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Waffen-SS men near a burning house, Kharkov, February 1943. |
The Third Battle of Kharkov was a
series of battles on the Eastern Front of World War II, undertaken by Army
Group South of Nazi Germany against the Soviet Red Army, around the city of
Kharkov (today Kharkiv) between 19 February and 15 March 1943. Known to the
German side as the Donets Campaign, and in the Soviet Union as the Donbas and
Kharkov operations, the German counterstrike led to the recapture of the cities
of Kharkov and Belgorod.
As the German 6th Army was
encircled in the Battle of Stalingrad, the Red Army undertook a series of wider
attacks against the rest of Army Group South. These culminated on 2 January
1943 when the Red Army launched Operation Star and Operation Gallop, which
between January and early February broke German defenses and led to the Soviet
recapture of Kharkov, Belgorod, Kursk, as well as Voroshilovgrad and Izium. The
Soviet victories caused participating Soviet units to over-extend themselves.
Freed on 2 February by the surrender of the German 6th Army, the Red Army's
Central Front turned its attention west and on 25 February expanded its
offensive against both Army Group South and Army Group Center. Months of
continuous operations had taken a heavy toll on the Soviet forces and some
divisions were reduced to 1,000–2,000 combat effective soldiers. On 19
February, Field Marshal Erich von Manstein launched his Kharkov counterstrike,
using the fresh II SS Panzer Corps and two panzer armies. Manstein benefited
greatly from the massive air support of Field Marshal Wolfram von Richthofen's
Luftflotte 4, whose 1,214 aircraft flew over 1,000 sorties per day from 20
February to 15 March to support the German Army, a level of airpower equal to
that during the Case Blue strategic offensive a year earlier.
The Wehrmacht flanked, encircled,
and defeated the Red Army's armored spearheads south of Kharkov. This enabled
Manstein to renew his offensive against the city of Kharkov proper on 7 March.
Despite orders to encircle Kharkov from the north, the SS Panzer Corps instead
decided to directly engage Kharkov on 11 March. This led to four days of
house-to-house fighting before Kharkov was recaptured by the SS Division
Leibstandarte on 15 March. The German forces recaptured Belgorod two days
later, creating the salient which in July 1943 would lead to the Battle of
Kursk. The German offensive cost the Red Army an estimated 90,000 casualties.
The house-to-house fighting in Kharkov was also particularly bloody for the
German SS Panzer Corps, which had suffered approximately 4,300 men killed and
wounded by the time operations ended in mid-March.
At the start of 1943, the German
Wehrmacht faced a crisis as Soviet forces encircled and reduced the German 6th
Army in the Battle of Stalingrad and expanded their Winter Campaign towards the
Don River. On 2 February 1943 the 6th Army's commanding officers surrendered,
and an estimated 90,000 men were taken prisoner by the Red Army. Total German
losses at the Battle of Stalingrad, excluding prisoners, were between 120,000
and 150,000. Throughout 1942 German casualties totaled around 1.9 million
personnel, and by the start of 1943 the Wehrmacht was around 470,000 men below
full strength on the Eastern Front. At the beginning of Operation Barbarossa,
the Wehrmacht was equipped with around 3,300 tanks; by 23 January only 495
tanks, mostly of older types, remained operational along the entire length of
the Soviet–German front. As the forces of the Don Front were destroying the
German forces in Stalingrad, the Red Army's command (Stavka) ordered the Soviet
forces to conduct a new offensive, which encompassed the entire southern wing
of the Soviet–German front from Voronezh to Rostov.
On 2 February, the Red Army
launched Operation Star, threatening the cities of Belgorod, Kharkiv and Kursk.
A Soviet drive, spearheaded by four tank corps organized under
Lieutenant-General Markian Popov, pierced the German front by crossing the
Donets River and pressing into the German rear. On 15 February, two fresh
Soviet tank corps threatened the city of Zaporizhia on the Dnieper River, which
controlled the last major road to Rostov and housed the headquarters of Army
Group South and Luftflotte 4 (Air Fleet Four). Despite Adolf Hitler's orders to
hold the city, Kharkov was abandoned by German forces and the city was
recaptured by the Red Army on 16 February. Hitler immediately flew to
Manstein's headquarters at Zaporizhia. Manstein informed him that an immediate
counterattack on Kharkov would be fruitless, but that he could successfully
attack the overextended Soviet flank with his five Panzer corps, and recapture
the city later. On 19 February Soviet armored units broke through the German
lines and approached the city. In view of the worsening situation, Hitler gave
Manstein operational freedom. When Hitler departed, the Soviet forces were only
some 30 kilometers (19 mi) away from the airfield.
