The Eastern Front Week by Week
Last time we spoke about the disaster at Donetz. At the start of May 1942, Germany’s Operation Fridericus triggered a sudden counteroffensive from Kleist’s 1st Panzer Army toward Kharkov. The Soviets failed to detect the buildup and, when Kleist’s thrust hit, the 9th Army collapsed rapidly; reserves were poorly pre-positioned, fortifications were neglected, and the Southern Front’s air activity was negligible against Luftwaffe dominance. Soviet attempts to contain the breakthrough—through hurried tank corps moves and delayed redeployments—could not stop sealed penetrations or halt the German advance to key Donets crossings. Elsewhere, German plans to neutralize Soviet partisans (Operation Hannover) were disrupted by successful deception and intelligence leaks around Belov. Meanwhile, heavy siege artillery and Soviet preparations at Sevastopol signaled the next phase of the campaign. This episode is Operation Hanover Well hello there, welcome to the Eastern Front week by week podcast, I am your dutiful host Craig Watson. But, before we start I want to also remind you this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Perhaps you want to learn more about world war two? Kings and Generals have an assortment of episodes on world war two and much more so go give them a look over on Youtube. So please subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry for some more history related content, over on my channel, the Pacific War Channel you can find a few videos all the way from the Opium Wars of the 1800’s until the end of the Pacific War in 1945. Last week’s success at Kestenga had come at the price of growing friction between Dietl and Siilasvuo. This tension arose because the latter had issued orders that lacked approval from Army Command, and the Germans had formed the impression that Finnish troops were showing reluctance to take part in intense combat. The combined German and Finnish losses at Kestenga reached 5,500, while those at Zapadnaya Litsa totaled 3,200. In exchange, the Finnish 3rd Corps asserted that it had caused 15,000 Soviet casualties. The Finns also maintained that Soviet losses in the rear areas were likewise substantial because of artillery barrages and air strikes. Meanwhile the Mountain Corps Norway reported that it had inflicted 8,000 Soviet deaths at Zapadnaya Litsa. These differences in casualty figures—whether accurate or inflated—nonetheless illustrated the brutal, grinding character of the fighting in the far north, where rugged terrain, thick taiga forests, and an almost complete lack of roads compelled both sides to fight for every frozen streambed and forest path at extremely close quarters. The disagreement persisted into the current week. Irritated by Dietl’s decision to restrict his authority, Siilasvuo directed the removal of every Finnish unit from the German zone of operations. He further insisted that all horses and carts previously loaned to the Germans be returned inside three days. Such a step would have stripped the Army of Lapland of any logistical capacity whatsoever. Dietl was therefore forced to plead with Siilasvuo in the spirit of comradeship-in-arms so that the Germans would not be abandoned in a difficult situation. The incident highlighted a persistent weakness in Axis coalition operations: Finnish officers, mindful of their nation’s separate war goals centered on reclaiming the lands lost in 1940, resented being placed under German operational control and were unwilling to accept heavy losses for aims they viewed as serving purely German interests. The Finnish 3rd Corps had remained subordinated to the Army of Lapland throughout the winter because Mannerheim had continued to show interest in restarting joint Finnish–German actions aimed at Murmansk. In addition, the German 5th and 7th Mountain Divisions, which had been scheduled to relieve the Kestenga sector, had been unable to reach Finland because winter ice had sealed the Finnish ports. Faced with this emergency, Dietl insisted that every German formation be made fully self-sufficient and independent of Finnish assistance as quickly as possible. He also urged the OKH to speed up the arrival of the 7th Mountain Division, part of which was still tied down with Army Group North. The deeper strategic difficulty was one that Germany had never managed to solve: the Murmansk railway kept delivering Allied supplies far into the Soviet heartland, and as long as the Finns refused to push south against it, the Army of Lapland simply lacked both the manpower and the logistical reach to cut the line on its own. Back on the 21st, Convoy PQ 16 had departed. Comprising 35 merchant ships, 4 cruisers, and 3 destroyers, it ranked among the largest convoys yet sent to the USSR. During the voyage it would also be reinforced by three additional Soviet destroyers. The lengthening daylight hours rendered submarine attacks too hazardous but favored the operations of