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The Budapest Operation (29 October 1944-13 February 1945) - An Operational-Strategic Study (Hardcover)
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The Budapest Operation (29 October 1944-13 February 1945) - An Operational-Strategic Study (Hardcover)
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The Budapest Operation (29 October 1944-13 February 1945): An
Operational-Strategic Study examines in detail the Red Army's
operations on the approaches to Budapest and the city's ultimate
capture following a long siege. The first part of the study deals
with the Red Army's arrival in central Hungary, following the
successful conduct of the Iasi-Kishinev operation in late August
1944 and the subsequent development of the offensive through
Romania, Bulgaria and eastern Yugoslavia. By mid-October the
Soviets were poised to continue the offensive into Hungary and its
capital of Budapest, the capture of which would clear the path for
a subsequent advance into Austria and southern Germany. This study
examines the rapid advance to the outskirts of Budapest, where
stubborn German-Hungarian resistance forced them to halt, after
which the Soviets sought to surround the city, finally closing the
ring at the end of December. Also examined are the Germans'
repeated attempts to break the siege by launching several
counter-offensives to the west and south of the city. However,
these were all beaten back in heavy fighting and the enemy garrison
was forced to capitulate on 13 February. This study also devotes
considerable attention to the combat arms (artillery, tanks and
mechanized forces, aviation, and engineering troops) during the
operation. The other study is an internal General Staff Academy
document dealing with the activities of the Third Ukrainian Front
during the Budapest operation. Throughout the greater part of the
operation the Third Ukrainian Front played a decidedly secondary
role, charged with protecting the flank of the Soviet advance
through Yugoslavia and Hungary, with the Second Ukrainian Front
slated to receive the accolades for taking Budapest. However, the
bitter enemy resistance along the approaches to Budapest gradually
forced the Soviet high command to increasingly shift its efforts to
the right bank of the Danube River, first to help in isolating the
Budapest garrison inside the city, and then to fend off repeated
German counter-offensives to relieve the city. It was the Third
Ukrainian Front's successful repulse of these efforts that enabled
the Soviets to finally bring about the garrison's capitulation and
the end of the operation.
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