Syrmian Front: Difference between revisions
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{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2023}} |
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{{Infobox military conflict |
{{Infobox military conflict |
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| conflict = Syrmian Front |
| conflict = Syrmian Front |
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| partof = the [[Yugoslav Front|Yugoslav]] and [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern]] fronts of the [[European theatre of World War II|European theatre]] of [[World War II]] |
| partof = the [[Yugoslav Front|Yugoslav]] and [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern]] fronts of the [[European theatre of World War II|European theatre]] of [[World War II]] |
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| date = 21 October 1944 – 12 April 1945<ref name="b92_62anniversary">[http://www.b92.net/eng/news/society-article.php?yyyy=2007&mm=04&dd=12&nav_id=40650 62nd Anniversary announcement] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110607164014/http://www.b92.net/eng/news/society-article.php?yyyy=2007&mm=04&dd=12&nav_id=40650 |date=7 June 2011 }}, [[B92]], 2007.</ref> |
| date = 21 October 1944 – 12 April 1945<ref name="b92_62anniversary">[http://www.b92.net/eng/news/society-article.php?yyyy=2007&mm=04&dd=12&nav_id=40650 62nd Anniversary announcement] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110607164014/http://www.b92.net/eng/news/society-article.php?yyyy=2007&mm=04&dd=12&nav_id=40650 |date=7 June 2011 }}, [[B92]], 2007.</ref> |
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| place = [[Syrmia]], [[Slavonia]], [[Baranya (region)|Baranya]] |
| place = [[Syrmia]], [[Slavonia]], [[Baranya (region)|Baranya]] |
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| image = 1945-04-15GerWW2BattlefrontAtlas.jpg |
| image = 1945-04-15GerWW2BattlefrontAtlas.jpg |
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| image_size = 300px |
| image_size = 300px |
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| caption = [[Syrmia]]n frontline (far south-east) as a part of the European [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]] in April 1945. |
| caption = [[Syrmia]]n frontline (far south-east) as a part of the European [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]] in April 1945. |
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| result = [[Allies of World War II|Allied]] victory |
| result = [[Allies of World War II|Allied]] ([[Yugoslav Partisans|Yugoslav]]) victory |
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* Yugoslav led Coalition success |
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| combatant2 = '''[[Axis powers|Axis]]:'''<br/>{{flagcountry|Nazi Germany}}<br>{{flagcountry|Independent State of Croatia}} |
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⚫ | | combatant1 = '''[[Allies of World War II|Allies]]:'''<br/> |
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| commander1 = {{flagicon|Yugoslav Partisans}} [[Peko Dapčević]] |
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| commander2 = {{flagicon|Nazi Germany}} [[Alexander Löhr]] |
| commander2 = {{flagicon|Nazi Germany}} [[Alexander Löhr]] |
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| strength1 = |
| strength1 = |
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| strength2 = |
| strength2 = |
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| casualties1 = {{flagicon |
| casualties1 = {{flagicon|Yugoslav Partisans}} 13,500+ killed<ref name="pressonline_arsic">[http://www.pressonline.rs/page/stories/sr.html?view=story&id=33191§ionId=63&seriesId=0 Stratište srpske mladosti], Vlada Arsić, 2008. {{in lang|sr}}</ref><br>{{small|(including [[File:Flag of Italy (1861-1946) crowned.svg|12px|border|Italian partisans]] 163 killed)}}<br/>{{flagicon|Soviet Union|1936}} 1,100 killed<br/>{{flagicon|Kingdom of Bulgaria}} 630 killed |
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| casualties2 = Total 30,000 killed<ref name="pressonline_arsic"/> |
| casualties2 = Total 30,000 killed<ref name="pressonline_arsic"/> |
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| campaignbox = {{Campaignbox Yugoslavia}} |
| campaignbox = {{Campaignbox Yugoslavia}} |
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}} |
}} |
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The '''Syrmian Front''' ({{ |