naval bombers. On the 27th, 100 high-altitude Ju-88 bombers together with 8 He-111 torpedo bombers struck the convoy and succeeded in sinking only four vessels. Nevertheless, the attackers’ use of mixed altitudes had confused the defensive anti-aircraft fire and caused it to lose concentration. This same approach would be employed repeatedly over the following four days in a series of raids against the convoy. Altogether these air assaults sank 6 ships. One merchant vessel was lost to a German submarine, and another ship struck a Soviet mine upon reaching Murmansk. Moreover, many of the surviving merchant ships that made it into Soviet ports had sustained heavy damage. Despite these setbacks, the great majority of the convoy’s cargo arrived safely in Soviet harbors, proving that even under repeated Luftwaffe pressure the Arctic supply route stayed open. The tanks, aircraft, raw materials, and foodstuffs carried by PQ 16 and the convoys that followed were flowing straight into the Soviet war economy at a time when the Red Army was suffering enormous losses across several fronts at once. In parallel, Germany kept up its air offensive throughout May in an effort to disrupt the flow of supplies reaching Leningrad. On the 28th a large raid involving more than 100 aircraft targeted Kobona and Lednyovo. Yet only limited damage was caused, while ground-based flak batteries brought down 19 of the bombers. On the 29th another raid struck Osinevets but again produced only minor effects. Newly installed radars had helped Soviet fighters disrupt these attacks. After these disappointments, Luftwaffe focus shifted back to the frontline situation involving the Volkhov group of forces. The sole exception involved 15 Bf 109s that were detached from JG 54 and sent to the Finnish airfield at Petäjärvi. Their mission was to attack Soviet barge traffic on Lake Ladoga. Despite flying 104 sorties, however, they failed to sink even one vessel. The inability of these Bf 109s to produce results typified a wider Luftwaffe problem: fighter aircraft were ill-suited for anti-shipping strikes against scattered small craft operating near their own shore-based flak defenses, and the expanding Soviet radar network was steadily eroding the surprise on which such interdiction missions relied. Despite the German attempts, maritime traffic across Lake Ladoga continued to grow throughout the week as the ice disappeared. By the 28th the first convoy sailed from Novaia Ladoga to supply Leningrad. By December 1942 more than 200 ships would ply this supply route, transporting an estimated 779,586 tons of cargo. Half of that total would consist of foodstuffs. As Glantz records: “Of this cargo, 50 percent was foodstuffs, 15.4 percent coal, 16.7 percent lubricants, and 17.9 percent weaponry and other military cargoes. The foodstuffs primarily consisted of flour, grain, macaroni, butter, fat, meat, sugar, preserves, and chocolate. In addition, the city received 4,186 sheep and goats, 7,723 small cattle, 4,388 horses, 41,638 cubic meters of wood, 5,967 tons of various goods, and 1,300 tons of medical supplies.” Raw materials were also delivered to restart the military industry inside Leningrad. During the same period 310,000 combat replacements were shipped into the city, further transforming it into a fortress. At the same time 539,597 civilians and an additional 292,900 tons of factory equipment were evacuated from Leningrad. The opening of the lake route therefore marked a decisive change in Leningrad’s strategic situation. The city that had endured the most severe starvation of the winter—when daily rations had dropped to as little as 125 grams of bread for dependents—was gradually being reconnected to the rest of the Soviet war economy. The simultaneous evacuation of civilians and factory equipment alongside military resupply reflected a deliberate Soviet policy of adjusting Leningrad’s population to a level that could be fed and defended, while at the same time safeguarding the industrial capacity that had once made the city the second metropolis of the USSR. After all the indications of a Soviet withdrawal that had appeared the previous week, on May 24th Küchler informed Lindemann that it would be extremely unfortunate to allow the Russians to slip away. Consequently the 18th Army was ordered to launch an offensive to stop the 2nd Shock Army from escaping. Responsibility for the attack fell to the 1st and 38th Army Corps, which together fielded 5 infantry divisions, 1 motorized division, and the 2nd SS Infantry Brigade. The weather, however, had other plans. The ground was far too saturated to support an offensive. After observing still more troops leaving the pocket on the 25th, Lindemann asked the commander of the 38th Corps, Haenicke, whether he could launch an attack with a clear conscience on the 27th provided he received air support. Haenicke initially consented, but the weather deteriorated again before the conversion