Battle of Raseiniai

Battle of Raseiniai

Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Battle of Rasienai


partof=World War II
place=Raseiniai, Lithuania
date=June 23, 1941June 27, 1941
result=German victory
combatant1=
combatant2=
commander1=
commander2=
strength1=300 tanks
strength2=300 tanks
casualties1=Light
casualties2=Virtually all Soviet tanks destroyed|

The Battle of Raseiniai (23–27 June 1941) was a tank battle fought between the elements of the 4th Panzer Army and two Soviet Mechanized Corps in Lithuania 75 km northwest of Kaunas in the attempt by the commander of the Northwestern Front to contain and destroy German troops that had crossed the Neman River (Nemunas). The result of the battle was the almost complete destruction of Soviet armored forces of the Northwestern Front, clearing the way for the continued German offensive towards the crossings of the Daugava River (Western Dvina). This was one of the major battles during the initial phases of Operation Barbarossa known in Soviet history as the Border Defensive Battles (22–24 June 1941) as part of the larger Baltic Strategic Defensive Operation.

Prelude

Army Group North, commanded by Field Marshal Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb, and staging in East Prussia prior to the commencement of the offensive, was the northern of three Army Groups participating in the invasion of the Soviet Union. Army Group North controlled the 18th and 16th Armies, along with the 4th Panzer Army commanded by General Erich Hoepner. In total, the Germans had 20 infantry divisions, three Panzer and three motorized infantry divisions. Air support was provided by the 1st Air Fleet.

The military administrative control over the Baltic republics area where the Army Group North would be deployed was exercised by the Special Baltic Military District which after the invasion was renamed into the Northwestern Front, Commanded by Colonel General Kuznetsov. The front fielded 8th and 11th Armies with the 27th in its second echelon. All together, Northwestern Front had 28 rifle, 4 tank, and 2 motorized divisions.

The operation

Army Group North's 4th Panzer Army advanced in two spearheads, led by the XXXXI Panzer Corps and LVI Panzer Corps. Their objectives was to cross the Neman and Daugava, the most difficult natural obstacles in front of Army Group North's drive towards Leningrad.

German bombers destroyed many of the signals and communications centers, naval bases, and the Soviet aerodromes in particular; from Riga to Kronstadt, on Šiauliai, Vilnius and Kaunas the bombs rained on carefully selected targets. Soviet aircraft had been on one-hour alert, but were held on their airfields after the first wave of German bombers passed.

At 9:30 AM on 22 June, Colonel General Kuznetsov, ordered 3rd and 12th Mechanised Corps to take up their counterattack positions, intending to use them in flanking attacks on the 4th Panzer Army, which had broken through to the river Dubysa (Dubissa). By noon, the Soviet divisions began to fall back. The German columns then began swung against Raseiniai, where Kuznetsov was concentrating his own armor for a major counterattack on the next day. By the evening, Soviet formations had fallen back to the Dubysa. Northwest of Kaunas, forward elements of von Manstein's 56th Panzer Corps reached the Dubysa and seized the vital Ariogola road viaduct across it. Without this crossing, Germans tanks might have been trapped in what was a giant natural tank ditch. A dash to Dvinsk would have been wholly ruled out. Meanwhile southwest of Vilnius more armor from the 3rd Panzer Army, which had ripped through the Soviet 11th Army, moved across the Niemen River over the intact bridges.

By the end of 22 June, the German armored spearheads had crossed the Neman and penetrated 80 kilometres (50 mi). The next day, Kuznetsov committed his armored forces to battle. Near Raseiniai, the XXXXI Panzer Corps was counter-attacked by 300 tanks of the Soviet 3rd and 12th Mechanised Corps. The battle would last four days.

It was here that German forces encountered a unit equipped with the Soviet KV heavy tanks for the first time. Gen. E.N. Solyalyankin's 2nd Tank Division attacked and overran elements of the German 4th army near Skaudvilė on 23 June. The Germans' Panzer 38(t) tanks and antitank weapons were practically ineffective against the Soviet heavy tanks—some of them were out of ammunition, but closed with and destroyed German antitank guns by literally driving over them. [Zaloga 1995, pp 17–18.] The next day, a single KV-2 heavy artillery tank, at a crossroads in front of Raseiniai, managed to cut off elements of the 6th Panzer Division which had established bridgeheads on the Dubysa. It stalled the Division's advance for a full day while being attacked by a variety of antitank weapons, until it finally ran out of ammunition. [Zaloga 1995, pp 18–19.]

