Battle of Berlin
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The Battle of Berlin, designated as the Berlin Strategic Offensive Operation by the Soviet Union, and also known as the Fall of Berlin, was one of the last major offensives of the European theatre of World War II.Template:Efn
After the Vistula–Oder Offensive of January–February 1945, the Red Army had temporarily halted on a line Template:Cvt east of Berlin. On 9 March, Germany established its defence plan for the city with Operation Clausewitz. The first defensive preparations at the outskirts of Berlin were made on 20 March, under the newly appointed commander of Army Group Vistula, General Gotthard Heinrici.
When the Soviet offensive resumed on 16 April, two Soviet fronts (army groups) attacked Berlin from the east and south, while a third overran German forces positioned north of Berlin. Before the main battle in Berlin commenced, the Red Army encircled the city after successful battles of the Seelow Heights and Halbe. On 20 April 1945, Hitler's birthday, the 1st Belorussian Front led by Marshal Georgy Zhukov, advancing from the east and north, started shelling Berlin's city centre, while Marshal Ivan Konev's 1st Ukrainian Front broke through Army Group Centre and advanced towards the southern suburbs of Berlin. On 23 April General Helmuth Weidling assumed command of the forces within Berlin. The garrison consisted of several depleted and disorganised Army and Waffen-SS divisions, along with poorly trained Volkssturm and Hitler Youth members. Over the course of the next week, the Red Army gradually took the entire city.
On 30 April, Hitler killed himself. The city's garrison surrendered on 2 May but fighting continued to the north-west, west, and south-west of the city until the end of the war in Europe on 8 May (9 May in the Soviet Union) as some German units fought westward so that they could surrender to the Western Allies rather than to the Soviets.Template:Sfn
BackgroundEdit
On 12 January 1945, the Red Army began the Vistula–Oder Offensive across the Narew River and from Warsaw, a three-day operation on a broad front, which incorporated four army Fronts.Template:Sfn On the fourth day, the Red Army broke out and started moving west, up to Template:Cvt per day, taking East Prussia, Danzig, and Poznań, drawing up on a line Template:Cvt east of Berlin along the Oder River.Template:Sfn
The new Army Group Vistula ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Heinrich Himmler), conducted Operation Solstice, a counter-attack, but this had failed by 24 February.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Red Army then drove on to Pomerania, clearing the right bank of the Oder River, thereby reaching into Silesia.Template:Sfn
In the south, Soviet and Romanian forces conducted the Siege of Budapest. Three German divisions' attempts to relieve the city failed, and Budapest fell to the Soviets on 13 February.Template:Sfn Adolf Hitler insisted on a counter-attack to recapture the Drau-Danube triangle.Template:Sfn The goal was to secure the oil region of Nagykanizsa and regain the Danube River for future operations but the depleted German forces had been given an impossible task.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn By 16 March, the German Operation Spring Awakening (also the Lake Balaton Offensive) had failed, and a counter-attack by the Red Army took back in 24 hours everything the Germans had taken ten days to gain.Template:Sfn On 30 March, the Soviets entered Austria; and in the Vienna Offensive they captured Vienna on 13 April.Template:Sfn
On 12 April 1945, Hitler, who had earlier decided to remain in the city against the wishes of his advisers, heard the news that the American President Franklin D. Roosevelt had died.Template:Sfn This briefly raised false hopes in the Führerbunker that there might yet be a falling out among the Allies and that Berlin would be saved at the last moment, as had happened once before when Berlin was threatened (see the Miracle of the House of Brandenburg).Template:Sfn
No plans were made by the Western Allies to seize the city.Template:Sfn The Supreme Commander [Western] Allied Expeditionary Force, General Eisenhower, lost interest in the race to Berlin and saw no further need to suffer casualties by attacking a city that would be in the Soviet sphere of influence after the war, envisioning excessive friendly fire if both armies attempted to occupy the city at once.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The main Western Allied contribution to the battle was the bombing of Berlin during 1945.Template:Sfn During 1945 the United States Army Air Forces launched mass day raids on Berlin and for 36 nights in succession, scores of Royal Air Force (RAF) Mosquitos bombed the German capital, ending on the night of 20/21 April 1945 just before the Soviets entered the city.Template:Sfn
PreparationsEdit