In conjunction with Operation Star
the Red Army also launched Operation Gallop south of Star, pushing the
Wehrmacht away from the Donets, taking Voroshilovgrad and Izium, worsening the
German situation further. By this time Stavka believed it could decide the war
in the southwest Russian SFSR and eastern Ukrainian SSR, expecting total
victory.
The surrender of the German 6th
Army at Stalingrad freed six Soviet armies, under the command of Konstantin
Rokossovsky, which were refitted and reinforced by the 2nd Tank Army and the
70th Army. These forces were repositioned between the junction of German Army
Groups Center and South. Known to the Soviet forces as the Kharkov and Donbas
operations, the offensive sought to surround and destroy German forces in the
Orel salient, cross the Desna River and surround and destroy German Army Group
Center. Originally planned to begin between 12 and 15 February, deployment
problems forced Stavka to push the start date back to 25 February. Meanwhile,
the Soviet 60th Army pushed the German Second Army's 4th Panzer Division away
from Kursk, while the Soviet 13th Army forced the Second Panzer Army to turn on
its flank. This opened a 60 kilometers (37 mi) breach between these two German
forces, shortly to be exploited by Rokossovsky's offensive. While the Soviet
14th and 48th Armies attacked the Second Panzer Army's right flank, making
minor gains, Rokossovsky launched his offensive on 25 February, breaking
through German lines and threatening to surround and cut off the German Second
Panzer Army and the Second Army, to the south. Unexpected German resistance
began to slow the operation considerably, offering Rokossovsky only limited
gains on the left flank of his attack and in the center. Elsewhere, the Soviet
2nd Tank Army had successfully penetrated 160 kilometers (99 mi) of the German
rear, along the left flank of the Soviet offensive, increasing the length of
the army's flank by an estimated 100 kilometers (62 mi).
While the Soviet offensive
continued, Field Marshal von Manstein was able to put the SS Panzer Corps – now
reinforced by the 3rd SS Panzer Division – under the command of the 4th Panzer
Army, while Hitler agreed to release seven understrength panzer and motorized
divisions for the impending counteroffensive. The 4th Air Fleet, under the
command of Field Marshal Wolfram von Richthofen, was able to regroup and
increase the number of daily sorties from an average of 350 in January to 1,000
in February, providing German forces strategic air superiority. On 20 February,
the Red Army was perilously close to Zaporizhia, signaling the beginning of the
German counterattack, known to the German forces as the Donets Campaign.
Between 13 January and 3 April
1943, an estimated 210,000 Red Army soldiers took part in what was known as the
Voronezh–Kharkov Offensive. In all, an estimated 6,100,000 Soviet soldiers were
committed to the entire Eastern Front, with another 659,000 out of action with
wounds. In comparison, the Germans could account for 2,988,000 personnel on the
Eastern Front. As a result, the Red Army deployed around twice as many
personnel as the Wehrmacht in early February. As a result of Soviet
over-extension and the casualties they had taken during their offensive, at the
beginning of Manstein's counterattack the Germans could achieve a tactical
superiority in numbers, including the number of tanks present – for example,
Manstein's 350 tanks outnumbered Soviet armor almost seven to one at the point
of contact, and were far better supplied with fuel.
At the time of the counterattack,
Manstein could count on the 4th Panzer Army, composed of XLVIII Panzer Corps,
the SS Panzer Corps and the First Panzer Army, with the XL and LVII Panzer
Corps. The XLVIII Panzer Corps was composed of the 6th, 11th and 17th Panzer
Divisions, while the SS Panzer Corps was organized with the 1st SS, 2nd SS and
3rd SS Panzer Division. In early February, the combined strength of the SS
Panzer Corps was an estimated 20,000 soldiers. The 4th Panzer Army and the
First Panzer Army were situated south of the Red Army's bulge into German
lines, with the First Panzer Army to the east of the 4th Panzer Army. The SS
Panzer Corps was deployed along the northern edge of the bulge, on the northern
front of Army Group South.
