Dates and events of the Great Patriotic War. Years of the Great Patriotic War

Great Patriotic War- the war of the USSR with Germany and its allies in – years and with Japan in 1945; component of World War II.

From the point of view of the leadership of Nazi Germany, war with the USSR was inevitable. The communist regime was seen by them as alien, and at the same time capable of striking at any moment. Only the rapid defeat of the USSR gave the Germans the opportunity to ensure dominance on the European continent. In addition, it gave them access to the rich industrial and agricultural regions of Eastern Europe.

At the same time, according to some historians, Stalin himself, at the end of 1939, decided on a preemptive attack on Germany in the summer of 1941. On June 15, Soviet troops began their strategic deployment and advance to the western border. According to one version, this was done with the aim of striking Romania and German-occupied Poland, according to another, to frighten Hitler and force him to abandon plans to attack the USSR.

First period of the war (June 22, 1941 – November 18, 1942)

The first stage of the German offensive (June 22 – July 10, 1941)

On June 22, Germany began the war against the USSR; on the same day Italy and Romania joined it, on June 23 - Slovakia, on June 26 - Finland, on June 27 - Hungary. The German invasion took the Soviet troops by surprise; on the very first day, a significant part of the ammunition, fuel and military equipment was destroyed; The Germans managed to ensure complete air supremacy. During the battles of June 23–25, the main forces of the Western Front were defeated. The Brest Fortress held out until July 20. On June 28, the Germans took the capital of Belarus and closed the encirclement ring, which included eleven divisions. On June 29, German-Finnish troops launched an offensive in the Arctic towards Murmansk, Kandalaksha and Loukhi, but were unable to advance deep into Soviet territory.

On June 22, the USSR carried out the mobilization of those liable for military service born in 1905–1918; from the first days of the war, a massive registration of volunteers began. On June 23, an emergency body of the highest military command was created in the USSR to direct military operations - the Headquarters of the Main Command, and there was also maximum centralization of military and political power in the hands of Stalin.

On June 22, British Prime Minister William Churchill made a radio statement about support for the USSR in its fight against Hitlerism. On June 23, the US State Department welcomed the efforts of the Soviet people to repel the German invasion, and on June 24, US President F. Roosevelt promised to provide the USSR with all possible assistance.

On July 18, the Soviet leadership decided to organize the partisan movement in the occupied and front-line areas, which became widespread in the second half of the year.

In the summer and autumn of 1941, about 10 million people were evacuated to the east. and more than 1350 large enterprises. The militarization of the economy began to be carried out using tough and energetic measures; All the country's material resources were mobilized for military needs.

The main reason for the defeats of the Red Army, despite its quantitative and often qualitative (T-34 and KV tanks) technical superiority, was the poor training of privates and officers, the low level of operation of military equipment and the troops’ lack of experience in conducting large military operations in modern warfare. . Repressions against the high command in 1937–1940 also played a significant role.

Second stage of the German offensive (July 10 – September 30, 1941)

On July 10, Finnish troops launched an offensive and on September 1, the 23rd Soviet Army on the Karelian Isthmus retreated to the line of the old state border, occupied before the Finnish War of 1939–1940. By October 10, the front had stabilized along the line Kestenga - Ukhta - Rugozero - Medvezhyegorsk - Lake Onega. - R. Svir. The enemy was unable to cut off communications routes between European Russia and northern ports.

On July 10, Army Group North launched an offensive in the Leningrad and Tallinn directions. Novgorod fell on August 15, Gatchina on August 21. On August 30, the Germans reached the Neva, cutting off the railway connection with the city, and on September 8 they took Shlisselburg and closed the blockade ring around Leningrad. Only the tough measures of the new commander of the Leningrad Front, G.K. Zhukov, made it possible to stop the enemy by September 26.

On July 16, the Romanian 4th Army took Chisinau; The defense of Odessa lasted about two months. Soviet troops left the city only in the first half of October. At the beginning of September, Guderian crossed the Desna and on September 7 captured Konotop (“Konotop breakthrough”). Five Soviet armies were surrounded; the number of prisoners was 665 thousand. Left Bank Ukraine was in the hands of the Germans; the path to Donbass was open; Soviet troops in Crimea found themselves cut off from the main forces.

Defeats on the fronts prompted Headquarters to issue order No. 270 on August 16, which qualified all soldiers and officers who surrendered as traitors and deserters; their families were deprived of state support and subject to exile.

Third stage of the German offensive (September 30 – December 5, 1941)

On September 30, Army Group Center launched an operation to capture Moscow (“Typhoon”). On October 3, Guderian's tanks broke into Oryol and reached the road to Moscow. On October 6–8, all three armies of the Bryansk Front were surrounded south of Bryansk, and the main forces of the Reserve (19th, 20th, 24th and 32nd armies) were surrounded west of Vyazma; the Germans captured 664 thousand prisoners and more than 1200 tanks. But the advance of the 2nd Wehrmacht tank group to Tula was thwarted by the stubborn resistance of M.E. Katukov’s brigade near Mtsensk; The 4th Tank Group occupied Yukhnov and rushed to Maloyaroslavets, but was delayed at Medyn by Podolsk cadets (6–10 October); The autumn thaw also slowed down the pace of the German advance.

On October 10, the Germans attacked the right wing of the Reserve Front (renamed the Western Front); On October 12, the 9th Army captured Staritsa, and on October 14, Rzhev. On October 19, a state of siege was declared in Moscow. On October 29, Guderian tried to take Tula, but was repulsed with heavy losses. In early November, the new commander of the Western Front, Zhukov, with an incredible effort of all his forces and constant counterattacks, managed, despite huge losses in manpower and equipment, to stop the Germans in other directions.

On September 27, the Germans broke through the defense line of the Southern Front. Most of Donbass fell into German hands. During the successful counter-offensive of the troops of the Southern Front on November 29, Rostov was liberated, and the Germans were driven back to the Mius River.

In the second half of October, the 11th German Army broke through into Crimea and by mid-November captured almost the entire peninsula. Soviet troops managed to hold only Sevastopol.

Counter-offensive of the Red Army near Moscow (December 5, 1941 – January 7, 1942)

On December 5–6, the Kalinin, Western and Southwestern fronts switched to offensive operations in the northwestern and southwestern directions. The successful advance of the Soviet troops forced Hitler on December 8 to issue a directive to go on the defensive along the entire front line. On December 18, the troops of the Western Front began an offensive in the central direction. As a result, by the beginning of the year the Germans were thrown back 100–250 km to the west. There was a threat of envelopment of Army Group Center from the north and south. The strategic initiative passed to the Red Army.

The success of the operation near Moscow prompted Headquarters to decide to launch a general offensive along the entire front from Lake Ladoga to the Crimea. The offensive operations of the Soviet troops in December 1941 - April 1942 led to a significant change in the military-strategic situation on the Soviet-German front: the Germans were driven back from Moscow, the Moscow, part of the Kalinin, Oryol and Smolensk regions were liberated. There was also a psychological turning point among soldiers and civilians: faith in victory strengthened, the myth of the invincibility of the Wehrmacht was destroyed. The collapse of the plan for a lightning war raised doubts about the successful outcome of the war among both the German military-political leadership and ordinary Germans.

Lyuban operation (January 13 – June 25)

The Lyuban operation was aimed at breaking the blockade of Leningrad. On January 13, the forces of the Volkhov and Leningrad fronts began an offensive in several directions, planning to unite at Lyuban and encircle the enemy’s Chudov group. On March 19, the Germans launched a counterattack, cutting off the 2nd Shock Army from the rest of the forces of the Volkhov Front. Soviet troops repeatedly tried to unblock it and resume the offensive. On May 21, Headquarters decided to withdraw it, but on June 6, the Germans completely closed the encirclement. On June 20, soldiers and officers received orders to leave the encirclement on their own, but only a few managed to do this (according to various estimates, from 6 to 16 thousand people); Army commander A.A. Vlasov surrendered.

Military operations in May-November 1942

Having defeated the Crimean Front (almost 200 thousand people were captured), the Germans occupied Kerch on May 16, and Sevastopol in early July. On May 12, troops of the Southwestern Front and Southern Front launched an attack on Kharkov. For several days it developed successfully, but on May 19 the Germans defeated the 9th Army, throwing it back beyond the Seversky Donets, went to the rear of the advancing Soviet troops and captured them in a pincer movement on May 23; the number of prisoners reached 240 thousand. On June 28–30, the German offensive began against the left wing of the Bryansk and the right wing of the Southwestern Front. On July 8, the Germans captured Voronezh and reached the Middle Don. By July 22, the 1st and 4th Tank Armies reached the Southern Don. On July 24, Rostov-on-Don was captured.

In the context of a military catastrophe in the south, on July 28, Stalin issued order No. 227 “Not a step back,” which provided for severe punishments for retreating without instructions from above, barrier detachments to combat those who left their positions without permission, and penal units for operations in the most dangerous sectors of the front. On the basis of this order, about 1 million military personnel were convicted during the war years, of which 160 thousand were shot, and 400 thousand were sent to penal companies.

On July 25, the Germans crossed the Don and rushed south. In mid-August, the Germans established control over almost all the passes of the central part of the Main Caucasus Range. In the Grozny direction, the Germans occupied Nalchik on October 29, they failed to take Ordzhonikidze and Grozny, and in mid-November their further advance was stopped.

On August 16, German troops launched an offensive towards Stalingrad. On September 13, fighting began in Stalingrad itself. In the second half of October - the first half of November, the Germans captured a significant part of the city, but were unable to break the resistance of the defenders.

By mid-November, the Germans had established control over the Right Bank of the Don and most of the North Caucasus, but did not achieve their strategic goals - to break into the Volga region and Transcaucasia. This was prevented by counterattacks of the Red Army in other directions (Rzhev meat grinder, tank battle between Zubtsov and Karmanovo, etc.), which, although they were not successful, nevertheless did not allow the Wehrmacht command to transfer reserves to the south.

Second period of the war (November 19, 1942 – December 31, 1943): a radical turning point

Victory at Stalingrad (November 19, 1942 – February 2, 1943)

On November 19, units of the Southwestern Front broke through the defenses of the 3rd Romanian Army and on November 21 captured five Romanian divisions in a pincer movement (Operation Saturn). On November 23, units of the two fronts united at Sovetsky and surrounded the enemy’s Stalingrad group.

On December 16, troops of the Voronezh and Southwestern Fronts launched Operation Little Saturn on the Middle Don, defeated the 8th Italian Army, and on January 26, the 6th Army was cut into two parts. On January 31, the southern group led by F. Paulus capitulated, on February 2 – the northern; 91 thousand people were captured. The Battle of Stalingrad, despite the heavy losses of Soviet troops, was the beginning of a radical turning point in the Great Patriotic War. The Wehrmacht suffered a major defeat and lost its strategic initiative. Japan and Türkiye abandoned their intention to enter the war on the side of Germany.

Economic recovery and transition to the offensive in the central direction

By this time, a turning point had also occurred in the sphere of the Soviet military economy. Already in the winter of 1941/1942 it was possible to stop the decline in mechanical engineering. The rise of ferrous metallurgy began in March, and the energy and fuel industry began in the second half of 1942. By the beginning, the USSR had a clear economic superiority over Germany.

In November 1942 - January 1943, the Red Army went on the offensive in the central direction.

Operation Mars (Rzhevsko-Sychevskaya) was carried out with the aim of eliminating the Rzhevsko-Vyazma bridgehead. Formations of the Western Front made their way through the Rzhev-Sychevka railway and carried out a raid on enemy rear lines, but significant losses and a lack of tanks, guns and ammunition forced them to stop, but this operation did not allow the Germans to transfer part of their forces from the central direction to Stalingrad.

Liberation of the North Caucasus (January 1 – February 12, 1943)

On January 1–3, the operation to liberate the North Caucasus and the Don bend began. Mozdok was liberated on January 3, Kislovodsk, Mineralnye Vody, Essentuki and Pyatigorsk were liberated on January 10–11, and Stavropol on January 21. On January 24, the Germans surrendered Armavir, and on January 30, Tikhoretsk. On February 4, the Black Sea Fleet landed troops in the Myskhako area south of Novorossiysk. On February 12, Krasnodar was captured. However, the lack of forces prevented Soviet troops from encircling the enemy’s North Caucasian group.

Breaking the siege of Leningrad (January 12–30, 1943)

Fearing encirclement of the main forces of Army Group Center on the Rzhev-Vyazma bridgehead, the German command began their systematic withdrawal on March 1. On March 2, units of the Kalinin and Western fronts began pursuing the enemy. On March 3, Rzhev was liberated, on March 6, Gzhatsk, and on March 12, Vyazma.

The January-March 1943 campaign, despite a number of setbacks, led to the liberation of a vast territory (North Caucasus, lower reaches of the Don, Voroshilovgrad, Voronezh, Kursk regions, part of the Belgorod, Smolensk and Kalinin regions). The blockade of Leningrad was broken, the Demyansky and Rzhev-Vyazemsky ledges were eliminated. Control over the Volga and Don was restored. The Wehrmacht suffered huge losses (approx. 1.2 million people). The depletion of human resources forced the Nazi leadership to carry out a total mobilization of older (over 46 years old) and younger ages (16–17 years old).

Since the winter of 1942/1943, the partisan movement in the German rear became an important military factor. The partisans caused serious damage to the German army, destroying manpower, blowing up warehouses and trains, and disrupting the communications system. The largest operations were raids by the M.I. detachment. Naumov in Kursk, Sumy, Poltava, Kirovograd, Odessa, Vinnitsa, Kyiv and Zhitomir (February-March 1943) and detachment S.A. Kovpak in the Rivne, Zhitomir and Kyiv regions (February-May 1943).

Defensive Battle of Kursk (July 5–23, 1943)

The Wehrmacht command developed Operation Citadel to encircle a strong group of the Red Army on the Kursk ledge through counter tank attacks from the north and south; If successful, it was planned to carry out Operation Panther to defeat the Southwestern Front. However, Soviet intelligence unraveled the Germans' plans, and in April-June a powerful defensive system of eight lines was created on the Kursk salient.

On July 5, the German 9th Army launched an attack on Kursk from the north, and the 4th Panzer Army from the south. On the northern flank, already on July 10, the Germans went on the defensive. On the southern wing, Wehrmacht tank columns reached Prokhorovka on July 12, but were stopped, and by July 23, the troops of the Voronezh and Steppe Front drove them back to their original lines. Operation Citadel failed.

The general offensive of the Red Army in the second half of 1943 (July 12 - December 24, 1943). Liberation of Left Bank Ukraine

On July 12, units of the Western and Bryansk fronts broke through the German defenses at Zhilkovo and Novosil, and by August 18, Soviet troops cleared the Oryol ledge of the enemy.

By September 22, units of the Southwestern Front pushed the Germans back beyond the Dnieper and reached the approaches to Dnepropetrovsk (now the Dnieper) and Zaporozhye; formations of the Southern Front occupied Taganrog, on September 8 Stalino (now Donetsk), on September 10 - Mariupol; The result of the operation was the liberation of Donbass.

On August 3, troops of the Voronezh and Steppe Fronts broke through the defenses of Army Group South in several places and captured Belgorod on August 5. On August 23, Kharkov was captured.

On September 25, through flank attacks from the south and north, the troops of the Western Front captured Smolensk and by the beginning of October entered the territory of Belarus.

On August 26, the Central, Voronezh and Steppe Fronts began the Chernigov-Poltava operation. The troops of the Central Front broke through the enemy defenses south of Sevsk and occupied the city on August 27; On September 13, we reached the Dnieper on the Loev-Kyiv section. Units of the Voronezh Front reached the Dnieper in the Kyiv-Cherkassy section. Units of the Steppe Front approached the Dnieper in the Cherkassy-Verkhnedneprovsk section. As a result, the Germans lost almost all of Left Bank Ukraine. At the end of September, Soviet troops crossed the Dnieper in several places and captured 23 bridgeheads on its right bank.

On September 1, the troops of the Bryansk Front overcame the Wehrmacht Hagen defense line and occupied Bryansk; by October 3, the Red Army reached the Sozh River in Eastern Belarus.

On September 9, the North Caucasus Front, in cooperation with the Black Sea Fleet and the Azov Military Flotilla, launched an offensive on the Taman Peninsula. Having broken through the Blue Line, Soviet troops took Novorossiysk on September 16, and by October 9 they had completely cleared the peninsula of Germans.

On October 10, the Southwestern Front began an operation to liquidate the Zaporozhye bridgehead and captured Zaporozhye on October 14.

On October 11, the Voronezh (from October 20 - 1st Ukrainian) Front began the Kyiv operation. After two unsuccessful attempts to take the capital of Ukraine with an attack from the south (from the Bukrin bridgehead), it was decided to launch the main blow from the north (from the Lyutezh bridgehead). On November 1, in order to divert the enemy's attention, the 27th and 40th armies moved towards Kyiv from the Bukrinsky bridgehead, and on November 3, the strike group of the 1st Ukrainian Front suddenly attacked it from the Lyutezhsky bridgehead and broke through the German defenses. On November 6, Kyiv was liberated.