The Soviet offensive into central Germany, what later became East Germany, had two objectives. Stalin did not believe the Western Allies would hand over territory occupied by them in the post-war Soviet zone, so he began the offensive on a broad front and moved rapidly to meet the Western Allies as far west as possible. But the overriding objective was to capture Berlin.Template:Sfn The two goals were complementary because possession of the zone could not be won quickly unless Berlin was taken. Another consideration was that Berlin itself held useful post-war strategic assets, including Adolf Hitler and the German nuclear weapons programTemplate:Sfn (but unknown to the Soviet Union, by the time of the Battle of Berlin, the bulk of the uranium and most of the scientists had been evacuated to Haigerloch in the Black Forest).Template:Sfn On 6 March, Hitler appointed Lieutenant General Helmuth Reymann commander of the Berlin Defence Area, replacing Lieutenant General Bruno Ritter von Hauenschild.Template:Sfn
On 20 March, General Gotthard Heinrici was appointed Commander-in-Chief of Army Group Vistula replacing Himmler.Template:Sfn Heinrici was one of the best defensive tacticians in the German army, and he immediately started to lay defensive plans. Heinrici correctly assessed that the main Soviet thrust would be made over the Oder River and along the main east-west Autobahn.Template:Sfn He decided not to try to defend the banks of the Oder with anything more than a light skirmishing screen. Instead, Heinrici arranged for engineers to fortify the Seelow Heights, which overlooked the Oder River at the point where the Autobahn crossed them.Template:Sfn This was some Template:Cvt west of the Oder and Template:Cvt east of Berlin. Heinrici thinned out the line in other areas to increase the manpower available to defend the heights. German engineers turned the Oder's flood plain, already saturated by the spring thaw, into a swamp by releasing the water from a reservoir upstream. Behind the plain on the plateau, the engineers built three belts of defensive emplacementsTemplate:Sfn reaching back towards the outskirts of Berlin (the lines nearer to Berlin were called the Wotan position).Template:Sfn These lines consisted of anti-tank ditches, anti-tank gun emplacements, and an extensive network of trenches and bunkers.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
On 9 April, after a long resistance, Königsberg in East Prussia fell to the Red Army. This freed up Marshal Rokossovsky's 2nd Belorussian Front to move west to the east bank of the Oder river.Template:Sfn Marshal Georgy Zhukov concentrated his 1st Belorussian Front, which had been deployed along the Oder river from Frankfurt (Oder) in the south to the Baltic, into an area in front of the Seelow Heights.Template:Sfn The 2nd Belorussian Front moved into the positions being vacated by the 1st Belorussian Front north of the Seelow Heights. While this redeployment was in progress, gaps were left in the lines; and the remnants of General Dietrich von Saucken's German II Army, which had been bottled up in a pocket near Danzig, managed to escape into the Vistula delta.Template:Sfn To the south, Marshal Konev shifted the main weight of the 1st Ukrainian Front out of Upper Silesia and north-west to the Neisse River.Template:Sfn
The three Soviet fronts had altogether 2.5 million men (including 78,556 soldiers of the 1st Polish Army), 6,250 tanks, 7,500 aircraft, 41,600 artillery pieces and mortars, 3,255 truck-mounted Katyusha rocket launchers (nicknamed 'Stalin's Organ'), and 95,383 motor vehicles, many manufactured in the US.Template:Sfn
Opposing forcesEdit
Northern sectorEdit
Template:Col-begin Template:Col-break Template:Multiple image Template:Col-break Template:Flagicon German
- Third Panzer Army
- General of Panzer Hasso von ManteuffelTemplate:Efn
- 4 infantry divisions
- 3 naval divisions
- 2 volksgrenadier divisions
Template:Col-break Template:Multiple image Template:Col-break Template:Flagicon Soviet
- Second Belorussian Front
- Marshal Konstantin RokossovskyTemplate:Efn
- 31 rifle divisions
- 7 guards rifle divisions
- 1 motorized rifle battalion
- 3 tank battalions
Middle sectorEdit
Template:Col-begin Template:Col-break
Template:Col-break Template:Flagicon German
- Army Group Vistula
- Colonel General Gotthard HeinriciTemplate:Efn
- 15 infantry divisions
- 6 panzer divisions
- 2 motorized infantry divisions
- Ninth Army
- General of Infantry Theodor BusseTemplate:Efn
- 5 infantry divisions
- 4 panzergrenadier divisions
- 1 panzer division
- 1 SS grenadier division
- 1 security division
- 1 Jäger division
- 1 parachute division
- 1 Kampfgruppe
Template:Col-break Template:Multiple image Template:Col-break
Template:Flagicon Soviet
- First Belorussian Front
- Marshal Georgy ZhukovTemplate:Efn
- 54 rifle divisions
- 16 guards rifle divisions
- 5 infantry divisions (Polish)
- 3 guards cavalry divisions
- 3 mechanized brigades
- 6 guards mechanized brigades
- 7 tank brigades
- 10 guards tank brigades
- 1 armored brigade (Polish)
- 2 motorized rifle brigades
Southern sectorEdit
Template:Col-begin Template:Col-break Template:Multiple image Template:Col-break Template:Flagicon German
- Army Group Centre
- Feldmarshal Ferdinand SchörnerTemplate:Efn
- 13 infantry divisions
- 3 panzer divisions
- 1 Reichsarbeitsdienst division
- 1 SS police division
- 1 SS grenadier division
- 1 anti-aircraft division
- 2 Kampfgruppen
Template:Col-break Template:Multiple image Template:Col-break Template:Flagicon Soviet