The '''Syrmian Front''' ({{langx|sh|Srijemski front/Sremski front}}) was an [[Axis powers|Axis]] line of defense during [[World War II]]. It was established as part of the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]] in late October 1944 in [[Syrmia]] and east [[Slavonia]], northwest of [[Belgrade]]. |
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After the [[Yugoslav Partisans]] and the [[Red Army]] expelled the Germans from Belgrade in the [[Belgrade Offensive]], the retreating [[Wehrmacht]] and the [[Croatian Armed Forces (NDH)|Croatian Armed Forces]] used fortifications to protect the withdrawal of German [[Army Group E]] from the [[Balkans]]. With help from their Soviet allies, the [[Yugoslav Partisans|Partisans]] (by then recognized as the Yugoslav army), joined by [[Bulgaria during World War II#Allies (1944–1945)|Bulgarian]] and [[Italian partisans|Italian]] forces, fought a difficult winter campaign and finally broke through the front on 12 April 1945. |
After the [[Yugoslav Partisans]] and the [[Red Army]] expelled the Germans from Belgrade in the [[Belgrade Offensive]], the retreating [[Wehrmacht]] and the [[Croatian Armed Forces (NDH)|Croatian Armed Forces]] used fortifications to protect the withdrawal of German [[Army Group E]] from the [[Balkans]]. With help from their Soviet allies, the [[Yugoslav Partisans|Partisans]] (by then recognized as the Yugoslav army), joined by [[Bulgaria during World War II#Allies (1944–1945)|Bulgarian]] and [[Italian partisans|Italian]] forces, fought a difficult winter campaign and finally broke through the front on 12 April 1945. |
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After the September advance through Romania and Bulgaria in October 1944, The Red Army, together with Yugoslav forces, took Belgrade (central communication node of the [[Balkans]]) in the [[Belgrade Offensive]]. Due to Yugoslav partisan activity,<ref>Report of the Commander in Chief of the South-East to Army Headquarters, 20. September 1944, NAW T311, roll 191, frames 637–642</ref> the Yugoslav-Allied [[Operation Ratweek (1944)|Operation Ratweek]], and pressure from the Bulgarian Army, the Germans failed to prevent this while they awaited the redeployment of [[Army Group E]] troops from Greece. The Red Army decided to exploit this delay and continued to advance with the [[3rd Ukrainian Front]] from [[Belgrade]] to south-west [[Hungary]]. The aim of the advance was to separate and protect their main attack in Hungary from attacks on the flank by Army Group E from the south. |
After the September advance through Romania and Bulgaria in October 1944, The Red Army, together with Yugoslav forces, took Belgrade (central communication node of the [[Balkans]]) in the [[Belgrade Offensive]]. Due to Yugoslav partisan activity,<ref>Report of the Commander in Chief of the South-East to Army Headquarters, 20. September 1944, NAW T311, roll 191, frames 637–642</ref> the Yugoslav-Allied [[Operation Ratweek (1944)|Operation Ratweek]], and pressure from the Bulgarian Army, the Germans failed to prevent this while they awaited the redeployment of [[Army Group E]] troops from Greece. The Red Army decided to exploit this delay and continued to advance with the [[3rd Ukrainian Front]] from [[Belgrade]] to south-west [[Hungary]]. The aim of the advance was to separate and protect their main attack in Hungary from attacks on the flank by Army Group E from the south. |
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From September 1944 to January 1945, Army Group E pushed its way through [[Macedonia (region)|Macedonia]], [[Kosovo]], [[Sanjak]], and [[Bosnia]], and soon their sole available escape route was in a line between [[Sarajevo]] and [[Slavonski Brod]]. For this reason, it was of vital significance for the Germans to defend the zone around Slavonski Brod, which was threatened by the Soviet-Yugoslav advance through Syrmia. To prevent Army Group E from being cut off, the German South-East command prepared seven successive fortified defense lines between the [[Danube]] and [[Sava|Sava river]] from [[Ruma]] to [[Vinkovci]]. The Syrmian Front campaign consisted of Yugoslavian attempts to break through these lines of defense. |
From September 1944 to January 1945, Army Group E pushed its way through [[Macedonia (region)|Macedonia]], [[ Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija |Kosovo]], [[Sanjak]], and [[Bosnia]], and soon their sole available escape route was in a line between [[Sarajevo]] and [[Slavonski Brod]]. For this reason, it was of vital significance for the Germans to defend the zone around Slavonski Brod, which was threatened by the Soviet-Yugoslav advance through Syrmia. To prevent Army Group E from being cut off, the German South-East command prepared seven successive fortified defense lines between the [[Danube]] and [[Sava|Sava river]] from [[Ruma]] to [[Vinkovci]]. The Syrmian Front campaign consisted of Yugoslavian attempts to break through these lines of defense. |