On November 13, the Germans, having brought up reserves, launched a counteroffensive in the Zhitomir direction against the 1st Ukrainian Front in order to recapture Kyiv and restore defenses along the Dnieper. But the Red Army retained a vast strategic Kiev bridgehead on the right bank of the Dnieper.

During the period of hostilities from June 1 to December 31, the Wehrmacht suffered huge losses (1 million 413 thousand people), which it was no longer able to fully compensate. A significant part of the USSR territory occupied in 1941–1942 was liberated. The plans of the German command to gain a foothold on the Dnieper lines failed. Conditions were created for the expulsion of the Germans from Right Bank Ukraine.

Third period of the war (December 24, 1943 – May 11, 1945): defeat of Germany

After a series of failures throughout 1943, the German command abandoned attempts to seize the strategic initiative and switched to a tough defense. The main task of the Wehrmacht in the north was to prevent the Red Army from breaking through into the Baltic states and East Prussia, in the center to the border with Poland, and in the south to the Dniester and the Carpathians. The Soviet military leadership set the goal of the winter-spring campaign to defeat German troops on the extreme flanks - on the Right Bank of Ukraine and near Leningrad.

Liberation of Right Bank Ukraine and Crimea

On December 24, 1943, troops of the 1st Ukrainian Front launched an offensive in the western and southwestern directions (Zhitomir-Berdichev operation). Only at the cost of great effort and significant losses did the Germans manage to stop the Soviet troops on the line Sarny - Polonnaya - Kazatin - Zhashkov. On January 5–6, units of the 2nd Ukrainian Front attacked in the Kirovograd direction and captured Kirovograd on January 8, but were forced to stop the offensive on January 10. The Germans did not allow the troops of both fronts to unite and were able to hold the Korsun-Shevchenkovsky ledge, which posed a threat to Kyiv from the south.

On January 24, the 1st and 2nd Ukrainian Fronts launched a joint operation to defeat the Korsun-Shevchenskovsky enemy group. On January 28, the 6th and 5th Guards Tank Armies united at Zvenigorodka and closed the encirclement ring. On January 30, Kanev was taken, on February 14, Korsun-Shevchenkovsky. On February 17, the liquidation of the “boiler” was completed; More than 18 thousand Wehrmacht soldiers were captured.

On January 27, units of the 1st Ukrainian Front launched an attack from the Sarn region in the Lutsk-Rivne direction. On January 30, the offensive of the troops of the 3rd and 4th Ukrainian Fronts began on the Nikopol bridgehead. Having overcome fierce enemy resistance, on February 8 they captured Nikopol, on February 22 - Krivoy Rog, and by February 29 they reached the river. Ingulets.

As a result of the winter campaign of 1943/1944, the Germans were finally driven back from the Dnieper. In an effort to make a strategic breakthrough to the borders of Romania and prevent the Wehrmacht from gaining a foothold on the Southern Bug, Dniester and Prut rivers, the Headquarters developed a plan to encircle and defeat Army Group South in Right Bank Ukraine through a coordinated attack by the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Ukrainian Fronts .

The final chord of the spring operation in the south was the expulsion of the Germans from Crimea. On May 7–9, troops of the 4th Ukrainian Front, with the support of the Black Sea Fleet, took Sevastopol by storm, and by May 12 they defeated the remnants of the 17th Army that fled to Chersonesus.

Leningrad-Novgorod operation of the Red Army (January 14 – March 1, 1944)

On January 14, troops of the Leningrad and Volkhov fronts launched an offensive south of Leningrad and near Novgorod. After defeating the 18th German Army and pushing it back to Luga, they liberated Novgorod on January 20. In early February, units of the Leningrad and Volkhov fronts reached the approaches to Narva, Gdov and Luga; On February 4 they took Gdov, on February 12 - Luga. The threat of encirclement forced the 18th Army to hastily retreat to the southwest. On February 17, the 2nd Baltic Front carried out a series of attacks against the 16th German Army on the Lovat River. At the beginning of March, the Red Army reached the Panther defensive line (Narva - Lake Peipus - Pskov - Ostrov); Most of the Leningrad and Kalinin regions were liberated.

Military operations in the central direction in December 1943 - April 1944

As the tasks of the winter offensive of the 1st Baltic, Western and Belorussian fronts, the Headquarters set the troops to reach the line Polotsk - Lepel - Mogilev - Ptich and the liberation of Eastern Belarus.

In December 1943 - February 1944, the 1st PribF made three attempts to capture Vitebsk, which did not lead to the capture of the city, but completely depleted the enemy forces. The offensive actions of the Polar Front in the Orsha direction on February 22–25 and March 5–9, 1944 were also unsuccessful.

In the Mozyr direction, the Belorussian Front (BelF) on January 8 dealt a strong blow to the flanks of the 2nd German Army, but thanks to a hasty retreat it managed to avoid encirclement. Lack of forces prevented Soviet troops from encircling and destroying the enemy’s Bobruisk group, and on February 26 the offensive was stopped. Formed on February 17 at the junction of the 1st Ukrainian and Belorussian (from February 24, 1st Belorussian) fronts, the 2nd Belorussian Front began the Polesie operation on March 15 with the goal of capturing Kovel and breaking through to Brest. Soviet troops surrounded Kovel, but on March 23 the Germans launched a counterattack and on April 4 released the Kovel group.

Thus, in the central direction during the winter-spring campaign of 1944, the Red Army was unable to achieve its goals; On April 15, she went on the defensive.

Offensive in Karelia (June 10 – August 9, 1944). Finland's withdrawal from the war

After the loss of most of the occupied territory of the USSR, the main task of the Wehrmacht was to prevent the Red Army from entering Europe and not to lose its allies. That is why the Soviet military-political leadership, having failed in attempts to reach a peace agreement with Finland in February-April 1944, decided to begin the summer campaign of the year with a strike in the north.

On June 10, 1944, LenF troops, with the support of the Baltic Fleet, launched an offensive on the Karelian Isthmus, as a result, control over the White Sea-Baltic Canal and the strategically important Kirov Railway connecting Murmansk with European Russia was restored. By early August, Soviet troops had liberated all of the occupied territory east of Ladoga; in the Kuolisma area they reached the Finnish border. Having suffered defeat, Finland entered into negotiations with the USSR on August 25. On September 4, she broke off relations with Berlin and ceased hostilities, on September 15 declared war on Germany, and on September 19 concluded a truce with the countries of the anti-Hitler coalition. The length of the Soviet-German front was reduced by a third. This allowed the Red Army to free up significant forces for operations in other directions.

Liberation of Belarus (June 23 – early August 1944)

Successes in Karelia prompted the Headquarters to carry out a large-scale operation to defeat the enemy in the central direction with the forces of three Belarusian and 1st Baltic fronts (Operation Bagration), which became the main event of the summer-autumn campaign of 1944.

The general offensive of the Soviet troops began on June 23–24. A coordinated attack by the 1st PribF and the right wing of the 3rd BF ended on June 26–27 with the liberation of Vitebsk and the encirclement of five German divisions. On June 26, units of the 1st BF took Zhlobin, on June 27–29 they surrounded and destroyed the enemy’s Bobruisk group, and on June 29 they liberated Bobruisk. As a result of the rapid offensive of the three Belarusian fronts, the German command’s attempt to organize a defense line along the Berezina was thwarted; On July 3, troops of the 1st and 3rd BF broke into Minsk and captured the 4th German Army south of Borisov (liquidated by July 11).

The German front began to collapse. Units of the 1st PribF occupied Polotsk on July 4 and, moving downstream of the Western Dvina, entered the territory of Latvia and Lithuania, reached the coast of the Gulf of Riga, cutting off Army Group North stationed in the Baltic States from the rest of the Wehrmacht forces. Units of the right wing of the 3rd BF, having taken Lepel on June 28, broke through into the valley of the river in early July. Viliya (Nyaris), on August 17 they reached the border of East Prussia.

The troops of the left wing of the 3rd BF, having made a rapid push from Minsk, took Lida on July 3, on July 16, together with the 2nd BF, they took Grodno and at the end of July approached the north-eastern protrusion of the Polish border. The 2nd BF, advancing to the southwest, captured Bialystok on July 27 and drove the Germans beyond the Narev River. Parts of the right wing of the 1st BF, having liberated Baranovichi on July 8, and Pinsk on July 14, at the end of July they reached the Western Bug and reached the central section of the Soviet-Polish border; On July 28, Brest was captured.

As a result of Operation Bagration, Belarus, most of Lithuania and part of Latvia were liberated. The possibility of an offensive in East Prussia and Poland opened up.

Liberation of Western Ukraine and the offensive in Eastern Poland (July 13 – August 29, 1944)

Trying to stop the advance of Soviet troops in Belarus, the Wehrmacht command was forced to transfer units there from other sectors of the Soviet-German front. This facilitated the operations of the Red Army in other directions. On July 13–14, the offensive of the 1st Ukrainian Front began in Western Ukraine. Already on July 17, they crossed the state border of the USSR and entered South-Eastern Poland.

On July 18, the left wing of the 1st BF launched an offensive near Kovel. At the end of July they approached Prague (the right bank suburb of Warsaw), which they managed to take only on September 14. At the beginning of August, German resistance increased sharply, and the advance of the Red Army was stopped. Because of this, the Soviet command was unable to provide the necessary assistance to the uprising that broke out on August 1 in the Polish capital under the leadership of the Home Army, and by the beginning of October it was brutally suppressed by the Wehrmacht.

Offensive in the Eastern Carpathians (September 8 – October 28, 1944)

After the occupation of Estonia in the summer of 1941, Metropolitan of Tallinn. Alexander (Paulus) announced the separation of Estonian parishes from the Russian Orthodox Church (the Estonian Apostolic Orthodox Church was created on the initiative of Alexander (Paulus) in 1923, in 1941 the bishop repented of the sin of schism). In October 1941, at the insistence of the German General Commissioner of Belarus, the Belarusian Church was created. However, Panteleimon (Rozhnovsky), who headed it in the rank of Metropolitan of Minsk and Belarus, maintained canonical communication with the Patriarchal Locum Tenens Metropolitan. Sergius (Stragorodsky). After the forced retirement of Metropolitan Panteleimon in June 1942, his successor was Archbishop Philotheus (Narco), who also refused to arbitrarily proclaim a national autocephalous Church.

Considering the patriotic position of the Patriarchal Locum Tenens Metropolitan. Sergius (Stragorodsky), the German authorities initially prevented the activities of those priests and parishes that declared their affiliation with the Moscow Patriarchate. Over time, the German authorities began to be more tolerant of the communities of the Moscow Patriarchate. According to the occupiers, these communities only verbally declared their loyalty to the Moscow center, but in reality they were ready to assist the German army in the destruction of the atheistic Soviet state.

In the occupied territory, thousands of churches, churches, and houses of worship of various Protestant movements (primarily Lutherans and Pentecostals) resumed their activities. This process was especially active in the Baltic states, in the Vitebsk, Gomel, Mogilev regions of Belarus, in the Dnepropetrovsk, Zhitomir, Zaporozhye, Kyiv, Voroshilovgrad, Poltava regions of Ukraine, in the Rostov, Smolensk regions of the RSFSR.

The religious factor was taken into account when planning domestic policy in areas where Islam traditionally spread, primarily in the Crimea and the Caucasus. German propaganda declared respect for the values ​​of Islam, presented the occupation as the liberation of peoples from the “Bolshevik godless yoke,” and guaranteed the creation of conditions for the revival of Islam. The occupiers willingly opened mosques in almost every settlement of the “Muslim regions” and provided the Muslim clergy with the opportunity to address believers through radio and print. Throughout the occupied territory where Muslims lived, the positions of mullahs and senior mullahs were restored, whose rights and privileges were equal to the heads of administrations of cities and towns.

When forming special units from among prisoners of war of the Red Army, much attention was paid to religious affiliation: if representatives of peoples who traditionally professed Christianity were mainly sent to the “army of General Vlasov”, then to such formations as the “Turkestan Legion”, “Idel-Ural” representatives of “Islamic” peoples.

The “liberalism” of the German authorities did not apply to all religions. Many communities found themselves on the verge of destruction, for example, in Dvinsk alone, almost all of the 35 synagogues operating before the war were destroyed, and up to 14 thousand Jews were shot. Most of the Evangelical Christian Baptist communities that found themselves in the occupied territory were also destroyed or dispersed by the authorities.

Forced to leave the occupied territories under the pressure of Soviet troops, the Nazi invaders took away liturgical objects, icons, paintings, books, and items made of precious metals from prayer buildings.

According to far from complete data from the Extraordinary State Commission to establish and investigate the atrocities of the Nazi invaders, 1,670 Orthodox churches, 69 chapels, 237 churches, 532 synagogues, 4 mosques and 254 other prayer buildings were completely destroyed, looted or desecrated in the occupied territory. Among those destroyed or desecrated by the Nazis were priceless monuments of history, culture and architecture, incl. dating back to the 11th-17th centuries, in Novgorod, Chernigov, Smolensk, Polotsk, Kyiv, Pskov. Many prayer buildings were converted by the occupiers into prisons, barracks, stables, and garages.

Position and patriotic activities of the Russian Orthodox Church during the war

June 22, 1941 Patriarchal Locum Tenens Metropolitan. Sergius (Stragorodsky) compiled the “Message to the Pastors and Flock of Christ’s Orthodox Church,” in which he revealed the anti-Christian essence of fascism and called on believers to defend themselves. In their letters to the Patriarchate, believers reported on the widespread voluntary collection of donations for the needs of the front and defense of the country.

After the death of Patriarch Sergius, according to his will, Metropolitan took over as locum tenens of the patriarchal throne. Alexy (Simansky), unanimously elected at the last meeting of the Local Council on January 31-February 2, 1945, Patriarch of Moscow and All Rus'. The Council was attended by Patriarchs Christopher II of Alexandria, Alexander III of Antioch and Kallistratus of Georgia (Tsintsadze), representatives of the Constantinople, Jerusalem, Serbian and Romanian patriarchs.

In 1945, the so-called Estonian schism was overcome, and the Orthodox parishes and clergy of Estonia were accepted into communion with the Russian Orthodox Church.

Patriotic activities of communities of other faiths and religions

Immediately after the start of the war, the leaders of almost all religious associations of the USSR supported the liberation struggle of the peoples of the country against the Nazi aggressor. Addressing believers with patriotic messages, they called upon them to honorably fulfill their religious and civic duty to protect the Fatherland and provide all possible material assistance to the needs of the front and rear. The leaders of most religious associations of the USSR condemned those representatives of the clergy who deliberately went over to the side of the enemy and helped to impose a “new order” in the occupied territory.

The head of the Russian Old Believers of the Belokrinitsky hierarchy, Archbishop. Irinarch (Parfyonov), in his Christmas message of 1942, called on the Old Believers, a considerable number of whom fought on the fronts, to serve valiantly in the Red Army and resist the enemy in the occupied territory in the ranks of the partisans. In May 1942, the leaders of the Unions of Baptists and Evangelical Christians addressed a letter of appeal to believers; the appeal spoke of the danger of fascism “for the cause of the Gospel” and called on “brothers and sisters in Christ” to fulfill “their duty to God and to the Motherland”, being “the best warriors at the front and the best workers in the rear.” Baptist communities were engaged in sewing linen, collecting clothes and other things for soldiers and families of the dead, helped in caring for the wounded and sick in hospitals, and looked after orphans in orphanages. With funds raised in Baptist communities, the Good Samaritan ambulance plane was built to transport seriously wounded soldiers to the rear. The leader of renovationism, A. I. Vvedensky, repeatedly made patriotic appeals.

In relation to a number of other religious associations, state policy during the war years remained invariably tough. First of all, this concerned “anti-state, anti-Soviet and fanatical sects,” which included the Doukhobors

  • M. I. Odintsov. Religious organizations in the USSR during the Great Patriotic War// Orthodox Encyclopedia, vol. 7, p. 407-415
    • http://www.pravenc.ru/text/150063.html

    Looking back, these events seem to be centuries old. Life is in full swing around, everyone is fussing, in a hurry, and sometimes even the events of a year ago have no meaning and are ingloriously covered with dust in memory. But humanity has no moral right to forget the 1418 days of the Great Patriotic War. Chronicles of the war 1941-1945. - this is just a small echo of that time, a good reminder to the modern generation that war has never brought anything good to anyone.

    Causes of the war

    Like any armed confrontation, the reasons for the outbreak of the war were very banal. The chronicle of the Great War of 1941-1945 indicates that the battle began because Adolf Hitler wanted to lead Germany to world domination: to seize all countries and create a state with pure races.

    Years later he invades the territory of Poland, then goes to Czechoslovakia, conquers more new territories, and then violates the peace treaty concluded on August 23, 1939 with the USSR. Intoxicated by his first successes and victories, he developed the Barbarossa plan, according to which he was supposed to capture the Soviet Union in a short time. But that was not the case. From this moment begins a four-year chronicle of the events of the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945).