- Marshal Ivan KonevTemplate:Efn
- 26 rifle divisions
- 15 guards rifle divisions
- 5 infantry divisions (Polish)
- 3 guards cavalry divisions
- 1 guards airborne division
- 9 guards mechanized brigades
- 3 mechanized brigades
- 4 guards motorized rifle brigades
- 1 armored corps (Polish)
- 4 tank brigades
- 10 guards tank brigades
- 1 motorized rifle brigade
Battle of the Oder–NeisseEdit
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The sector in which most of the fighting in the overall offensive took place was the Seelow Heights, the last major defensive line outside Berlin.Template:Sfn The Battle of the Seelow Heights, fought over four days from 16 until 19 April, was one of the last pitched battles of World War II: almost one million Red Army soldiers and more than 20,000 tanks and artillery pieces were deployed to break through the "Gates to Berlin", which were defended by about 100,000 German soldiers and 1,200 tanks and guns.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Soviet forces led by Zhukov broke through the defensive positions, having suffered about 30,000 dead,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn while 12,000 German personnel were killed.Template:Sfn
On 19 April, the fourth day, the 1st Belorussian Front broke through the final line of the Seelow Heights and nothing but broken German formations lay between them and Berlin.Template:Sfn The 1st Ukrainian Front, having captured Forst the day before, fanned out into open country.Template:Sfn One powerful thrust by Gordov's 3rd Guards Army and Rybalko's 3rd and Lelyushenko's 4th Guards Tank Armies were heading north-east towards Berlin while other armies headed west towards a section of the United States Army's front line south-west of Berlin on the Elbe.Template:Sfn With these advances, the Soviet forces drove a wedge between Army Group Vistula in the north and Army Group Centre in the south.Template:Sfn By the end of the day, the German eastern front line north of Frankfurt around Seelow and to the south around Forst had ceased to exist. These breakthroughs allowed the two Soviet Fronts to envelop the German 9th Army in a large pocket west of Frankfurt. Attempts by the 9th Army to break out to the west resulted in the Battle of Halbe.Template:Sfn The cost to the Soviet forces had been very high, with over 2,807 tanks lost between 1 and 19 April, including at least 727 at the Seelow Heights.Template:Sfn
In the meantime, RAF Mosquitos conducted tactical air raids against German positions inside Berlin on the nights of 15 April (105 bombers), 17 April (61 bombers), 18 April (57 bombers), 19 April (79 bombers), and 20 April (78 bombers).Template:Sfn
Encirclement of BerlinEdit
On 20 April 1945, Hitler's 56th birthday, Soviet artillery of the 1st Belorussian Front began shelling Berlin and did not stop until the city surrendered. The weight of ordnance delivered by Soviet artillery during the battle was greater than the total tonnage dropped by Western Allied bombers on the city.Template:Sfn While the 1st Belorussian Front advanced towards the east and north-east of the city, the 1st Ukrainian Front pushed through the last formations of the northern wing of Army Group Centre and passed north of Juterbog, well over halfway to the American front line on the river Elbe at Magdeburg.Template:Sfn To the north between Stettin and Schwedt, the 2nd Belorussian Front attacked the northern flank of Army Group Vistula, held by Hasso von Manteuffel's III Panzer Army.Template:Sfn The next day, Bogdanov's 2nd Guards Tank Army advanced nearly Template:Cvt north of Berlin and then attacked south-west of Werneuchen. The Soviet plan was to encircle Berlin first and then envelop the IX Army.Template:Sfn
The command of the German V Corps, trapped with the IX Army north of Forst, passed from the IV Panzer Army to the IX Army. The corps was still holding on to the Berlin-Cottbus highway front line.Template:Sfn Field Marshal Ferdinand Schörner's Army Group Centre launched a counter-offensive aimed at breaking through to Berlin from the south and entering (the Battle of Bautzen) in the 1st Ukrainian Front region, engaging the 2nd Polish Army and elements of the Red Army's 52nd Army and 5th Guards Army.Template:Sfn When the old southern flank of the IV Panzer Army had some local successes counter-attacking north against the 1st Ukrainian Front, Hitler unrealistically ordered the IX Army to hold Cottbus and set up a front facing west.Template:Sfn Next, they were to attack the Soviet columns advancing north to form a pincer that would meet the IV Panzer Army coming from the south and envelop the 1st Ukrainian Front before destroying it.Template:Sfn They were to anticipate a southward attack by the III Panzer Army and be ready to be the southern arm of a pincer attack that would envelop 1st Belorussian Front, which would be destroyed by SS-General Felix Steiner's Army Detachment advancing from north of Berlin.Template:Sfn Later in the day, when Steiner explained that he did not have the divisions to achieve this, Heinrici made it clear to Hitler's staff that unless the IX Army retreated immediately, it would be enveloped by the Soviets. He stressed that it was already too late for it to move north-west to Berlin and would have to retreat west.Template:Sfn Heinrici went on to say that if Hitler did not allow it to move west, he would ask to be relieved of his command.Template:Sfn