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==Operations== |
==Operations== |
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[[File:Syrmian Front. |
[[File:Syrmian Front 1944 1945.png|thumb|German defense lines in Syrmia]] |
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[[File: |
[[File:Syrmian Front.jpg|thumb|In the trenches of the Syrmian Front, December 1944]] |
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[[File:Capture of Germans on Syrmian Front.jpg|thumb|German soldiers surrendering in April 1945]] |
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The Syrmian Front saw some of the most difficult fighting in [[Yugoslavia in World War II]]. It lasted for almost six months. As the bulk of the Red Army involved in the Belgrade operation continued their [[Budapest Offensive|offensive in Hungary]], the Yugoslav Army, accustomed to [[guerrilla warfare]] in the mountainous terrain of the [[Dinaric Alps]], remained to fight the [[Trench warfare|entrenched front line]] heavily contested by the Axis on the flat ground of the [[Pannonian plain]].{{sfn|Đilas|1977|page=440}} Young men from [[Vojvodina]] and [[Central Serbia]], many from freshly liberated regions, were drafted ''en masse'' and sent to the front, and the amount of training they received and their casualty levels remain in dispute.{{sfn|Pavlowitch|2008|page=258}} |
The Syrmian Front saw some of the most difficult fighting in [[Yugoslavia in World War II]]. It lasted for almost six months. As the bulk of the Red Army involved in the Belgrade operation continued their [[Budapest Offensive|offensive in Hungary]], the Yugoslav Army, accustomed to [[guerrilla warfare]] in the mountainous terrain of the [[Dinaric Alps]], remained to fight the [[Trench warfare|entrenched front line]] heavily contested by the Axis on the flat ground of the [[Pannonian plain]].{{sfn|Đilas|1977|page=440}} Young men from [[Vojvodina]] and [[Central Serbia]], many from freshly liberated regions, were drafted ''en masse'' and sent to the front, and the amount of training they received and their casualty levels remain in dispute.{{sfn|Pavlowitch|2008|page=258}} |
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The campaign can be divided into four distinct phases: |
The campaign can be divided into four distinct phases: |
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# The first phase lasted from 24 October to the end of December 1944, and was characterized by slow but steady advancement of Yugoslav and Soviet forces through the seven German fortified lines of defense through fierce battles and heavy losses on both sides.<ref>[ |
# The first phase lasted from 24 October to the end of December 1944, and was characterized by slow but steady advancement of Yugoslav and Soviet forces through the seven German fortified lines of defense through fierce battles and heavy losses on both sides.<ref>[https://znaci.org/00001/58.htm Ljubivoje Pajović, Dušan Uzelac, Milovan Dželebdžić: Sremski Front 1944–1945], BIGZ, Belgrade 1979, chapter II – [https://znaci.org/00001/58_3.pdf Uspostavljanje Sremskog fronta i borbe u Sremu do kraja 1944.] {{in lang|sr}}</ref> |
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# In the second phase, from 3 to 26 January 1945, the Germans performed a successful counterattack with the newly arrived forces of [[XXXIV Corps (Germany)|XXXIV Corps]] of Army Group E, and succeeded in winning back to the Nibelung Line, the main line of defense in Syrmia, while inflicting heavy losses to the Yugoslav Army.<ref>[ |
# In the second phase, from 3 to 26 January 1945, the Germans performed a successful counterattack with the newly arrived forces of [[XXXIV Corps (Germany)|XXXIV Corps]] of Army Group E, and succeeded in winning back to the Nibelung Line, the main line of defense in Syrmia, while inflicting heavy losses to the Yugoslav Army.<ref>[https://znaci.org/00001/58.htm Ljubivoje Pajović, Dušan Uzelac, Milovan Dželebdžić: Sremski Front 1944–1945], chapter V – [https://znaci.org/00001/58_6.pdf Nemačke ofanzivne operacije na Sremskom frontu u januaru 1945.] {{in lang|sr}}</ref> |
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# The third phase was a stalemate period from 26 January to 12 April 1945. In this period both sides only performed limited reconnaissance activities.<ref>[ |