    1941st. Start

    In June the war began. During this month, five defense fronts were formed, each of which was responsible for its own territory:

    • Northern front. Defended Hanko (from 22.06 to 02.12) and the Arctic (from 29.07 to 10.10).
    • Northwestern Front. Immediately after the attack, he began to carry out the Baltic strategic defensive operation (06.22-09.07).
    • Western Front. The Bialystok-Minsk battle took place here (06.22-07.09).
    • Southwestern front. The Lviv-Chernivtsi defensive operation was launched (06.22-06.07).
    • Southern front. Founded 25.07.

    In July, defensive operations continued on the Northern Front. On the Northwestern Front, the Leningrad defensive operation began (from 10.07 to 30.09). At the same time, the Battle of Smolensk begins on the Western Front (10.07-10.09). On July 24, the Central Front was founded and took part in the Battle of Smolensk. On the 30th the Reserve Front was formed. The Kiev defensive operation began in the South-West (07.07-26.09). The Tiraspol-Melitopol defensive operation begins on the Southern Front (07.27-28.09).

    In August the battles continue. The forces of the Reserve Front join the Battle of Smolensk. On the 14th, the Bryansk Front was founded, and the city was defended in the Odessa defensive region (05.08-16.10). On August 23, the Transcaucasian Front is formed, two days later the Iranian operation begins.

    Entries for September in documentary chronicles of the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945) indicate that most defensive battles have ended. The forces of the Soviet Union changed their location and began new offensive operations: Sumy-Kharkov and Donbass.

    In October, the Sinyavskaya and Strelninsk-Peterhof operations were carried out on the Leningrad Front, and the Tikhvin defensive operation began (from October 16 to November 18). On the 17th, the Kalinin defensive front was formed, and the defensive operation of the same name began. On the 10th, the Reserve Front ceased to exist. The Tula defensive operation began on the Bryansk Front (10.24-05.12). Crimean troops began a defensive operation and entered the battle for Sevastopol (10/10/1941-07/09/1942).

    In November, the Tikhvin offensive operation began, which ended by the end of the year. The battles went on with varying degrees of success. On December 5, the Kalinin offensive operation began, and on the 6th, the Klin-Solnechnaya and Tula offensive operations began. On December 17, the Volkhov Front was formed. The Bryansk Front was formed again, and the Kerch landing operation began in the Transcaucasus (December 26). The defense of Sevastopol continued.

    1942 - a brief military chronicle of the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945)

    On January 1, 1942, an anti-German bloc was formed, which included 226 countries. Meanwhile, on January 2, the city of Maloyaroslavets was liberated, on the 3rd, near the city of Sukhinichi, the Russian army defeated the Germans, and on January 7, German shock groups were defeated near Moscow.

    New offensive operations begin. On January 20, Mozhaisk was completely liberated. At the beginning of February, the entire Moscow region was liberated from the Germans. Soviet troops advanced 250 km in the Vitebsk direction. On March 5, long-range aviation was created. On May 8, the German offensive in Crimea begins. Fighting is underway near Kharkov, and on June 28 a large-scale offensive by German troops begins. The forces were mainly directed to the Volga and the Caucasus.

    On July 17, the legendary Battle of Stalingrad begins, which is mentioned in all chronicles of the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945 (photos of the confrontation are attached). On August 25, a state of siege was introduced in Stalingrad. On September 13, fighting begins at Mamayev Kurgan. November 19 The Red Army begins an offensive operation near Stalingrad. On December 3, a group of German troops was defeated in the Shiripin area. On December 31, troops of the Stalingrad Front liberated the city of Elista.

    1943

    This year has become a turning point. On January 1, the Rostov offensive operation began. The cities of Mozdok, Malgobek, and Nalchik were liberated, and Operation Iskra began on January 12. The military personnel who took part in it must have been in Leningrad. Five days later, the city of Velikiye Luki was liberated. On January 18, it was possible to establish contact with Leningrad. On January 19, an offensive operation began on the Voronezh Front and managed to defeat a large enemy military group. On January 20, enemy troops were defeated near the city of Velikoluksk. On January 21, Stavropol was liberated.

    On January 31, German troops surrender at Stalingrad. On February 2, it was possible to liquidate the army at Stalingrad (almost 300 thousand fascists). On February 8, Kursk was liberated, and on the 9th, Belgorod. The Soviet army advanced towards Minsk.

    Krasnodar liberated; 14th - Rostov-on-Don, Voroshilovgrad and Krasnodon; On February 16, Kharkov was liberated. On March 3, Rzhevsk was liberated, on March 6, Gzhatsk, and on March 12, the Germans abandoned their positions in Vyazma. On March 29, the Soviet flotilla caused significant damage to the German fleet off the coast of Norway.

    On May 3, the Soviet army won the air battle, and on July 5, the legendary Battle of Kursk began. It ended on August 22, during the battle 30 German divisions were defeated. By the end of the year, successful offensive operations were carried out, one after another, the cities of the Soviet Union were liberated from the invaders. fails.

    1944

    According to the chronicle (1941-1945), the war took a turn favorable for the USSR. Offensive operations began on all fronts. Ten so-called Stalinist strikes helped completely liberate the territory of the USSR; military operations were now carried out in Europe.

    Path to Victory

    The German command understands that it cannot seize the strategic initiative and begins to take defensive positions in order to preserve at least those territories that they managed to capture. But every day they had to retreat further and further.

    On April 16, 1945, Soviet troops surround Berlin. The Nazi army is defeated. April 30 Hitler commits suicide. On May 7, Germany announced its surrender to the Western Allied forces, and on May 9, it capitulated to the Soviet Union.

    In the chronicles of the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945), the war is presented to the reader as a list of dates and events. But we must not forget that behind every date there are hidden human destinies: unfulfilled hopes, unfulfilled promises and unlived lives.

    The Great Patriotic War began on June 22, 1941, on the day of All Saints who shone in the Russian land. Plan Barbarossa, a plan for a lightning war with the USSR, was signed by Hitler on December 18, 1940. Now it was put into action. German troops - the strongest army in the world - attacked in three groups (North, Center, South), aimed at quickly capturing the Baltic states and then Leningrad, Moscow, and in the south, Kyiv.

    Start


    June 22, 1941, 3:30 am - German air raids on the cities of Belarus, Ukraine, and the Baltic states.

    June 22, 1941 4 a.m. - the beginning of the German offensive. 153 German divisions, 3,712 tanks and 4,950 combat aircraft entered the fighting (Marshal G.K. Zhukov provides such data in his book “Memories and Reflections”). The enemy forces were several times greater than the Red Army, both in numbers and in equipment.

    On June 22, 1941, at 5:30 a.m., Reich Minister Goebbels, in a special broadcast of Greater German Radio, read out Adolf Hitler’s appeal to the German people in connection with the outbreak of war against the Soviet Union.

    On June 22, 1941, the Primate of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarchal Locum Tenens Metropolitan Sergius, addressed the believers. In his “Message to the Shepherds and Flock of Christ’s Orthodox Church,” Metropolitan Sergius said: “Fascist robbers attacked our Motherland... The times of Batu, the German knights, Charles of Sweden, Napoleon are being repeated... The pitiful descendants of the enemies of Orthodox Christianity want to once again try to set the people ours is on our knees before untruth... With God's help this time too, he will scatter the fascist enemy force into dust... Let us remember the holy leaders of the Russian people, for example, Alexander Nevsky, Dmitry Donskoy, who laid down their souls for the people and the Motherland... Let us remember the countless thousands of simple Orthodox soldiers... Our Orthodox Church has always shared the fate of the people. She endured trials with him and was consoled by his successes. She will not leave her people even now. She blesses with heavenly blessing the upcoming national feat. If anyone, then it is we who need to remember the commandment of Christ: “Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends” (John 15:13)....”

    Patriarch Alexander III of Alexandria addressed a message to Christians around the world about prayerful and material assistance to Russia.

    Brest Fortress, Minsk, Smolensk

    June 22 - July 20, 1941. Defense of the Brest Fortress. The first Soviet border strategic point located in the direction of the main attack of Army Group Center (towards Minsk and Moscow) was Brest and the Brest Fortress, which the German command planned to capture in the first hours of the war.

    At the time of the attack, there were from 7 to 8 thousand Soviet soldiers in the fortress, and 300 military families lived here. From the first minutes of the war, Brest and the fortress were subjected to massive air bombardments and artillery shelling, heavy fighting took place on the border, in the city and the fortress. The Brest Fortress was stormed by the fully equipped German 45th Infantry Division (about 17 thousand soldiers and officers), which carried out frontal and flank attacks in cooperation with part of the forces of the 31st Infantry Division, the 34th Infantry and the rest of the 31st acted on the flanks of the main forces. 1st infantry divisions of the 12th Army Corps of the 4th German Army, as well as 2 tank divisions of Guderian's 2nd Panzer Group, with the active support of aviation and reinforcement units armed with heavy artillery systems. The Nazis methodically attacked the fortress for a whole week. Soviet soldiers had to fight off 6-8 attacks a day. By the end of June, the enemy captured most of the fortress; on June 29 and 30 the Nazis launched a continuous two-day assault on the fortress using powerful (500 and 1800 kg) aerial bombs. As a result of bloody battles and losses, the defense of the fortress broke up into a number of isolated centers of resistance. Being in complete isolation hundreds of kilometers from the front line, the defenders of the fortress continued to bravely fight the enemy.

    July 9, 1941 - the enemy occupied Minsk. The forces were too unequal. The Soviet troops were in dire need of ammunition, and to transport them there was not enough transport or fuel; moreover, some of the warehouses had to be blown up, the rest were captured by the enemy. The enemy stubbornly rushed towards Minsk from the north and south. Our troops were surrounded. Deprived of centralized control and supplies, they, however, fought until July 8.

    July 10 - September 10, 1941 Battle of Smolensk. On July 10, Army Group Center launched an offensive against the Western Front. The Germans had a twofold superiority in manpower and a fourfold superiority in tanks. The enemy's plan was to dissect our western front with powerful strike groups, encircle the main group of troops in the Smolensk area and open the way to Moscow. The Battle of Smolensk began on July 10 and dragged on for two months - a period that the German command did not count on at all. Despite all efforts, the troops of the Western Front were unable to complete the task of defeating the enemy in the Smolensk area. During the battles near Smolensk, the Western Front suffered serious losses. By the beginning of August, no more than 1–2 thousand people remained in his divisions. However, fierce resistance from Soviet troops near Smolensk weakened the offensive power of Army Group Center. The enemy strike forces were exhausted and suffered significant losses. According to the Germans themselves, by the end of August, only the motorized and tank divisions had lost half of their personnel and equipment, and the total losses were about 500 thousand people. The main result of the Battle of Smolensk was the disruption of the Wehrmacht's plans for a non-stop advance towards Moscow. For the first time since the beginning of World War II, German troops were forced to go on the defensive in their main direction, as a result of which the Red Army command gained time to improve strategic defense in the Moscow direction and prepare reserves.

    August 8, 1941 - Stalin appointed Supreme Commander-in-Chief Armed Forces of the USSR.

    Defense of Ukraine

    The seizure of Ukraine was important for the Germans, who sought to deprive the Soviet Union of its largest industrial and agricultural base and take possession of Donetsk coal and Krivoy Rog ore. From a strategic point of view, the capture of Ukraine provided support from the south for the central group of German troops, which had the main task of capturing Moscow.

    But the lightning capture that Hitler planned did not work out here either. Retreating under the blows of German troops, the Red Army bravely and fiercely resisted, despite heavy losses. By the end of August, the troops of the Southwestern and Southern Fronts retreated beyond the Dnieper. Once surrounded, Soviet troops suffered huge losses.

    Atlantic Charter. Allied powers

    On August 14, 1941, on board the English battleship Prince of Wales in Argentia Bay (Newfoundland), US President Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Churchill adopted a declaration outlining the goals of the war against the fascist states. On September 24, 1941, the Soviet Union acceded to the Atlantic Charter.

    Siege of Leningrad

    On August 21, 1941, defensive battles began on the near approaches to Leningrad. In September, fierce fighting continued in the immediate vicinity of the city. But the German troops were unable to overcome the resistance of the city’s defenders and take Leningrad. Then the German command decided to starve the city out. Having captured Shlisselburg on September 8, the enemy reached Lake Ladoga and blocked Leningrad from land. German troops surrounded the city in a tight ring, cutting it off from the rest of the country. Communication between Leningrad and the “mainland” was carried out only by air and through Lake Ladoga. And the Nazis tried to destroy the city with artillery strikes and bombings.

    From September 8, 1941 (the day of celebration in honor of the Presentation of the Vladimir Icon of the Mother of God) until January 27, 1944 (the day of St. Nina Equal to the Apostles) blockade of Leningrad. The winter of 1941/42 was the most difficult for Leningraders. Fuel reserves have run out. Electricity supply to residential buildings was cut off. The water supply system failed and 78 km of the sewer network was destroyed. Utilities stopped working. Food supplies were running out, and on November 20, the lowest bread standards for the entire period of the blockade were introduced - 250 grams for workers and 125 grams for employees and dependents. But even in the most difficult conditions of the siege, Leningrad continued to fight. With the beginning of the freeze-up, a highway was built across the ice of Lake Ladoga. Since January 24, 1942, it was possible to slightly increase the standards for supplying the population with bread. To supply the Leningrad Front and the city with fuel, an underwater pipeline was laid between the eastern and western shores of the Shlisselburg Bay of Lake Ladoga, which became operational on June 18, 1942 and turned out to be practically invulnerable to the enemy. And in the fall of 1942, a power cable was also laid along the bottom of the lake, through which electricity began to flow into the city. Attempts were made repeatedly to break through the blockade ring. But this was only possible in January 1943. As a result of the offensive, our troops occupied Shlisselburg and a number of other settlements. On January 18, 1943, the blockade was broken. A corridor 8-11 km wide was formed between Lake Ladoga and the front line. The blockade of Leningrad was completely lifted on January 27, 1944, on the day of St. Nina Equal to the Apostles.

    During the blockade, there were 10 Orthodox churches in the city. Metropolitan Alexy (Simansky) of Leningrad, the future Patriarch Alexy I, did not leave the city during the blockade, sharing its hardships with his flock. A procession of the cross around the city was held with the miraculous Kazan Icon of the Most Holy Theotokos. The Venerable Elder Seraphim of Vyritsky took upon himself a special feat of prayer - he prayed at night on a stone in the garden for the salvation of Russia, imitating the feat of his heavenly patron, the Venerable Seraphim of Sarov.

    By the fall of 1941, the leadership of the USSR curtailed anti-religious propaganda. The publication of the magazines "Atheist" and "Anti-religious" was stopped..

    Battle for Moscow

    From October 13, 1941, fierce fighting broke out in all operationally important directions leading to Moscow.

    On October 20, 1941, a state of siege was introduced in Moscow and its surrounding areas. A decision was made to evacuate the diplomatic corps and a number of central institutions to Kuibyshev. It was also decided to remove particularly important state values ​​from the capital. 12 divisions of people's militia were formed from Muscovites.

    In Moscow, a prayer service was held before the miraculous Kazan Icon of the Mother of God and the icon was flown around Moscow by plane.

    The second stage of the attack on Moscow, called "Typhoon", was launched by the German command on November 15, 1941. The fighting was very difficult. The enemy, regardless of losses, sought to break through to Moscow at any cost. But already in the first days of December it was felt that the enemy was running out of steam. Due to the resistance of the Soviet troops, the Germans had to stretch their troops along the front to such an extent that in the final battles on the near approaches to Moscow they lost their penetrating ability. Even before the start of our counterattack near Moscow, the German command decided to retreat. This order was given on the night that Soviet troops launched a counteroffensive.


    On December 6, 1941, on the day of the Holy Blessed Prince Alexander Nevsky, a counter-offensive of our troops began near Moscow. Hitler's armies suffered heavy losses and retreated to the west, putting up fierce resistance. The counteroffensive of Soviet troops near Moscow ended on January 7, 1942, on the occasion of the Nativity of Christ. The Lord helped our soldiers. At that time, unprecedented frosts struck near Moscow, which also helped stop the Germans. And according to the testimonies of German prisoners of war, many of them saw St. Nicholas walking ahead of the Russian troops.

    Under pressure from Stalin, it was decided to launch a general offensive along the entire front. But not all directions had the strength and means to do this. Therefore, only the advance of the troops of the North-Western Front was successful; they advanced 70-100 kilometers and somewhat improved the operational-strategic situation in the western direction. Beginning on January 7, the offensive continued until early April 1942. After which it was decided to go on the defensive.

