The last great offensive that brought the Russians their
final victory in the East began during the third week of January 1945. The
principal objective was to crush the remaining German forces in Poland, East
Prussia and the Baltic states. Along the front an all-out Russian assault had
begun in earnest with the sole intention of crushing the remaining
understrength German units that had once formed Heeresgruppe Nord. It was these
heavy, sustained attacks that eventually restricted the German-held territory
in the north-east to a few small pockets of land surrounding four ports: Libau,
Kurland, Pillau in East Prussia and Danzig at the mouth of the River Vistula.
Here along the Baltic coast the German defenders attempted
to stall the massive Russian push with the remaining weapons and men they had
at their disposal. Every German soldier defending the area was aware of the
consequences of being captured. Not only would the coastal garrisons be cut off
and eventually destroyed, but also masses of civilian refugees would be
prevented from escaping from those ports by sea. Hitler made it quite clear
that all remaining Wehrmacht, Waffen-SS volunteer units, and Luftwaffe
personnel were not to evacuate, but to stand and fight and wage an
unprecedented battle of attrition. In fact, what Hitler had done by a single
sentence was to condemn to death 8,000 officers and more than 181,000 soldiers
and Luftwaffe personnel.
In southwest Poland the strategic town of Breslau situated
on the River Oder had been turned into a fortress and defended by various
Volkssturm, Hitlerjugend, Waffen-SS and various formations from the
269.Infantry-Division. During mid-February 1945 the German units put up a
staunch defence with every available weapon that they could muster. As the
battle ensued, both German soldiers and civilians were cut to pieces by Russian
attacks. During these viscous battles, which lasted until May 1945, there were
many acts of courageous fighting. Cheering and yelling, old men and boys of the
Volkssturm and Hitlerjugend, supported by ad hoc SS units, advanced across open
terrain, sacrificing themselves in front of well positioned Russian machine
gunners and snipers. By the first week of March, Russian infantry had driven
back the defenders into the inner city and were pulverising it street by
street. Lightly clad SS, Volkssturm and Hitlerjugend were still seen resisting,
forced to fight in the sewers beneath the decimated city. When Breslau finally
capitulated almost 60,000 Russian soldiers were killed or wounded trying to the
capture the town, with some 29,000 German military and civilian casualties.
Elsewhere on the Eastern Front, fighting was merciless, with
both sides imposing harsh measures on their men to stand where they were and
fight to the death. With every defeat and withdrawal came ever-increasing
pressure on the commanders to exert harsher discipline on their weary men. The
thought of fighting on German soil for the first time resulted in mixed
feelings among the soldiers. Although the defence of the Reich automatically
stirred emotional feelings to fight for their land, not all soldiers felt the same
way. More and more young conscripts were showing signs that they did not want
to die for a lost cause. Conditions on the Eastern Front were miserable not
only for the newest recruits, but also for battle-hardened soldiers who had
survived many months of bitter conflict against the Red Army. The cold harsh
weather during February and March prevented the soldiers digging trenches more
than a metre down. But the main problems that confronted the German forces
during this period were shortages of ammunition, fuel and vehicles. Some
vehicles in a division could only be used in an emergency and battery fire was
strictly prohibited without permission from the commanding officer. The daily
ration on average per division was for two shells per gun.
As the great Red Army drive gathered momentum, more towns
and villages fell to the onrushing forces. Suicidal opposition from a few SS
and Wehrmacht strong points bypassed in earlier attacks reduced buildings to
blasted rubble. Everywhere it seemed the Germans were being constantly forced
to retreat. Many isolated units spent hours or even days fighting a bloody
defence. Russian soldiers frequently requested them to surrender and assured
them that no harm would come to them if they did so. But despite this
reassuring tone, most German troops continued to fight to the bitter end. To
the German soldier in 1945 they were fighting an enemy that they not only
despised, but were also terrified of. Many soldiers, especially those fighting
in the ranks of the Waffen-SS decided that would meet their fate out on the
battlefield. To them they would rather bleed fighting on the grasslands of
Eastern Europe than surrender and be at the mercy of a Russian soldier.
Along the Baltic States the German soldier too was totally
aware of the significance if it were lost. They knew that their Führer was
determined more than ever to drag out the war and help stave off a Russian
drive on Berlin. For this reason he told his battlefront commanders to instill
every soldier to fight to the death for every city, town and village. one such
city he was fanatical in defending was the ancient Teutonic city of Danzig.
Danzig was populated almost exclusively by Germans and before the war had been
designated a free city giving Poland access to the Baltic Sea. This had angered
Hitler bitterly and churned-up great bitterness and a determination to reclaim
the city back. It was on this pretense that Hitler attacked Poland in 1939, and
engulfed Europe into a World War. Now five years later he was determined not to
let the city fall without a bloody fight.