On 22 April 1945, at his afternoon situation conference, Hitler fell into a tearful rage when he realised that his plans, prepared the previous day, could not be achieved. He declared that the war was lost, blaming the generals for the defeat and that he would remain in Berlin until the end and then kill himself.Template:Sfn
In an attempt to coax Hitler out of his rage, General Alfred Jodl speculated that General Walther Wenck's XII Army, which was facing the Americans, could move to Berlin because the Americans, already on the Elbe River, were unlikely to move further east. This assumption was based on his viewing of the captured Eclipse documents, which organised the partition of Germany among the Allies.Template:Sfn Hitler immediately grasped the idea, and within hours Wenck was ordered to disengage from the Americans and move the XII Army north-east to support Berlin.Template:Sfn It was then realised that if the IX Army moved west, it could link up with the XII Army. In the evening Heinrici was given permission to make the link-up.Template:Sfn
Elsewhere, the 2nd Belorussian Front had established a bridgehead Template:Cvt deep on the west bank of the Oder and was heavily engaged with the III Panzer Army.Template:Sfn The IX Army had lost Cottbus and was being pressed from the east. A Soviet tank spearhead was on the Havel River to the east of Berlin, and another had at one point penetrated the inner defensive ring of Berlin.Template:Sfn
The capital was now within range of field artillery. A Soviet war correspondent, in the style of World War II Soviet journalism, gave the following account of an important event which took place on 22 April 1945 at 08:30 local time:Template:Sfn Template:Quote
On 23 April 1945, the Soviet 1st Belorussian Front and 1st Ukrainian Front continued to tighten the encirclement, severing the last link between the German IX Army and the city.Template:Sfn Elements of the 1st Ukrainian Front continued to move westward and started to engage the German XII Army moving towards Berlin. On this same day, Hitler appointed General Helmuth Weidling as the commander of the Berlin Defence Area, replacing Lieutenant General Reymann.Template:Efn Meanwhile, by 24 April 1945 elements of 1st Belorussian Front and 1st Ukrainian Front had completed the encirclement of the city.Template:Sfn Within the next day, 25 April 1945, the Soviet investment of Berlin was consolidated, with leading Soviet units probing and penetrating the S-Bahn defensive ring.Template:Sfn By the end of the day, it was clear that the German defence of the city could not do anything but temporarily delay the capture of the city by the Soviets, since the decisive stages of the battle had already been fought and lost by the Germans outside the city.Template:Sfn By that time, Schörner's offensive, initially successful, had mostly been thwarted, although he did manage to inflict significant casualties on the opposing Polish and Soviet units, slowing down their progress.Template:Sfn
Battle in BerlinEdit
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The forces available to General Weidling for the city's defence included roughly 45,000 soldiers in several severely depleted Heer and Waffen-SS divisions.Template:Sfn These divisions were supplemented by the Berlin Police force, boys in the compulsory Hitlerjugend, and the Volkssturm.Template:Sfn Many of the 40,000 elderly men of the Volkssturm had been in the army as young men and some were veterans of World War I. Hitler appointed SS Brigadeführer Wilhelm Mohnke the Battle Commander for the central government district that included the Reich Chancellery and Führerbunker.Template:Sfn He had over 2,000 men under his command.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Weidling organised the defences into eight sectors designated 'A' through to 'H' each one commanded by a colonel or a general, but most had no combat experience.Template:Sfn To the west of the city was the 20th Infantry Division. To the north of the city was the 9th Parachute Division.Template:Sfn To the north-east of the city was the Panzer Division Müncheberg. To the south-east of the city and to the east of Tempelhof Airport was the 11th SS Panzergrenadier Division Nordland.Template:Sfn The reserve, 18th Panzergrenadier Division, was in Berlin's central district.Template:Sfn
On 23 April, Berzarin's 5th Shock Army and Katukov's 1st Guards Tank Army assaulted Berlin from the south-east and, after overcoming a counter-attack by the German LVI Panzer Corps, reached the Berlin S-Bahn ring railway on the north side of the Teltow Canal by the evening of 24 April.Template:Sfn During the same period, of all the German forces ordered to reinforce the inner defences of the city by Hitler, only a small contingent of French SS volunteers under the command of SS Brigadeführer Gustav Krukenberg arrived in Berlin.Template:Sfn During 25 April, Krukenberg was appointed as the commander of Defence Sector C, the sector under the most pressure from the Soviet assault on the city.Template:Sfn