The Germans were able to amass
around 160,000 men against the 210,000 Red Army soldiers. The German Wehrmacht
was understrength, especially after continuous operations between June 1942 and
February 1943, to the point where Hitler appointed a committee made up of Field
Marshal Wilhelm Keitel, Martin Bormann and Hans Lammers, to recruit 800,000 new
able-bodied men – half of whom would come from "nonessential
industries". The effects of this recruitment were not seen until around
May 1943, when the German armed forces were at their highest strength since the
beginning of the war, with 9.5 million personnel.
By the start of 1943 Germany's
armored forces had sustained heavy casualties. It was unusual for a Panzer
division to field more than 100 tanks, and most averaged only 70–80 serviceable
tanks at any given time. After the fighting around Kharkov, Heinz Guderian
embarked on a program to bring Germany's mechanized forces up to strength.
Despite his efforts, a German panzer division could only count on an estimated
10,000–11,000 personnel, out of an authorized strength of 13,000–17,000. Only
by June did a panzer division begin to field between 100 and 130 tanks each. SS
divisions were normally better equipped, with an estimated 150 tanks, a
battalion of self-propelled assault guns and enough half-tracks to motorize
most of its infantry and reconnaissance soldiers – and these had an authorized
strength of an estimated 19,000 personnel. At this time, the bulk of Germany's
armor was still composed of Panzer IIIs and Panzer IVs, although the SS
Division Das Reich had been outfitted with a number of Tiger I tanks.
The 4th Panzer Army was commanded
by General Hermann Hoth, while the First Panzer Army fell under the leadership
of General Eberhard von Mackensen. The 6th, 11th and 17th Panzer Divisions were
commanded by Generals Walther von Hünersdorff, Hermann Balck and Fridolin von
Senger und Etterlin, respectively. The SS Panzer Corps was commanded by General
Paul Hausser, who also had SS Division Totenkopf under his command.
Since the beginning of the Red
Army's exploitation of Germany's Army Group South's defenses in late January
and early February, the fronts involved included the Bryansk, Voronezh and
Southwestern Fronts. These were under the command of Generals M. A. Reiter,
Filipp Golikov and Nikolai Vatutin, respectively. On 25 February, Marshal
Rokossovsky's Central Front also joined the battle. These were positioned in
such a way that Reiter's Briansk Front was on the northern flank of Army Group
South, while Voronezh was directly opposite of Kursk, and the Southwestern
Front was located opposite their opponents. Central Front was deployed between
the Briansk and Voronezh Fronts, to exploit the success of both of these Soviet
units, which had created a gap in the defenses of the German Second Panzer
Army. This involved an estimated 500,000 soldiers, while around 346,000
personnel were involved in the defense of Kharkov after the beginning of the
German counterstroke.
Like their German counterparts,
Soviet divisions were also seriously understrength. For example, divisions in
the 40th Army averaged 3,500–4,000 men each, while the 69th Army fielded some
divisions which could only count on 1,000–1,500 soldiers. Some divisions had as
little as 20–50 mortars to provide fire support. This shortage in manpower and
equipment led Vatutin's Southwestern Front to request over 19,000 soldiers and
300 tanks, while it was noted that the Voronezh Front had only received 1,600
replacements since the beginning of operations in 1943. By the time Manstein
launched his counteroffensive, the Voronezh Front had lost so much manpower and
had overextended itself to the point where it could no longer offer assistance
to the Southwestern Front, south of it. The 1st Czechoslovak Independent Field
Battalion, commanded by Ludvík Svoboda, was also attached to the Soviet forces
and subsequently participated in fighting alongside Soviet forces at Sokolov.
What was known to the Germans as
the Donets Campaign took place between 19 February and 15 March 1943.