    The Chief of the General Staff of the Wehrmacht Ground Forces, General F. Halder, wrote in his diary: “The myth of the invincibility of the German army has been shattered. With the onset of summer, the German army will achieve new victories in Russia, but this will no longer restore the myth of its invincibility. Therefore, December 6, 1941 can considered a turning point, and one of the most fatal moments in the short history of the Third Reich. The strength and power of Hitler reached their apogee, from that moment they began to decline..."

    United Nations Declaration

    In January 1942, a declaration was signed in Washington by 26 countries (later known as the Declaration of the United Nations), in which they agreed to use all forces and means to fight aggressive states and not conclude a separate peace or truce with them. An agreement was reached with Great Britain and the United States on the opening of a second front in Europe in 1942.

    Crimean front. Sevastopol. Voronezh

    On May 8, 1942, the enemy, having concentrated his strike force against the Crimean Front and brought into action numerous aircraft, broke through our defenses. Soviet troops, finding themselves in a difficult situation, were forced to leave Kerch. By May 25, the Nazis captured the entire Kerch Peninsula.

    October 30, 1941 - July 4, 1942 Defense of Sevastopol. The siege of the city lasted nine months, but after the Nazis captured the Kerch Peninsula, the situation in Sevastopol became very difficult and on July 4, Soviet troops were forced to leave Sevastopol. Crimea was completely lost.

    June 28, 1942 - July 24, 1942 Voronezh-Voroshilovgrad operation. - combat operations of the troops of the Bryansk, Voronezh, South-Western and Southern Fronts against the German Army Group "South" in the Voronezh and Voroshilovgrad region. As a result of the forced withdrawal of our troops, the richest regions of the Don and Donbass fell into enemy hands. During the retreat, the Southern Front suffered irreparable losses; only a little more than a hundred people remained in its four armies. The troops of the Southwestern Front suffered heavy losses during the retreat from Kharkov and could not successfully restrain the enemy’s advance. For the same reason, the Southern Front could not stop the Germans in the Caucasian direction. It was necessary to block the path of German troops to the Volga. For this purpose, the Stalingrad Front was created.

    Battle of Stalingrad (July 17, 1942 - February 2, 1943)

    According to the plan of Hitler's command, German troops were supposed to achieve those goals in the summer campaign of 1942 that were thwarted by their defeat in Moscow. The main blow was supposed to be delivered on the southern wing of the Soviet-German front with the goal of capturing the city of Stalingrad, reaching the oil-bearing regions of the Caucasus and the fertile regions of the Don, Kuban and Lower Volga. With the fall of Stalingrad, the enemy had the opportunity to cut off the south of the country from the center. We could have lost the Volga, the most important transport artery along which cargo came from the Caucasus.

    The defensive actions of the Soviet troops in the Stalingrad direction lasted for 125 days. During this period, they carried out two consecutive defensive operations. The first of them was carried out on the approaches to Stalingrad in the period from July 17 to September 12, the second - in Stalingrad and to the south from September 13 to November 18, 1942. The heroic defense of Soviet troops in the Stalingrad direction forced Hitler's high command to transfer more and more forces here. On September 13, the Germans went on the offensive along the entire front, trying to capture Stalingrad by storm. Soviet troops failed to contain his powerful onslaught. They were forced to retreat to the city. Days and nights the fighting continued on the streets of the city, in houses, factories, and on the banks of the Volga. Our units, having suffered heavy losses, still held the defense without leaving the city.

    Soviet troops near Stalingrad were united into three fronts: Southwestern (Lieutenant General, from December 7, 1942 - Colonel General N.F. Vatutin), Don (Lieutenant General, from January 15, 1943 - Colonel General K . K. Rokossovsky) and Stalingrad (Colonel General A. I. Eremenko).

    On September 13, 1942, a decision was made to launch a counteroffensive, the plan of which was developed by Headquarters. The leading role in this development was played by generals G.K. Zhukov (from January 18, 1943 - marshal) and A.M. Vasilevsky, they were appointed representatives of Headquarters at the front. A.M. Vasilevsky coordinated the actions of the Stalingrad Front, and G.K. Zhukov - the South-Western and Don Front. The idea of ​​the counteroffensive was to defeat the troops covering the flanks of the enemy strike force with strikes from the bridgeheads on the Don in the Serafimovich and Kletskaya areas and from the Sarpinskie Lakes area south of Stalingrad, and, developing an offensive in converging directions towards the city of Kalach, the Sovetsky farm, encircle and destroy its main forces operating in the area between the Volga and Don rivers.

    The offensive was scheduled for November 19, 1942 for the Southwestern and Don Fronts, and for November 20 for the Stalingrad Front. The strategic offensive operation to defeat the enemy at Stalingrad consisted of three stages: encircling the enemy (November 19-30), developing the offensive and disrupting the enemy’s attempts to release the encircled group (December 1942), eliminating the group of Nazi troops encircled in the Stalingrad area (10 January-February 2, 1943).

    From January 10 to February 2, 1943, the troops of the Don Front captured 91 thousand people, including over 2.5 thousand officers and 24 generals led by the commander of the 6th Army, Field Marshal Paulus.

    “The defeat at Stalingrad,” as Lieutenant General Westphal of the Nazi army writes about it, “horrified both the German people and their army. Never before in the entire history of Germany has there been such a terrible death of so many troops.”

    And the Battle of Stalingrad began with a prayer service in front of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God. The icon was among the troops; prayers and memorial services for the fallen soldiers were constantly served in front of it. Among the ruins of Stalingrad, the only surviving building was the temple in the name of the Kazan Icon of the Blessed Virgin Mary with the chapel of St. Sergius of Radonezh.

    Caucasus

    July 1942 - October 9, 1943. Battle for the Caucasus

    In the North Caucasus direction at the end of July and beginning of August 1942, the development of events was clearly not in our favor. The superior enemy forces persistently moved forward. On August 10, enemy troops captured Maykop, and on August 11, Krasnodar. And on September 9, the Germans captured almost all the mountain passes. In the stubborn bloody battles of the summer and autumn of 1942, Soviet troops suffered heavy losses, abandoned most of the territory of the North Caucasus, but still stopped the enemy. In December, preparations began for the North Caucasus offensive operation. In January, German troops began to withdraw from the Caucasus, and Soviet troops launched a powerful offensive. But the enemy put up fierce resistance and victory in the Caucasus came at a high price.

    German troops were driven out to the Taman Peninsula. On the night of September 10, 1943, the Novorossiysk-Taman strategic offensive operation of Soviet troops began. Novorossiysk was liberated on September 16, 1943, Anapa on September 21, and Taman on October 3.

    On October 9, 1943, Soviet troops reached the coast of the Kerch Strait and completed the liberation of the North Caucasus.

    Kursk Bulge

    July 5, 1943 – May 1944 Battle of Kursk.

    In 1943, the Nazi command decided to conduct its general offensive in the Kursk region. The fact is that the operational position of the Soviet troops on the Kursk ledge, concave towards the enemy, promised great prospects for the Germans. Here two large fronts could be surrounded at once, as a result of which a large gap would form, allowing the enemy to carry out major operations in the southern and northeastern directions.

    The Soviet command was preparing for this offensive. From mid-April, the General Staff began developing a plan for both a defensive operation near Kursk and a counteroffensive. And by the beginning of July 1943, the Soviet command completed preparations for the Battle of Kursk.

    July 5, 1943 German troops launched an offensive. The first attack was repulsed. However, then the Soviet troops had to retreat. The fighting was very intense and the Germans failed to achieve significant success. The enemy did not solve any of the assigned tasks and was ultimately forced to stop the offensive and go on the defensive.

    The struggle was also extremely intense on the southern front of the Kursk salient - in the Voronezh Front.


    On July 12, 1943 (on the day of the holy supreme apostles Peter and Paul), the largest event in military history took place. tank battle near Prokhorovka. The battle unfolded on both sides of the Belgorod-Kursk railway, and the main events took place southwest of Prokhorovka. As Chief Marshal of the Armored Forces P. A. Rotmistrov, former commander of the 5th Guards Tank Army, recalled, the fight was unusually fierce, “the tanks ran at each other, grappled, could no longer separate, fought to the death until one of them burst into flames with a torch or did not stop with broken tracks. But even damaged tanks, if their weapons did not fail, continued to fire.” For an hour, the battlefield was littered with burning German and our tanks. As a result of the battle near Prokhorovka, neither side was able to solve the tasks facing it: the enemy - to break through to Kursk; 5th Guards Tank Army - enter the Yakovlevo area, defeating the opposing enemy. But the enemy’s path to Kursk was closed, and July 12, 1943 became the day the German offensive near Kursk collapsed.

    On July 12, the troops of the Bryansk and Western fronts went on the offensive in the Oryol direction, and on July 15 - the Central.

    August 5, 1943 (the day of celebration of the Pochaev Icon of the Mother of God, as well as the icon of “Joy of All Who Sorrow”) was released Eagle. On the same day, the troops of the Steppe Front were Belgorod liberated. The Oryol offensive operation lasted 38 days and ended on August 18 with the defeat of a powerful group of Nazi troops aimed at Kursk from the north.

    Events on the southern wing of the Soviet-German front had a significant impact on the further course of events in the Belgorod-Kursk direction. On July 17, the troops of the Southern and Southwestern Fronts went on the offensive. On the night of July 19, a general withdrawal of fascist German troops began on the southern front of the Kursk ledge.

    August 23, 1943 liberation of Kharkov The strongest battle of the Great Patriotic War ended - the Battle of Kursk (it lasted 50 days). It ended with the defeat of the main group of German troops.

    Liberation of Smolensk (1943)

    Smolensk offensive operation August 7 – October 2, 1943. According to the course of hostilities and the nature of the tasks performed, the Smolensk strategic offensive operation is divided into three stages. The first stage covers the period of hostilities from August 7 to 20. During this stage, the troops of the Western Front carried out the Spas-Demen operation. The troops of the left wing of the Kalinin Front began the Dukhovshchina offensive operation. At the second stage (August 21 - September 6), the troops of the Western Front carried out the Elny-Dorogobuzh operation, and the troops of the left wing of the Kalinin Front continued to conduct the Dukhovshchina offensive operation. At the third stage (September 7 - October 2), the troops of the Western Front, in cooperation with the troops of the left wing of the Kalinin Front, carried out the Smolensk-Roslavl operation, and the main forces of the Kalinin Front carried out the Dukhovshchinsko-Demidov operation.

    September 25, 1943 troops of the Western Front liberated Smolensk- the most important strategic center of defense of the Nazi troops in the western direction.

    As a result of the successful implementation of the Smolensk offensive operation, our troops broke through the enemy’s heavily fortified multi-line and deeply echeloned defenses and advanced 200 - 225 km to the West.

    Liberation of Donbass, Bryansk and left-bank Ukraine

    On August 13, 1943 it began Donbass operation Southwestern and Southern fronts. The leadership of Nazi Germany attached extremely great importance to keeping Donbass in their hands. From the very first day the fighting became extremely intense. The enemy put up stubborn resistance. However, he failed to stop the advance of the Soviet troops. Nazi troops in the Donbass faced the threat of encirclement and a new Stalingrad. Retreating from Left Bank Ukraine, the Nazi command carried out a savage plan drawn up according to recipes for total war for the complete devastation of the abandoned territory. Along with regular troops, the mass extermination of civilians and their deportation to Germany, the destruction of industrial facilities, cities and other populated areas were carried out by SS and police units. However, the rapid advance of Soviet troops prevented him from fully implementing his plan.

    On August 26, the troops of the Central Front began an offensive (commander - Army General K.K. Rokossovsky), starting to carry out Chernigov-Poltava operation.

    On September 2, the troops of the right wing of the Voronezh Front (commanded by Army General N.F. Vatutin) liberated Sumy and launched an attack on Romny.

    Continuing to successfully develop the offensive, the troops of the Central Front advanced in a southwestern direction by more than 200 km and on September 15 liberated the city of Nezhin, an important stronghold of enemy defense on the approaches to Kyiv. There were 100 km left to the Dnieper. By September 10, the troops of the right wing of the Voronezh Front, advancing to the south, broke the stubborn resistance of the enemy in the area of ​​​​the city of Romny.

    The troops of the right wing of the Central Front crossed the Desna River and liberated the city of Novgorod-Seversky on September 16.

    September 21 (feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary) Soviet troops liberated Chernigov.

    With the arrival of Soviet troops at the end of September at the Dnieper line, the liberation of Left Bank Ukraine was completed.

    “...It’s more likely that the Dnieper will flow back than the Russians will overcome it...” said Hitler. Indeed, the wide, deep, high-water river with a high right bank represented a serious natural barrier to the advancing Soviet troops. The Soviet high command clearly understood the enormous importance of the Dnieper for the retreating enemy, and did everything to cross it on the move, seize bridgeheads on the right bank and prevent the enemy from gaining a foothold on this line. They tried to speed up the advance of troops towards the Dnieper, and to develop the offensive not only against the main enemy groups retreating to permanent crossings, but also in the intervals between them. This made it possible to reach the Dnieper on a wide front and thwart the plan of the fascist German command to make the “Eastern Wall” impregnable. Significant forces of partisans also actively joined the fight, subjecting the enemy’s communications to continuous attacks and preventing the regrouping of German troops.

    On September 21 (the feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary), the advanced units of the left wing of the Central Front reached the Dnieper north of Kyiv. Troops from other fronts also advanced successfully during these days. The troops of the right wing of the Southwestern Front reached the Dnieper on September 22, south of Dnepropetrovsk. From September 25 to 30, the troops of the Steppe Front reached the Dnieper in their entire offensive zone.


    The crossing of the Dnieper began on September 21, the day of the celebration of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

    At first, the forward detachments crossed using improvised means under continuous enemy fire and tried to gain a foothold on the right bank. After this, pontoon crossings for equipment were created. The troops who crossed to the right bank of the Dnieper had a very difficult time. Before they had time to gain a foothold there, fierce battles broke out. The enemy, having brought up large forces, continuously counterattacked, trying to destroy our units and units or throw them into the river. But our troops, suffering heavy losses, showing exceptional courage and heroism, held the captured positions.

    By the end of September, having knocked down the defenses of enemy troops, our troops crossed the Dnieper on a 750-kilometer front section from Loev to Zaporozhye and captured a number of important bridgeheads from which it was planned to develop an offensive further to the west.

    For crossing the Dnieper, for dedication and heroism in battles on the bridgeheads, 2,438 soldiers of all types of troops (47 generals, 1,123 officers and 1,268 soldiers and sergeants) were awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

    On October 20, 1943, the Voronezh Front was renamed into the 1st Ukrainian, the Steppe Front into the 2nd Ukrainian, the Southwestern and Southern Fronts into the 3rd and 4th Ukrainian.

    On November 6, 1943, on the day of the celebration of the icon of the Mother of God “Joy of All Who Sorrow,” Kyiv was liberated from the fascist invaders by the troops of the 1st Ukrainian Front under the command of General N.F. Vatutin.

    After the liberation of Kyiv, the troops of the 1st Ukrainian Front launched an attack on Zhitomir, Fastov and Korosten. Over the next 10 days, they advanced 150 km west and liberated many settlements, including the cities of Fastov and Zhitomir. A strategic bridgehead was formed on the right bank of the Dnieper, the length of which along the front exceeded 500 km.

    Intense fighting continued in southern Ukraine. On October 14 (the feast of the Intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary), the city of Zaporozhye was liberated and the German bridgehead on the left bank of the Dnieper was liquidated. On October 25, Dnepropetrovsk was liberated.

    Tehran Conference of the Allied Powers. Opening of a second front

    From November 28 - December 1, 1943 it took place Tehran Conference heads of the allied powers against fascism of states - the USSR (J.V. Stalin), the USA (President F. Roosevelt) and Great Britain (Prime Minister W. Churchill).

    The main issue was the opening of a second front in Europe by the United States and Great Britain, which they did not open, contrary to their promises. At the conference it was decided to open a second front in France during May 1944. The Soviet delegation, at the request of the allies, announced the USSR’s readiness to enter the war against Japan at the end of the war. action in Europe. The conference also discussed questions about the post-war system and the fate of Germany.

    December 24, 1943 – May 6, 1944 Dnieper-Carpathian strategic offensive operation. Within the framework of this strategic operation, 11 offensive operations of fronts and groups of fronts were carried out: Zhitomir-Berdichev, Kirovograd, Korsun-Shevchenkovsk, Nikopol-Krivoy Rog, Rivne-Lutsk, Proskurov-Chernovtsy, Uman-Botoshan, Bereznegovato-Snigirev, Polessk, Odessa and Tyrgu- Frumosskaya.

    December 24, 1943 – January 14, 1944 Zhitomir-Berdichev operation. Having advanced 100-170 km, the troops of the 1st Ukrainian Front in 3 weeks of fighting almost completely liberated the Kyiv and Zhitomir regions and many areas of the Vinnitsa and Rivne regions, including the cities of Zhitomir (December 31), Novograd-Volynsky (January 3) , Bila Tserkva (January 4), Berdichev (January 5). On January 10-11, advanced units reached the approaches to Vinnitsa, Zhmerinka, Uman and Zhashkov; defeated 6 enemy divisions and deeply captured the left flank of the German group, which still held the right bank of the Dnieper in the Kanev area. The preconditions were created for striking the flank and rear of this group.

