th Tank Corps 110th Tank Brigade T 34 85 markings 4xx e g red 408 Chassis No 412085 170th Tank Brigade T 34 85 markings 5xx e g red 545 Chassis No 4121591 181st Tank Brigade T 34 85 markings 6xx e g red 667 Chassis No 4121023 32nd Guards Mechanical Brigade 52nd Separate Tank Regiment T 34 208th Self prop Artillery Brigade 1016th Self prop Artillery Regiment SU 100 1068th Self prop Artillery Regiment SU 100 1922nd Self prop Artillery Regiment SU 100 markings C xx e g red C 47 Chassis No 411101 363rd Guards Heavy Self prop Artillery Regiment Markings Battery No 0 Gun No For example ISU 122S No 303 Chassis No 41222 or ISU 152 No 401 Chassis No 41264 78th Separate Mechanized Motorcycle Battalion T 34 motorcycles 1438th Self prop Artillery Regiment SU 76M e g white B 946 Chassis No 411591 1694th Anti Aircraft Artillery Regiment M 17 halftrack 27th Army 35th Guards Rifle Corps 3rd Guards Airborne Division 78th Rifle Division 163rd Rifle Division 37th Guards Rifle Corps 108th Rifle Division 316th Rifle Division 320th Rifle Division 1st Guards Fortified District 1st Guards Mechanized Corps 1st Guards Mechanized Brigade BA 64 M3A1 Scout Car e g white 146 Chassis No U S A 6089987 18th Guards Tank Regiment M4A2 76 W Sherman markings 1xx e g white 139 Chassis No U S A 3080899 2nd Guards Mechanized Brigade BA 64 e g white No 249 19th Guards Tank Regiment M4A2 76 W Sherman markings 2xx e g white 223 Chassis No U S A 3080689 3rd Guards Mechanized Brigade BA 64 e g Chassis No 74566 20th Guards Tank Regiment M4A2 76 W Sherman markings 3xx e g Chassis No U S A 3080508 9th Guards Tank Brigade M4A2 76 W Sherman markings 9xx e g white 959 Chassis No U S A 30116426 382nd Self prop Artillery Regiment SU 100 1453rd Self prop Artillery Regiment SU 100 1821st Self prop Artillery Regiment SU 100 markings 6xx e g white No 603 in Vienna 11th Guards Separate Motorcycle Battalion 57th Army 6th Guards Rifle Corps 10th Guards Airborne Rifle Division 20th Guards Rifle Division 61st Guards Rifle Division 64th Rifle Corps 73rd Guards Rifle Division 113th Rifle Division 299th Rifle Division 864th Self prop Artillery Regiment SU 76M 1201st Self prop Artillery Regiment SU 76M 3rd Guards Motorcycle Regiment 53rd Motorcycle Regiment 5th Guards Cavalry Corps 11th Guards Cavalry Division 71st Tank Regiment T 34 M4A2 75 W Sherman 12th Guards Cavalry Division 54th Tank Regiment T 34 63rd Cavalry Division 60th Guards Tank regiment M3 Lee Valentine Mk IX e g white No 213 221 231 232 1896th Self prop Artillery Regiment SU 76M 17th Air Army 136th Ground Attack Air Division 210th Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik 1 long diagonal tail stripe e g IL 2m3 No 35 S N 11926 715th Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik 1 long 1 short diagonal tail stripe e g IL 2m3 No 31 S N 18819118 989th Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik 1 long 2 short diagonal tail stripes e g IL 2m3 No 19 S N 10586 189th Ground Attack Air Division 615th Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik e g IL 2m3 No 35 S N 10807 639th Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik e g IL 2m3 S N 1889403 707th Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik e g IL 2m3 No 1 S N 18825124 306th Ground Attack Air Division 672nd Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik White diagonal tail cap e g IL 2m3 No 18 S N 1875788 951st Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik White diagonal tail cap with 1 short diagonal stripe e g IL 2m3 No 210 S N 1874898 10th Guards Ground Attack Air Division 165th Guards Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik 166th Guards Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik 167th Guards Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik 194th Fighter Air Division 56th Fighter Air Regiment La 5F La 5FN 530th Fighter Air Regiment La 5F La 5FN 848th Fighter Air Regiment La 5F La 5FN 236th Fighter Air Division 267th Fighter Air Regiment Yak 1b 3 9 117th Guards Fighter Air Regiment Yak 1b 9 168th Guards Fighter Air Regiment Yak 1b 9 288th Fighter Air Division HQ Yak 3 611th Fighter Air Regiment Yak 1b 3 9D DD M White diagonal tail stripe with a wide bar on the rudder 659th