Originally, Manstein foresaw a three-stage offensive. The first stage
encompassed the destruction of the Soviet spearheads, which had over-extended
themselves through their offensive. The second stage included the recapture of
Kharkov, while the third stage was designed to attack the Soviet forces at
Kursk, in conjunction with Army Group Center – this final stage was ultimately
called off due to the advent of the Soviet spring thaw (Rasputitsa) and Army
Group Center's reluctance to participate.
On 19 February, Hausser's SS Panzer
Corps was ordered to strike southwards, to provide a screen for the 4th Panzer
Army's attack. Simultaneously, Army Detachment Hollidt was ordered to contain
the continuing Soviet efforts to break through German lines. The 1st Panzer
Army was ordered to drive north in an attempt to cut off and destroy Popov's
Mobile Group, using accurate intelligence on Soviet strength which allowed the
Wehrmacht to pick and choose their engagements and bring about tactical
numerical superiority. The 1st and 4th Panzer Armies were also ordered to
attack the overextended Soviet 6th Army and 1st Guards Army. Between 20 and 23
February, the 1st SS Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler (LSSAH) cut through
the 6th Army's flank, eliminating the Soviet threat to the Dnieper River and
successfully surrounding and destroying a number of Red Army units south of the
Samara River. The SS Division Das Reich advanced in a northeastern direction,
while the SS Division Totenkopf was put into action on 22 February, advancing
parallel to Das Reich. These two divisions successfully cut the supply lines to
the Soviet spearheads. First Panzer Army was able to surround and pocket
Popov's Mobile Group by 24 February, although a sizable contingent of Soviet
troops managed to escape north. On 22 February, alarmed by the success of the
German counterattack, the Soviet Stavka ordered the Voronezh Front to shift the
3rd Tank Army and 69th Army south, in an effort to alleviate pressure on the
Southwestern Front and destroy German forces in the Krasnograd area.
The Red Army's 3rd Tank Army began
to engage German units south of Kharkov, performing a holding action while
Manstein's offensive continued. By 24 February, the Wehrmacht had pulled the
Großdeutschland Division off the line, leaving the 167th and 320th infantry
divisions, a regiment from the Totenkopf division and elements from the
Leibstandarte division to defend the Western edge of the bulge created by the
Soviet offensive. Between 24 and 27 February, the 3rd Tank Army and 69th Army
continued to attack this portion of the German line, but without much success.
With supporting Soviet units stretched thin, the attack began to falter. On 25
February, Rokossovky's Central Front launched their offensive between the
German Second and 2nd Panzer Armies, with encouraging results along the German
flanks, but struggling to keep the same pace in the center of the attack. As
the offensive progressed, the attack on the German right flank also began to
stagnate in the face of increased resistance, while the attack on the left
began to over-extend itself.
In the face of German success
against the Southwestern Front, including attempts by the Soviet 6th Army
breaking out of the encirclement, Stavka ordered the Voronezh Front to
relinquish control of the 3rd Tank Army to the Southwestern Front. To ease the
transition, the 3rd Tank Army gave two rifle divisions to the 69th Army, and
attacked south in a bid to destroy the SS Panzer Corps. Low on fuel and
ammunition after the march south, the 3rd Tank Army's offensive was postponed
until 3 March. The 3rd Tank Army was harassed and severely damaged by
continuous German aerial attacks with Junkers Ju 87 Stuka dive bombers.
Launching its offensive on 3 March, the 3rd Tank Army's 15th Tank Corps struck
into advancing units of the 3rd SS Panzer Division and immediately went on the
defensive. Ultimately, the 3rd SS was able to pierce the 15th Tank Corps' lines
and link up with other units of the same division advancing north, successfully
encircling the Soviet tank corps. The 3rd Tank Army's 12th Tank Corps was also
forced on the defensive immediately, after SS divisions Leibstandarte and Das
Reich threatened to cut off the 3rd Tank Army's supply route. By 5 March, the
attacking 3rd Tank Army had been badly mauled, with only a small number of men
able to escape northwards, and was forced to erect a new defensive line.