On 26 April, Chuikov's 8th Guards Army and the 1st Guards Tank Army fought their way through the southern suburbs and attacked Tempelhof Airport, just inside the S-Bahn defensive ring, where they met stiff resistance from the Müncheberg Division.Template:Sfn But by 27 April, the two understrength divisions (Müncheberg and Nordland) that were defending the south-east, now facing five Soviet armies—from east to west, the 5th Shock Army, the 8th Guards Army, the 1st Guards Tank Army and Rybalko's 3rd Guards Tank Army (part of the 1st Ukrainian Front)—were forced back towards the centre, taking up new defensive positions around Hermannplatz.Template:Sfn Krukenberg informed General Hans Krebs, Chief of the General Staff of Army high command that within 24 hours the Nordland would have to fall back to the centre sector Z (for {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}).Template:SfnTemplate:Efn The Soviet advance to the city centre was along these main axes: from the south-east, along the Frankfurter Allee (ending and stopped at the Alexanderplatz); from the south along Sonnenallee ending north of the Belle-Alliance-Platz, from the south ending near the Potsdamer Platz and from the north ending near the Reichstag.Template:Sfn The Reichstag, the Moltke bridge, Alexanderplatz, and the Havel bridges at Spandau saw the heaviest fighting, with house-to-house and hand-to-hand combat. The foreign contingents of the SS fought particularly hard, because they were ideologically motivated and they believed that they would not live if captured.Template:Sfn
Battle for the ReichstagEdit
In the early hours of 29 April the Soviet 3rd Shock Army crossed the Moltke Bridge and started to fan out into the surrounding streets and buildings.Template:Sfn The initial assaults on buildings, including the Ministry of the Interior, were hampered by the lack of supporting artillery. It was not until the damaged bridges were repaired that artillery could be moved up in support.Template:Sfn At 4Template:Nbspam, in the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, Hitler signed his last will and testament and, shortly afterwards, married Eva Braun.Template:Sfn At dawn the Soviets pressed on with their assault in the south-east. After very heavy fighting they managed to capture Gestapo headquarters on Prinz-Albrechtstrasse, but a Waffen-SS counter-attack forced the Soviets to withdraw from the building.Template:Sfn To the south-west the 8th Guards Army attacked north across the Landwehr canal into the Tiergarten.Template:Sfn
By the next day, 30 April, the Soviets had solved their bridging problems and with artillery support at 06:00 they launched an attack on the Reichstag, but because of German entrenchments and support from 12.8 cm FlaK 40 guns Template:Cvt away on the roof of the Zoo flak tower, close by Berlin Zoo, it was not until that evening that the Soviets were able to enter the building.Template:Sfn The Reichstag had not been in use since it had burned in February 1933 and its interior resembled a rubble heap more than a government building. The German troops inside were heavily entrenched,Template:Sfn and fierce room-to-room fighting ensued. At that point there was still a large contingent of German soldiers in the basement who launched counter-attacks against the Red Army.Template:Sfn By 2 May 1945 the Red Army controlled the building entirely.Template:Sfn The famous photo of the two soldiers planting the flag on the roof of the building is a re-enactment photo taken the day after the building was taken.Template:Sfn To the Soviets the event as represented by the photo became symbolic of their victory demonstrating that the Battle of Berlin, as well as the Eastern Front hostilities as a whole, ended with the total Soviet victory.Template:Sfn As the 756th Regiment's commander Zinchenko had stated in his order to Battalion Commander Neustroev "... the Supreme High Command ... and the entire Soviet People order you to erect the victory banner on the roof above Berlin".Template:Sfn
Battle for the centreEdit
During the early hours of 30 April, Weidling informed Hitler in person that the defenders would probably exhaust their ammunition during the night. Hitler granted him permission to attempt a breakout through the encircling Red Army lines.Template:Sfn That afternoon, Hitler and Braun committed suicide and their bodies were cremated not far from the bunker.Template:Sfn In accordance with Hitler's last will and testament, Admiral Karl Dönitz became the President of the Reich ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) and Joseph Goebbels became the new Chancellor of the Reich ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}).Template:Sfn