Fighter Air Regiment Yak 3 9D DD M T Long white arrow on fuselage 866th Fighter Air Regiment Yak 3 897th Fighter Air Regiment Yak 1b 3 9D DD M T 295th Fighter Air Division 31st Fighter Air Regiment La 5F La 5FN 7FN Lightning bolt on fuselage diagonal tail stripe 116th Fighter Air Regiment La 5F La 5FN Lightning bolt on fuselage diagonal tail stripes 164th Fighter Air Regiment La 5F La 5FN Lightning bolt on fuselage diagonal tail stripes 244th Bomber Air Division Douglas A 20 Boston 260th Bomber Air Regiment A 20B C G J UA 20C Boston Lightning emblem on the nose 449th Bomber Air Regiment A 20B C G UA 20C Boston Bomb dropping seagull emblem on the nose 861st Bomber Air Regiment A 20B C G J UA 20C Boston 262nd Night Bomber Air Division 370th Night Bomber Air Regiment Po 2 371st Night Bomber Air Regiment Po 2 993rd Night Bomber Air Regiment Po 2 97th Guards Night Bomber Air Regiment Po 2 39th Separate Air Reconnaissance Regiment Pe 2R Yak 9D M R 5th Air Army Units involved due to temporary bad weather fog over some 17th Air Army airfields Pulled from 2nd Ukrainian Front 7th Guards Ground Attack Air Division 130th Guards Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik 131st Guards Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik 12th Guards Ground Attack Air Division 187th Guards Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik 188th Guards Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik 190th Guards Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik 264th Ground Attack Air Division 235st Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik white tail cap 451st Ground Attack Regiment IL 2m3 Sturmovik 279th Fighter Air Division 92nd Fighter Air Regiment La 5 192nd Fighter Air Regiment La 5 486th Fighter Air Regiment La 5 6th Guards Fighter Air Division 31st Guards Fighter Air Regiment Yak 1b 9 73rd Guards Fighter Air Regiment Yak 1b 9 85th Guards Fighter Air Regiment Yak 1b 9 14th Guards Fighter Air Division 177th Guards Fighter Air Regiment La 5 178th Guards Fighter Air Regiment La 5 179th Guards Fighter Air Regiment La 7 218th Bomber Air Division 48th Bomber Air Regiment A 20G Boston red tail cap 452nd Bomber Air Regiment A 20G Boston white tail cap 453rd Bomber Air Regiment A 20G Boston dark blue tail cap 18th Air Army Unit involved bombers operated at night Pulled from former soviet long range air force 15th Guards Bomber Air Division 14th Guards Bomber Air Regiment B 25D J Mitchell 238th Guards Bomber Air Regiment B 25D J Mitchell 251st Guards Bomber Air Regiment B 25D J Mitchell 53rd Bomber Air Division Li 2 cargo planes etc 1st Bulgarian Army 3rd Army Corps 8th Infantry Division 10th Infantry Division 12th Infantry Division 4th Army Corps 3rd Infantry Division 11th Infantry Division 16th Infantry Division 1st Separate Tank Battalion Pz IV Ausf H 3rd Army Yugoslav Partisans 12th Army Corps 16th Infantry Division 51st Infantry DivisionGerman offensive Edit nbsp German troops at the beginning of Operation Spring AwakeningThe offensive units did not start in unison owing to complications thus the units of the 6th SS Panzer Army began their attack at 04 00 while the 2nd SS Panzer Corps attacked at 18 30 67 On the 6 March 1945 the German 6th Army joined by the 6th SS Panzer Army launched a pincer movement north and south of Lake Balaton Ten armoured Panzer and five infantry divisions including a large number of new heavy Tiger II tanks struck 3rd Ukrainian Front hoping to reach the Danube and link up with the German 2nd Panzer Army forces attacking south of Lake Balaton 68 The attack was spearheaded by the 6th SS Panzer Army and included elite units such as the LSSAH division Dietrich s army made good progress at first but as they drew near the Danube the combination of the muddy terrain and strong Soviet resistance had ground the German advance to a halt 69 On 10 March the Axis forces fighting under Operation Spring Awakening around Lake Balaton had a total of 230 operational tanks and 167 operational assault guns between their 17 divisions 70 A single fully equipped late 1944 Panzer division would officially have held no fewer than 136 tanks meaning that by 10 March the entire offensive immediately