was even finished. Only on the 30th did the rain finally ease and the ground dry sufficiently to permit an assault, although conditions remained extremely muddy. The delay proved agonizing from the German viewpoint: every hour that elapsed allowed more Soviet troops and equipment to filter through the narrow corridor, and Küchler was sharply aware that his opportunity to close the pocket permanently was shrinking. The Volkhov swamplands, which had already swallowed men and vehicles all winter, now worked against the very encirclement operation that the Germans had spent months preparing to carry out. Despite the assault force suffering 30 percent casualties, the Erika route was cut that evening. During the night the two German corps linked up near the Erika lane, and by midday on the 31st they had established a firm cordon around the 2nd Shock Army with strong defenses oriented both east and west. As a result the 2nd Shock Army continued to starve inside its pocket and grew ever more dependent on eating the vegetation around them. In June, A. Baziuk wrote home: “We ate everything that could be eaten . . . [including] tree leaves and fir cones. We boiled old horse bones and gnawed on them. I say nothing about the bark—all the trees around us were stripped. Any insects, worms, and frogs were used as food. Birch sap was of great help, but, in the middle of May, it disappeared, and we suffered distressingly until the end of June.” Baziuk’s letter, along with others of its kind, conveyed the real character of the 2nd Shock Army’s suffering in a manner that operational maps and order-of-battle charts could never achieve. Vlasov’s army had entered the Volkhov swamps in January as a powerful offensive formation meant to relieve Leningrad. By late May it had been reduced to a band of starving men clinging to waterlogged forest clearings, no longer fighting for map objectives but simply struggling to remain alive long enough to be rescued. After nearly a year of internal political maneuvering, Lavrenti Beria had failed in his bid to obtain exclusive authority over the Partisans. On the 30th the Communist Party established a Central Headquarters of the Partisan Movement that reported directly to STAVKA. Ponomarenko was named its chief, and regional partisan headquarters would be formed beneath this central command. The directive also spelled out six primary missions for the partisans: disrupting enemy supply and communications infrastructure, destroying enemy equipment stored in warehouses or on airfields, raiding enemy rear installations such as headquarters, and furnishing the Red Army with reconnaissance data. Although the senior leaders remained Communist Party members, the move signaled a transition toward greater Red Army oversight of the partisan effort. Additional Red Army and NKVD personnel were sent behind German lines to expand recruitment and supervise operations. The establishment of the Central Headquarters amounted in many respects to a belated recognition of what the partisan movement had already shown on its own: that occupied Soviet territory was not passively submitting to German rule. The main task ahead would be to convert hundreds of scattered, locally organized groups into a unified strategic tool capable of inflicting real operational damage on the Wehrmacht’s rear services. Ponomarenko himself was a party official rather than a military professional, yet the directive’s stress on Red Army and NKVD liaison officers indicated that military competence, not political loyalty alone, would now shape the movement’s future course. Much like the German 16th Army, Kurochkin took advantage of the pause in combat to reorganize his units around Demyansk. The 27th Army was assigned to screen Staraya Russa, the 11th Army was positioned north of the Ramushevo Corridor, and the 1st Shock Army was placed to its south. The 34th and 53rd Armies continued to hold the ring around the Demyansk salient. STAVKA decided to grant the Northwestern Front time to restore its formations to full strength after months of exhausting combat. Its next major operation was provisionally scheduled for early July. By then the Front would have assembled more than 300,000 troops and would be strengthened by the 6th Air Army. The Demyansk pocket remained an unusual feature of the northern sector of the Eastern Front: a German force of roughly 100,000 men, isolated since February, that had refused to disintegrate despite Soviet pressure and was instead kept alive by a Luftwaffe airlift that placed heavy strain on German transport aircraft and established a risky precedent. Both sides had poured vast resources into the pocket—Germany to maintain it, the Soviet Union to eliminate it—without either side achieving a conclusive outcome. For STAVKA, the reduction of Demyansk before the summer campaigning season offered an appealing goal, yet the heavy cost of the winter fighting had made a fully prepared offensive