# The third phase was a stalemate period from 26 January to 12 April 1945. In this period both sides only performed limited reconnaissance activities.<ref>[https://znaci.org/00001/58.htm Ljubivoje Pajović, Dušan Uzelac, Milovan Dželebdžić: Sremski Front 1944–1945], chapter VII – [https://znaci.org/00001/58_8.pdf Period zatišja i priprema za prolećne ofanzivne operacije] {{in lang|sr}}</ref> |
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# The fourth phase began when Yugoslav forces broke through the German defense lines on 12 April, with heavy German losses and fierce battles and Army Group E retreating.<ref>[ |
# The fourth phase began when Yugoslav forces broke through the German defense lines on 12 April, with heavy German losses and fierce battles and Army Group E retreating.<ref>[https://znaci.org/00001/58.htm Ljubivoje Pajović, Dušan Uzelac, Milovan Dželebdžić: Sremski Front 1944–1945], chapter XI – [https://znaci.org/00001/58_12.pdf Plan proboja Sremske utvrđene zone], chapter XII – [https://znaci.org/00001/58_13.pdf Prva armija u proboju utvrđene zone] and chapter XIV – [https://znaci.org/00001/58_15.pdf Od Srema do Austrije] {{in lang|sr}}</ref> |
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[[File:Spomen-obeležje Sremski front, jun 2018. 271.jpg|thumb|Syrmian Front memorial in [[Šid]]]] |
[[File:Spomen-obeležje Sremski front, jun 2018. 271.jpg|thumb|Syrmian Front memorial in [[Šid]]]] |
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==Sources== |
==Sources== |
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* {{cite book|last=Đilas|first=Milovan|title=Wartime|publisher=Harcourt Brace Jovanovich|location=New York|year=1977|isbn=0-15-694712-9}} |
* {{cite book|last=Đilas|first=Milovan|title=Wartime|publisher=Harcourt Brace Jovanovich|location=New York|year=1977|isbn=0-15-694712-9}} |
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* [ |
* [https://znaci.org/00001/58.htm Ljubivoje Pajović, Dušan Uzelac, Milovan Dželebdžić: Sremski Front 1944–1945], BIGZ, Belgrade 1979 {{in lang|sr}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Pavlowitch |first=S.K. |title=Hitler's New Disorder: the Second World War in Yugoslavia |publisher=Columbia University Press |location=New York |year=2008 |isbn=978-0-231-70050-4}} |
* {{cite book |last=Pavlowitch |first=S.K. |title=Hitler's New Disorder: the Second World War in Yugoslavia |publisher=Columbia University Press |location=New York |year=2008 |isbn=978-0-231-70050-4}} |
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==Further reading== |
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*{{cite journal |title=Carnage in the Land of Three Rivers: The Syrmian Front 1944–1945 |first=Gaj |last=Trifković |journal=Militärgeschichtliche Zeitschrift |volume=75 |issue=1 |url=https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/mgzs-2016-0004/html |year=2016 |pages=94–122|doi=10.1515/mgzs-2016-0004 |s2cid=132224010 |doi-access=free }} |
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*{{cite journal |last1=Trifković |first1=Gaj |title=The Yugoslav Partisans' Lost Victories: Operations in Montenegro and Bosnia-Herzegovina, 1944–1945 |journal=The Journal of Military History |date=January 2018 |volume=82 |issue=1 |pages=95–124 |issn=0899-3718}} |
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{{commonscat|Syrmian Front}} |
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{{Campaignbox Yugofront}} |
{{Campaignbox Yugofront}} |
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{{coord missing|Croatia}} |
{{coord missing|Croatia}} |
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[[Category:Battles involving Bulgaria]] |
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[[Category:Conflicts in 1944]] |
[[Category:Conflicts in 1944]] |
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[[Category:Conflicts in 1945]] |
[[Category:Conflicts in 1945]] |
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[[Category:Eastern European theatre of World War II]] |
[[Category:Eastern European theatre of World War II]] |
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[[Category:Battles and operations of World War II]] |
[[Category:Battles and operations of World War II]] |
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[[Category:Battles involving the Yugoslav Partisans]] |
[[Category:Battles involving the Yugoslav Partisans]] |
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[[Category:1944 in Yugoslavia]] |
[[Category:1944 in Yugoslavia]] |
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[[Category:1945 in Yugoslavia]] |
[[Category:1945 in Yugoslavia]] |
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[[Category:History of Vojvodina]] |
