18th Army (Soviet Union)

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18th Army
Active1941–1946
Country Soviet Union
BranchRed Army flag.svg Red Army
Sizeseveral corps or, later, divisions
Part ofFront or Military District
EngagementsOperation Barbarossa
Moravian-Ostrava Offensive
Operation München
Rostov Defensive Operation
Battle of Rostov (1941)
Mius-Front
Kerch–Eltigen Operation
Zhitomir–Berdichev Offensive
Lvov–Sandomierz Offensive
Battle of the Dukla Pass
Prague Offensive

The 18th Army of the Soviet Union's Red Army was formed on 21 June 1941 on the basis of HQ Kharkov Military District and armies of the Kiev Special Military District.

The Army's commander in 1941 was General-Lieutenant Andrew Kirilovych Smirnov. The Army composition on the beginning of the war was:

  • [1]
    • , , , 64th Fighter Air Division and 45th Mixed Air Division
  • 17th Rifle Corps[2][3]
    • 96th Mountain Rifle Division, 60th Mountain Rifle Division, 164th Rifle Division
  • [1]
    • , 218th Mechanised Division
  • [1]

It was caught soon after the start of Operation Barbarossa in 1941 in a huge encirclement south of Kiev along with the 6th Army and 12th Armies. This encirclement was part of the Battle of Uman. A further formation was shattered during the Battle of the Sea of Azov in September–October 1941.

On 1 October 1943 the army consisted of (8th Guards Rifle Brigade, 81st and 83rd Naval Rifle Brigades), 55th Guards Rifle Division, 89th Rifle Division, , 318th, 414th Rifle Divisions, 107th Rifle Brigade, 255th Naval Infantry Brigade, 10th Guards Separate Antitank Battalion, artillery, armoured forces, and engineers.[4]

As part of Southern, North-Caucasian, Transcaucasian Front, and the 1st and 4th Ukrainian Fronts the 18th Army conducted defensive operations in right-bank Ukraine, participated in Donbass, the Rostov defensive and offensive operations, and in the fight for Caucasus. Based on the experience of the Kerch - Eltigen landing operation, the Army was uniquely identified as 18th Desant Army (Russian: 18-я десантная армия) for amphibious operations, between 15 February and 5 April 1944 around Malaya Zemlya.

For this operation the Army included:[5]

  • 10th Guards Rifle Corps
  • 16th Rifle Corps
  • 176th Rifle Division
  • 318th Rifle Division
  • 5th Guards Tank Brigade
  • also two artillery regiments of the High Command Reserve, a regiment of Guards mortars (multiple rocket launchers), desant detachment of Major Kunikov, and elements of the 255th and 83rd Naval Infantry Brigades, elements of 107th and 165th Rifle Brigades, 31st Desant Regiment, machine gun battalion and 29th Tank Destroyer Regiment, all under command of Army Operational Group Grechkin (commanding officer General-Major А.А. Grechkin).

The Army reverted to its previous designation for the clearing of right-bank Ukraine, Hungary, Poland and Czechoslovakia. For much of this period the 24th Rifle Division served with 18th Army, and the Division was still serving with the Army in May 1945, along with the 17th Rifle Corps (8th and 138th Rifle Divisions) and a Fortified Region.[6]

After World War II, the 18th Army was transformed into a Mountain Army in the territory of the Carpathian Military District and Northern Bukovina. This army was disbanded in May 1946. Some of its elements, along with parts of the 52nd Army were used to form the 8th Mechanised Army.

Commanders[]

  • (June - October 1941), Lieutenant General, killed in action
  • Vladimir Kolpakchi (October - November 1941), Major General
  • (November 1941 - February 1942 and April - October, 19th 1942), Major General
  • I. K. Smirnov (February - April 1942), Lieutenant General
  • Andrei Grechko (October 1942 - January, 5th 1943), Major General
  • A. I. Ryzhov (January - February, 11th 1943), Major General
  • Konstantin Koroteyev (February - March, 16th 1943), Major General
  • Konstantin Leselidze (March 1943 - on February, 6th 1944), Lieutenant General promoted to Colonel General in October 1943
  • (February - November 1944), Lieutenant General
  • (November 1944 - May 1945), Major General, since January 1945 Lieutenant General

Sources and references[]

  1. ^ a b c Том VIII - Книга памяти Украины
  2. ^ samsv.narod.ru
  3. ^ Aberjona Press, Slaughterhouse
  4. ^ BSSA
  5. ^ "ВОВ-60 - 18-я армия". Archived from the original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 15 January 2008.
  6. ^ "Боевой состав Советской Армии на 1 мая 1945 г". Archived from the original on 26 December 2013. Retrieved 30 November 2007.

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