The destruction of Popov's Mobile
Group and the Soviet 6th Army during the early stages of the German
counterattack created a large gap between Soviet lines. Taking advantage of
uncoordinated and piecemeal Soviet attempts to plug this gap, Manstein ordered
a continuation of the offensive towards Kharkov. Between 1–5 March the 4th
Panzer Army, including the SS Panzer Corps, covered 80 kilometers (50 mi) and
positioned itself only about 16 kilometers (9.9 mi) south of Kharkov. By 6
March, the SS Division Leibstandarte made a bridgehead over the Mosh River,
opening the road to Kharkov. The success of Manstein's counterattack forced
Stavka to stop Rokossovsky's offensive.
Richthofen's Luftflotte 4 played a
decisive role in the success of the German counteroffensive. While
simultaneously carrying out airlift operations in the Kuban bridgehead, it
increased its daily sortie average from 350 in January to 1,000 in February,
providing the army with excellent close air support and air interdiction. It
relentlessly attacked Soviet troop columns, tanks, fortified positions, as well
as supply depots and columns. On 22 February, Richthofen noted with
satisfaction that the number of sorties flown that day was 1,500. On 23
February the number was 1,200. Richthofen personally directed the major air
attacks in consultation with the army generals and his subordinate air corps
commanders. In order to avoid dissipating his strength, he concentrated all
available forces in a single Schwerpunkt, including the concentration of
multiple air commands on the same target at the same time. A British government
analysis in 1948 praised Richthofen's skill during the Third Battle of Kharkov,
singling out his constant use of the principles of "extreme flexibility,
coordination and concentration".
While Rokossovsky's Central Front
continued its offensive against the German Second Army, which had by now been
substantially reinforced with fresh divisions, the renewed German offensive
towards Kharkov took it by surprise. On 7 March, Manstein made the decision to
press on towards Kharkov, despite the coming of the spring thaw. Instead of
attacking east of Kharkov, Manstein decided to orient the attack towards the
west of Kharkov and then encircle it from the north. The Großdeutschland
Panzergrenadier Division had also returned to the front, and threw its weight
into the attack, threatening to split the 69th Army and the remnants of the 3rd
Tank Army. Between 8–9 March, the SS Panzer Corps completed its drive north,
splitting the 69th and 40th Soviet Armies, and on 9 March it turned east to
complete its encirclement. Despite attempts by the Stavka to curtail the German
advance by throwing in the freshly released 19th Rifle Division and 186th Tank
Brigade, the German drive continued.
On 9 March, the Soviet 40th Army
counterattacked against the Großdeutschland Division in a final attempt to
restore communications with the 3rd Tank Army. This counterattack was caught by
the expansion of the German offensive towards Kharkov on 10 March. That same
day, the 4th Panzer Army issued orders to the SS Panzer Corps to take Kharkov
as soon as possible, prompting Hausser to order an immediate attack on the city
by the three SS Panzer divisions. Das Reich would come from the West, LSSAH
would attack from north, and Totenkopf would provide a protective screen along
the north and northwestern flanks. Despite attempts by General Hoth to order
Hausser to stick to the original plan, the SS Panzer Corps commander decided to
continue with his own plan of attack on the city, although Soviet defenses
forced him to postpone the attack until the next day. Manstein issued an order
to continue outflanking the city, although leaving room for a potential attack
on Kharkov if there was little Soviet resistance, but Hausser decided to
disregard the order and continue with his own assault.
Early morning 11 March, the LSSAH
launched a two-prong attack into northern Kharkov. The 2nd Panzergrenadier
Regiment, advancing from the Northwest, split up into two columns advancing
towards northern Kharkov on either side of the Belgorod-Kharkov railroad. The
2nd Battalion, on the right side of the railroad, attacked the city's Severnyi
Post district, meeting heavy resistance and advancing only to the Severenyi
railway yard by the end of the day. On the opposite side of the railroad, the
1st Battalion struck at the district of Alexeyevka, meeting a T-34-led Soviet
counterattack which drove part of the 1st Battalion back out of the city. Only
with aerial and artillery support provided by Ju 87 Stuka dive bombers and StuG
assault guns were the German infantry able to battle their way into the city. A
flanking attack from the rear finally allowed the German forces to achieve a
foothold in that area of the city. Simultaneously, the 1st SS Panzergrenadier
Regiment, with armor attached from a separate unit, attacked down the main road
from Belgorod, fighting an immediate counterattack produced over the Kharkov's
airport, coming on their left flank. Fighting their way past Soviet T-34s, this
German contingent was able to lodge itself into Kharkov's northern suburbs.