impossible until the troops could be rested and brought back up to strength. On the 24th, planning began in the Western and Kalinin Fronts to resume their offensives against Army Group Center. Once again the focus would be Rzhev. Halder recorded in his diary on the 24th and 26th that Soviet forces were concentrating in growing numbers in the Belyi area and concluded that an offensive there was probably imminent. The Rzhev salient—a westward bulge in the German line—had preoccupied the Soviets ever since the winter counteroffensive. Soviet commanders had correctly calculated that eliminating the salient would shorten the front, free up substantial forces, and push German supply lines farther away from Moscow. What they could not fully anticipate was the determination with which German troops, especially those of Model’s 9th Army, had turned the interior of the salient into a dense web of mutually supporting strongpoints, anti-tank ditches, and meticulously registered artillery kill zones. Also on the 24th, beneath pouring dawn rain, German artillery signaled the beginning of Operation Hanover. Elements of six German divisions, supported by powerful Luftwaffe air cover, crashed into Kazankin’s Airborne Corps. The 6th Partisan Regiment at Vskhody was immediately overrun by the 19th Panzer Division, which also forced the 8th Cavalry Regiment backward. The Soviets did succeed, however, in destroying the bridge, thereby denying the Germans a crossing of the Ugra River at that point for several days. The Germans pushed northward to seize Selishche and Selibka in an effort to isolate the Airborne Corps from the Ugra River crossings. From the north the 197th Infantry Division marched five hours to reach Ugra station and the rail bridge spanning the river. The Germans had not anticipated capturing Ugra and Vskhody until the second day of the operation. Radio traffic believed to originate from Belov’s command post inside the emerging pocket appeared to show signs of panic. Only 16 km remained to close the ring completely. Kluge and Heinrici were already congratulating themselves and their soldiers on a brilliant success. Their confidence was understandable: on paper the operation had exceeded expectations, the Soviet forces seemed disorganized, and the encirclement looked only days from completion. What German intelligence had failed to appreciate was the extent to which Belov’s cavalry and Kazankin’s paratroopers had become seasoned survivors in the forests behind German lines, able to display a resilience and inventiveness that would frustrate German plans for weeks to come. All along the front line the airborne troops were pushed back. Zhabo’s 1st Partisan Regiment was compelled to fall back to a new position between Nadezhada and Kombain after losing 60 percent of its strength. This created a gap more than 10 km wide in the airborne defensive line and also drove the partisans away from the Airborne Corps. The 8th Brigade was assaulted at the town of Bol’shaia Myshenka by 3,000 German infantry and 20 tanks. After suffering 20 percent casualties the Soviet infantry were forced northwest in disorder. One company, however, was completely cut off and fought to the last man. During the day Belov had asked Zhukov for assistance from the 50th Army. He received only vague assurances that the Western Front would mount an offensive in early June. Therefore the sole remaining hope lay in withdrawing the Airborne Corps and linking the two groups together. Kazankin pulled back northwest during the night. His objective was the Ugra River crossing at Selibka so that he could join Belov. Yet the lead battalion of the 8th Brigade discovered a German company occupying the village that blocked the crossing. The Soviets possessed no proper bridging equipment for the 120-meter-wide river. Consequently the airborne troops had to use the dense forest for cover while they quietly reconnoitered the riverbank. Torrential rain had halted major German movements, even grounding their Storch reconnaissance aircraft. An improvised footbridge was also attempted using eight large pine trunks, but the structure repeatedly broke apart under the force of the river current. The Ugra, swollen by spring runoff, at that moment hindered the Germans as much as it hindered the Soviets—small comfort to exhausted paratroopers attempting to carry their wounded across a 120-meter torrent on makeshift pine-log rafts in the middle of the night. Then on the 26th six small boats were discovered on the Soviet side of the river at the ferry landing in Pishchevo. A thin telephone cable was rigged as a guide wire, and these boats were laboriously employed to ferry the airborne troops across during the 26th and 27th. The continuing foul weather fortunately prevented the Luftwaffe from interfering with the crossings. As a result it was not until the 27th that the Germans resumed their advance to seize the entire Ugra River line. Their forward elements