    January 5-16, 1944 Kirovograd operation. After intense fighting on January 8, the troops of the 2nd Ukrainian Front captured Kirovograd and continued the offensive. However, on January 16, repelling strong enemy counterattacks, they were forced to go on the defensive. As a result of the Kirovograd operation, the position of the fascist German troops in the zone of action of the 2nd Ukrainian Front significantly worsened.

    January 24 – February 17, 1944 Korsun-Shevchenko operation. During this operation, troops of the 1st and 2nd Ukrainian Fronts encircled and defeated a large group of Nazi troops in the Kanevsky ledge.

    January 27 – February 11, 1944 Rivne-Lutsk operation- was carried out by troops of the right wing of the 1st Ukrainian Front. On February 2, the cities of Lutsk and Rivne were isolated, and on February 11, Shepetivka.

    January 30 – February 29, 1944 Nikopol-Krivoy Rog operation. It was carried out by troops of the 3rd and 4th Ukrainian Fronts with the aim of eliminating the enemy’s Nikopol bridgehead. By the end of February 7, the 4th Ukrainian Front had completely cleared the Nikopol bridgehead of enemy troops and on February 8, together with units of the 3rd Ukrainian Front, liberated the city of Nikopol. After stubborn fighting, troops of the 3rd Ukrainian Front liberated the city of Krivoy Rog on February 22, a large industrial center and road junction. By February 29, the 3rd Ukrainian Front with its right wing and center advanced to the Ingulets River, capturing a number of bridgeheads on its western bank. As a result, favorable conditions were created for launching subsequent attacks on the enemy in the direction of Nikolaev and Odessa. As a result of the Nikopol-Krivoy Rog operation, 12 enemy divisions were defeated, including 3 tank and 1 motorized. Having eliminated the Nikopol bridgehead and thrown the enemy back from the Zaporozhye bend of the Dnieper, Soviet troops deprived the fascist German command of their last hope of restoring communications by land with the 17th Army blocked in the Crimea. A significant reduction in the front line allowed the Soviet command to free up forces to capture the Crimean Peninsula.

    On February 29, Bandera’s troops seriously wounded the commander of the 1st Ukrainian Front, General Nikolai Fedorovich Vatutin. Unfortunately, it was not possible to save this talented commander. He died on April 15.

    By the spring of 1944, troops from four Ukrainian fronts had broken through enemy defenses all the way from Pripyat to the lower reaches of the Dnieper. Having advanced 150-250 km westward over the course of two months, they defeated several large enemy groups and thwarted his plans to restore defenses along the Dnieper. The liberation of the Kyiv, Dnepropetrovsk, and Zaporozhye regions was completed, the entire Zhitomir, almost completely the Rivne and Kirovograd regions, and a number of districts of the Vinnitsa, Nikolaev, Kamenets-Podolsk and Volyn regions were cleared of the enemy. Such large industrial areas as Nikopol and Krivoy Rog have been returned. The length of the front in Ukraine by the spring of 1944 reached 1200 km. In March, a new offensive was launched in Right Bank Ukraine.

    On March 4, the 1st Ukrainian Front went on the offensive and carried out Proskurov-Chernivtsi offensive operation(4 March – 17 April 1944).

    On March 5, the 2nd Ukrainian Front began Uman-Botosha operation(March 5 – April 17, 1944).

    March 6th began Bereznegovato-Snigirevskaya operation 3rd Ukrainian Front (6-18 March 1944). On March 11, Soviet troops liberated Berislav, on March 13, the 28th Army captured Kherson, and on March 15, Bereznegovatoye and Snigirevka were liberated. The troops of the right wing of the front, pursuing the enemy, reached the Southern Bug in the Voznesensk region.

    On March 29, our troops captured the regional center, the city of Chernivtsi. The enemy lost the last link between his troops operating north and south of the Carpathians. The strategic front of the Nazi troops was cut into two parts. On March 26, the city of Kamenets-Podolsky was liberated.

    The 2nd Belorussian Front provided significant assistance to the troops of the 1st Ukrainian Front in the defeat of the northern wing of Hitler’s Army Group South. Polesie offensive operation(March 15 – April 5, 1944).

    March 26, 1944 forward detachments of the 27th and 52nd armies (2nd Ukrainian Front) west of the city of Balti reached the Prut River, occupying an 85-km-long section along the USSR border with Romania. This would the first exit of Soviet troops to the border of the USSR.
    On the night of March 28, the troops of the right wing of the 2nd Ukrainian Front crossed the Prut and advanced 20-40 km into Romanian territory. On the approaches to Iasi and Chisinau they met stubborn enemy resistance. The main result of the Uman-Botosha operation was the liberation of a significant part of the territory of Ukraine and Moldova and the entry of Soviet troops into Romania.

    March 26 - April 14, 1944 Odessa offensive operation troops of the 3rd Ukrainian Front. On March 26, the troops of the 3rd Ukrainian Front went on the offensive throughout their entire zone. On March 28, after heavy fighting, the city of Nikolaev was taken.

    On the evening of April 9, Soviet troops from the north burst into Odessa and captured the city by night assault by 10 a.m. on April 10. The liberation of Odessa was attended by troops of three armies, commanded by Generals V.D. Tsvetaev, V.I. Chuikov and I.T. Shlemin, as well as the cavalry mechanized group of General I.A. Pliev.

    April 8 – May 6, 1944 Tirgu-Frumos offensive operation of the 2nd Ukrainian Front was the final operation of the strategic offensive of the Red Army in Right Bank Ukraine. Its goal was to strike the Chisinau enemy group from the west with a blow in the direction of Tirgu-Frumos, Vaslui. The offensive of the troops of the right wing of the 2nd Ukrainian Front began quite successfully. In the period from April 8 to 11, they, having broken enemy resistance, crossed the Siret River, advanced 30-50 km in the southwestern and southern directions and reached the foothills of the Carpathians. However, it was not possible to complete the assigned tasks. Our troops went on the defensive at the achieved lines.

    Liberation of Crimea (8 April - 12 May 1944)

    On April 8, the offensive of the 4th Ukrainian Front began with the goal of liberating Crimea. On April 11, our troops captured Dzhankoy, a powerful stronghold in the enemy’s defense and an important road junction. The entry of the 4th Ukrainian Front into the Dzhankoy area threatened the retreat routes of the enemy’s Kerch group and thereby created favorable conditions for the offensive of the Separate Primorsky Army. Fearing encirclement, the enemy decided to withdraw troops from the Kerch Peninsula. Having discovered preparations for withdrawal, the Separate Primorsky Army went on the offensive on the night of April 11. On April 13, Soviet troops liberated the cities of Yevpatoria, Simferopol and Feodosia. And on April 15-16, they reached the approaches to Sevastopol, where they were stopped by organized enemy defenses.

    On April 18, the Separate Primorsky Army was renamed the Primorsky Army and included in the 4th Ukrainian Front.

    Our troops were preparing for the assault. On May 9, 1944, Sevastopol was liberated. The remnants of the German troops fled to Cape Chersonesos, hoping to escape by sea. But on May 12 they were completely dispersed. At Cape Chersonese, 21 thousand enemy soldiers and officers were captured, and a large amount of weapons and military equipment was captured.

    Western Ukraine

    On July 27, after stubborn fighting, Lviv liberated.

    In July-August 1944, Soviet troops liberated western regions of Ukraine, and also south-eastern part of Poland, captured a large bridgehead on the western bank of the Vistula River, from which an offensive was subsequently launched into the central regions of Poland and further to the borders of Germany.

    The final lifting of the blockade of Leningrad. Karelia

    January 14 – March 1, 1944. Leningrad-Novgorod offensive operation. As a result of the offensive, Soviet troops liberated the territory of almost the entire Leningrad and part of the Kalinin regions from the occupiers, completely lifted the blockade of Leningrad, and entered Estonia. The basing area of ​​the Red Banner Baltic Fleet in the Gulf of Finland has expanded significantly. Favorable conditions were created for the defeat of the enemy in the Baltic states and in areas north of Leningrad.

    June 10 - August 9, 1944 Vyborg-Petrozavodsk offensive operation Soviet troops on the Karelian Isthmus.

    Liberation of Belarus and Lithuania

    June 23 - August 29, 1944 Belarusian strategic offensive operation Soviet troops in Belarus and Lithuania "Bagration". As part of the Belarusian operation, the Vitebsk-Orsha operation was also carried out.
    The general offensive was opened on June 23 by the troops of the 1st Baltic Front (commander Colonel General I.Kh. Bagramyan), the troops of the 3rd Belorussian Front (commander Colonel General I.D. Chernyakhovsky) and the troops of the 2nd Belorussian Front (commander Colonel General G.F. Zakharov). The next day, the troops of the 1st Belorussian Front under the command of Army General K.K. Rokossovsky went on the offensive. Guerrilla detachments began active operations behind enemy lines.

    The troops of four fronts, with persistent and coordinated strikes, broke through the defenses to a depth of 25-30 km, crossed a number of rivers on the move and inflicted significant damage on the enemy.

    In the Bobruisk area, about six divisions of the 35th Army and 41st Tank Corps of the 9th German Army were surrounded.

    July 3, 1944 Soviet troops liberated Minsk. As Marshal G.K. writes Zhukov, “the capital of Belarus could not be recognized... Now everything was in ruins, and in place of residential areas there were vacant lots, covered with piles of broken bricks and debris. The most difficult impression was made by the people, the residents of Minsk. Most of them were extremely exhausted and exhausted. .."

    June 29 - July 4, 1944, troops of the 1st Baltic Front successfully carried out the Polotsk operation, destroying the enemy in this area, and on July 4 Polotsk was liberated. On July 5, troops of the 3rd Belorussian Front captured the city of Molodechno.

    As a result of the defeat of large enemy forces near Vitebsk, Mogilev, Bobruisk and Minsk, the immediate goal of Operation Bagration was achieved, several days earlier than planned. In 12 days - from June 23 to July 4 - Soviet troops advanced almost 250 km. Vitebsk, Mogilev, Polotsk, Minsk and Bobruisk regions were completely liberated.

    On July 18, 1944 (on the feast of St. Sergius of Radonezh), Soviet troops crossed the border of Poland.

    On July 24 (the feast day of the Holy Blessed Princess Olga of Russia), the troops of the 1st Belorussian Front with their advanced units reached the Vistula in the Dęblin area. Here they freed the prisoners of the Majdanek death camp, in which the Nazis exterminated about one and a half million people.

    On August 1, 1944 (on the feast of St. Seraphim of Sarov), our troops reached the borders of East Prussia.

    The Red Army troops, having launched an offensive on June 23 on a front of 700 km, by the end of August advanced 550-600 km to the west, expanding the front of military operations to 1100 km. The vast territory of the Belarusian Republic was cleared of invaders - 80% and a quarter of Poland.

    Warsaw Uprising (1 August – 2 October 1944)

    On August 1, 1994, an anti-Nazi uprising took place in Warsaw. In response, the Germans carried out brutal massacres against the population. The city was destroyed to the ground. Soviet troops attempted to help the rebels, crossed the Vistula and captured the embankment in Warsaw. However, soon the Germans began to press our units, the Soviet troops suffered heavy losses. It was decided to withdraw the troops. The uprising lasted 63 days and was crushed. Warsaw was the front line of German defense, and the rebels had only light weapons. Without the help of Russian troops, the rebels had practically no chance of victory. And the uprising, unfortunately, was not coordinated with the command of the Soviet army in order to receive effective help from our troops.

    Liberation of Moldova, Romania, Slovakia

    August 20 - 29, 1944. Iasi-Kishinev offensive operation.

    In April 1944, as a result of a successful offensive in Right Bank Ukraine, troops of the 2nd Ukrainian Front reached the border of the cities of Iasi and Orhei and went on the defensive. The troops of the 3rd Ukrainian Front reached the Dniester River and captured several bridgeheads on its western bank. These fronts, as well as the Black Sea Fleet and the Danube Military Flotilla, were tasked with carrying out the Iasi-Kishinev strategic offensive operation with the aim of defeating a large group of German and Romanian troops covering the Balkan direction.

    As a result of the successful implementation of the Iasi-Kishinev operation, Soviet troops completed the liberation of Moldova and the Izmail region of Ukraine.

    August 23, 1944 - armed uprising in Romania. as a result of which the fascist Antonescu regime was overthrown. The next day, Romania withdrew from the war on the side of Germany and declared war on Germany on August 25. From that time on, Romanian troops took part in the war on the side of the Red Army.

    September 8 – October 28, 1944 East Carpathian offensive operation. As a result of the offensive of units of the 1st and 4th Ukrainian Fronts in the Eastern Carpathians, our troops liberated almost all of Transcarpathian Ukraine, September 20 reached the border of Slovakia, liberated part of Eastern Slovakia. The breakthrough into the Hungarian lowland opened up the prospect of liberating Czechoslovakia and access to the southern border of Germany.

    Baltics

    September 14 - November 24, 1944 Baltic offensive operation. This is one of the largest operations of the autumn of 1944; 12 armies of three Baltic fronts and the Leningrad Front were deployed on a 500-km front. The Baltic Fleet was also involved.

    September 22, 1944 - liberated Tallinn. In the following days (until September 26), the troops of the Leningrad Front reached the coast all the way from Tallinn to Pärnu, thereby completing the clearing of the enemy from the entire territory of Estonia, with the exception of the islands of Dago and Ezel.

    On October 11 our troops reached borders with East Prussia. Continuing the offensive, by the end of October they completely cleared the northern bank of the Neman River from the enemy.

    As a result of the offensive of Soviet troops in the Baltic strategic direction, Army Group North was expelled from almost the entire Baltic region and lost communications connecting it by land with East Prussia. The struggle for the Baltic states was long and extremely fierce. The enemy, having a well-developed road network, actively maneuvered with its forces and means, put up stubborn resistance to the Soviet troops, often launching counterattacks and delivering counterattacks. On his part, up to 25% of all forces on the Soviet-German front took part in the fighting. During the Baltic operation, 112 soldiers were awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

    Yugoslavia

    September 28 – October 20, 1944 Belgrade offensive operation. The goal of the operation was to use the joint efforts of Soviet and Yugoslav troops in the Belgrade direction, Yugoslav and Bulgarian troops in the Niš and Skopje directions to defeat the Serbia army group and liberate the eastern half of the territory of Serbia, including Belgrade. To carry out these tasks, troops of the 3rd Ukrainian (57th and 17th Air Armies, 4th Guards Mechanized Corps and units of front-line subordination) and 2nd Ukrainian (46th and parts of the 5th Air Army) fronts were involved . The offensive of Soviet troops in Yugoslavia forced the German command to make a decision on October 7, 1944 to withdraw its main forces from Greece, Albania and Macedonia. By the same time, the troops of the left wing of the 2nd Ukrainian Front reached the Tisa River, freeing the entire left bank of the Danube east of the mouth of the Tisa from the enemy. On October 14 (on the Feast of the Intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary), the order was given to begin the assault on Belgrade.

    October 20 Belgrade was liberated. The battles for the liberation of the capital of Yugoslavia lasted a week and were extremely stubborn.

    With the liberation of the capital of Yugoslavia, the Belgrade offensive operation ended. During it, Army Group Serbia was defeated and a number of formations of Army Group F were defeated. As a result of the operation, the enemy front was pushed 200 km to the west, the eastern half of Serbia was liberated and the enemy’s transport artery Thessaloniki - Belgrade was cut. At the same time, favorable conditions were created for the Soviet troops advancing in the Budapest direction. The Supreme High Command headquarters could now use the forces of the 3rd Ukrainian Front to defeat the enemy in Hungary. Residents of villages and cities in Yugoslavia greeted Soviet soldiers very warmly. They took to the streets with flowers, shook hands, hugged and kissed their liberators. The air was filled with the solemn ringing of bells and Russian melodies performed by local musicians. A medal “For the Liberation of Belgrade” was established.

    Karelian Front, 1944

    October 7 - 29, 1944 Petsamo-Kirkenes offensive operation. The successful conduct of the Vyborg-Petrozavodsk strategic offensive operation by Soviet troops forced Finland to withdraw from the war. By the fall of 1944, the troops of the Karelian Front had mostly reached the pre-war border with Finland, with the exception of the Far North, where the Nazis continued to occupy part of the Soviet and Finnish territories. Germany sought to retain this region of the Arctic, which was an important source of strategic raw materials (copper, nickel, molybdenum) and had ice-free seaports where the forces of the German fleet were based. The commander of the troops of the Karelian Front, General of the Army K. A. Meretskov, wrote: “Under your feet, the tundra is damp and somehow uncomfortable, lifelessness emanates from below: there, in the depths, permafrost begins, lying in islands, and yet the soldiers have to sleep on this earth, laying under oneself only one coat of an overcoat... Sometimes the earth rises up with naked masses of granite rocks... Nevertheless, it was necessary to fight. And not just fight, but attack, beat the enemy, drive him away and destroy him. I had to remember the words of the great Suvorov: “Where a deer passes, a Russian soldier will pass, and where a deer does not pass, a Russian soldier will still pass.” On October 15, the city of Petsamo (Pechenga) was liberated. Back in 1533, a Russian monastery was founded at the mouth of the Pechenga River. Soon, a port was built here, at the base of a wide and convenient bay of the Barents Sea for sailors. Vigorous trade with Norway, Holland, England and other Western countries took place through Pechenga. In 1920, under the peace treaty of October 14, Soviet Russia voluntarily ceded the Pechenga region to Finland.