From the northeast, another contingent of German infantry, armor and
self-propelled guns attempted to take control of the road exits to the cities
of Rogan and Chuhuiv. This attack penetrated deeper into Kharkov, but low on
fuel the armor was forced to entrench itself and turn to the defensive.
Das Reich division attacked on the
same day, along the west side of Kharkov. After penetrating into the city's
Zalyutino district, the advance was stopped by a deep anti-tank ditch, lined
with Soviet defenders, including anti-tank guns. A Soviet counterattack was
repulsed after a bloody firefight. A detachment of the division fought its way
to the southern approaches of the city, cutting off the road to Merefa. At
around 15:00, Hoth ordered Hausser to immediately disengage with SS Das Reich,
and instead redeploy to cut off escaping Soviet troops. Instead, Hausser sent a
detachment from SS Totenkopf division for this task and informed Hoth that the
risk of disengaging with SS Das Reich was far too great. On the night of 11–12
March, a breakthrough element crossed the anti-tank ditch, taking the Soviet
defenders by surprise, and opening a path for tanks to cross. This allowed Das
Reich to advance to the city's main railway station, which would be the
farthest this division would advance into the city. Hoth repeated his order at
00:15, on 12 March, and Hausser replied as he had replied on 11 March. A third
attempt by Hoth was obeyed, and Das Reich disengaged, using a corridor opened
by LSSAH to cross northern Kharkov and redeploy east of the city.
On 12 March, the LSSAH made
progress into the city's center, breaking through the staunch Soviet defenses
in the northern suburbs and began a house to house fight towards the center. By
the end of the day, the division had reached a position just two blocks north
of Dzerzhinsky Square. The 2nd Panzergrenadier Regiment's 2nd Battalion was
able to surround the square, after taking heavy casualties from Soviet snipers
and other defenders, by evening. When taken, the square was renamed "Platz
der Leibstandarte". That night, 2nd Panzergrenadier Regiment's 3rd
Battalion, under the command of Joachim Peiper linked up with the 2nd Battalion
in Dzerzhinsky Square and attacked southwards, crossing the Kharkiv River and
creating a bridgehead, opening the road to Moscow Avenue. Meanwhile, the
division's left wing reached the junction of the Volchansk and Chuhuiv exit
roads and went on the defensive, fighting off a number of Soviet
counterattacks.
The next day, the LSSAH struck
southwards towards the Kharkov River from Peiper's bridgehead, clearing Soviet
resistance block by block. In a bid to trap the city's defenders in the center,
the 1st Battalion of the 1st SS Panzergrenadier Regiment re-entered the city
using the Volchansk exit road. At the same time, Peiper's forces were able to
breakout south, suffering from bitter fighting against a tenacious Soviet
defense, and link up with the division's left wing at the Volchansk and Chuhuiv
road junction. Although the majority of Das Reich had, by now, disengaged from
the city, a single Panzergrenadier Regiment remained to clear the southwestern
corner of the city, eliminating resistance by the end of the day. This
effectively put two-thirds of the city under German control.
Fighting in the city began to wind
down on 14 March. The day was spent with the LSSAH clearing the remnants of
Soviet resistance, pushing east along a broad front. By the end of the day, the
entire city was declared to be back in German hands. Despite the declaration
that the city had fallen, fighting continued over the next two days, as German
units cleared the remnants of resistance in the tractor works factory complex,
in the southern outskirts of the city.
Army Group South's Donets Campaign
had cost the Red Army over 80,000 personnel casualties. Of these troops lost,
an estimated 45,200 were killed or went missing, while another 41,200 were
wounded. Between April and July 1943, the Red Army took its time to rebuild its
forces in the area and prepare for an eventual renewal of the German offensive,
known as the Battle of Kursk. Overall German casualties are more difficult to
come by but clues are provided by examining the casualties of the SS Panzer
Corps, taking into consideration that the Waffen-SS divisions were frequently
deployed where the fighting was expected to be the harshest. By 17 March, it is
estimated that the SS Panzer Corps had lost around 44% of its fighting
strength, including around 160 officers and about 4,300 enlisted personnel.