As the perimeter shrank and the surviving defenders fell back, they became concentrated into a small area in the city centre. By now there were about 10,000 German soldiers in the city centre, which was being assaulted from all sides. One of the other main thrusts was along Wilhelmstrasse on which the Air Ministry, built of reinforced concrete, was pounded by large concentrations of Soviet artillery.Template:Sfn The remaining German Tiger tanks of the Hermann von Salza battalion took up positions in the east of the Tiergarten to defend the centre against Kuznetsov's 3rd Shock Army (which although heavily engaged around the Reichstag was also flanking the area by advancing through the northern Tiergarten) and the 8th Guards Army advancing through the south of the Tiergarten.Template:Sfn These Soviet forces had effectively cut the sausage-shaped area held by the Germans in half and made any escape attempt to the west for German troops in the centre much more difficult.Template:Sfn
During the early hours of 1 May, Krebs talked to General Vasily Chuikov, commander of the Soviet 8th Guards Army,Template:Efn informing him of Hitler's death and a willingness to negotiate a citywide surrender.Template:Sfn They could not agree on terms because of Soviet insistence on unconditional surrender and Krebs' claim that he lacked authorisation to agree to that.Template:Sfn Goebbels was against surrender. In the afternoon, Goebbels and his wife killed their children and then themselves.Template:Sfn Goebbels's death removed the last impediment which prevented Weidling from accepting the terms of unconditional surrender of his garrison, but he chose to delay the surrender until the next morning to allow the planned breakout to take place under the cover of darkness.Template:Sfn
Breakout and surrenderEdit
On the night of 1/2 May, most of the remnants of the Berlin garrison attempted to break out of the city centre via three directions. Only those that went west through the Tiergarten and crossed the Charlottenbrücke (a bridge over the Havel) into Spandau succeeded in breaching Soviet lines.Template:Sfn A handful of those who survived the initial breakout made it to the lines of the Western Allies—most were either killed or captured by the Red Army's outer encirclement forces west of the city.Template:Sfn Early in the morning of 2 May, the Soviets captured the Reich Chancellery. General Weidling surrendered with his staff at 6Template:Nbspam. He was taken to see General Vasily Chuikov at 08:23, where Weidling ordered the city's defenders to surrender to the Soviets.Template:Sfn The 350-strong garrison of the Zoo flak tower left the building. There was sporadic fighting in a few isolated buildings where some SS troops still refused to surrender, but the Soviets reduced such buildings to rubble.Template:Sfn
Hitler's Nero DecreeEdit
The city's food supplies had been largely destroyed on Hitler's orders. 128 of the 226 bridges had been blown up and 87 pumps rendered inoperative. "A quarter of the subway stations were under water, flooded on Hitler's orders. Thousands and thousands who had sought shelter in them had drowned when the SS had carried out the blowing up of the protective devices on the Landwehr Canal."Template:Sfn A number of workers, on their own initiative, resisted or sabotaged the SS's plan to destroy the city's infrastructure; they successfully prevented the blowing up of the Klingenberg power station, the Johannisthal waterworks, and other pumping stations, railroad facilities, and bridges.Template:Sfn
Battle outside BerlinEdit
At some point on 28 April or 29 April, General Heinrici, Commander-in-Chief of Army Group Vistula, was relieved of his command after disobeying Hitler's direct orders to hold Berlin at all costs and never order a retreat, and was replaced by General Kurt Student.Template:Sfn General Kurt von Tippelskirch was named as Heinrici's interim replacement until Student could arrive and assume control. There remains some confusion as to who was in command, as some references say that Student was captured by the British and never arrived.Template:Sfn Regardless of whether von Tippelskirch or Student was in command of Army Group Vistula, the rapidly deteriorating situation that the Germans faced meant that Army Group Vistula's coordination of the armies under its nominal command during the last few days of the war was of little significance.Template:Sfn
On the evening of 29 April, Krebs contacted General Alfred Jodl (Supreme Army Command) by radio:Template:Sfn Template:Quote
In the early morning of 30 April, Jodl replied to Krebs:Template:Sfn Template:Quote
NorthEdit
While the 1st Belorussian Front and the 1st Ukrainian Front encircled Berlin, and started the battle for the city itself, Rokossovsky's 2nd Belorussian Front started his offensive to the north of Berlin. On 20 April between Stettin and Schwedt, Rokossovsky's 2nd Belorussian Front attacked the northern flank of Army Group Vistula, held by the III Panzer Army.Template:Sfn By 22 April, the 2nd Belorussian Front had established a bridgehead on the east bank of the Oder that was over Template:Cvt deep and was heavily engaged with the III Panzer Army.Template:Sfn On 25 April, the 2nd Belorussian Front broke through III Panzer Army's line around the bridgehead south of Stettin, crossed the Randowbruch Swamp, and were now free to move west towards Montgomery's British 21st Army Group and north towards the Baltic port of Stralsund.Template:Sfn
