Lvov-Sandomierz Offensive

Lvov-Sandomierz strategic offensive operation
Part of the Eastern Front of World War II

Soviet soldiers advancing in Lvov
Date13 July – 29 August 1944
Location
Result Soviet victory
Belligerents
 Germany
 Hungary
 Soviet Union
Commanders and leaders
Nazi Germany Josef Harpe
Erhard Raus
Walther Nehring
Ferenc Farkas
Otto Dessloch
Soviet Union Ivan Konev
Soviet Union Mikhail Katukov
Soviet Union Pavel Rybalko
Soviet Union Dmitry Lelyushenko
Soviet Union Vasiliy Gordov
Soviet Union Nikolay Pukhov
Soviet Union Kirill Moskalenko
Soviet Union Pavel Kurochkin
Soviet Union Stepan Krasovsky
Units involved

Army Group North Ukraine

1st Ukrainian Front

Strength

Nazi Germany

440,512 personnel in total[1] (as of 1 July 1944)

420 AFVs
1,000 aircraft[2]
1,002,200 men[3]
1,979 AFVs
11,265 guns
Casualties and losses

Nazi Germany
55,000 killed, missing and captured
136,860 overall[4]

Casualty reports of the army group for 11 July-31 August 1944[5]:
- 16,438 killed
- 69,895 wounded
- 57,500 missing
- 143,833 in total

30,000 killed, wounded and missing in total[6]
65,001 killed, missing or captured
224,295 wounded
289,296 overall
1,269 tanks and SP guns
289 aircraft[3]

The Lvov–Sandomierz offensive or Lvov–Sandomierz strategic offensive operation (Russian: Львовско-Сандомирская стратегическая наступательная операция) was a major Red Army operation to force the German troops from Ukraine and Eastern Poland. Launched in mid-July 1944, the operation was successfully completed by the end of August.

The LvovSandomierz offensive is generally overshadowed by the overwhelming successes of the concurrently conducted Operation Bagration that led to the destruction of Army Group Centre. However, most of the Red Army and Red Air Force resources were allocated, not to Bagration's Belorussian operations, but the Lvov-Sandomierz operations.[7] The campaign was conducted as Maskirovka. By concentrating in southern Poland and Ukraine, the Soviets drew German mobile reserves southward, leaving Army Group Centre vulnerable to a concentrated assault.[8] When the Soviets launched their Bagration offensive against Army Group Center, it would create a crisis in the eastern German front, which would then force the powerful German Panzer forces back to the central front, leaving the Soviets free to then pursue their objectives in seizing western Ukraine, the Vistula bridgeheads, and gaining a foothold in Romania.[9]

The offensive was composed of three smaller operations:

In Soviet propaganda, this offensive was listed as one of Stalin's ten blows.

  1. ^ OKH Organisationsabteilung (I). Nr. I/8897-98/44 g. Kdos. Notiz. Betr.: Auswertung der Stärkemeldungen 1.7.1944. Verbände und Fechtende Heerestruppen. Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv (BA-MA) RH 2/1341, fol. 36.
  2. ^ Olsen, Van Creveld, "The Evolution of Operational Art: From Napoleon to the Present." p. 85
  3. ^ a b Glantz (1995), p. 299
  4. ^ Frieser (2007), p. 711-718
  5. ^ Heeresarzt 10-Day Casualty Reports for Heeresgruppe Nordukraine (11.7-31.8.44) in Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv (BA-MA) RW 6/559.
  6. ^ Frieser, Karl-Heinz. The Eastern Front 1943-1944: The War in the East and on the Neighbouring Fronts. Oxford University Press, 2017, p. 862.
  7. ^ Watt 2008, p. 687-688.
  8. ^ Watt 2008, pp. 683-684
  9. ^ Watt 2008, pp. 695-700.

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