    On October 25, Kirkenes was liberated, and the fighting was so fierce that every house and every street had to be stormed.

    854 Soviet prisoners of war and 772 civilians abducted by the Nazis from the Leningrad region were rescued from concentration camps.

    The last cities our troops reached were Neiden and Nautsi.

    Hungary

    October 29, 1944 - February 13, 1945. Assault and capture of Budapest.

    The offensive began on October 29. The German command took all measures to prevent the capture of Budapest by Soviet troops and the withdrawal of its last ally from the war. Fierce fighting broke out on the approaches to Budapest. Our troops achieved significant success, but they could not defeat the enemy group in Budapest and take possession of the city. Finally managed to surround Budapest. But the city was a fortress prepared by the Nazis for long-term defense. Hitler ordered to fight for Budapest to the last soldier. The battles for the liberation of the eastern part of the city (Pest) took place from December 27 to January 18, and the western part (Buda) - from January 20 to February 13.

    During the Budapest operation, Soviet troops liberated a significant part of Hungarian territory. The offensive actions of Soviet troops in the autumn and winter of 1944–1945 in the southwestern direction led to a radical change in the entire political situation in the Balkans. To Romania and Bulgaria, which were previously withdrawn from the war, another state was added - Hungary.

    Slovakia and Southern Poland

    January 12 - February 18, 1945. West Carpathian offensive operation. In the Western Carpathian operation, our troops had to overcome the enemy’s defensive lines, stretching 300–350 km in depth. The offensive was carried out by the 4th Ukrainian Front (commanded by Army General I.E. Petrov) and part of the forces of the 2nd Ukrainian Front. As a result of the winter offensive of the Red Army in the Western Carpathians, our troops liberated vast areas of Slovakia and Southern Poland with a population of about 1.5 million people.

    Warsaw-Berlin direction

    January 12 - February 3, 1945. Vistula-Oder offensive operation. The offensive in the Warsaw-Berlin direction was carried out by the forces of the 1st Belorussian Front under the command of Marshal of the Soviet Union G.K. Zhukov and the 1st Ukrainian Front under the command of Marshal of the Soviet Union I.S. Konev. Soldiers of the Polish Army fought alongside the Russians. The actions of the troops of the 1st Belorussian and 1st Ukrainian Fronts to defeat the Nazi troops between the Vistula and Oder can be divided into two stages. On the first (from January 12 to 17), the enemy’s strategic defense front in a strip of about 500 km was broken through, the main forces of Army Group A were defeated and conditions were created for the rapid development of the operation to great depth.

    January 17, 1945 was Warsaw liberated. The Nazis literally wiped the city off the face of the earth, and subjected the local residents to merciless destruction.

    At the second stage (from January 18 to February 3), the troops of the 1st Belorussian and 1st Ukrainian Fronts, with the assistance of the troops of the 2nd Belorussian and 4th Ukrainian Fronts on the flanks, during the rapid pursuit of the enemy, defeated the enemy reserves advancing from the depths and captured Silesian industrial region and reached the Oder on a broad front, capturing a number of bridgeheads on its western bank.

    As a result of the Vistula-Oder operation, a significant part of Poland was liberated, and the fighting was transferred to German territory. About 60 divisions of German troops were defeated.

    January 13 - April 25, 1945 East Prussian offensive operation. During this long-term strategic operation, the Insterburg, Mlavsko-Elbing, Heilsberg, Koenigsberg and Zemland frontal offensive operations were carried out.

    East Prussia was Germany's main strategic springboard for attacks on Russia and Poland. This territory also tightly covered access to the central regions of Germany. Therefore, the fascist command attached great importance to holding East Prussia. The terrain features - lakes, rivers, swamps and canals, a developed network of highways and railways, strong stone buildings - greatly contributed to the defense.

    The overall goal of the East Prussian strategic offensive operation was to cut off the enemy troops located in East Prussia from the rest of the fascist forces, press them to the sea, dismember and destroy them in parts, completely clearing the territory of East Prussia and Northern Poland of the enemy.

    Three fronts took part in the operation: 2nd Belorussian (commander - Marshal K.K. Rokossovsky), 3rd Belorussian (commander - Army General I.D. Chernyakhovsky) and 1st Baltic (commander - General I.Kh. Bagramyan). They were assisted by the Baltic Fleet under the command of Admiral V.F. Tributsa.

    The fronts began the offensive successfully (January 13 - 3rd Belorussian and January 14 - 2nd Belorussian). By January 18, German troops, despite desperate resistance, suffered a heavy defeat in the places of the main attacks of our armies and began to retreat. Until the end of January, waging stubborn battles, our troops captured a significant part of East Prussia. Having reached the sea, they cut off the East Prussian enemy group from the rest of the forces. At the same time, the 1st Baltic Front captured the large seaport of Memel (Klaipeda) on January 28.

    On February 10, the second stage of hostilities began - the elimination of isolated enemy groups. On February 18, Army General I.D. Chernyakhovsky died from a serious wound. The command of the 3rd Belorussian Front was entrusted to Marshal A.M. Vasilevsky. During intense battles, Soviet troops suffered serious losses. By March 29, it was possible to defeat the Nazis occupying the Heilsbury region. Next it was planned to defeat the Koenigsberg group. The Germans created three powerful defensive positions around the city. The city was declared by Hitler to be the best German fortress in the entire history of Germany and "an absolutely impregnable bastion of the German spirit."

    Assault on Konigsberg started on April 6th. On April 9, the fortress garrison capitulated. Moscow celebrated the completion of the assault on Koenigsberg with a salute of the highest category - 24 artillery salvoes from 324 guns. A medal was established “For the Capture of Koenigsberg”, which was usually done only on the occasion of the capture of state capitals. All participants in the assault received a medal. On April 17, a group of German troops near Koenigsberg was liquidated.

    After the capture of Koenigsberg, only the Zemland enemy group remained in East Prussia, which was defeated by the end of April.

    In East Prussia, the Red Army destroyed 25 German divisions, the other 12 divisions lost from 50 to 70% of their strength. Soviet troops captured more than 220 thousand soldiers and officers.

    But the Soviet troops also suffered huge losses: 126.5 thousand soldiers and officers died or went missing, more than 458 thousand soldiers were injured or were out of action due to illness.

    Yalta Conference of the Allied Powers

    This conference took place from February 4 to 11, 1945. The heads of the countries of the anti-Hitler coalition - the USSR, the USA and Great Britain - I. Stalin, F. Roosevelt and W. Churchill took part in it. Victory over fascism was no longer in doubt; it was a matter of time. The conference discussed the post-war structure of the world, the division of spheres of influence. A decision was made to occupy and divide Germany into occupation zones and to allocate France its own zone. For the USSR, the main task was to ensure the security of its borders after the end of the war. For example, there was a provisional government of Poland in exile, based in London. However, Stalin insisted on creating a new government in Poland, since it was from the territory of Poland that attacks on Russia were conveniently carried out by its enemies.

    The “Declaration on a Liberated Europe” was also signed in Yalta, which, in particular, said: “The establishment of order in Europe and the reorganization of national economic life must be achieved in such a way that will allow the liberated peoples to destroy the last traces of Nazism and fascism and create democratic institutions of their own choosing."

    At the Yalta Conference, an agreement was concluded on the entry of the USSR into the war against Japan two to three months after the end of the war in Europe and with the condition that Russia would return South Sakhalin and adjacent islands, as well as the previously Russian naval base in Port Arthur and with the condition transfer of the Kuril Islands to the USSR.

    The most important outcome of the conference was the decision to convene a conference on April 25, 1945 in San Francisco, at which it was supposed to develop the Charter of the new United Nations.

    Coast of the Baltic Sea

    February 10 – April 4, 1945. East Pomeranian offensive operation. The enemy command continued to hold the coast of the Baltic Sea in Eastern Pomerania in its hands, as a result of which between the armies of the 1st Belorussian Front, which reached the Oder River, and the troops of the 2nd Belorussian Front, the main forces of which were fighting in East Prussia, in early February 1945 year, a gap of about 150 km was formed. This strip of terrain was occupied by limited forces of Soviet troops. As a result of the fighting, by March 13, the troops of the 1st Belorussian and 2nd Belorussian fronts reached the coast of the Baltic Sea. By April 4, the East Pomeranian enemy group was eliminated. The enemy, having suffered huge losses, not only lost a bridgehead convenient for operations against our troops preparing for an attack on Berlin, but also a significant part of the Baltic Sea coast. The Baltic Fleet, having relocated its light forces to the ports of Eastern Pomerania, took advantageous positions on the Baltic Sea and could provide the coastal flank of the Soviet troops during their offensive in the Berlin direction.

    Vein

    March 16 - April 15, 1945. Vienna offensive operation In January-March 1945, as a result of the Budapest and Balaton operations carried out by the Red Army, the troops of the 3rd Ukrainian Front (commander - Marshal of the Soviet Union F.I. Tolbukhin) defeated the enemy in the central part of Hungary and moved west.

    April 4, 1945 Soviet troops completed the liberation of Hungary and launched an attack on Vienna.

    Fierce fighting for the capital of Austria began the very next day - April 5. The city was covered from three sides - from the south, east and west. Fighting stubborn street battles, Soviet troops advanced towards the city center. Fierce battles broke out for each block, and sometimes even for a separate building. By 2 p.m. on April 13, Soviet troops were completely liberated Vienna.

    During the Vienna operation, Soviet troops fought 150-200 km and completed the liberation of Hungary and the eastern part of Austria with its capital. The fighting during the Vienna operation was extremely fierce. The Soviet troops here were opposed by the most combat-ready divisions of the Wehrmacht (6th SS Panzer Army), which shortly before inflicted a serious defeat on the Americans in the Ardennes. But Soviet soldiers, in a fierce struggle, crushed this flower of Hitler's Wehrmacht. True, the victory was achieved at the cost of considerable sacrifices.

    Berlin offensive operation (April 16 - May 2, 1945)


    The Battle of Berlin was a special, incomparable operation that determined the outcome of the war. It is obvious that the German command also planned this battle as decisive on the Eastern Front. From the Oder to Berlin, the Germans created a continuous system of defensive structures. All settlements were adapted to all-round defense. On the immediate approaches to Berlin, three lines of defense were created: an external defensive zone, an external defensive circuit and an internal defensive circuit. The city itself was divided into defense sectors - eight sectors around the circumference and a particularly fortified ninth, central sector, where government buildings, the Reichstag, the Gestapo, and the Imperial Chancellery were located. Heavy barricades, anti-tank barriers, rubble, and concrete structures were built on the streets. The windows of the houses were strengthened and turned into loopholes. The territory of the capital together with its suburbs was 325 square meters. km. The essence of the strategic plan of the Wehrmacht High Command was to maintain defenses in the east at all costs, hold back the advance of the Red Army, and in the meantime try to conclude a separate peace with the United States and England. The Nazi leadership put forward the slogan: “It is better to surrender Berlin to the Anglo-Saxons than to let the Russians into it.”

    The offensive of the Russian troops was planned very carefully. On a relatively narrow section of the front, 65 rifle divisions, 3,155 tanks and self-propelled guns, and about 42 thousand guns and mortars were concentrated in a short time. The plan of the Soviet command was to break through the enemy’s defenses along the Oder and Neisse rivers with powerful blows from troops on three fronts and, developing an offensive in depth, encircle the main group of fascist German troops in the Berlin direction, simultaneously cutting it into several parts and subsequently destroying each of them. them. In the future, Soviet troops were supposed to reach the Elbe. The completion of the defeat of the Nazi troops was supposed to be carried out jointly with the Western allies, an agreement in principle with whom on coordinating actions was reached at the Crimean Conference. The main role in the upcoming operation was assigned to the 1st Belorussian Front (commanded by Marshal of the Soviet Union G.K. Zhukov), the 1st Ukrainian Front (commanded by Marshal of the Soviet Union I.S. Konev) was supposed to defeat the enemy group south of Berlin. The front launched two attacks: the main one in the general direction of Spremberg and the auxiliary one towards Dresden. The start of the offensive by the troops of the 1st Belorussian and 1st Ukrainian fronts was scheduled for April 16. On the 2nd, the Belorussian Front (commander - Marshal of the Soviet Union K.K. Rokossovsky) was supposed to launch an offensive on April 20, cross the Oder in its lower reaches and strike in a north-western direction in order to cut off the West Pomeranian enemy group from Berlin. In addition, the 2nd Belorussian Front was entrusted with the task of covering the coast of the Baltic Sea from the mouth of the Vistula to Altdamm with part of its forces.

    It was decided to begin the main offensive two hours before dawn. One hundred and forty anti-aircraft searchlights were supposed to suddenly illuminate enemy positions and attack targets. A sudden and powerful artillery barrage and air strikes, followed by an attack by infantry and tanks, stunned the Germans. Hitler's troops were literally drowned in a continuous sea of ​​fire and metal. On the morning of April 16, Russian troops successfully advanced on all sectors of the front. However, the enemy, having come to his senses, began to resist from the Seelow Heights - this natural line stood as a solid wall in front of our troops. The steep slopes of the Zelovsky Heights were dug with trenches and trenches. All approaches to them were shot through multi-layered cross artillery and rifle-machine-gun fire. Individual buildings have been turned into strongholds, barriers made of logs and metal beams have been erected on the roads, and the approaches to them have been mined. On both sides of the highway running from the city of Zelov to the west, there was anti-aircraft artillery, which was used for anti-tank defense. The approaches to the heights were blocked by an anti-tank ditch up to 3 m deep and 3.5 m wide. Having assessed the situation, Marshal Zhukov decided to bring tank armies into the battle. However, even with their help it was not possible to quickly master the border. The Seelow Heights were taken only on the morning of April 18, after fierce battles. However, on April 18, the enemy was still trying to stop the advance of our troops, throwing all his available reserves towards them. Only on April 19, suffering heavy losses, the Germans could not stand it and began to retreat to the outer perimeter of Berlin’s defenses.

    The offensive of the 1st Ukrainian Front developed more successfully. Having crossed the Neisse River, combined arms and tank formations by the end of the day on April 16 broke through the main enemy defense line at a front of 26 km and to a depth of 13 km. During the three days of the offensive, the armies of the 1st Ukrainian Front advanced up to 30 km in the direction of the main attack.

    Storm of Berlin

    On April 20, the assault on Berlin began. Long-range artillery of our troops opened fire on the city. On April 21, our units broke into the outskirts of Berlin and started fighting in the city itself. The fascist German command made desperate efforts to prevent the encirclement of their capital. It was decided to remove all troops from the Western Front and throw them into the battle for Berlin. However, on April 25, the encirclement ring around the Berlin enemy group was closed. On the same day, a meeting of Soviet and American troops took place in the Torgau area on the Elbe River. The 2nd Belorussian Front, through active operations in the lower reaches of the Oder, reliably pinned down the 3rd German Tank Army, depriving it of the opportunity to launch a counterattack from the north against the Soviet armies surrounding Berlin. Our troops suffered heavy losses, but, inspired by successes, rushed to the center of Berlin, where the main enemy command led by Hitler was still located. Fierce battles broke out on the streets of the city. The fighting did not stop day or night.

    April 30th started early in the morning storming of the Reichstag. The approaches to the Reichstag were covered by strong buildings, the defense was held by selected SS units with a total number of about six thousand people, equipped with tanks, assault guns and artillery. At about 3 p.m. on April 30, the Red Banner was hoisted over the Reichstag. However, fighting in the Reichstag continued throughout the day of May 1 and into the night of May 2. Separate scattered groups of Nazis, holed up in the basements, capitulated only on the morning of May 2.

    On April 30, German troops in Berlin were divided into four parts of different composition, and their unified control was lost.

    At 3 a.m. on May 1, the Chief of the General Staff of the German Ground Forces, Infantry General G. Krebs, by agreement with the Soviet command, crossed the front line in Berlin and was received by the commander of the 8th Guards Army, General V.I. Chuikov. Krebs reported Hitler's suicide, and also conveyed a list of members of the new imperial government and a proposal from Goebbels and Bormann for a temporary cessation of hostilities in the capital in order to prepare the conditions for peace negotiations between Germany and the USSR. However, this document said nothing about surrender. Krebs' message was immediately reported by Marshal G.K. Zhukov to the Supreme Command Headquarters. The answer was: to achieve only unconditional surrender. On the evening of May 1, the German command sent a truce who reported their refusal to capitulate. In response to this, the final assault began on the central part of the city, where the Imperial Chancellery was located. On May 2, by 15:00, the enemy in Berlin had completely ceased resistance.