The German III Panzer Army and the German XXI Army situated to the north of Berlin retreated westwards under relentless pressure from Rokossovsky's 2nd Belorussian Front, and was eventually pushed into a pocket Template:Cvt wide that stretched from the Elbe to the coast.Template:Sfn To their west was the British 21st Army Group (which on 1 May broke out of its Elbe bridgehead and had raced to the coast capturing Wismar and Lübeck), to their east Rokossovsky's 2nd Belorussian Front and to the south was the United States Ninth Army which had penetrated as far east as Ludwigslust and Schwerin.Template:Sfn
SouthEdit
The successes of the 1st Ukrainian Front during the first nine days of the battle meant that by 25 April, they were occupying large swathes of the area south and south-west of Berlin. Their spearheads had met elements of the 1st Belorussian Front west of Berlin, completing the investment of the city.Template:Sfn Meanwhile, the 58th Guards Rifle Division of the 5th Guards Army in 1st Ukrainian Front made contact with the 69th Infantry Division of the United States First Army near Torgau, on the Elbe River.Template:Sfn These manoeuvres had broken the German forces south of Berlin into three parts. The German IX Army was surrounded in the Halbe pocket.Template:Sfn Wenck's XII Army, obeying Hitler's command of 22 April, was attempting to force its way into Berlin from the south-west but met stiff resistance from 1st Ukrainian Front around Potsdam.Template:Sfn Schörner's Army Group Centre was forced to withdraw from the Battle of Berlin, along its lines of communications towards Czechoslovakia.Template:Sfn
Between 24 April and 1 May, the IX Army fought a desperate action to break out of the pocket in an attempt to link up with the XII Army.Template:Sfn Hitler assumed that after a successful breakout from the pocket, the IX Army could combine forces with the XII Army and would be able to relieve Berlin.Template:Sfn There is no evidence to suggest that Generals Heinrici, Busse, or Wenck thought that this was even remotely strategically feasible, but Hitler's agreement to allow the IX Army to break through Soviet lines allowed many German soldiers to escape to the west and surrender to the United States Army.Template:Sfn
At dawn on 28 April, the youth divisions Clausewitz, Scharnhorst, and Theodor Körner attacked from the south-west toward the direction of Berlin. They were part of Wenck's XX Corps and were made up of men from the officer training schools, making them some of the best units the Germans had in reserve. They covered a distance of about Template:Cvt, before being halted at the tip of Lake Schwielow, south-west of Potsdam and still Template:Cvt from Berlin.Template:Sfn During the night, General Wenck reported to the German Supreme Army Command in Fuerstenberg that his XII Army had been forced back along the entire front. According to Wenck, no attack on Berlin was possible.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn At that point, support from the IX Army could no longer be expected.Template:Sfn In the meantime, about 25,000 German soldiers of the IX Army, along with several thousand civilians, succeeded in reaching the lines of the XII Army after breaking out of the Halbe pocket.Template:Sfn The casualties on both sides were very high. Nearly 30,000 Germans were buried after the battle in the cemetery at Halbe.Template:Sfn About 20,000 soldiers of the Red Army also died trying to stop the breakout; most are buried at a cemetery next to the Baruth-Zossen road.Template:Sfn These are the known dead, but the remains of more who died in the battle are found every year, so the total of those who died will never be known. Nobody knows how many civilians died but it could have been as high as 10,000.Template:Sfn
Having failed to break through to Berlin, Wenck's XII Army made a fighting retreat back towards the Elbe and American lines after providing the IX Army survivors with surplus transport.Template:Sfn By 6 May many German Army units and individuals had crossed the Elbe and surrendered to the US Ninth Army.Template:Sfn Meanwhile, the XII Army's bridgehead, with its headquarters in the park of Schönhausen, came under heavy Soviet artillery bombardment and was compressed into an area eight by two kilometres (five by one and a quarter miles).Template:Sfn
SurrenderEdit
On the night of 2–3 May, General von Manteuffel, commander of the III Panzer Army along with General von Tippelskirch, commander of the XXI Army, surrendered to the US Army.Template:Sfn Von Saucken's II Army, that had been fighting north-east of Berlin in the Vistula Delta, surrendered to the Soviets on 9 May.Template:Sfn On the morning of 7 May, the perimeter of the XII Army's bridgehead began to collapse. Wenck crossed the Elbe under small arms fire that afternoon and surrendered to the American Ninth Army.Template:Sfn
AftermathEdit