As the SS Panzer Corps began to
emerge from the city, they engaged Soviet units positioned directly southwest
of the city, including the 17th NKVD Brigade, 19th Rifle Division and 25th
Guards Rifle Division. Attempts by the Red Army to re-establish communication
with the remnants of the 3rd Tank Army continued, although in vain. On 14–15
March, these forces were given permission to withdraw to the northern Donets
River. The Soviet 40th and 69th armies had been engaged since 13 March with the
Großdeutschland Panzergrenadier Division, and had been split by the German
drive. After the fall of Kharkov, the Soviet defense of the Donets had
collapsed, allowing Manstein's forces to drive to Belgorod on 17 March, and
take it by the next day. Muddy weather and exhaustion forced Manstein's
counterstroke to end soon thereafter.
The military historian Bevin
Alexander wrote that the Third Battle of Kharkov was "the last great
victory of German arms in the eastern front", while the military historian
Robert Citino referred to the operation as "not a victory at all". Borrowing
from a chapter title of the book Manstein by Mungo Melvin, Citino described the
battle as a "brief glimpse of victory". According to Citino, the
Donets Campaign was a successful counteroffensive against an overextended and
overconfident enemy and did not amount to a strategic victory.
Following the German success at
Kharkov, Hitler was presented with two options. The first, known as the
"backhand method" was to wait for the inevitable renewal of the
Soviet offensive and conduct another operation similar to that of Kharkov –
allowing the Red Army to take ground, extend itself and then counterattack and
surround it. The second, or the "forehand method", encompassed a
major German offensive by Army Groups South and Center against the protruding
Kursk salient. Because of Hitler's obsession with preserving the front, he
chose the "forehand method", which led to the Battle of Kursk.
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Defense Technical Information Center. U.S. Army War College: 15.
Further Reading
Heiber, Helmut; David M. Glantz (2003). Hitler and his
Generals: Military Conferences 1942–1945. New York, NY: Enigma Books.
Mawdsley, Evan (2005). Thunder in the East: the Nazi-Soviet
War, 1941–1945. Hodder Arnold. p. 502.
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Third Battle of Kharkov. |
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Cropped from previous map. |
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Operation Star, Soviet advance February 2-10, 1943. |
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Operation Star, Soviet advances between 10 and 14 February 1943. |
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Operation Star, Soviet advance February 14-23, 1943. |
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Third Battle of Kharkov, February 1943. Men of 1 Panzer Regiment of the Waffen-SS Division "Leibstandarte-SS Adolf Hitler" with a Marder III tank destroyer and infantry in snow camouflage overalls. |
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Field Marshal Erich von Manstein, commander of Army Group South at the time of the battle. |
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SS-Standartenführer Fritz Witt, the commander of a SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment and a recipient of the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves, advances in the cover of an armored personnel carrier along Sumskaya street in Kharkov. The city was recaptured by the Waffen-SS on March 14, 1943. |
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Two infantrymen of the "Grossdeutschland" Division in winter camouflage clothing covering a ruined house near Belgorod, armed with captured Soviet submachine guns. 1943. |
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Soldiers of the "Grossdeutschland" Division, in winter camouflage clothing, firing an 8 cm Granatwerfer from the cover of a hut, Belgorod, 1943. |
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Artillerymen of the "Grossdeutschland" Division with schwere Feldhaubitze 18 in a position, in front an anti-aircraft machine gun, 1943. |
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Schwere Panzer-Abteilung 502 of the Waffen SS Division "Das Reich" with the new Panzer VI (Tiger I) during demonstration and testing, April 1943. |
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Schwere Panzer-Abteilung 502 of the Waffen SS Division "Das Reich" with the new Panzer VI (Tiger I) during demonstration and testing, April 1943. |
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Heinrich Himmler (left) inspects a captured Soviet T-34/76 tank marked with Balkenkreuzen, SS-Division "Das Reich", near Kharkov, April 1943. |
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Oberscharführer of the Waffen-SS Hermann Dahlke, Kp.Truppfuhrer in the 3./SS-Pz.G.R. 1st of the 1st SS Panzer Division "Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler", Knight's Cross awarded on March 3, 1943, near Kharkov, March 1943. |