    Prague

    May 6 - 11, 1945. Prague offensive operation. After the defeat of the enemy in the Berlin direction, the only force capable of providing serious resistance to the Red Army was Army Group Center and part of Army Group Austria, located on the territory of Czechoslovakia. The idea of ​​the Prague operation was to encircle, dismember and quickly defeat the main forces of fascist German troops on the territory of Czechoslovakia by delivering several strikes in converging directions towards Prague, and to prevent their withdrawal to the west. The main attacks on the flanks of Army Group Center were carried out by troops of the 1st Ukrainian Front from the area northwest of Dresden and troops of the 2nd Ukrainian Front from the area south of Brno.

    On May 5, a spontaneous uprising began in Prague. Tens of thousands of city residents took to the streets. They not only erected hundreds of barricades, but also captured the central post office, telegraph, train stations, bridges over the Vltava, a number of military warehouses, disarmed several small units stationed in Prague, and established control over a significant part of the city. On May 6, German troops, using tanks, artillery and aircraft against the rebels, entered Prague and captured a significant part of the city. The rebels, having suffered heavy losses, radioed to the Allies for help. In this regard, Marshal I. S. Konev gave the order to the troops of his strike force to begin an offensive on the morning of May 6.

    On the afternoon of May 7, the commander of Army Group Center received by radio an order from Field Marshal W. Keitel about the surrender of German troops on all fronts, but did not convey it to his subordinates. On the contrary, he gave his order to the troops, in which he stated that rumors of surrender were false, they were being spread by Anglo-American and Soviet propaganda. On May 7, American officers arrived in Prague, reported the surrender of Germany and advised an end to the fighting in Prague. At night it became known that the head of the garrison of German troops in Prague, General R. Toussaint, was ready to enter into negotiations with the leadership of the rebels on surrender. At 16:00 the act of surrender of the German garrison was signed. Under its terms, German troops received the right of free retreat to the west, leaving heavy weapons at the exit from the city.

    On May 9, our troops entered Prague and, with the active support of the population and rebel fighting squads, Soviet troops cleared the city of the Nazis. The routes for the possible withdrawal of the main forces of Army Group Center to the west and southwest with the capture of Prague by Soviet troops were cut off. The main forces of Army Group Center found themselves in a “pocket” east of Prague. On May 10-11 they capitulated and were captured by Soviet troops.

    Surrender of Germany

    On May 6, on the day of the Holy Great Martyr George the Victorious, Grand Admiral Doenitz, who was the head of the German state after Hitler’s suicide, agreed to the surrender of the Wehrmacht, Germany admitted itself defeated.

    On the night of May 7, in Reims, where Eisenhower’s headquarters was located, a preliminary protocol on the surrender of Germany was signed, according to which, from 11 p.m. on May 8, hostilities ceased on all fronts. The protocol specifically stipulated that it was not a comprehensive agreement on the surrender of Germany and its armed forces. It was signed on behalf of the Soviet Union by General I. D. Susloparov, on behalf of the Western allies by General W. Smith and on behalf of Germany by General Jodl. Only a witness was present from France. After the signing of this act, our Western allies hastened to notify the world of Germany’s surrender to American and British troops. However, Stalin insisted that “surrender must be carried out as the most important historical act and accepted not on the territory of the victors, but where the fascist aggression came from - in Berlin, and not unilaterally, but necessarily by the high command of all countries of the anti-Hitler coalition ".

    On the night of May 8-9, 1945, the Act of Unconditional Surrender of Nazi Germany was signed in Karlshorst (an eastern suburb of Berlin). The signing ceremony of the act took place in the building of the military engineering school, where a special hall was prepared, decorated with the state flags of the USSR, USA, England and France. At the main table were representatives of the Allied powers. Present in the hall were Soviet generals whose troops took Berlin, as well as Soviet and foreign journalists. Marshal Georgy Konstantinovich Zhukov was appointed representative of the Supreme High Command of the Soviet troops. The High Command of the Allied Forces was represented by the English Air Marshal Arthur W. Tedder, the commander of the US Strategic Air Forces, General Spaats, and the Commander-in-Chief of the French Army, General Delattre de Tassigny. On the German side, Field Marshal Keitel, Fleet Admiral von Friedeburg and Air Force Colonel General Stumpf were authorized to sign the act of unconditional surrender.

    The ceremony of signing the surrender at 24 o'clock was opened by Marshal G.K. Zhukov. At his suggestion, Keitel presented the heads of the Allied delegations with a document on his powers, signed by Doenitz. The German delegation was then asked whether it had the Act of Unconditional Surrender in its hands and whether it had studied it. After Keitel’s affirmative answer, representatives of the German armed forces, at the sign of Marshal Zhukov, signed an act drawn up in 9 copies. Then Tedder and Zhukov put their signatures, and representatives of the United States and France served as witnesses. The procedure for signing the surrender ended at 0 hours 43 minutes on May 9, 1945. The German delegation, by order of Zhukov, left the hall. The act consisted of 6 points as follows:

    "1. We, the undersigned, acting on behalf of the German High Command, agree to the unconditional surrender of all our armed forces on land, sea and air, as well as all forces currently under German command, to the Supreme Command of the Red Army and at the same time to the Supreme Command Allied Expeditionary Forces.

    2. The German High Command will immediately issue orders to all German commanders of land, sea and air forces and all forces under German command to cease hostilities at 23-01 hours Central European time on May 8, 1945, to remain in their places where they are at this time, and completely disarm, handing over all their weapons and military equipment to local Allied commanders or officers assigned by representatives of the Allied High Command, not to destroy or cause any damage to ships, ships and aircraft, their engines, hulls and equipment, and also machines, weapons, apparatus and all military-technical means of warfare in general.

    3. The German High Command will immediately assign the appropriate commanders and ensure that all further orders issued by the Supreme Command of the Red Army and the High Command of the Allied Expeditionary Forces are carried out.

    4. This act shall not be an obstacle to its replacement by another general instrument of surrender, concluded by or on behalf of the United Nations, applicable to Germany and the German armed forces as a whole.

    5. In the event that the German High Command or any armed forces under its command do not act in accordance with this instrument of surrender, the High Command of the Red Army as well as the High Command of the Allied Expeditionary Forces will take such punitive measures or other actions which they deem necessary.

    6. This act is drawn up in Russian, English and German. Only Russian and English texts are authentic.

    At 0:50 a.m. the meeting was adjourned. After this, a reception took place, which was a great success. Much was said about the desire to strengthen friendly relations between the countries of the anti-fascist coalition. The festive dinner ended with songs and dances. As Marshal Zhukov recalls: “The Soviet generals danced without competition. I, too, could not resist and, remembering my youth, danced the “Russian” one.”

    The ground, sea and air forces of the Wehrmacht on the Soviet-German front began to lay down their arms. By the end of the day on May 8, Army Group Kurland, pressed to the Baltic Sea, ceased resistance. About 190 thousand soldiers and officers, including 42 generals, surrendered. On the morning of May 9, German troops in the area of ​​Danzig and Gdynia capitulated. About 75 thousand soldiers and officers, including 12 generals, laid down their arms here. In Norway, Task Force Narvik capitulated.

    The Soviet landing force, which landed on the Danish island of Bornholm on May 9, captured it 2 days later and captured the German garrison located there (12 thousand people).

    Small groups of Germans on the territory of Czechoslovakia and Austria, who did not want to surrender along with the bulk of the troops of Army Group Center and tried to get to the west, had to be destroyed by Soviet troops until May 19.


    The finale of the Great Patriotic War was Victory Parade, held on June 24 in Moscow (that year, the Feast of Pentecost and the Holy Trinity fell on this day). Ten fronts and the Navy sent their best warriors to participate in it. Among them were representatives of the Polish army. The combined regiments of the fronts, led by their illustrious commanders under battle banners, marched solemnly along Red Square.

    Potsdam Conference (17 July - 2 August 1945)

    Government delegations from allied states took part in this conference. The Soviet delegation headed by J.V. Stalin, the British - headed by Prime Minister W. Churchill and the American - led by President G. Truman. The first official meeting was attended by heads of government, all foreign ministers, their first deputies, military and civilian advisers and experts. The main issue of the conference was the question of the post-war structure of European countries and the reconstruction of Germany. Agreement was reached on the political and economic principles for coordinating Allied policy towards Germany during the period of Allied control over it. The text of the agreement stated that German militarism and Nazism must be eradicated, all Nazi institutions must be dissolved, and all members of the Nazi Party must be removed from public positions. War criminals must be arrested and brought to justice. The production of German weapons should be prohibited. With regard to the reconstruction of the German economy, it was decided that the main focus should be on the development of peaceful industry and agriculture. Also, at the insistence of Stalin, it was decided that Germany should remain a single whole (the USA and England proposed dividing Germany into three states).

    According to N.A. Narochnitskaya, “The most important, although never spoken out loud, result of Yalta and Potsdam was the actual recognition of the continuity of the USSR in relation to the geopolitical area of ​​the Russian Empire, combined with newfound military power and international influence.”

    Tatiana Radynova

    The confrontation of the Russian people with the aggression of Germany and other countries that sought to establish a “new world order.” This war became a clash between two opposing civilizations, in which the Western world set as its goal the complete destruction of Russia - the USSR as a state and nation, the seizure of a significant part of its territories and the formation of puppet regimes subject to Germany in the remaining parts. Germany was pushed to war against Russia by the Judeo-Masonic regimes of the USA and England, which saw in Hitler an instrument for carrying out their plans for world domination and the destruction of Russia.

    On June 22, 1941, German armed forces consisting of 103 divisions, including 10 tank divisions, invaded Russian territory. Their total number numbered five and a half million people, of which more than 900 thousand were military personnel of Germany's Western allies - Italians, Spaniards, French, Dutch, Finns, Romanians, Hungarians, etc. 4,300 tanks and assault guns were assigned to this treacherous Western international , 4980 combat aircraft, 47200 guns and mortars.

    The Russian armed forces of the five western border military districts and three fleets opposing the aggressor were twice as inferior to the enemy in manpower, and in the first echelon of our armies there were only 56 rifle and cavalry divisions, which found it difficult to compete with the German tank corps. The aggressor also had a great advantage in artillery, tanks and aircraft of the latest designs.

    By nationality, more than 90% of the Soviet army opposing Germany were Russians (Great Russians, Little Russians and Belarusians), which is why, without exaggeration, it can be called the Russian army, which in no way detracts from the feasible contribution of other peoples of Russia in confronting the common enemy.

    Treacherously, without declaring war, concentrating overwhelming superiority on the direction of attacks, the aggressor broke through the defenses of Russian troops, seized strategic initiative and air supremacy. The enemy occupied a significant part of the country and advanced inland to 300 - 600 km.

    On June 23, the Headquarters of the High Command was created (from August 6 - the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command). All power was concentrated in the State Defense Committee (GKO) created on June 30. From August 8 I.V. Stalin became the Supreme Commander-in-Chief. He gathered around him outstanding Russian commanders G.K. Zhukov, S.K. Timoshenko, B.M. Shaposhnikov, A.M. Vasilevsky, K.K. Rokossovsky, N.F. Vatutin, A.I. Eremenko, K. A. Meretskov, I. S. Konev, I. D. Chernyakhovsky and many others. In his public speeches, Stalin relies on the sense of patriotism of the Russian people and calls on them to follow the example of their heroic ancestors. The main military events of the summer-autumn campaign of 1941 were the Battle of Smolensk, the defense of Leningrad and the beginning of its blockade, the military disaster of Soviet troops in Ukraine, the defense of Odessa, the beginning of the defense of Sevastopol, the loss of Donbass, the defensive period of the Battle of Moscow. The Russian army retreated 850-1200 km, but the enemy was stopped in the main directions near Leningrad, Moscow and Rostov and went on the defensive.

    The winter campaign of 1941-42 began with a counter-offensive of Russian troops in the western strategic direction. During it, a counteroffensive near Moscow, the Lyuban, Rzhevsko-Vyazemskaya, Barvenkovsko-Lozovskaya and Kerch-Feodosia landing operations were carried out. Russian troops removed the threat to Moscow and the North Caucasus, eased the situation in Leningrad, and completely or partially liberated the territory of 10 regions, as well as over 60 cities. The blitzkrieg strategy collapsed. About 50 enemy divisions were defeated. The patriotism of the Russian people, which was widely manifested from the first days of the war, played a major role in the defeat of the enemy. Thousands of national heroes like A. Matrosov and Z. Kosmodemyanskaya, hundreds of thousands of partisans behind enemy lines in the first months greatly shook the morale of the aggressor.

    In the summer-autumn campaign of 1942, the main military events unfolded in the southwestern direction: the defeat of the Crimean Front, the military disaster of Soviet troops in the Kharkov operation, the Voronezh-Voroshilovgrad, Donbass, and Stalingrad defensive operations, the battle in the North Caucasus. In the northwestern direction, the Russian army carried out the Demyansk and Rzhev-Sychevsk offensive operations. The enemy advanced 500 - 650 km, reached the Volga, and captured part of the passes of the Main Caucasus Range. The territory was occupied, where before the war 42% of the population lived, a third of the gross output was produced, and more than 45% of the sown areas were located. The economy was put on a war footing. A large number of enterprises were relocated to the eastern regions of the country (2,593 in the second half of 1941 alone, including 1,523 large ones), and 2.3 million heads of livestock were exported. In the first half of 1942, 10 thousand aircraft, 11 thousand tanks, approx. 54 thousand guns. In the 2nd half of the year their output increased by more than 1.5 times.

    In the winter campaign of 1942-43, the main military events were the Stalingrad and North Caucasus offensive operations and the breaking of the blockade of Leningrad. The Russian army advanced 600 - 700 km westward, liberating a territory of over 480 thousand square meters. km, defeated 100 divisions (40% of the enemy forces on the Soviet-German front). In the summer-autumn campaign of 1943, the decisive event was the Battle of Kursk. The partisans played an important role (Operation Rail War). During the battle for the Dnieper, 38 thousand settlements were liberated, including 160 cities; With the capture of strategic bridgeheads on the Dnieper, conditions were created for an offensive in Belarus. In the Battle of the Dnieper, the partisans carried out Operation Concert to destroy enemy communications. In other directions, the Smolensk and Bryansk offensive operations were carried out. The Russian army fought up to 500 - 1300 km and defeated 218 divisions.

    During the winter campaign of 1943-44, the Russian army carried out an offensive in Ukraine (10 simultaneous and sequential front-line operations, united by a common plan). Completed the defeat of Army Group South, crossed the border with Romania and transferred the fighting to its territory. Almost simultaneously, the Leningrad-Novgorod offensive operation unfolded; Leningrad was finally released. As a result of the Crimean operation, Crimea was liberated. Russian troops advanced westward by 250 - 450 km, liberating approx. 300 thousand sq. km of territory, reached the state border with Czechoslovakia.

    In June 1944, when the USA and England realized that Russia could win the war without their participation, they opened a 2nd front in France. This worsened the military-political situation in Germany. During the summer-autumn campaign of 1944, Russian troops carried out the Belarusian, Lvov-Sandomierz, East Carpathian, Iasi-Kishinev, Baltic, Debrecen, East Carpathian, Belgrade, partially Budapest and Petsamo-Kirkenes offensive operations. The liberation of Belarus, Little Russia and the Baltic states (except for some regions of Latvia), partially of Czechoslovakia was completed, Romania and Hungary were forced to capitulate and entered the war against Germany, the Soviet Arctic and the northern regions of Norway were liberated from the occupiers.

    The 1945 campaign in Europe included the East Prussian, Vistula-Oder, completion of Budapest, East Pomeranian, Lower Silesian, Upper Silesian, Western Carpathian, Vienna and Berlin operations, which ended with the unconditional surrender of Nazi Germany. After the Berlin operation, Russian troops, together with the 2nd army of the Polish Army, the 1st and 4th Romanian armies and the 1st Czechoslovak corps, carried out the Prague operation.

    Victory in the war greatly raised the spirit of the Russian people and contributed to the growth of their national self-awareness and self-confidence. As a result of the victory, Russia regained most of what was taken from it as a result of the revolution (except for Finland and Poland). The historical Russian lands in Galicia, Bukovina, Bessarabia, etc. returned to its composition. Most of the Russian people (including Little Russians and Belarusians) again became a single entity in one state, which created the preconditions for their unification in a single Church. The fulfillment of this historical task was the main positive outcome of the war. The victory of Russian weapons created favorable conditions for Slavic unity. At some stage, the Slavic countries united with Russia in something like a fraternal federation. For a period of time, the peoples of Poland, Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria, and Yugoslavia realized how important it was for the Slavic world to stick together in the fight against Western encroachment on Slavic lands.