surrounding Lake Balaton had enough tanks for only 1 7 Panzer divisions as opposed to the 11 which were in action By the 14 March Operation Spring Awakening was at risk of failure The 6th SS Panzer Army was well short of its goals The 2nd Panzer Army did not advance as far on the southern side of Lake Balaton as the 6th SS Panzer Army had on the northern side Army Group E met fierce resistance from the Bulgarian First Army and Josip Broz Tito s Yugoslav Partisans and failed to reach its objective of Mohacs German losses were heavy Heeresgruppe Sud lost 15 117 casualties in the first eight days of the offensive On the 15 March strength returns on this day show the Hohenstaufen Division with 35 Panther tanks 20 Panzer IVs 32 Jagdpanzers 25 Sturmgeschutzes and 220 other self propelled weapons and armoured cars 42 of these vehicles were damaged under short or long term repair The Das Reich Division had 27 Panthers 22 Panzer IVs 28 Jagdpanzers and 26 Sturmgeschutzes on hand the number of those under repair is not available 17 Soviet counterattack Vienna offensive EditMain article Vienna offensive nbsp Soviet counterattackOn 16 March the Soviets forces counterattacked in strength The Germans were driven back to the positions they had held before Operation Spring Awakening began 71 The overwhelming numerical superiority of the Red Army made any defense impossible but Hitler believed victory was attainable 72 On 22 March the remnants of the 6th SS Panzer Army withdrew towards Vienna By 30 March the Soviet 3rd Ukrainian Front crossed from Hungary into Austria By 4 April the 6th SS Panzer Army was already in the Vienna area desperately setting up defensive lines against the anticipated Soviet Vienna offensive Approaching and encircling the Austrian capital were the Soviet 4th and 6th Guards Tank 9th Guards and 46th Armies 71 The Soviet s Vienna Offensive ended with the fall of the city on 13 April By 15 April the remnants of the 6th SS Panzer Army were north of Vienna facing the Soviet 9th Guards and 46th Armies By 15 April the depleted German 6th Army was north of Graz facing the Soviet 26th and 27th Armies The remnants of the German 2nd Panzer Army were south of Graz in the Maribor area facing the Soviet 57th Army and the Bulgarian First Army Between 25 April and 4 May the 2nd Panzer Army was attacked near Nagykanizsa during the Nagykanizsa Kormend offensive nbsp German casualtiesSome Hungarian units survived the fall of Budapest and the destruction which followed when the Soviets counterattacked after Operation Spring Awakening The Hungarian Szent Laszlo Infantry Division was still indicated to be attached to the German 2nd Panzer Army as late as 30 April Between 16 and 25 March the Hungarian Third Army had been destroyed about 40 kilometres 25 mi west of Budapest by the Soviet 46th Army which was driving towards Bratislava and the Vienna area On 19 March the Red Army recaptured the last territories lost during the 13 day Axis offensive Sepp Dietrich commander of the Sixth SS Panzer Army tasked with defending the last sources of petroleum controlled by the Germans joked that 6th Panzer Army is well named we have just six tanks left 73 Armband Order EditThe failure of the operation resulted in the armband order that was issued to Sepp Dietrich by Adolf Hitler who claimed that the troops and more importantly the Leibstandarte did not fight as the situation demanded 74 As a mark of disgrace the Waffen SS units involved in the battle were ordered to remove their cuff titles Dietrich did not relay the order to his troops 69 The reason for not relaying this order was twofold firstly the order had already been partially previously completed as cuff tiles were already removed from the uniforms as per a secrecy measure ordered on 30 January 1945 44 secondly there was no need to further disgrace his men beyond the fatal loss they had just suffered Trophy Tanks Edit nbsp Panther in Hungary Spring 1945 trophy number 77After new territory had been captured Soviet collection teams scoured the countryside and towns to document and photograph knocked out Axis vehicles and tanks This was an effort to document not only the sudden buildup of Axis forces and to