1st Czechoslovak Army Corps in the Soviet Union explained

Unit Name:1st Czechoslovak Army Corps
První československý armádní sbor
Prvý československý armádny zbor
Country: Czechoslovakia
Allegiance: Czechoslovak government-in-exile
Branch: Red Army
Type:Corps
Size:16,171 (September 1944)[1]
Command Structure:1st Ukrainian Front, later 4th Ukrainian Front
Motto:"Věrni zůstaneme"
Battles:Eastern Front (World War II)
Commander5:Jan Kratochvíl (1944)
Ludvík Svoboda (1944-1945)
Karel Klapálek (1945)

The 1st Czechoslovak Army Corps (Czech: První československý armádní sbor, Slovak: Prvý československý armádny zbor), also known as Svoboda's Army[2] (Czech: Svobodova armáda, after its commander Ludvík Svoboda), was a military formation of the Czechoslovak Army in exile fighting on the Eastern Front alongside the Soviet Red Army in World War II.[3]

The corps was the largest of the Czechoslovak units that fought on the Soviet side on the Eastern Front.

History of Czechoslovak military in the USSR

The 1st Czechoslovak Independent Field Battalion, formed in Buzuluk in the Urals, was the first foreign unit fighting alongside the Red Army in Soviet Union. It was formed from former members of the Czechoslovak Legion, Czechoslovak citizens (mostly refugees) living in the Soviet Union, Slovak prisoners-of-war and defectors, and Volhynian Czechs (Soviet citizens of Czech origin). Lieutenant-colonel Ludvík Svoboda was appointed to become the commander of the unit on 15 July 1942.

Despite the plans of the Czechoslovak government-in-exile in the United Kingdom, who intended to keep the unit intact to help with the future liberation of the Czechoslovakia, the officers of the battalion tried to bring the unit into the fight as soon as possible. After sending a personal letter to Joseph Stalin, they eventually succeed and the battalion was sent into action. Notably, it took part in the defensive battle of Sokolovo, a part of the larger Third Battle of Kharkov, in March 1943. At the time, it was one of the most well armed infantry battalions on the East Front – fully equipped with automatic guns and semiautomatic infantry weapons. However, the battalion lacked heavier anti-tank weapons and artillery, which was to be provided by supporting Soviet units. Because of this, during the battle, when facing parts of the German armored division, the battalion suffered heavy losses and was later withdrawn from the front line.[4]

In May 1943, the remnants of the 1st Czechoslovak Independent Field Battalion and the 1st Czechoslovak Reserve Regiment were reorganized into 1st Czechoslovak Independent Brigade. The reinforcements were largely Rusyn and Ukrainian[5] prisoners released from the Gulag camps. The brigade played a key role in the 1943 battle of Kiev, and its troops were some of the first to reach the center of the Ukrainian capital city. The brigade suffered only low losses: 33 dead and missing, 82 wounded. At the time the brigade had a strength of 3,348 personnel.[6]

Formation

Large parts of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic had been liberated by 1943 and 1944, allowing the Czechoslovak units to recruit Volhynian Czechs who were technically Soviet citizens. Around 12,000 enlisted, becoming the core of the post-war Czechoslovak Army.[7] At the same time, thousands of Slovak prisoners of war, captured or deserted from Slovak Army, were regrouped and trained as the new parachute unit. This enabled to build the army corps.

The corps was created on April 10, 1944, at Chernivtsi and his headquarters moved to Sadagura. The 1st Czechoslovak Army Corps consisted of three (later four) infantry brigades and of tank, artillery, engineer and other support units. Some of these units were later reorganized into higher independent units, such as Tank Brigade and Mixed Air Division. While most of the Czechoslovak units served as part of the Corps, some may have been detached for operations with Red Army formations and units as required.[8]

In late autumn 1944, when parts of Czechoslovakia (Ruthenia and eastern Slovakia) were already liberated, a new infantry brigade was formed and the support units transformed into higher units.

Combat history

By the time that the Soviet offensive entered Czechoslovakia, it had grown to corps size. In the autumn of 1944, 13,000 members of the corps participated in the Battle of Dukla Pass, and after fierce fighting they finally set foot on their native soil once more. Czechoslovak troops were also involved in the Prague Offensive, the last major World War II battle in Europe.

The Corps initially served within the 1st Ukrainian Front's 38th Army.