According to Grigoriy Krivosheev, declassified archival data gives 81,116 Soviet dead for the operation, including the battles of Seelow Heights and the Halbe.Template:Sfn Another 280,251 were reported wounded or sick.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn The operation also cost the Soviets about 1,997 tanks and self-propelled guns.Template:Sfn All losses were considered irrecoverable – i.e. beyond economic repair or no longer serviceable.Template:Sfn The Soviets claimed to have captured nearly 480,000 German soldiers,Template:SfnTemplate:Efn while German research put the number of dead between 92,000 and 100,000.Template:Sfn Some 125,000 civilians are estimated to have died during the entire operation.Template:Sfn John Erickson says that the Battle for Berlin "cost half a million beings their lives, their well-being or their sanity." He puts Soviet casualties for the three weeks from 16 April to 8 May as 304,877 men killed, wounded and missing; plus 2156 tanks and combat aircraft for the three Soviet fronts: 1st and 2nd Belorussian and 1st Ukrainian.Template:Sfn
In those areas that the Red Army had captured and before the fighting in the centre of the city had stopped, the Soviet authorities took measures to start restoring essential services.Template:Sfn Almost all transport in and out of the city had been rendered inoperative, and bombed-out sewers had contaminated the city's water supplies.Template:Sfn The Soviet authorities appointed local Germans to head each city block, and organised the cleaning-up.Template:Sfn The Red Army made a major effort to feed the residents of the city.Template:Sfn Most Germans, both soldiers and civilians, were grateful to receive food issued at Red Army soup kitchens, which began on Colonel-General Berzarin's orders.Template:Sfn After the capitulation the Soviets went house to house, arresting and imprisoning anyone in a uniform including firemen and railwaymen.Template:Sfn
During and immediately following the assault,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn in many areas of the city, vengeful Soviet troops (often rear echelon unitsTemplate:Sfn) engaged in mass rape, pillage and murder.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Oleg Budnitskii, historian at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow, told a BBC Radio programme that Red Army soldiers were astounded when they reached Germany. "For the first time in their lives, eight million Soviet people came abroad, the Soviet Union was a closed country. All they knew about foreign countries was there was unemployment, starvation and exploitation. And when they came to Europe they saw something very different from Stalinist Russia ... especially Germany. They were really furious, they could not understand why being so rich, Germans came to Russia".Template:Sfn Other authorsTemplate:Who question the narrative of sexual violence by Red Army soldiers being more than what was a sad normality from all sides during the war, including the Western Allies. Nikolai Berzarin, commander of the Red Army in Berlin, quickly introduced penalties up to the death penalty for looting and rape.Template:Sfn
Despite Soviet efforts to supply food and rebuild the city, starvation remained a problem.Template:Sfn In June 1945, one month after the surrender, the average Berliner was getting only 64 percent of a daily ration of Template:Cvt.Template:Sfn Across the city over a million people were without homes.Template:Sfn
CommemorationEdit
All told, 402 Red Army personnel were bestowed the USSR's highest degree of distinction, the title Hero of the Soviet Union (HSU), for their valor in Berlin's immediate suburbs and in the city itself. Marshals of the Soviet Union Zhukov and Konev received their third and second HSU awards respectively, for their roles in the battle's outcome.Template:Sfn Combat medic Guards Senior Sergeant Lyudmila S. Kravets, was the Battle of Berlin's only female HSU recipient for her valorous actions while serving in 1st Rifle Battalion, 63rd Guards Rifle Regiment, 23rd Guards Rifle Division (subordinate to 3rd Shock Army).Template:Sfn Additionally, 280 Red Army enlisted personnel earned the Soviet Order of Glory First Class and attained status as Full Cavaliers of the Order of Glory for their heroism during the Battle of Berlin.Template:Sfn In Soviet society, Full Cavaliers of the Order of Glory were accorded the same rights and privileges as Heroes of the Soviet Union.Template:Sfn
Some 1.1 million Soviet personnel who took part in the capture of Berlin from 22 April to 2 May 1945 were awarded the Medal "For the Capture of Berlin".Template:Sfn
The design of the Victory Banner for celebrations of the Soviet Victory Day was defined by a federal law of Russia on 7 May 2007.Template:Sfn
Poland's official Flag Day is held each year on 2 May, the last day of the battle in Berlin, when the Polish Army hoisted its flag on the Berlin Victory Column.Template:Sfn
See alsoEdit
- Medal for Participation in the Battle of Berlin
- Soviet Union in World War II
- Siege of Breslau
- German Instrument of Surrender and Berlin Declaration (1945)
- German World War II strongholds
- Mikhail Minin
- Panzerbär
- Prague Offensive
- Soviet war crimes
- Stunde Null
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
SourcesEdit
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- Template:Citation – Originally published in "World War II" at Suite101.com on 1 May 1999. Revised edition published in "Articles On War" at OnWar.com on 1 July 2003
Further readingEdit
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- RT (TV network), (official channel on YouTube), Template:YouTube, 27 June 2010. 26-minute video
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