gain intelligence but also an opportunity to assess the quality of their opponent s technology Four main commissions were formed by the HQ of the artillery of the 3rd Ukrainian Front the 17th Air Army the 9th Guards Army and the 18th Tank corps 75 Hundreds of tanks and armored fighting vehicles were documented See also Edit nbsp Soviet memorial today in SzekesfehervarHungary during the Second World War Battle of Budapest 1944 45 Operation Konrad III 1945 Operation Southwind 1945 Battle of the Transdanubian Hills 1945 Nagykanizsa Kormend Offensive 1945 Vistula Oder Offensive 1945 History of Germany during World War II Military history of Bulgaria during World War II Prague Offensive 1945 Notes Edit Many were abandoned due to a lack of fuel 10 References EditCitations Edit a b Frieser et al 2007 p 930 Szamveber 2017 pp 567 569 Maksim amp Kolomiets 2014 Szamveber 2017 pp 22 574 575 Great Patriotic War without Secracy 2010 p 184 sfn error no target CITEREFGreat Patriotic War without Secracy2010 help a b c d Frieser et al 2007 p 941 Frieser et al 2007 p 942 Tucker Jones Anthony 2016 The Battle for Budapest Pen amp Sword Books Limited ISBN 978 1473877320 a b Frieser et al 2007 p 953 Frieser et al 2007 p 952 O Baronov Balaton Defense Operation Moscow 2001 P 82 106 G F Krivosheyev Soviet Casualties and Combat Losses in the twentieth century London Greenhill Books 1997 ISBN 1 85367 280 7 Page 110 G F Krivosheyev Soviet Casualties and Combat Losses in the twentieth century London Greenhill Books 1997 p 156 7 G F Krivosheyev Soviet Casualties and Combat Losses in the twentieth century London Greenhill Books 1997 p 156 7 a b Hitler s Last Offensive Operation Spring Awakening Warfare History Network 2016 10 31 Retrieved 2020 05 05 Duffy Christopher July 2002 Red Storm on the Reich The Soviet March on Germany 1945 Edison NJ Castle Books ISBN 0 7858 1624 0 a b c d Hitler s Last Offensive Operation Spring Awakening Archived from the original on 2017 04 14 a b Szamveber Norbert 2013 Kard a Pajzs Mogott A Konrad hadmuveletek tortenete 1945 2 bovitett kiadas Budapest PeKo Publishing pp 221 222 ISBN 978 963 89623 7 9 Frieser Karl Heinz 2007 The Eastern Front 1943 1944 The War in the East and on the Neighbouring Fronts Germany and the Second World War VIII Munchen p 913 ISBN 978 3 421 06235 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Szamveber Norbert 2013 Kard a Pajzs Mogott A Konrad hadmuveletek tortenete 1945 2 bovitett kiadas Budapest PeKo Publishing p 456 ISBN 978 963 89623 7 9 Juhasz Attila New achievements in WW II military historical reconstruction with GIS ResearchGate Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 112 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 a b c d e f Aleksei Maksim Isaev Kolomiets 2014 Tomb of the Panzerwaffe The Defeat of the 6th SS Panzer Army in Hungary 1945 Moscow Helion amp Company ISBN 978 1 909982 16 1 a b c d e Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 113 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Vistula Oder Offensive Retrieved 18 May 2020 a b c Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 115 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 120 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Warlimont Walter 1990 Inside Hitler s Headquarters p 499 a b c d e f Szamveber 2017 p 13 a b Szamveber 2017 pp 15 17 Szamveber 2017 p 17 a b c Szamveber 2017 p 18 a b Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 152 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Szamveber 2017 p 20 Szamveber 2017 pp 19 20 a b c d e Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 4 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 148 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 a b c d Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 155 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 9 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 a b Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 116 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 124 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 125 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada Drama Between Budapest and Vienna p 419 