From September 4, 1944, as the part of 38th Army the Corps participated in the East Carpathian Strategic Offensive Operation (8 September 1944 – 28 September 1944). During this operation, from 14,900 personnel the Corps suffered a loss of 1,630 dead and 4,069 wounded.[9] While majority of the Corps fought in the Dukla Pass, the 2nd Parachute Brigade and the 1st Czechoslovak Independent Fighter Air Regiment were relocated behind the enemy lines as the direct support to the Slovak National Uprising. After the Uprising was suppressed, the Fighter Regiment was withdrawn, while the soldiers of 2nd Parachute Brigade continued in partisan warfare in Slovak mountains until the battlefront came to central Slovakia.

In November 1944 Corps was reassigned to 4th Ukrainian Front's, 1st Guards Army, only the artillery units saw the action within the 1st Ukrainian Front's in the Soviet offensive near Jasło. As part of 4th Ukrainian Front, 18th Army the Corps took part in the secondary battles until the end of the war and participated in the liberation of central Slovakia and east Moravia. However the 1st Tank Brigade, 1st Czechoslovak Mixed Air Division and some infantry units were reassigned again to the 1st Ukrainian Front's 38th Army and fought in the hardest fights in the Moravian-Ostrava Operation. At the end of the war the remnants of the Tank Brigade formed so called Fast Group in the Prague Strategic Offensive Operation (6 May 1945 -11 May 1945) during which the Corps suffered 112 killed, and 421 wounded from a total of 48,400 personnel.

The First Czechoslovak Army Corps ceased to exist shortly after the victorious end of the war. On 25 May 1945, the provisional organization of the Czechoslovak armed forces was approved, according to which there was a reorganization of the Czechoslovak army in peacetime. Since the end of the May 1945 the Corps was reorganized into the 1st Czechoslovak Army and its brigades were reorganized into respective divisions.

Commanders

The Corps's initial commander was Brigade General Jan Kratochvíl, who was replaced by Brigade General Ludvík Svoboda during the initial phase of Battle of Dukla Pass. The decision was made by Soviet authorities (Marshal Konev) but was subsequently confirmed by Czechoslovak government in London. Towards the end of the war Svoboda became Minister of Defence in the new government appointed in Košice and was replaced by Brigade General Karel Klapálek who however was recovering from injuries at the time and was therefore substituted by general Boček.

Organisation

The Corps composition on formation was:

Air units operationally attached to the Corps were:

See also

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1st Czechoslovak army corps (1944-1945). 2008-03-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20080802180723/http://www.czechpatriots.com/csmu/corps.php. 2008-08-02. dead.
  2. Web site: Kulka. Erich. Jews in Svoboda's army in the Soviet Union: Czechoslovak Jewry's fight against the Nazis during World War II. University Press of America ; Institute of Contemporary Jewry. 14 August 2019. 1987.
  3. Web site: Vznik československých jednotek na východě provázely improvizace. 2012-01-15. ceskatelevize.cz.
  4. Book: Kolektiv autorů. Vojenské dějiny Československa. Díl IV. (1939–1945). 1988. Naše vojsko. Praha. 307–318.
  5. Web site: Друга світова – особистий рахунок. 2013-05-07. day.kiev.ua. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20130607012834/http://www.day.kiev.ua/uk/article/politika/druga-svitova-osobistiy-rahunok . 2013-06-07 .
  6. Book: Kolektiv autorů. Vojenské dějiny Československa. Díl IV. (1939–1945). 1988. Naše vojsko. Praha. 319–341.
  7. Book: Gerlach . David W. . The Economy of Ethnic Cleansing: The Transformation of the German-Czech Borderlands after World War II . 2017 . Cambridge University Press . Cambridge . 978-1-107-19619-3 . 46.
  8. Book: Kolektiv autorů. Vojenské dějiny Československa. Díl IV. (1939–1945). 1988. Naše vojsko. Praha. 363–318.
  9. Web site: ОБОРОНИТЕЛЬНАЯ ОПЕРАЦИЯ В ЛИТВЕ И ЛАТВИИ. May 5, 2008. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080505031426/http://www.soldat.ru/doc/casualties/book/chapter5_10_1.html. May 5, 2008. Krivosheyev
  10. Book: Kolektiv autorů. Vojenské dějiny Československa. Díl IV. (1939–1945). 1988. Naše vojsko. Praha. 665–667.
  11. Book: Kolektiv autorů. Vojenské dějiny Československa. Díl IV. (1939–1945). 1988. Naše vojsko. Praha. 675.