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SS-Standartenfuhrer Witt standing at a car and reading a map, Kharkov, March 1943. |
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Sturmbannfuhrer of the Waffen-SS Kurt Meyer, commander of SS Aufkl.Abt.1 of the 1st SS Panzer Division "Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler", near Kharkov, February/March 1943. |
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Oberscharführer of the Waffen-SS Hans Reimling, platoon commander in the 2nd/ SS-Pz.Rgt.1 of the 1st SS-Panzer-Division "Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler", Knight's Cross awarded on 28 February 1943, near Kharkov, February/March 1943. |
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Orders awarded to soldiers of the Waffen-SS Division "Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler" by Sturmbannfuhrer Schöneberger and Sturmbannfuhrer Wunsch, near Kharkov, March 1943. |
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Soldiers of the Waffen SS Division "Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler" after the award ceremony, near Kharkov, March 1943 |
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Panzer IIIs with mounted infantry of the Waffen-SS Totenkopf Division in the suburbs of Kharkov, March 1943. |
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Members of the Waffen-SS Division "Das Reich" on Panzer IVs in the recaptured city, Kharkov, March 1943. |
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Sturmbannführer Sylvester Stadler, portrait taken during the battles for Kharkov, March 1943. |
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After the Battle of Kharkov Knight's Crosses awarded to Krumm, Tychsen, Worthmann, Stadler, Kaiser and Weiss of the Waffen-SS Division "Das Reich" by Division Commander SS-Obergruppenfuhrer Walter Krüger, standing on a Panzer VI "Tiger I", near Kharkov, 20 April 1943. |
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After the Battle of Kharkov Knight's Crosses awarded to Krumm, Tychsen, Worthmann, Stadler, Kaiser and Weiss of the Waffen-SS Division "Das Reich" by Division Commander SS-Obergruppenfuhrer Walter Krüger, standing on a Panzer VI "Tiger I", near Kharkov, 20 April 1943. |
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Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler disembarking from an Fw 200 during a visit and inspection of the Tiger I heavy tanks of the schweren Pz. Abt. 502 of the Waffen-SS-Div. "Das Reich", near Kharkov, April 1943. |
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Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler inspecting the Tiger I heavy tanks of schweren Pz. Abt. 502 der Waffen-SS-Div. "Das Reich". Left to right: Walter Krüger, Heinrich Himmler, Paul Hausser, nerar Kharkov, April 1943. |
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Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler inspecting the Tiger I heavy tanks of schweren Pz. Abt. 502 der Waffen-SS-Div. "Das Reich", near Kharhov, April 1943. |
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Caring for a seriously wounded man in the Battle of Kharkov, March 1943. |
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On 10 March 1943, under heavy security, Hitler flew in to Army Group South's headquarters at Zaporozh'ye, Ukraine. Seen here, Generalfeldmarschall Erich von Manstein is greeting Hitler on the local airfield; on the right are Hans Baur and the Luftwaffe Generalfeldmarschall Wolfram von Richthofen. |
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General Pavel Rybalko in Kharkov, Ukraine, late February 1943. |
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SS Panzergrenadier troops of Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler in Kharkov, March 1943. |
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Grenadiers perched atop German tanks in Kharkov wield their arms with confidence as they head to the center of the city. |
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Jubilant troops celebrate around a piano looted from a home in Kharkov. The German triumph was hard won, but fleeting. |
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SS-Sturmbannführer Georg Bochmann, commander of SS-Pz.-Jäg. Abt. der SS-Division "Totenkopf", April 1943. |
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Waffen-SS MG42 machine gun team preparing to move into the suburbs of Kharkov in March 1943. |
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German armor on a street in Kharkov. |
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Knocked out and abandoned T-34 medium tanks line the streets of Kharkov, Ukraine, February 1943. |
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Moving throughout the streets of Kharkov, 1943. |
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Stug III of Kampfgruppe "Vitte" near Kharkov in 1943. |
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German armor, Kharkov, 1943. |
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Kharkov, 1943. |