Army Group Vistula

Army Group Vistula

Army Group Vistula ( _de. "Heeresgruppe Weichsel") was an Army Group of the "Wehrmacht", formed on January 241945. It was put together from elements of Army Group A (shattered in the Soviet Vistula-Oder Offensive), Army Group Centre (similarly largely destroyed in the East Prussian Offensive), and a variety of new or ad-hoc formations. It was formed to protect Berlin from the Soviet armies advancing from the Vistula River.

Establishment and history

Heinz Guderian had originally urged the creation of a new army group as an essentially defensive measure to fill the gap opening in German defences between the lower Vistula and the lower Oder.Duffy, p.176]

The new Army Group Vistula was duly formed from an assortment of rebuilt, new and existing units. Guderian intended to propose Field-Marshal Maximilian von Weichs as commander.Duffy, p.177] However, in a reflection of Hitler's desire to transfer control of the conflict from the "Wehrmacht" to the SS, Heinrich Himmler was appointed.Beevor, p.52] Himmler, who lacked any real military knowledge, proved inadequate to the task; General Gotthard Heinrici replaced Himmler as commander of Army Group Vistula on 20 March, subsequent to its participation in the German offensive codenamed Operation Solstice and the following defence against the Soviet East Pomeranian Offensive.

Other than Operation Solstice, the Army Group's only offensive action was a disastrous attept to relieve the fortress of Kustrin late in March 1945, during which the subordinate XXXIX Panzer Corps took heavy casualties.

Under the command of Heinrici, parts of the army group fought through the Battle of Berlin and Battle of Halbe, with some of its elements not surrendering until the end of the war in Europe on 8 May 1945. Army Group Vistula's strength was in the region of 500,000 troops;Duffy, p.177, who states that German sources give the group's size as 32-34 divisions, while a "good Soviet source" identifies it as having 450,000 troops.] in general, the army group was poorly equipped, many of its units being little more than the 'paper' formations typical of the German military at the end of World War II. Indeed, when first set up it was found that the army group lacked many essential facilities, such as proper maps or a headquarters signals detachment - the sole means of communication being Himmler's private telephone.Beevor, p.54]

Organisation

The Army Group was originally formed from:

*The Ninth Army of General Theodor Busse, which had previously been part of Army Group A and had been shattered around Warsaw during the Vistula-Oder Offensive. This now held lines on the Oder and was progressively rebuilt.
*The Second Army of Colonel-General Walter Weiss, which as part of Army Group Centre had been defending the line of the Narew river on the borders of East Prussia. The East Prussian Offensive had cut it off from the remnants of its parent formation, and by late January it defended a long sector from Elbing in the east running westwards through Pomerania. It therefore formed the new army group's northern and eastern flank.
*The Eleventh SS Panzer Army was a 'new' formation which had been assembled in western Pomerania. Soon after its formation it received the staff of the Third Panzer Army, which had been largely destroyed in East Prussia, and was redesignated as Third Panzer Army.

During the East Pomeranian Offensive, the Second Army was finally cut off from the remainder of the army group and withdrew into Danzig, where it was eventually destroyed. The rest of Army Group Vistula was forced west of the Oder, though the Third Panzer Army retained a small bridgehead at Altdamm until the middle of March.

Towards the end of April, the Twenty-First Army (itself formed around the remnants of the Fourth Army, which had been destroyed in the Heiligenbeil Cauldron) was added to Army Group Vistula.