did not link up until nightfall on the 27th because of repeated counterattacks mounted by Belov’s Cavalry Corps. The 6th Guard Regiment, supported by two T-26 tanks, had driven the Germans back across the Ugra at Vskhody. Meanwhile the 3rd and 7th Regiments had hurried to Sorokino to secure that river crossing. German artillery nevertheless managed to fire on the final battalion while it was still crossing. One company was unable to get across and chose to conceal itself in the swamplands to the southeast. There it would remain until July 15th, when it finally rejoined the 50th Army near Zaitseva Gora. The rear-guard company was also isolated. It fought its way out of the encirclement and returned to the Airborne Corps by the 29th. Back on the 26th Kazankin had ordered a withdrawal toward Podlipki through the woods near Selibka. Once regrouped there, the corps would push westward toward Pustoshka to link up with Belov. Official archival records noted his decision: “In light of the complete impossibility of penetrating in the direction of Fursovo, the corps commander decided: while exploiting the darkness on the night of 26–27 May to penetrate to the west between the villages of Selibka and Chashchi, enter the forest masses and subsequently withdraw in the direction of Pustoshka.” During the night of the 28th they succeeded in slipping past German strongpoints after dispersing a screen of security troops. By daybreak the corps was hidden in the forests around Selibka. The movement had been executed with such stealth that the German artillery barrage on the 28th fell on the camps abandoned the previous night rather than on the new position. By this stage Shmelev and Zhabo had also managed to bring the remnants of their partisan formations back into the Airborne Corps. It was here that Kazankin restored radio contact with both Belov and Zhukov and informed them of his situation. He also requested air support to protect his withdrawal. VVS airstrikes on the 29th enabled him to cross the Vskhody–Pustoshka road. It was during this period that a Major Bocharov betrayed the paratroopers and began supplying the Germans with information about the corps’ location. During the march Captain Smirnov, commander of the 2nd Battalion, 9th Brigade, was wounded and captured by the Germans because of the treachery of this former Major Bocharov, who subsequently provided the Germans with information about Kazankin’s plans. As 4th Airborne’s official history noted, “Undoubtedly, he provided the enemy with information about the parachutists, and, from that day, tanks, infantry, artillery, and aviation uninterruptedly struck the corps throughout its 300-kilometer path of withdrawal.” Smirnov became a POW but later escaped to join first Polish and then Belorussian partisans. The Bocharov betrayal represented a serious setback but not a fatal one: Kazankin’s corps had already shown an exceptional ability to evade capture, and the forest and swamp terrain that made movement so physically punishing also furnished concealment that partly neutralized the intelligence edge Bocharov had given the Germans. The 300-kilometre withdrawal that now confronted the corps would rank among the most punishing episodes of the entire Soviet experience behind German lines on the Eastern Front. During this period other German units had been attacking the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps from Dorogobuzh toward Vyazma, slowly forcing them southward. At this stage Belov’s forces consisted of the 1st Guards Cavalry Division, the 1st and 2nd Partisan Divisions, and seven tanks, including a heavy KV (model Klimenti Voroshilov) and a medium T-34. By the 28th Belov had stabilized his eastward front along the Ugra River. Halder recorded in his war diary that same day: “Fourth Army has closed the ring around the main body of Belov.” The following day both the 2nd Guards Cavalry Division and the 4th Airborne Corps had completed their reorganization and joined Belov’s forces. In addition the 23rd and 211th Airborne Brigades, totaling some 4,000 men, were ordered into the pocket to reinforce Belov. The 23rd Brigade arrived first, beginning on the 29th. For once the brigade landed accurately at its drop zone and brought supplies for six days. The decision to reinforce a force already surrounded behind enemy lines was a classically Stalinist gamble: instead of writing off Belov’s group as lost and preserving the airborne assets for future use, STAVKA poured additional manpower into the pocket in the hope that a large enough force could eventually break out. Whether this represented sound strategy or a refusal to accept reality remained open to debate. Only 2,000 Soviets were taken prisoner and 1,500 killed during Operation Hanover. Belov and the great majority of his troops escaped the German trap with more than 17,000 men, 18 light tanks, 1 T-34, and 1 KV tank. Although he had been driven farther from safety and had lost