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Operation Tempest
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== In different regions of Poland == === Southeast Volhynia === Operation Tempest began in [[Volhynia]], a region which until 1939 had belonged to the [[Second Polish Republic]] (see [[Wołyń Voivodeship (1921–1939)]]), in January 1944, after the [[Red Army]] had entered prewar Polish territory east of the town of [[Sarny]] on January 4. The operation, which was mainly carried out by the [[27th Home Army Infantry Division (Poland)]] (some 6500 soldiers) was aimed at the [[Wehrmacht]] units, still operating in the region. * January 4, 1944: the Red Army enters Volhynia east of Sarny * January 15: a mobilization of ethnic Poles takes place in the area of Kowel and Włodzimierz Wołyński * January 28: the 27th Volhynian Home Army Infantry Division is officially created * February 10: Colonel [[Jan Wojciech Kiwerski]] is named commandant of the Volhynian District of the Home Army * March 4: first Home Army unit meets the advancing Red Army * March 17: a Wehrmacht company is disarmed at the village of Zasmyki near [[Kowel]] * March 18: first skirmishes against Germans take place * March 20–27: heavy battles in the Turia river valley * March 23: a German detachment is disarmed at Stezarzyce * March 24: a skirmish near Kapitulka * March 26: Colonel Kiwerski meets Soviet General Sergeev * April 1944: heavy fighting with the [[Wehrmacht]] west of Kowel. Due to German superiority, on April 12 Polish forces try to get in touch with the [[Red Army]], after a failed attempt to capture Włodzimierz Wołyński. Eventually, the division is surrounded, and on April 18, its commandant, Colonel Kiwerski, was killed in action. On April 21 the unit escapes the encirclement, and after several skirmishes, on June 10 it crosses the [[Bug River]], entering [[Lesser Poland]]. The division then took part in Operation Tempest in the region of [[Lublin]], remaining active until late July 1944. All together, between January and June 1944, the 27th Volhynian ID of the Home Army took part in over 100 skirmishes, losing over 600 soldiers. German and Hungarian losses are estimated at up to 750 KIA and 900 wounded. ===Northeast Operation Ostra Brama=== {{main|Operation Ostra Brama}} In the north, on July 7, 1944, the forces of the {{Ill|Wilno District (Home Army)|lt=Wilno|pl|Okręg Wilno Armii Krajowej}} and {{Ill|Nowogródek District (Home Army)|lt=Nowogródek Home Army districts|pl|Okręg Nowogródek Armii Krajowej}} (some 13,000 men under Colonel [[Aleksander Krzyżanowski]]) launched an [[Operation Ostra Brama|attack on German-occupied Vilnius]], although the attack stalled until the arrival of Soviet forces. The AK and Soviet armies then jointly occupied the city on July 13. Prior to the assault, the surrounding countryside had also been seized by Polish and Soviet partisans. Cooperation ended almost immediately after Vilnius was occupied; on July 14, Krzyżanowski and his officers were disarmed and imprisoned, and AK units who resisted disarmament were violently crushed by Soviet forces, with dozens of Polish fatalities.<ref>[[Włodzimierz Borodziej]], Barbara Harshav (transl.), [https://books.google.com/books?id=YHO0F65ifDIC&pg=PA55 The Warsaw uprising of 1944.] University of Wisconsin Press, 2006.</ref> ===Lwów Uprising=== {{Main|Lwów Uprising}} On July 23, Home Army forces in Lwów (now [[Lviv]]) began an armed rising in cooperation with advancing Soviet forces. In four days the city was taken over. The Polish civil and military authorities were then summoned to "a meeting with Red Army commanders" and taken prisoner by the Soviet [[NKVD]]. Colonel [[Władysław Filipkowski]]'s men were forcibly conscripted into the Red Army, sent to [[Gulag|forced-labor camps]], or went back underground. === Polesie === Operation Tempest in Polesia took place in the final days of the German occupation of this region. Due to rapid Soviet advance westwards (see [[Operation Bagration]]), it lasted for two weeks (July 15–30, 1944), mainly in the western part of Polesie, near [[Brześć nad Bugiem]], [[Kobryn]] and [[Bereza Kartuska]], but also in the area of [[Pinsk]]. The Home Army headquarters gave orders for the 30th Home Army Infantry Division to be created in Polesia. This unit was tasked with capturing the areas north and east of Brześć. The division concentrated in forested areas along the [[Nurzec]] river, with some 1000 soldiers. On July 17, a [[Wehrmacht]] motorized transport was attacked near the [[folwark]] of Adampol, and a skirmish with the Germans took place near the village of Wyzary. On July 30, 1944, Polish forces made contact with [[Red Army]]'s [[65th Army (Soviet Union)|65th Army]]: Soviet officers ordered the Poles to merge with [[First Polish Army (1944–45)|First Polish Army]]. Poles disobeyed this order, and headed towards [[Biała Podlaska]], where they decided to march to [[Warsaw]] and fight in the [[Warsaw Uprising]]. Near [[Otwock]], the division was surrounded and disarmed by the Soviets. ===Warsaw Uprising=== {{main|Warsaw Uprising}} [[File:26PPAK relief Warsaw Uprising.jpg|thumb|right|220px|[[Armia Krajowa|Polish Home Army]]'s [[26th Infantry Regiment AK|26th Infantry Regiment]] en route from the [[Kielce]]–[[Radom]] area to [[Warsaw]] in an attempt to join the [[Warsaw Uprising]]]] Seeing the fate of the Home Army forces that had taken part in Operation Tempest, the [[Polish government in exile]] and the Home Army's current commander, General [[Tadeusz Komorowski|Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski]], decided that the last chance for regaining Poland's independence was to open an uprising in Warsaw. On July 21, 1944, Bór-Komorowski ordered that the Warsaw Uprising begin at 17:00 hours on August 1, 1944. The political goal was to emphasize for the Allies the existence of the Polish government and Polish civil authorities. Warsaw was to be taken in order to allow the legitimate [[Polish government in exile|Polish government]] to return from exile to Poland. At the same time, other Home Army districts were also mobilized. Units of the [[Kraków]] area were preparing an uprising, similar to the one in Wilno, Lwów and Warsaw, but it was cancelled due to several reasons (see: [[Kraków Uprising (1944)]]). In the [[Kielce]] and [[Radom]] area, the [[2nd Polish Home Army Division]] was formed and took control of the entire area except for the cities. Other units were also mustered in Kraków, [[Łódź]] and [[Greater Poland]]. === Białystok === Operation Tempest in [[Białystok]] and its area began in the second half of July 1944 and lasted until late September. The Home Army recreated here four units, based on interbellum [[Polish Army]]: 18th and 29th Infantry Divisions, also [[Suwałki Cavalry Brigade]] and [[Podlaska Cavalry Brigade]]. All together, some 7,000 soldiers fought in over 200 battles and skirmishes. The operation was commanded by Colonel [[Władysław Liniarski]]. The first unit to enter the fighting was 81st Home Army Infantry Regiment, which operated in the forests around [[Grodno]]. Armed with light weapons, the regiment was too weak to capture the city of Grodno and limited its activities to fighting German outposts and police stations. In the outskirts of Białystok, among Polish forces concentrated in the [[Knyszyn]] Wilderness were: 42nd Home Army Infantry Regiment, and 10th Home Army [[Uhlan]] Regiment. The 2nd Home Army [[Uhlan]] Regiment operated in the area of [[Bransk]] and [[Hajnówka]]. This unit destroyed the rail line between Hajnówka and [[Czeremcha, Podlaskie Voivodeship|Czeremcha]], including a rail bridge, which was blown up. The 76th Home Army Infantry Regiment fought in the area of [[Ciechanowiec]] and [[Lapy]]. Three Home Army regiments were formed in the [[Augustów Primeval Forest]]: 1st Home Army Uhlan Regiment (with 300 soldiers), 41st Home Army Infantry Regiment and 3rd Regiment (all together: 700 soldiers). Fearing a partisan attack, the Germans declared a state of emergency in the town of [[Augustów]]. During Operation Tempest in this part of Białystok Province, over 30 raids of different kinds took place, in which 4 military transports were blown up, along the rail line from Augustow to Grodno. Home Army forces cooperated with the [[Red Army]]. On August 6, a unit of 300 soldiers managed to get through German lines, and into the areas controlled by the Soviets. By autumn 1944, most regiments had ceased operations. The last skirmish in this area took place on November 2 near the village of Nowinka. In the forests surrounding the [[Osowiec Fortress]], 9th Home Army Mounted Rifles were concentrated under Wiktor Konopka. In July and August 1944, this regiment fought the Germans in several locations. On September 8, after a heavy battle, the unit was destroyed by the enemy. Survivors managed to cross the frontline, which at that time was along the [[Biebrza]] river. In the area of [[Łomża]], the 33rd Home Army Infantry Regiment was created, with three battalions. It fought rear German units, breaking communication links between frontline and [[East Prussia]]. Near the village of [[Czarnowo-Undy]], some 150 Soviet prisoners of war were released by the Poles. As a reprisal, the Germans burned the village, shooting all its residents (July 22, 1944). On August 20, the 5th Home Army Uhlan Regiment, which operated in the area of [[Ostrołęka]], attacked a German artillery battery near the village of Labedy. === Lublin === Operation Tempest in the area of [[Lublin]] took place in the final two weeks of July 1944. The Home Army created there such units, as 3rd Infantry Division, 9th Infantry Division, 15th Infantry Regiment, also units of [[Bataliony Chłopskie]] and other resistance organizations, plus [[27th Home Army Infantry Division (Poland)]] from the province of [[Volhynia]]. All together, Polish forces in the region had some 20,000 men. The partisans attacked retreating German forces