Order of Battle during Soviet Berlin Offensive

*German Third Panzer Army (Hasso-Eccard von Manteuffel from 9 March 1945 to 8 May 1945)
**III (Germanic) SS Panzer Corps (Felix Steiner) (later transferred to Twenty-First Army, below)
**CI Corps (later transferred to Twenty-First Army, see below)
**XXVII Corps (later transferred to Twenty-First Army, see below)
**XXXII Corps
**XXXXVI Panzer Corps
**"Verteidigungsbereich" Swinemunde
* German Twenty-First Army (Kurt von Tippelskirch)
**III (Germanic) SS Panzer Corps
**CI Corps
**XXVII Corps
*German Ninth Army (Theodor Busse from 20 January 1945 to 2 May 1945)
** CI Corps (to mid-April)
** LVI Panzer Corps (Helmuth Weidling from 12 April 1945 to 23 April 1945)
** XI SS Panzer Corps
** V SS Mountain Corps

Commanders

* Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler - 28 January 1945 to 20 March
* Colonel General ("Generaloberst") Gotthard Heinrici - 20 March to 28 April
* Infantry General ("General der Infanterie") Kurt von Tippelskirch - 28 April to 29 April
* Colonel General ("Generaloberst") Kurt Student - 29 April to 8 May 1945

ee also

* Battle for Berlin

Footnotes

References

*Beevor, A. "Berlin: The Downfall 1945", Penguin Books, 2002, ISBN 0-670-88695-5
*Duffy, C. "Red Storm on the Reich: The Soviet March on Germany, 1945" Routledge 1991 ISBN 0-415-22829-8
*Hastings, M. "Armageddon. The Battle for Germany 1944-45", Macmillan, London


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Army Group Oberrhein (Germany) — Army Group Oberrhein The situation at the Upper Rhine on 15 December 1944 Active 26 November 1944 – 25 January 1945 Country …   Wikipedia

  • Army Group Ostmark — ( Heeresgruppe Ostmark ) was a German army group formed very late in World War II.Army Group Ostmark was formed on 2 April 1945 from the remnants of Army Group South ( Heeresgruppe Sud ). Army Group Ostmark was operational in Austria and… …   Wikipedia

  • Army Detachment Steiner — ( Armeeabteilung Steiner ), was a temporary military unit, something more than a corps but less than an army, created on paper by German dictator Adolf Hitler on 21 April 1945 during the Battle of Berlin, and placed under the command of SS… …   Wikipedia

  • Vistula (disambiguation) — Vistula and the Polish language equivalent, Wisła, is the name of several places and organizations in Poland:* The river Vistula, the primary use of the name * Vistula Lagoon, a fresh water lagoon on the Baltic Sea that is cut off from Gdańsk Bay …   Wikipedia

  • Vistula–Oder Offensive — Infobox Military Conflict conflict=Vistula Oder Offensive partof=the Eastern Front of World War II caption=Soviet troops enter Łódź date=12 January – 2 February 1945 place=Central Poland and eastern Germany casus= territory= result=Soviet victory …   Wikipedia

  • 11th SS Panzer Army — The 11th SS Panzer Army ( SS Panzer Armeeoberkommando 11 ) was not much more than a paper army formed between November 1944 and February 1945 by Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler while he was commander of Army Group Vistula.The military historian… …   Wikipedia

  • 11th Army (Germany) — Infobox Military Unit unit name=11th Army caption= dates=5 October 1940 21 November 1942 26 November 1944 21 April 1945 country=Germany allegiance= branch=Heer type=Field Army role= size= command structure= current commander= garrison= ceremonial …   Wikipedia

  • 3rd Panzer Army (Germany) — The 3rd Panzer Army ( de. 3.Panzerarmee) was a German army that saw action during World War II.The 3rd Panzer Army was a constituent of Army Group Centre and fought in the Battle of Moscow in late 1941 and early 1942. During the Soviet counter… …   Wikipedia

  • List of German Army Groups in WWII — This is a list of German Army Groups in World War II * Army Group 1 * Army Group 2 * Army Group 3 * Army Group 4 * Army Group 5 * Army Group 6 * Army Group A * Army Group B * Army Group C * Army Group D * Army Group E * Army Group F * Army Group… …   Wikipedia

  • 21st Army (Germany) — The 21st Army was also known as the 21. Armee Norwegen or the Norweien Armee.The 21st Army was formed on 19 December 1940. The units of the army were absorbed by the 20th Mountain Army on 18 December 1944.On 27 April 1945, towards the end of the… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”