Army Group Vistula
Army Group Vistula was an Army Group of the Wehrmacht, formed on 24 January 1945. It lasted for 105 days, having been put together from elements of Army Group A, Army Group Centre, and a variety of new or ad hoc formations. It was formed to protect Berlin from the Soviet armies advancing from the Vistula River.
Establishment and history
had originally urged the creation of a new army group as an essentially defensive measure to fill the gap opening in German defences between the lower Vistula and the lower Oder.The new Army Group Vistula was duly formed from an assortment of rebuilt, new and existing units. Guderian intended to propose Field-Marshal Maximilian von Weichs as commander. However, in a reflection of Hitler's desire to transfer control of the conflict from the Wehrmacht to the SS, Heinrich Himmler was appointed. Himmler, who lacked any real military knowledge, proved inadequate to the task; General Gotthard Heinrici replaced Himmler as commander of Army Group Vistula on 20 March, subsequent to its participation in the German offensive codenamed Operation Solstice and the following defence against the Soviet East Pomeranian Offensive.
Between January and February 1945, Army Group Vistula sustained 98,000 casualties, including 15,000 dead, 50,000 wounded, and 33,000 missing. On 1 April 1945, it had 185,975 assigned personnel, with 104,162 soldiers in active combat, 21,946 sick and wounded since 1 February, and 318 vacationers.
The Army Group's only offensive action was Operation Solstice, the failed attempt to relieve the fortress of Kustrin late in March 1945, during which the subordinate XXXIX Panzer Corps took heavy casualties.
Under the command of Gotthard Heinrici, parts of the army group fought through the Battle of Berlin and Battle of Halbe, with some of its elements not surrendering until the end of the war in Europe on 8 May 1945. Army Group Vistula's strength was in the region of 500,000 troops; in general, the army group was poorly equipped, many of its units being little more than the 'paper' formations typical of the German military at the end of World War II. Indeed, when first set up it was found that the army group lacked many essential facilities, such as proper maps or a headquarters signals detachment—the sole means of communication being Himmler's private telephone.
Organisation
The Army Group was originally formed from:- The 9th Army of General of the Infantry Theodor Busse, which had previously been part of Army Group A and had been shattered around Warsaw during the Vistula-Oder Offensive. This now held lines on the Oder and was progressively rebuilt.
- The 2nd Army of Generaloberst Walter Weiß, which as part of Army Group Centre had been defending the line of the Narew river on the borders of East Prussia. The East Prussian Offensive had cut it off from the remnants of its parent formation, and by late January it defended a long sector from Elbing in the east running westwards through Pomerania. It therefore formed the new army group's northern and eastern flank.
- The 11th SS Panzer Army was a 'new' formation which had been assembled in western Pomerania. Soon after its formation it received the commander Obergruppenführer Felix Steiner and other staff of the 3rd Panzer Army, which had been largely destroyed in East Prussia.
Towards the end of April, the Twenty-First Army, commanded by General der Infanterie Kurt von Tippelskirch, was added to Army Group Vistula.
Order of Battle during Soviet Berlin Offensive
- German 3rd Panzer Army
- *III SS Panzer Corps
- *CI Corps
- *XXVII Corps
- *XXXII Corps
- *XXXXVI Panzer Corps
- *Verteidigungsbereich Swinemünde
- German 21st Army
- *III SS Panzer Corps
- *CI Corps
- *XXVII Corps
- German 9th Army
- * CI Corps
- * LVI Panzer Corps
- * XI SS Panzer Corps
- * V SS Mountain Corps
Commanders