the most operationally valuable ground, a second phase of Operation Hanover would be required to eliminate this pocket behind German lines. For Kluge and Heinrici the outcome was a major disappointment. The operation had scored tactical victories—overrunning partisan regiments, capturing key river crossings, pushing Belov southward—but had fallen short of its central goal of destroying the Soviet force. The forests of Army Group Center’s rear had absorbed Belov’s cavalry just as they had absorbed everything else that ventured too far into them. On the 29th Army Group Center issued a top-secret directive to all its subordinate formations. Its opening sentence stated: “The OKH has ordered the earliest possible resumption of the attack on Moscow.” The document required that all subsequent communications concerning this operation be filed under the code name Kreml. In reality no such operational plan existed. It was a purely notional undertaking designed to mislead the Soviets. On paper it was a reworking of Operation Typhoon that assigned the same tasks to the two Panzer Armies of the Army Group. Security for the operation was deliberately kept tight, on the understanding that even the smallest leak would still reach Soviet ears. Operation Kreml was an ambitious exercise in strategic deception. German planners recognized that Soviet intelligence, despite being penetrated and disrupted, retained considerable capacity to gather information. By creating a detailed illusion of a renewed offensive against Moscow—complete with orders, unit assignments, and timetables—they hoped to pin Soviet reserves in place opposite Army Group Center while the real blow, Fall Blau, was prepared far to the south. The plan succeeded beyond all expectations: Soviet conviction that Germany’s main effort in 1942 would again be aimed at Moscow shaped their deployments and their interpretation of events in Ukraine throughout the spring and early summer. In Germany, Herbert Backe had been appointed acting minister of food and agriculture on May 22nd, replacing Richard Darré. Backe had originally championed the Hunger Plan in 1941, which had called for the deliberate starvation of 30 million Soviet civilians by seizing all available grain and cutting Soviet cities off from food supplies. The plan had effectively been dropped as unworkable late in 1941. Soviet civilians had not simply waited passively to starve, and the Wehrmacht had concluded that actively blockading food from urban areas would require far too many troops. Yet by that time millions had already perished from hunger, directly or indirectly, chiefly among minority groups and prisoners of war. Germany’s own food situation had deteriorated further by May 1942 because of poor harvests in 1940 and 1941 and the lack of imports from occupied territories. Grain reserves were almost exhausted. Rations for both civilians and the military had already been reduced in April amid widespread discontent. Germany was completely unable to feed the workers it had enslaved for its war economy. Göring had suggested that these workers could subsist on cat and horse meat. Backe performed the calculations and demonstrated that there were not enough cats to supply any meaningful quantity of meat. Moreover, horse meat was already being consumed by German civilians. The starving workers were so unproductive that the meager food they received was regarded by Backe as essentially wasted. Backe and Hitler therefore agreed—Hitler’s slogan being: “These consequences must be accepted, because before the German population starves in any way, others must . . . pay.” It was preferable to concentrate food on a small core of productive workers rather than distributing it to “useless eaters.” In addition there would be no further food shipments from the Reich to the Wehrmacht in the field. The Army was to obtain its own supplies locally without concern for the local population. Furthermore, Jews and all others the Nazis deemed undesirable were to be denied any rations whatsoever and removed from the food distribution system entirely. All other groups were to starve before the Germans did. Food was also to be imported into Germany from the General Government of Poland even though that territory could not feed its own population. Until then it had depended on food shipments from Germany simply to sustain its inhabitants. As Goebbels declared, Germany was digesting the occupied territories. The appointment of Backe—the architect of deliberate mass starvation as official policy—to oversee Germany’s food supply was not simply an administrative change. It marked the final institutionalization of the Nazi hierarchy of hunger: German civilians first, productive slave laborers a distant second, and all other subject peoples nowhere at all. The millions of Soviet prisoners of war who had already starved to death in German camps since 1941 were the most visible result of this logic, but the policy’s