2nd Guards Rifle Corps | |
---|---|
Active | December 1941–June 1956 |
Country | Soviet Union |
Branch | Red Army (Soviet Army from 1946) |
Type | Infantry (Rifle corps) |
Engagements | World War II |
The2nd Guards Rifle Corps (Russian:2-й гвардейский стрелковый корпус) was arifle corps of theRed Army duringWorld War II.
The 2nd Guards Rifle Corps headquarters was formed by aStavka order of 31 December 1941. The corps headquarters was formed in the area of Nakhabino, where its units concentrated. From 3 February 1942 the corps became part of theKalinin Front, entering battle in the zone betweenStaraya Russa and theLovat river. On the first day of the offensive the corps advanced fifteen kilometers to the south and reached the Kholm highway. On 15 February in the area ofKholm the corps linked up with units of the3rd Shock Army. The corps advanced deep into the rear of the Demyansk group of German troops and cut off its main forces in theDemyansk Pocket. At the end of February the neighboring1st Guards Rifle Corps, also advancing from the north of the corps, linked up with the 42nd Rifle Brigade of the 3rd Shock Army in the area of Zaluchye. These actions thus formed the outer and inner fronts of the encirclement, with a gap between them of up to 40 kilometers. The German16th Army was in encirclement for more than two months, but the Soviet forces did not manage to destroy the encircled troops.[1]
From June 1942 the corps as part of the 3rd Shock Army of the Kalinin Front conducted intense battles for the town of Kholm, but could not take it. From 13 August 1943 units of the corps went over to the offensive in the area ofDukhovshchina. Meeting sustained German resistance, the divisions of the corps went over to the defensive. On 3 September the corps resumed the offensive, and creating a salient within the German defenses, consolidated on a line along the east bank of the Velenya river on 8 September. The corps began moving forward from 14 September and broke through the German defenses at Dukhovschina and reached the Tsarevich river. From 25 September, the corps, under the operational control of the4th Shock Army, fought in battles on theNevel axis. From 9 to 24 December the corps took part in theGorodok offensive as part of the 3rd Shock Army. From 5 February 1944 the corps was part of the Kalinin Front, and in March went over to the defensive on the line of Vitebsk and Polotsk under the operational control of the6th Guards Army. The corps fought inOperation Bagration, during which it participated in thePolotsk offensive and the battles inDvinsk. In August the corps participated in fighting on theMemel river, and at the end of August was relocated to the area southwest ofMitava, taking positions on the approaches to that city on the line ofDobele andŽagarė, preparing for the offensive. The corps fought in theMemel Offensive in early October, attacking from the area northwest ofŠiauliai on theLiepāja axis.[1]
From October 1944 the corps fought in the encirclement of theCourland Pocket in the area ofPriekulė, where it ended the war.[1]
The corps took over coast defense of the area ofAizpute,Pāvilosta,Liepāja, andRucava, alongside the97th Rifle Corps of the51st Army on 30 May 1945. The corps was relocated to theKaunas area between 11 and 24 July.[1]
After the end of the war, the corps became part of theBaltic Military District,[2] headquartered at Kaunas. It included the9th Guards Rifle Division atMarijampolė, the71st Guards Rifle Division at Kaunas and the166th Rifle Division atAlytus. All three divisions were disbanded during 1946 and 1947 and by 1 May 1947 it included the43rd Guards Rifle Division and29th Guards Mechanized Division. During 1948 and 1949 the divisions were reorganized as separate rifle brigades, and at the beginning of 1949 the corps included the 29th Guards Separate Rifle Brigade (the former 43rd Guards Rifle Division), 42nd Guards Separate Rifle Brigade (the former51st Guards Rifle Division), and 44th Separate Rifle Brigade (the former16th Lithuanian Rifle Division). After the brigades were expanded back into divisions the corps included the 43rd Guards and 51st Guards Rifle Divisions and the 29th Guards Mechanized Division on 1 May 1955.[3] The corps headquarters, by then at Riga, was disbanded on 9 June 1956 as the number of corps headquarters in the Soviet Army was reduced.[4] The 43rd Guards Rifle Division was disbanded weeks later,[5] while the 51st Guards Rifle Division and the 29th Guards Mechanized Division came under direct district control.[3]
The following officers commanded the corps:[2]