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[[Category:History of Syrmia]] |
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[[Category:History of Slavonia]] |
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[[Category:Serbia in World War II]] |
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[[Category:Croatia in World War II]] |
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[[Category:Croatia–Serbia relations]] |
Latest revision as of 09:23, 11 November 2024
Syrmian Front | |||||||
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Part of the Yugoslav and Eastern fronts of the European theatre of World War II | |||||||
Syrmian frontline (far south-east) as a part of the European Eastern Front in April 1945. | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Allies: Yugoslav Partisans (including Italia Brigade) Soviet Union Bulgaria |
Axis: Germany Croatia | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Peko Dapčević | Alexander Löhr | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
13,500+ killed[2] (including 163 killed) 1,100 killed 630 killed | Total 30,000 killed[2] |
The Syrmian Front (Serbo-Croatian: Srijemski front/Sremski front) was an Axis line of defense during World War II. It was established as part of the Eastern Front in late October 1944 in Syrmia and east Slavonia, northwest of Belgrade.
After the Yugoslav Partisans and the Red Army expelled the Germans from Belgrade in the Belgrade Offensive, the retreating Wehrmacht and the Croatian Armed Forces used fortifications to protect the withdrawal of German Army Group E from the Balkans. With help from their Soviet allies, the Partisans (by then recognized as the Yugoslav army), joined by Bulgarian and Italian forces, fought a difficult winter campaign and finally broke through the front on 12 April 1945.
After the Syrmian front was broken, occupied Yugoslavia was liberated.[3]
Operative background and significance
[edit]After the September advance through Romania and Bulgaria in October 1944, The Red Army, together with Yugoslav forces, took Belgrade (central communication node of the Balkans) in the Belgrade Offensive. Due to Yugoslav partisan activity,[4] the Yugoslav-Allied Operation Ratweek, and pressure from the Bulgarian Army, the Germans failed to prevent this while they awaited the redeployment of Army Group E troops from Greece. The Red Army decided to exploit this delay and continued to advance with the 3rd Ukrainian Front from Belgrade to south-west Hungary. The aim of the advance was to separate and protect their main attack in Hungary from attacks on the flank by Army Group E from the south.
From September 1944 to January 1945, Army Group E pushed its way through Macedonia, Kosovo, Sanjak, and Bosnia, and soon their sole available escape route was in a line between Sarajevo and Slavonski Brod. For this reason, it was of vital significance for the Germans to defend the zone around Slavonski Brod, which was threatened by the Soviet-Yugoslav advance through Syrmia. To prevent Army Group E from being cut off, the German South-East command prepared seven successive fortified defense lines between the Danube and Sava river from Ruma to Vinkovci. The Syrmian Front campaign consisted of Yugoslavian attempts to break through these lines of defense.
Operations
[edit]The Syrmian Front saw some of the most difficult fighting in Yugoslavia in World War II. It lasted for almost six months. As the bulk of the Red Army involved in the Belgrade operation continued their offensive in Hungary, the Yugoslav Army, accustomed to guerrilla warfare in the mountainous terrain of the Dinaric Alps, remained to fight the entrenched front line heavily contested by the Axis on the flat ground of the Pannonian plain.[5] Young men from Vojvodina and Central Serbia, many from freshly liberated regions, were drafted en masse and sent to the front, and the amount of training they received and their casualty levels remain in dispute.[6]
Although mostly stationary, the front moved several times, generally westward, as the Axis forces were pushed back. The fighting started east of Ruma and stabilized in January 1945 west of Šid after the town changed hands due to Axis counterattacks. In late March and early April 1945, Yugoslav Army units mounted a general offensive on all fronts. The Yugoslav First Army, commanded by Peko Dapčević, broke through German XXXIV Corps defenses in Syrmia on 12 April, quickly capturing the cities of Vukovar, Vinkovci, and Županja, and enabling further advances through Slavonia toward Slavonski Brod and Zagreb in the last month of the war.
