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Niš operation

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1944 military operation

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Niš operation
Part of theEastern andYugoslav fronts of theEuropean theatre ofWorld War II

Bulgarian troops enteringNiš in October 1944
DateOctober 8–14, 1944
Location
ResultAllied victory
Belligerents

Nazi GermanyGermany

ChetniksChetniks
Commanders and leaders
Nazi GermanyHans Felber
Government of National SalvationMilan Nedić
ChetniksLjubo Patak
Units involved

Bulgaria

  • 2nd Bulgarian Army
    • 4th Division
    • 6th Division
    • 9th Division
    • 12th Division
    • 2nd Cavalry Division
    • 1st Sofia Guard Division
    • 4th Border Brigade
    • Armoured Brigade
    • others

Yugoslav PartisansNational Liberation Army

  • 13th Corps
    • 22nd Division
    • 24th Division
    • 46th Division
    • 47th Division
  • 2nd Proletarian Division
  • 14th Corps
    • 45th Division
  • Partisan Detachments

Soviet Union

Nazi GermanyWehrmacht andWaffen-SS

Government of National Salvation Serbian collaborators

ChetniksChetniks

  • Chetnik bands
Strength
  • 80,000 men
  • 21,500 men
  • 154 guns
  • 164 mortars
  • 38 tanks
  • 18 airplanes
  • Casualties and losses
  • 1,545 dead or wounded[2]
  • 5,200 dead or wounded
  • 3,580captured
  • 97 captured guns
  • 720 captured machine guns
  • 1,100 captured vehicles
  • 1941

    Uprisings

    • Uprising in Bosnia and Herzegovina
    • Uprising in Croatia

    1942

    1943

    1944

    1945


    Niš operation (Serbian:Нишка операција,Bulgarian:Нишка операция) was an offensive operation of theBulgarian army, supported by Yugoslav Partisans against GermanArmy Group E to secure the left flank of theThird Ukrainian Front of theRed Army.[3][4][5]

    It was held from October 8–14, 1944.Second Bulgarian Army, in cooperation with Yugoslav People's Liberation Army and IX Air Corps of the Red Army was ordered to destroy the German troops and to seizeNiš. Its enemy was7th SS Volunteer Mountain Division Prinz Eugen, or about 21 500 people from 13 infantry battalions, featuring 154 guns, 164 mortars, 38 tanks and 18 aircraft. Their task was to cover the retreat of 300,000 German soldiers from the composition of the Army Group "E". Bulgarian troops entered the brunt along the RiverSouthern Morava. On October 10, the Sofia armored brigade, consisting of about 150 tanks, most of whichPanzer IV, and the restPanzer 38(t) andPanzer 35(t), aided by ca. 40Leichter Panzerspähwagen, and 50Sturmgeschütz III,[6] penetrated in the defense of the Germans and forced them to retreat west of the Southern Morava. On October 12 and 13 Bulgarian troops continue pursuit. On October 14 parts of the VI Infantry Division, using the jab from the south of the armored brigade seizedNiš and completely pushed the Nazis. Losses of the Wehrmacht amounted up to 5200 killed and 3850 prisoners of war, but they managed to hold its position in the Vardar corridor to the withdrawal of the remaining German troops.

    Battle Order

    [edit]

    Allied units

    [edit]

    Bulgarian Army:

    • 2nd Army (Major General Kiril Stanchev) (on Oct. 1 - 79,079 men)
    • 4th Infantry Division
    • 6th Infantry Division
    • 9th Infantry Division
    • 12th Infantry Division
    • 2nd Cavalry Division
    • 1st Guards Infantry Division
    • Armored Brigade (had German equipment: 78 Maybach T-IV (= PzKw IV), 35 Skoda tanks (= PzKw 35(t)), 10 Prague tanks (= PzKw 38(t)), 23 Maybach T-III (= StuG III)
    • 4th Frontier Guard Brigade

    NOVJ:

    • 13th Serbian Corps (Ljubo Vuckovic) (estimate based on average number of men per division, 35,000 - 45,000 men)
    • 22nd Serbian Division
    • 24th Serbian Division
    • 46th Serbian Division
    • 47th Serbian Division
    • 2nd Proletarian Division
    • 45th Serbian Division
    • Ten local partisan detachments

    See also

    [edit]

    Citations

    [edit]
    1. ^Nedev, Nedyo (2007).Три държавни преврата или Кимон Георгиев и неговото време. София: „Сиела". p. 651.ISBN 978-954-28-0163-4.
    2. ^Peychev, A.; et al. (1975).Bulgaria's participation in the defeat of Nazi Germany (1st ed.). Durzhavno Voenno Izdatelstvo. p. 65.
    3. ^Christopher Chant. The Encyclopedia of Codenames of World War II (Routledge Revivals; 2013);ISBN 1134647875, p. 209.
    4. ^Elisabeth Barker et al., British Political and Military Strategy in Central, Eastern and Southern Europe in 1944, Springer (1988);ISBN 1349193798, p. 249.
    5. ^Jozo Tomasevich. War and Revolution in Yugoslavia: 1941–1945, Volume 2, Stanford University Press (2001);ISBN 0804779244, p. 156.
    6. ^Матев, К. Бронетанкова техника 1935 – 1945, С., Анжела, 2000.
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