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 a b Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 425 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 a b c d Higgins David R 2014 Jagdpanther vs SU 100 Eastern Front 1945 Osprey Publishing a b c d Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc pp 156 157 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 161 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 164 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 169 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 172 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 166 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 a b Szamveber 2017 p 21 a b Szamveber 2017 pp 21 22 Frieser Karl Heinz 2017 Germany and the Second World War The Eastern Front 1943 1944 The War in the East and on the Neighbouring Fronts Volume VIII Great Britain Oxford University Press p 930 ISBN 9780198723462 a b c d e f Szamveber 2017 p 26 a b c Szamveber 2017 p 22 a b Szamveber 2017 p 23 a b Szamveber 2017 p 24 Szamveber 2017 p 25 Szamveber 2017 p 30 a b c Szamveber 2017 p 27 a b Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna Canada J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc p 5 ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Horvath Gabor 2013 Bostonok a Magyar Egen es Foldben 1944 1945 Szolnok Self Published Lexicon der Wehrmacht TsAMO pamyat naroda memory of the people Szamveber 2017 p page needed Norbert Norbert 2017 Pancelosok a Dunantulon Az utolso pancelosutkozetek Magyarorszagon 1945 tavaszan Hungary PeKo Publishing p 57 ISBN 978 963 454 083 0 Glantz amp House 1995 p 253 a b Stein 1984 p 238 Nevenkin Kamen 2020 Bloody Vienna The Soviet Offensive Operations in Western Hungary and Austria March May 1945 Keszthely Hungary PeKo Publishing Kft pp 10 12 ISBN 978 615 5583 26 1 a b Dollinger 1967 p 182 Ziemke 1968 p 450 Germans Trapped in Hungarian Capital 4 January 2014 Dollinger 1967 p 198 Lee Archer Kamen Nevenkin 2016 Panzerwrecks 20 Ostfront 3 Sussex Panzerwrecks publishing pp 4 5 ISBN 978 1 908032 14 0 Bibliography Edit Maksim Aleksei Kolomiets Isaev 2014 Tomb of the Panzerwaffe The Defeat of the 6th SS Panzer Army in Hungary 1945 Moscow Helion amp Company ISBN 978 1 909982 16 1 Dollinger Hans 1967 1965 The Decline and Fall of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan New York Bonanza ISBN 978 0 517 01313 7 Duffy Christopher 2002 Red Storm on the Reich The Soviet March on Germany 1945 Edison NJ Castle Books ISBN 0 7858 1624 0 Frieser Karl Heinz Schmider Klaus Schonherr Klaus Schreiber Gerhard Ungvary Kristian Wegner Bernd 2007 Die Ostfront 1943 44 Der Krieg im Osten und an den Nebenfronten The Eastern Front 1943 1944 The War in the East and on the Neighbouring Fronts ISBN 978 3 421 06235 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Fritz Stephen 2011 Ostkrieg Hitler s War of Extermination in the East Lexington The University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 81313 416 1 Glantz David M House Jonathan 1995 When Titans Clashed How the Red Army Stopped Hitler Lawrence Kansas Kansas University Press ISBN 0 7006 0717 X Horvath Gabor 2013 Bostonok a Magyar Egen es Foldben 1944 1945 Szolnok self published source Maier Georg 2004 Drama Between Budapest and Vienna J J Fedorowicz Publishing Inc ISBN 0 921991 78 9 Seaton Albert 1971 The Russo German War 1941 45 New York Praeger Publishers ISBN 978 0 21376 478 4 Stein George H 1984 The Waffen SS Hitler s Elite Guard at War 1939 1945 Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 9275 0 Szamveber Norbert 2013 Kard a Pajzs Mogott A Konrad hadmuveletek tortenete 1945 2 bovitett kiadas Budapest PeKo Publishing ISBN 978 963 89623 7 9 Szamveber Norbert 2017 Pancelosok a Dunantulon Az Utolso Pancelosutkozetek Magyarorszagon 1945 Tavaszan Budapest PeKo Publishing ISBN 978 963 454 083 0 Ziemke Earl F 1968 Stalingrad to Berlin The German Defeat in the East Washington Office of the Chief of Military History U S Army ASIN B002E5VBSE Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Operation Spring Awakening amp oldid 1180643185, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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