consequences extended to every corner of occupied Europe wherever German administrators decided who would eat and who would not. In Ukraine, Bock’s counterattack the previous week had encircled the 6th and 57th Armies together with Group Bobkin. Now, day and night, fragmented Soviet formations that were short of fuel and ammunition hurled themselves against the thin line held by 3rd Panzer Corps. One attack nearly reached Novopokrovske but ran out of momentum 6 km short of safety. Continuous Luftwaffe airstrikes helped shatter the Soviet assaults. This concentrated effort by the encircled Soviet forces against 3rd Panzer Corps was closely followed by advancing German formations. As a result, by the 26th the Soviet pocket had been compressed to only 16 km by 3 km, centered on the Bereka valley. From a hilltop near Lozovenka, Bock could survey most of the pocket. The scene that met his eyes represented one of the most total annihilations of a major Soviet force yet seen in the war: tens of thousands of men crammed into a strip of ground barely wider than the effective range of artillery, their vehicles immobilized for lack of fuel, their ammunition nearly gone, with no hope of relief from outside and the Luftwaffe overhead denying them rest even at night. The 17th Army noted in its war diary, with surprise, that no relief operation was attempted from outside the pocket. After the unsuccessful efforts of the 38th Army on the 23rd near Chepil, it was not until the 28th that they managed to organize a fresh attack using two tank brigades. This advance met a German offensive aimed at crushing the 38th Army’s bridge over the Donets near Zhukovka. The two operations essentially canceled each other out, although Moskalenko claimed that his actions had enabled 22,000 Soviets to escape the encirclement. To put it politely, this represents a mild exaggeration both of the number who escaped and of his own contribution to their escape. By the 28th the fighting had ended. Germany claimed to have captured 240,000 prisoners and seized 1,200 tanks and 2,600 artillery pieces. The Soviets officially recorded total losses of 266,927 men, 652 tanks, and 4,924 guns and mortars. Of these, 207,057 men were taken prisoner, 46,314 were sick or wounded, and only 13,556 were listed as dead. Glantz notes that modern estimates put the real total at 170,958 dead, missing, or captured, with an additional 106,232 wounded. Generals Kostenko, Bobkin, Podlas, and Gorodnyanskii all lay dead alongside thousands of their men. As devastating as this disaster was, it still did not equal the human losses suffered by Kozlov and Mekhlis in Crimea, although it did produce greater losses in modern tanks and other equipment. German losses were estimated at 20,000 men and 108 tanks. The Luftwaffe reported losing only 49 aircraft while claiming 615 Soviet planes destroyed. While Soviet records confirm heavy aviation losses during the Second Battle of Kharkov, the Luftwaffe’s claims were undoubtedly inflated. For his part in the battle General Paulus became a favorite of the German press and was awarded the Knight’s Cross. For the Soviet officer corps, Kharkov represented a catastrophe whose repercussions reached far beyond the immediate loss of ground and equipment. The destruction of Timoshenko’s offensive capability at the precise moment when German forces were beginning to mass for Fall Blau left the southern sector of the Soviet front dangerously exposed. The armies that would have to oppose Germany’s drive toward the Caucasus and the Volga had been largely consumed in a failed offensive launched on the basis of faulty intelligence and unwarranted optimism. On the 29th Timoshenko sent an assessment to Moscow warning that renewed German attacks against the South-Western Front could be expected within ten days. Thanks to Operation Kreml, both Timoshenko and STAVKA believed that Germany was about to launch a massive operation against Moscow, making everything happening in Ukraine secondary. Timoshenko was too frightened to approach Stalin directly, so he sent Khrushchev and Bagramyan to plead for reinforcements. Stalin proved less harsh than they had feared and dispatched 7 rifle divisions, 2 tank corps, and 4 tank brigades to bolster Timoshenko’s Front. According to Shtemenko, Stalin rebuked Timoshenko and Khrushchev with the words: “Battles must be won not with numbers but by skill. If you do not learn to direct your troops better, all the armaments the country can produce will not be enough for you.” Bagramyan, however, was made the immediate scapegoat for the disaster and demoted to chief of staff of the 28th Army. Further punishments would follow once more information became available. Stalin’s comment, harsh as it was, contained a genuine strategic truth: the Red Army’s repeated practice of hurling mass against well-prepared German defenses without the necessary coordination, deception, and combined-arms tactics required to