2nd Shock Army

2nd Shock Army

The 2nd Shock Army ( _ru. 2 Ударная армия) was a field army of the Red Army during the Second World War. This type of formation was created in accordance with prewar doctrine that called for Shock Armies to "overcome difficult defensive dispositions in order to create a tactical penetration of sufficient breadth and depth to permit the commitment of mobile formations for deeper exploitation." [Keith Bonn (ed), Slaughterhouse, p.306] However, as the war went on, Shock Armies lost this specific role and reverted, in general, to ordinary frontline formations.

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On January 7, 1942, Vlasov's army had spearheaded the Lubanskaya Offensive operation offensive to break the Leningrad encirclement. Planned as a combined operation between the Volkhov and Leningrad Fronts on a 30km frontage, other armies of the Leningrad Front (including the 54th) were supposed to participate at scheduled intervals in this operation. Crossing the Volkhov River Vlasov's army was successful in breaking through the German 18th Army's lines and penetrated 70-74km deep inside German rear area. [Meretskov, On the service of the nation, Ch.6] The other armies (Volkhov Front's 4th, 52nd, and 59th Armies, 13th Cavalry Corps, and 4th and 6th Guards Rifle Corps), however, failed to provide the required support, and Vlasov's army became stranded. Permission to retreat was refused. With the counter-offensive in May 1942, the Second Shock Army was finally allowed to retreat, but by now, too weakened, it was virtually annihilated during the final breakout at Myasnoi Bor. [Erickson, Road to Stalingrad, 2003, p.352. See also p.381, where Erickson describes 2 Shock after this operation as 'an army brought back from the dead.'] Vlasov was taken prisoner by the Wehrmacht troops on July 6, 1942. [Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. The Gulag Archipelago. Harper & Row Publ., New York (1973), p 252, 253.] He later raised a legion of Russians who fought alongside the German forces.

2nd Shock Army again suffered severe losses during the Siniavino operation from 19 August - 20 October 1942. [Dates are taken from David Glantz, The Soviet-German War 1941-1945:Myths and Realities: A Survey Essay, p.40] Again, the army was returned to the Front reserves for rebuilding.

In January 1943 it took part in the offensive which aimed to raise the Siege of Leningrad. The Stavka then intervened in Leningrad Front offensive planning during September 1943, changing the plan so that 2nd Shock Army would attack from the Oranienbaum bridgehead. By January 1944 the Army composition was five rifle divisions (11th, 43rd, 90th, 131st, and 196th) had been moved into the bridgehead, along with 600 artillery pieces, a tank brigade, another tank regiment, two SPG regiments, and masses of ammunition and supplies. [John Erickson (historian), The Road to Berlin, Weidenfeld & Nicholson, London, 1982, p.170] The offensive, under a newly appointed commander, General I.I. Fedyuninskii, begun on 14 January, took part in breaking the almost 900-day Siege of Leningrad, and pushed west to the outskirts of Narva, resulting in the Battle of Narva.

The 2nd Shock Army struggled to take Narva and German positions further west of the city until September 1944, when deep exploitation by Soviet forces in the Baltic States forced a German retreat through Estonia. As a result of the strategic Soviet victory in this region, the 2nd Shock Army was moved south and assigned to the 2nd Belorussian Front. As part of the 2nd Belorussian Front, the 2nd Shock Army fought across Poland and northeastern Germany, with its route of march taking it north of Warsaw and Stettin. On May 1, 1945, the 2nd Shock Army took Stralsund on the Baltic Coast, ending the war there and on the island of Rügen.

After the end of the war, until January 1946 2nd Shock remained in the northeast of Germany (with HQ at Schwerin), after which in full strength it was returned to the USSR, where its HQ was reorganised as HQ Arkhangel'sk Military District. It comprised 3 rifle corps by this time (9 divisions). After 2nd Shock was redesignated HQ Arkhangelsk MD 116th Rifle Corps and its divisions, 109th Rifle Corps (101st Guards, 46th and 372nd) went to the North Caucasus Military District, and 134th Rifle Corps (102nd Guards, the 90th and 272nd RD) - in the Voronezh Region.

ources and References

*Keith E. Bonn, Slaughterhouse: The Handbook of the Eastern Front, Aberjona Press, Bedford, PA, 2005
*Feskov, The Soviet Army in the Period of the Cold War, Tomsk, 2004


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