For some weeks Danzig had been preparing itself for a
long-drawn out defence. Fighting to the east of the city in early March 1945
was the 2.Armee. For several days the 2.Armee fought well against the full
weight of the Second Belorussian Front. A number of German divisions put up a
staunch defence notably from the 4.Panzer-Division. However, fighting was so
fierce that the division was savagely mauled and pushed westwards with its
remnants doggedly combating from one fixed position to another.
Inside the city Danzig was being defended by a mixture of
infantry, Panzertruppen, Volkssturm, and Hitlerjugend. The main armoured force
comprised of the 4.Panzer-Division which consisted of Panzer-Regiment 35,
Artillerie-Regiment 103, and Panzer Aufklaerungs Abteilung 4, and two regiments
of Panzergrenadiere. The first battalion of the Panzer-Regiment 35 was equipped
with Panther tanks, while the second battalion was equipped with Pz.kpfw IV’s.
The artillery regiment was equipped mainly with Wespe and Hummel self-propelled
howitzers, and towed howitzers and guns.
Although the Germans were poorly matched in terms of
equipment and supply a number of the troops were hardened veterans that had
survived some of the costliest battles in the East. Hurriedly these troops were
positioned along the main roads leading into the city. Heavy machine gun
platoons dug-in and held each end of the line while the remainder were
scattered in various buildings. Armoured vehicles from Panzer-Regiment 35
took-up key positions in order to defend the main thoroughfare leading into the
centre of the city, although not one single tank was battle ready. Crude
obstacles were also erected, and troops were emplaced in defensive positions
armed with a motley assortment of anti-tank and Flak guns, machine guns,
Panzerfaust and the deadly Panzerschrek.
When Russian tanks were identified entering the suburbs on
24 March, Wehrmacht, Panzertruppen, Volkssturm, and Hitlerjugend laden with
guns and ammunition, suddenly sprang into action. Moving rapidly through the
deserted streets Russian tanks pushed forward accompanied by infantry. In an
instant the Germans opened-up a crescendo of fire. A number of Soviet tanks
burst into flames before they could wrench open a route into the city. However,
superior Soviet strength soon began overwhelming the suburbs. For hours it
seemed each soldier was engaged in an individual contest of attrition. House to
house fighting raged. Infiltrating the buildings Russians fought a series of deadly
hand-to-hand battles with Germans using bayonets, knives and grenades.
Anti-tank, machine gun and mortar fire were brought to bear on anything that
moved. Germans commanders were all too aware of the significant strength of
their resilient foe and hoped that they could contain the Red Army for as long
as possible. The Russians mercilessly tore through the suburbs of the city and
lay to waste every building in its path. A mixture of armoured vehicles mainly
from Panzer-Regiment 35, tried to contain parts of the city from becoming
overrun. The attack through the city was swift, but from every conceivable
point, German troops poured a lethal storm of fire onto the advancing troops.
By 26 March the whole city had been engulfed in a sea of
smoke and flame. German troops became more aggressive as the urban battle
intensified. Slowly and methodically the Russians began taking one district
after another, pushing back the defenders in a storm of fire and heavy infantry
assaults. Whole areas were totally obliterated by tanks and artillery. Many
Germans that were captured or wounded were executed on the spot and left
suspended from the lamp posts as a warning to others. In parts of the city
Volkssturm and Hitlerjugend support by a mixture of Wehrmacht and Panzer troops,
managed to knock out a number of Russian tanks with Panzerfaust and
Panzerschreck. But even these courageous fighters were no match for hardened
soldiers that had fought their way bitterly through Russia to the gates of the
Reich. German commanders tried their best to instil hope and determination in
the poorly armed defenders, but district after district still fell to the
Russian advance.
By 29 March those that had not been encircled or annihilated
inside the city fled to mouth of the Vistula. Although the following day Danzig
fell, resistance was not totally suppressed. A number of defiant groups that
had been encircled and refused to capitulate fought on until they were
annihilated.
Elsewhere along the Baltic coast and further south on the
German central front the situation for the German Army was spiralling out of
control, in spite fanatical resistance. German commanders in the field now
resigned themselves with the gloomy prospect of not being able of hold back the
Red Army for any appreciable length of time, and the news sent shock waves
through the German High Command. For them it marked the beginning of the Soviet
invasion of the Fatherland. As German forces fought to delay the inevitable
capture of East Prussia, the main bulk of the Red Army drive bypassed various
pockets of resistance and spilled out into eastern Pomerania and the Prussian
province of Pomerania, where it fought a number of hard-pressed battles.
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