exploit any breakthroughs was the fundamental reason for disasters such as Kharkov, just as surely as German operational skill contributed to them. The lesson would eventually be absorbed, but only after enormous sacrifice. This unexpected triumph at Kharkov generated a fresh surge of optimism inside the German high command. Hitler declared that the speed and scale of the victory allowed “favorable inferences to be drawn with respect to the entire enemy situation.” As a result it was no longer necessary to adhere strictly to the Blau timetable. Instead it was more urgent to strike quickly at any exposed Soviet formations while they were still reeling from the shock. Operation Wilhelm was to strike at the Vovchansk salient north of Kharkov. A new FRIDERICUS II offensive was also to be prepared in order to encircle and destroy the 9th and 38th Armies and then advance to the Oskol River line as a preliminary step for Fall Blau. The preparations for these two operations now made it possible to revive STOERFANG. Manstein was instructed to have his operation ready to begin by June 7th. Hitler also demanded that the 8th Air Corps be returned to Crimea before the fighting at Kharkov had even concluded. Not all of the air units would return, however, because of disagreements over how much air support would be required for the other planned operations. The sequence of planned operations—Wilhelm, FRIDERICUS II, then STOERFANG, then Blau—reflected Germany’s characteristic method of linking tactical successes together to set the stage for a larger strategic offensive. It was a technique that had worked brilliantly in 1941, but it rested on the assumption that the Red Army would continue to collapse under successive blows rather than absorbing them and regenerating. On the 25th, efforts to evacuate civilians and non-combat personnel from Sevastopol were intensified in a final attempt to ease the food burden on the garrison. In addition, Petrov and Oktyabrsky’s forces had for months been shortchanged logistically by Kozlov, who had diverted nearly all supplies to his own units. With Kozlov now removed from the picture, an effort was made to revive the garrison. The Black Sea Fleet military council requested 15,000 replacements, 50 new Yak-1 fighters, additional fuel for the 3rd Special Aviation Group to sustain a high sortie rate, and three times the previous allocation of ammunition for the Sevastopol Defensive Region. Petrov further asked for 10,000 rifles and 1,500 light machine guns to rearm his inadequately equipped troops. On the 28th a supply convoy delivered 3,017 replacements—all survivors of the Kerch campaign, most of whom had only recently returned to duty after recovering from wounds. Oktyabrsky had assigned two cruisers, six destroyers, and eight minesweepers to conduct these final supply runs in May and June. All except the old Krasny Krym were capable of 30 knots, making them extremely difficult targets for air attack. The destroyers, however, could carry at most 400 troops per run, and the cruisers up to 2,000 troops each. They were also poorly suited for transporting heavy cargo. Consequently three cargo ships and a tanker were also detailed to carry supplies to Sevastopol. These vessels, however, could manage only 12 knots at best, rendering them far more vulnerable to air attack. Moreover, the faster warships were tied down escorting them. Even worse, only the cruiser Molotov possessed any air-search radar, and it was of a very primitive type. Most of the warships also relied on obsolete, slow-firing single-mount 21-K anti-aircraft guns. The basic dilemma of Sevastopol’s resupply was one that offered no satisfactory solution: fast warships could survive the gauntlet of air attacks but could carry little; slow cargo vessels could carry a great deal but were highly vulnerable to the Luftwaffe’s Ju-88s operating at short range from Crimean airfields. The garrison’s survival therefore depended on a logistical balance that became steadily more unfavorable with each passing week as German forces tightened the land perimeter and Manstein prepared the deliberate, set-piece assault that would determine the fortress’s fate. I would like to take this time to remind you all that this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Please go subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals [http://www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals]. If you are still hungry after that, give my personal channel a look over at The Pacific War Channel at Youtube, it would mean a lot to me. Germany launched a strategic deception, “Operation Kreml,” to convince the USSR Germany would attack Moscow, fixing Soviet reserves while Fall Blau prepared. In Ukraine, Kharkov’s destruction shattered Soviet offensive capability. Meanwhile Nazi hunger policy tightened under Backe, and Sevastopol’s strained resupply in May–June worsened.
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