The campaign can be divided into four distinct phases:
- The first phase lasted from 24 October to the end of December 1944, and was characterized by slow but steady advancement of Yugoslav and Soviet forces through the seven German fortified lines of defense through fierce battles and heavy losses on both sides.[7]
- In the second phase, from 3 to 26 January 1945, the Germans performed a successful counterattack with the newly arrived forces of XXXIV Corps of Army Group E, and succeeded in winning back to the Nibelung Line, the main line of defense in Syrmia, while inflicting heavy losses to the Yugoslav Army.[8]
- The third phase was a stalemate period from 26 January to 12 April 1945. In this period both sides only performed limited reconnaissance activities.[9]
- The fourth phase began when Yugoslav forces broke through the German defense lines on 12 April, with heavy German losses and fierce battles and Army Group E retreating.[10]
References
[edit]- ^ 62nd Anniversary announcement Archived 7 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine, B92, 2007.
- ^ a b Stratište srpske mladosti, Vlada Arsić, 2008. (in Serbian)
- ^ »Sremski front 1944–1945«, n. f. str. 42, 166, 200 i 285.
- ^ Report of the Commander in Chief of the South-East to Army Headquarters, 20. September 1944, NAW T311, roll 191, frames 637–642
- ^ Đilas 1977, p. 440.
- ^ Pavlowitch 2008, p. 258.
- ^ Ljubivoje Pajović, Dušan Uzelac, Milovan Dželebdžić: Sremski Front 1944–1945, BIGZ, Belgrade 1979, chapter II – Uspostavljanje Sremskog fronta i borbe u Sremu do kraja 1944. (in Serbian)
- ^ Ljubivoje Pajović, Dušan Uzelac, Milovan Dželebdžić: Sremski Front 1944–1945, chapter V – Nemačke ofanzivne operacije na Sremskom frontu u januaru 1945. (in Serbian)
- ^ Ljubivoje Pajović, Dušan Uzelac, Milovan Dželebdžić: Sremski Front 1944–1945, chapter VII – Period zatišja i priprema za prolećne ofanzivne operacije (in Serbian)
- ^ Ljubivoje Pajović, Dušan Uzelac, Milovan Dželebdžić: Sremski Front 1944–1945, chapter XI – Plan proboja Sremske utvrđene zone, chapter XII – Prva armija u proboju utvrđene zone and chapter XIV – Od Srema do Austrije (in Serbian)
Sources
[edit]- Đilas, Milovan (1977). Wartime. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. ISBN 0-15-694712-9.
- Ljubivoje Pajović, Dušan Uzelac, Milovan Dželebdžić: Sremski Front 1944–1945, BIGZ, Belgrade 1979 (in Serbian)
- Pavlowitch, S.K. (2008). Hitler's New Disorder: the Second World War in Yugoslavia. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-70050-4.
Further reading
[edit]- Trifković, Gaj (2016). "Carnage in the Land of Three Rivers: The Syrmian Front 1944–1945". Militärgeschichtliche Zeitschrift. 75 (1): 94–122. doi:10.1515/mgzs-2016-0004. S2CID 132224010.
- Trifković, Gaj (January 2018). "The Yugoslav Partisans' Lost Victories: Operations in Montenegro and Bosnia-Herzegovina, 1944–1945". The Journal of Military History. 82 (1): 95–124. ISSN 0899-3718.
- Battles involving Bulgaria
- Battles of World War II involving Bulgaria
- Conflicts in 1944
- Conflicts in 1945
- Eastern European theatre of World War II
- Battles and operations of World War II
- Battles involving the Yugoslav Partisans
- Battles involving the Independent State of Croatia
- Military operations of World War II involving Germany
- Battles and operations of World War II involving Bulgaria
- Soviet Union–Yugoslavia relations
- 1944 in Yugoslavia
- 1945 in Yugoslavia
- History of Vojvodina
- History of Syrmia
- History of Slavonia
- Serbia in World War II
- Croatia in World War II
- Croatia–Serbia relations