    On Russia's initiative, Poland received Silesia and a significant part of East Prussia, from which the city of Königsberg with its surrounding territory came into the possession of the Russian state, and Czechoslovakia regained the Sudetenland previously captured by Germany.

    The great mission to save humanity from the “new world order” was given to Russia at a huge price: the Russian people and the brotherly peoples of our Fatherland paid for this with the lives of 47 million people (including direct and indirect losses), of which approximately 37 million people were Russians themselves (including Little Russians and Belarusians).

    Most of the deaths were not of the military directly involved in the hostilities, but of civilians, the civilian population of our country. The irretrievable losses of the Russian army (killed, died from wounds, missing in action, died in captivity) amount to 8 million 668 thousand 400 people. The remaining 35 million are the lives of civilians. During the war years, about 25 million people were evacuated to the East. Approximately 80 million people, or about 40% of the population of our country, ended up in the territory occupied by Germany. All these people became “objects” of the implementation of the misanthropic Ost program, were subjected to brutal repressions, and died from famine organized by the Germans. About 6 million people were driven into German slavery, many of them died from unbearable living conditions.

    As a result of the war, the genetic fund of the most active and viable part of the population was significantly undermined, because in it, first of all, the strongest and most energetic members of society, capable of producing the most valuable offspring, died. In addition, due to the falling birth rate, the country is missing tens of millions of future citizens.

    The huge price of victory fell most heavily on the shoulders of the Russian people (including Little Russians and Belarusians), because the main hostilities were carried out on their ethnic territories and it was towards them that the enemy was especially cruel and merciless.

    In addition to the enormous human losses, our country suffered colossal material damage. Not a single country in its entire history and in the Second World War had such losses and barbaric destruction from aggressors as befell Great Russia. Russia's total material losses in world prices amounted to more than a trillion dollars (US national income for several years).

    On June 22, 1941, at 4 o’clock in the morning, Nazi Germany treacherously invaded the USSR without declaring war. This attack ended the chain of aggressive actions of Nazi Germany, which, thanks to the connivance and incitement of the Western powers, grossly violated the elementary norms of international law, resorted to predatory seizures and monstrous atrocities in the occupied countries.

    In accordance with the Barbarossa plan, the fascist offensive began on a wide front by several groups in different directions. An army was stationed in the north "Norway", advancing on Murmansk and Kandalaksha; an army group was advancing from East Prussia to the Baltic states and Leningrad "North"; the most powerful army group "Center" had the goal of defeating the Red Army units in Belarus, capturing Vitebsk-Smolensk and taking Moscow on the move; army group "South" was concentrated from Lublin to the mouth of the Danube and led an attack on Kyiv - Donbass. The Nazis' plans boiled down to delivering a surprise attack in these directions, destroying border and military units, breaking through deep into the rear, and capturing Moscow, Leningrad, Kyiv and the most important industrial centers in the southern regions of the country.

    The command of the German army expected to end the war in 6-8 weeks.

    190 enemy divisions, about 5.5 million soldiers, up to 50 thousand guns and mortars, 4,300 tanks, almost 5 thousand aircraft and about 200 warships were thrown into the offensive against the Soviet Union.

    The war began in extremely favorable conditions for Germany. Before the attack on the USSR, Germany captured almost all of Western Europe, whose economy worked for the Nazis. Therefore, Germany had a powerful material and technical base.

    Germany's military products were supplied by 6,500 of the largest enterprises in Western Europe. More than 3 million foreign workers were involved in the war industry. In Western European countries, the Nazis looted a lot of weapons, military equipment, trucks, carriages and locomotives. The military-economic resources of Germany and its allies significantly exceeded those of the USSR. Germany fully mobilized its army, as well as the armies of its allies. Most of the German army was concentrated near the borders of the Soviet Union. In addition, imperialist Japan threatened an attack from the East, which diverted a significant part of the Soviet Armed Forces to defend the country's eastern borders. In theses of the CPSU Central Committee "50 years of the Great October Socialist Revolution" An analysis of the reasons for the temporary failures of the Red Army in the initial period of the war is given. They are due to the fact that the Nazis used temporary advantages:

    • militarization of the economy and all life in Germany;
    • long preparation for a war of conquest and more than two years of experience in conducting military operations in the West;
    • superiority in weapons and numbers of troops concentrated in advance in border zones.

    They had the economic and military resources of almost all of Western Europe at their disposal. Miscalculations in determining the possible timing of Hitler's Germany's attack on our country and related omissions in preparation for repelling the first blows played a role. There was reliable information about the concentration of German troops near the borders of the USSR and Germany’s preparations for an attack on our country. However, the troops of the western military districts were not brought to a state of full combat readiness.

    All these reasons put the Soviet country in a difficult situation. However, the enormous difficulties of the initial period of the war did not break the fighting spirit of the Red Army or shake the fortitude of the Soviet people. From the first days of the attack, it became clear that the plan for a lightning war had collapsed. Accustomed to easy victories over Western countries, whose governments treacherously surrendered their people to be torn to pieces by the occupiers, the Nazis met stubborn resistance from the Soviet Armed Forces, border guards and the entire Soviet people. The war lasted 1418 days. Groups of border guards fought bravely at the border. The garrison of the Brest Fortress covered itself with unfading glory. The defense of the fortress was led by Captain I. N. Zubachev, regimental commissar E. M. Fomin, Major P. M. Gavrilov and others. On June 22, 1941, at 4:25 a.m., fighter pilot I. I. Ivanov made the first ram. (In total, about 200 rams were carried out during the war). On June 26, the crew of Captain N.F. Gastello (A.A. Burdenyuk, G.N. Skorobogatiy, A.A. Kalinin) crashed into a column of enemy troops on a burning plane. Hundreds of thousands of Soviet soldiers from the first days of the war showed examples of courage and heroism.

    lasted two months Battle of Smolensk. Born here near Smolensk soviet guard. The battle in the Smolensk region delayed the enemy's advance until mid-September 1941.
    During the Battle of Smolensk, the Red Army thwarted the enemy's plans. The delay of the enemy offensive in the central direction was the first strategic success of the Soviet troops.

    The Communist Party became the leading and directing force for the country's defense and preparation for the destruction of Hitler's troops. From the first days of the war, the party took emergency measures to organize resistance to the aggressor; a huge amount of work was carried out to reorganize all work on a military basis, turning the country into a single military camp.

    “To wage a war for real,” wrote V.I. Lenin, “a strong, organized rear is needed. The best army, the people most devoted to the cause of the revolution will be immediately exterminated by the enemy if they are not sufficiently armed, supplied with food, and trained” (Lenin V.I. Poln. sobr. soch., vol. 35, p. 408).

    These Leninist instructions formed the basis for organizing the fight against the enemy. On June 22, 1941, on behalf of the Soviet government, V. M. Molotov, People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs of the USSR, spoke on the radio with a message about the “robbery” attack of Nazi Germany and a call to fight the enemy. On the same day, a Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR was adopted on the introduction of martial law on the European territory of the USSR, as well as a Decree on the mobilization of a number of ages in 14 military districts. On June 23, the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks and the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR adopted a resolution on the tasks of party and Soviet organizations in war conditions. On June 24, the Evacuation Council was formed, and on June 27, the resolution of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks and the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR “On the procedure for the removal and placement of human contingents and valuable property” determined the procedure for the evacuation of productive forces and the population to the eastern regions. In the directive of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks and the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR dated June 29, 1941, the most important tasks for mobilizing all forces and means to defeat the enemy were outlined to party and Soviet organizations in the front-line regions.

    “...In the war imposed on us with fascist Germany,” this document said, “the question of life and death of the Soviet state is being decided, whether the peoples of the Soviet Union should be free or fall into enslavement.” The Central Committee and the Soviet government called for realizing the full depth of the danger, reorganizing all work on a war footing, organizing comprehensive assistance to the front, increasing the production of weapons, ammunition, tanks, aircraft in every possible way, and in the event of a forced withdrawal of the Red Army, removing all valuable property, and destroying what cannot be removed. , in enemy-occupied areas to organize partisan detachments. On July 3, the main provisions of the directive were outlined in a speech by J.V. Stalin on the radio. The directive determined the nature of the war, the degree of threat and danger, set the tasks of transforming the country into a single combat camp, comprehensively strengthening the Armed Forces, restructuring the work of the rear on a military scale, and mobilizing all forces to repel the enemy. On June 30, 1941, an emergency body was created to quickly mobilize all the country’s forces and resources to repel and defeat the enemy - State Defense Committee (GKO) led by I.V. Stalin. All power in the country, state, military and economic leadership was concentrated in the hands of the State Defense Committee. It united the activities of all state and military institutions, party, trade union and Komsomol organizations.

    In war conditions, the restructuring of the entire economy on a war footing was of paramount importance. At the end of June it was approved “Mobilization national economic plan for the third quarter of 1941.”, and on August 16 “Military-economic plan for the IV quarter of 1941 and 1942 for the regions of the Volga region, the Urals, Western Siberia, Kazakhstan and Central Asia" In just five months of 1941, over 1,360 large military enterprises were relocated and about 10 million people were evacuated. Even according to the admission of bourgeois experts evacuation of industry in the second half of 1941 and the beginning of 1942 and its deployment in the East should be considered among the most amazing feats of the peoples of the Soviet Union during the war. The evacuated Kramatorsk plant was launched 12 days after arriving at the site, Zaporozhye - after 20. By the end of 1941, the Urals were producing 62% of cast iron and 50% of steel. In scope and significance this was equal to the largest battles of wartime. The restructuring of the national economy on a war footing was completed by mid-1942.

    The party carried out a lot of organizational work in the army. In accordance with the decision of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks, the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR issued a decree on July 16, 1941 “On the reorganization of political propaganda bodies and the introduction of the institution of military commissars”. From July 16 in the Army, and from July 20 in the Navy, the institution of military commissars was introduced. During the second half of 1941, up to 1.5 million communists and more than 2 million Komsomol members were mobilized into the army (up to 40% of the total strength of the party was sent to the active army). Prominent party leaders L. I. Brezhnev, A. A. Zhdanov, A. S. Shcherbakov, M. A. Suslov and others were sent to party work in the active army.

    On August 8, 1941, J.V. Stalin was appointed Supreme Commander-in-Chief of all the Armed Forces of the USSR. In order to concentrate all functions of managing military operations, the Headquarters of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief was formed. Hundreds of thousands of communists and Komsomol members went to the front. About 300 thousand of the best representatives of the working class and intelligentsia of Moscow and Leningrad joined the ranks of the people's militia.

    Meanwhile, the enemy stubbornly rushed towards Moscow, Leningrad, Kyiv, Odessa, Sevastopol and other important industrial centers of the country. An important place in the plans of fascist Germany was occupied by the calculation of the international isolation of the USSR. However, from the first days of the war, an anti-Hitler coalition began to take shape. Already on June 22, 1941, the British government announced its support for the USSR in the fight against fascism, and on July 12 it signed an agreement on joint actions against Nazi Germany. On August 2, 1941, US President F. Roosevelt announced economic support for the Soviet Union. On September 29, 1941, the conference of representatives of the three powers(USSR, USA and England), at which a plan for Anglo-American assistance in the fight against the enemy was developed. Hitler's plan to isolate the USSR internationally failed. On January 1, 1942, a declaration of 26 states was signed in Washington anti-Hitler coalition about using all the resources of these countries to fight against the German bloc. However, the Allies were in no hurry to provide effective assistance aimed at defeating fascism, trying to weaken the warring parties.

    By October, the Nazi invaders, despite the heroic resistance of our troops, managed to approach Moscow from three sides, while simultaneously launching an offensive on the Don, in the Crimea, near Leningrad. Odessa and Sevastopol defended themselves heroically. On September 30, 1941, the German command launched the first, and in November - the second general offensive against Moscow. The Nazis managed to occupy Klin, Yakhroma, Naro-Fominsk, Istra and other cities in the Moscow region. Soviet troops conducted a heroic defense of the capital, showing examples of courage and heroism. The 316th Infantry Division of General Panfilov fought to the death in fierce battles. A partisan movement developed behind enemy lines. About 10 thousand partisans fought near Moscow alone. On December 5-6, 1941, Soviet troops launched a counteroffensive near Moscow. At the same time, offensive operations were launched on the Western, Kalinin and Southwestern fronts. The powerful offensive of Soviet troops in the winter of 1941/42 drove the Nazis back in a number of places to a distance of up to 400 km from the capital and was their first major defeat in the Second World War.

    Main result Moscow battle was that the strategic initiative had been wrested from the hands of the enemy and the plan for a lightning war had failed. The defeat of the Germans near Moscow was a decisive turn in the military operations of the Red Army and had a great influence on the entire further course of the war.

    By the spring of 1942, military production had been established in the eastern regions of the country. By the middle of the year, most of the evacuated enterprises were set up in new locations. The transition of the country's economy to a war footing was basically completed. In the deep rear - in Central Asia, Kazakhstan, Siberia, and the Urals - there were over 10 thousand industrial construction projects.

    Instead of the men who went to the front, women and youth came to the machines. Despite very difficult living conditions, Soviet people worked selflessly to ensure victory at the front. We worked one and a half to two shifts to restore industry and supply the front with everything necessary. The All-Union Socialist Competition developed widely, the winners of which were awarded a challenge Red Banner of the State Defense Committee. Agricultural workers organized above-plan plantings for the defense fund in 1942. The collective farm peasantry supplied the front and rear with food and industrial raw materials.

    The situation in the temporarily occupied areas of the country was extremely difficult. The Nazis plundered cities and villages and abused the civilian population. German officials were appointed at the enterprises to supervise the work. The best lands were selected for farms for German soldiers. In all occupied settlements, German garrisons were maintained at the expense of the population. However, the economic and social policies of the fascists, which they tried to implement in the occupied territories, immediately failed. Soviet people, brought up on the ideas of the Communist Party, believed in the victory of the Soviet country and did not succumb to Hitler’s provocations and demagoguery.

    Winter offensive of the Red Army in 1941/42 dealt a powerful blow to Nazi Germany and its military machine, but Hitler’s army was still strong. Soviet troops fought stubborn defensive battles.

    In this situation, the nationwide struggle of the Soviet people behind enemy lines, especially partisan movement.

    Thousands of Soviet people joined partisan detachments. Guerrilla warfare developed widely in Ukraine, Belarus and the Smolensk region, Crimea and a number of other places. In cities and villages temporarily occupied by the enemy, underground party and Komsomol organizations operated. In accordance with the resolution of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks dated July 18, 1941. “On the organization of the fight in the rear of German troops” 3,500 partisan detachments and groups, 32 underground regional committees, 805 city and district party committees, 5,429 primary party organizations, 10 regional, 210 inter-district city and 45 thousand primary Komsomol organizations were created. To coordinate the actions of partisan detachments and underground groups with units of the Red Army, by decision of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks on May 30, 1942, a central headquarters of the partisan movement. Headquarters for the leadership of the partisan movement were formed in Belarus, Ukraine and other republics and regions occupied by the enemy.

    After the defeat near Moscow and the winter offensive of our troops, the Nazi command was preparing a new major offensive with the goal of capturing all the southern regions of the country (Crimea, North Caucasus, Don) right up to the Volga, capturing Stalingrad and separating Transcaucasia from the center of the country. This posed an extremely serious threat to our country.

    By the summer of 1942, the international situation had changed, characterized by the strengthening of the anti-Hitler coalition. In May - June 1942, agreements were concluded between the USSR, England and the USA on an alliance in the war against Germany and on post-war cooperation. In particular, an agreement was reached on the opening in 1942 in Europe second front against Germany, which would significantly speed up the defeat of fascism. But the Allies delayed its opening in every possible way. Taking advantage of this, the fascist command transferred divisions from the Western Front to the Eastern Front. By the spring of 1942, Hitler's army had 237 divisions, massive aviation, tanks, artillery and other types of equipment for a new offensive.

    Intensified siege of Leningrad, exposed to artillery fire almost daily. In May, the Kerch Strait was captured. On July 3, the Supreme Command ordered the heroic defenders of Sevastopol to leave the city after a 250-day defense, since it was not possible to hold Crimea. As a result of the defeat of Soviet troops in the region of Kharkov and the Don, the enemy reached the Volga. The Stalingrad Front, created in July, took on powerful enemy attacks. Retreating with heavy fighting, our troops inflicted enormous damage on the enemy. In parallel, there was a fascist offensive in the North Caucasus, where Stavropol, Krasnodar, and Maykop were occupied. In the Mozdok area, the Nazi offensive was suspended.

    The main battles took place on the Volga. The enemy sought to capture Stalingrad at any cost. The heroic defense of the city was one of the brightest pages of the Patriotic War. The working class, women, old people, teenagers - the entire population rose to defend Stalingrad. Despite the mortal danger, workers at the tractor plant sent tanks to the front lines every day. In September, battles broke out in the city for every street, for every house.