along railways and roads in the whole district of Lublin. In several cases, they defended villages pacified by the [[Wehrmacht]] and the [[SS]]. Poles cooperated with [[Red Army]] guerillas, which also operated in the area. In the south (the region of [[Zamość]]), 9th Infantry Regiment under Major Stanislaw Prus liberated the town of [[Bełżec, Lublin Voivodeship|Bełżec]] (July 21). Together with the Soviets, they captured [[Tomaszów Lubelski]]. German forces were attacked in several locations, including [[Frampol]] and [[Zwierzyniec]]. On July 21 and 22, Volhynian 27th Division captured [[Kock]], [[Lubartów]] and [[Firlej]]. In western part of the province, 8th and 15th Infantry Regiments liberated a number of towns: [[Kurów]], [[Urzędów]], [[Nałęczów]], [[Garbów]], [[Wąwolnica, Lublin Voivodeship|Wąwolnica]], [[Sobolew, Lublin Voivodeship|Sobolew]], [[Ryki]], [[Końskowola]]. On July 26, Polish units cooperated with Soviet forces fighting for [[Puławy]]. Several German rail transports were destroyed, and Polish soldiers saved Końskowola from Germans, who planned to set the town on fire. === Kraków === Home Army District of [[Kraków]] was one of the largest districts of the organization. It spread from [[Przemyśl]] to Kraków itself, and the first fighting in the area took place in the east. In [[Rzeszow]] and Przemysl, 22nd and 24th Home Army Divisions were mobilized. In Rzeszów, [[Mielec]] and [[Krosno]], 10th Home Army Cavalry Brigade was created. In the west, 6th and 106th Home Army Infantry Divisions were created, also Kraków Brigade of Motorized Cavalry. Other units active in the region were: Independent Battalion of Major Jan Panczakiewicz and Operational Group Kraków under Colonel Edward Godlewski. The Home Army considered an armed insurrection in the city of Kraków, but this plan was abandoned (see [[Kraków Uprising (1944)]]). === Radom–Kielce === Operation Tempest in [[Radom]] and [[Kielce]] began on August 1, 1944, and lasted until October 6. The Home Army here created 2nd, 7th and 28th Infantry Divisions, with several other units. The purpose of the operation was to aid the Red Army with its capture of the eastern bank of the [[Vistula]] and cities of the region. Polish partisans planned to defend the Vistula bridges, and armament factories in [[Starachowice]] and [[Skarżysko-Kamienna]]. After the Red Army had managed to cross the Vistula and capture bridgeheads at [[Sandomierz]] and [[Magnuszew]] (see [[Lublin–Brest Offensive]]), Home Army got in touch with the Soviets, and began cooperating with them. In [[Kozienice]] and Sandomierz, Polish units supported the advancing Soviets: on the night of July 31 / August 1, 1944, a German counterattack was halted by the Polish 2nd Infantry Regiment of Captain Michal Mandziara, which helped the Soviets keep their positions in the Sandomierz Bridgehead. On August 3, Polish and Soviet forces liberated [[Staszów]]; in the following days, Poles, helped by Soviet tanks, captured [[Stopnica]] and [[Busko]]. On August 14, 1944, General [[Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski]] ordered all units of the Kielce – Radom area to march towards Warsaw and join the Warsaw Uprising. Operation Revenge, as it was called, resulted in the creation of Kielce Corps of the Home Army, under Colonel Jan Zientarski, with 6,430 soldiers. On August 21, during its concentration, the Corps saved residents of the village of Antoniów, which was raided by Germans. Even though Kielce Corps began its march towards Warsaw, it did not reach the Polish capital. After careful analysis of German forces concentrated around Warsaw, Home Army leaders decided to halt the operation, as it was too risky. Poles did not have heavy weapons and tanks to face the enemy on equal terms. Operation Revenge was abandoned, and the Corps was dissolved. In early September 1944, local units of the Home Army planned to capture either Kielce or Radom, also there were plans to seize [[Częstochowa]] and Skarzysko. 7th Infantry Division was transferred westwards, to the area of Częstochowa. 2nd Infantry remained near Kielce, actively fighting the enemy until November. In late October 1944, Operation Tempest was cancelled. All units were dissolved. === Łódź === Operation Tempest in the area of the city of [[Łódź]] took place in summer and autumn of 1944, lasting from August 14 until November 26. Local Home Army mobilized here several units, such as the 25th Infantry Regiment under Major Rudolf Majewski. This regiment was stationed in forests near [[Przysucha]]: in August 1944, it carried out a number of attacks on German forces, destroying rail lines. The last battle of the 25th regiment took place on November 8, all together it lost 130 men. Among other units was 29th Kaniow Rifles Regiment, which operated near [[Brzeziny]]. On September 14, it captured a German warehouse at the station of [[Słotwiny, Łódź Voivodeship|Słotwiny]] near [[Koluszki]].
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