In the south, by 23 June, 11th Army commander Lieutenant-General Morozov ordered the units falling back to the old fortress town Kaunas on the Nemen to move on to Jonava some 30 miles to the northeast. By the evening of 25 June, the Soviet 8th Army fell back towards Riga and the 11th towards Vilnius to the Desna. A breach gaped in the Soviet front from Ukmergė to Daugavpils.

By 26 June, the German Panzer Divisions cut through the Soviet Mechanised Corps and linked up. The Soviet 3rd Mechanised Corps, severely depleted due to losses in vehicles and personnel, [ Boyevoye Doneseniye No.1, HQ North-western Front, July 2, 1941, 24:00// Sbornik boyevykh dokumentov vol. 34, Moscow, Voyennoye Izdatelstvo Ministerstva Oborony, 1958 and E. Drig, "Mekhanizirovannye korpusa RKKA v boyu", AST, Moscow, 2005 , via http://rkkaww2.armchairgeneral.com/formation/mechcorps/3mk.htm] and the 12th pulled out of the trap, but by now very short of fuel and ammunition.

The Soviet Baltic Fleet was withdrawn from bases in Liepāja, Windau, and Riga by 26 June. Meanwhile, von Manstein's 56th Panzer Corps dashed for the River Dvina and in a remarkable coup seized bridges near Dvinsk intact.

After the operation

After the seizure of the Dvina bridges and the fall of Dvinsk, the leading formations of LVI Panzer Corps furiously set about enlarging the bridgehead. On 25 June, Marshal Semyon Timoshenko ordered Colonel General Kuznetsov to organize a defense of the West Dvina, by deploying the 8th Army on the right bank of the river from Riga to Livani while the 11th would defend Livani-Kraslava sector. Colonel General Kuznetsov also decided to use Major-General Berzarin's 27th Army. Berzarin was to pull his troops off the Dago and Osel islands and out of Riga and bring them to Daugavpils. At the same time the Soviet high command (Stavka) released Major-General Lelyushenko's 21st Mechanized Corps from the Moscow Military District to co-operate with the 27th Army; Lelyushenko had 98 tanks and 129 guns.

At 5:00 AM, on 28 June, Lelyushenko attacked upon Kuznetsov's orders in an attempt to destroy the German bridgehead near Daugavpils. Von Manstein halted on the Dvina, but attacked on the next day, striking along the Daugavpils-Ostrov highway. At Riga on the afternoon of 29 June, the Germans crossed the railway bridge over the Dvina. On 30 June Soviet troops withdrew on the right bank of the river, and by July 1 were in retreat to Estonia. A priceless opportunity now offered itself to the Germans. An immediate drive forwards would make it almost impossible for the Soviets to defend Leningrad. However, it was not to be: orders received with disbelief by the tankers were to wait for the infantry to arrive. In the end the wait would last almost a week.

Colonel General Kuznetsov was removed as front commander by Timoshenko, and 8th Army commander Major-General Sobennikov took over the front on 4 July. Timoshenko issued a directive on 29 June to the Northwestern Front stipulating that in the event of a withdrawal from the Daugava, the next river line, the Vilikaya, was to be held and every effort made to get Soviet troops emplaced there. Despite this, the river Vilikaia line fell rapidly on 8 July, with the rail and road bridges remaining intact. Pskov itself fell on the evening of 9 July. The 11th Army commander was therefore ordered to move to Dno. The crumbling of the Northwestern Front on the Velikaya and the German sweep to Luga were grave setbacks for the Soviets, and the 8th Army was being rammed inexorably towards the Gulf of Finland. But the German pause had given time for more troops to be rushed in to defend Leningrad, and the battle for the city would be long and hard.

Notes

References

* Zaloga, Steven J., Jim Kinnear, and Peter Sarson (1995). "KV-1 & 2 Heavy Tanks 1939–1945". Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-85532-496-2.


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