Battle of the Caucasus

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Eastern Front
BarbarossaBaltic SeaFinlandLeningrad and BalticsCrimea and CaucasusMoscow1st Rzhev-Vyazma2nd KharkovStalingradVelikiye Luki2nd Rzhev-SychevkaKursk2nd SmolenskDnieper2nd KievKorsunHube's PocketBelorussiaLvov-SandomierzBalkansHungaryVistula-OderKönigsbergBerlinPrague
Operation Blue to 3rd Kharkov
BlueVoronezhEdelweissStalingradUranusWinter StormSaturnTatsinskaya Raid3rd Kharkov
Crimea and Caucasus
1st CrimeaKerch PeninsulaAdzhimushkaySevastopolCaucasus – Kuban Bridgehead – 2nd Crimea

The Battle of Caucasus is a generic name for a series of operations in the Caucasus area during the Soviet-German War. In 1942, the Wehrmacht launched Operation Edelweiss, which was aimed at penetrating to the oil fields of Azerbaijan. The German offensive was stopped by the Red Army in Chechenya in September, partly due to severe drain of German personnel to the ongoing Battle of Stalingrad. The Soviet counter-offensive was launched in January 1943. The key military base of Novorossiysk was liberated by September, and the Taman Peninsula was cleared from the Germans in early October.

In his memoirs, the commander Ivan Tiulenev recounts how thousands of civilians attempted to flee to comparatively safe Caspian ports, such as Makhachkala and Baku. The connections between Moscow and Transcaucasia were effected through the town of Krasnovodsk in Turkmenistan.

As the time was lacking, it proved impracticable to evacuate industrial enterprises and oilfield facilities. On this account, oil wells in Maykop were blown up by the Red Army on leaving the city to prevent these fuel supplies from falling to the Germans.

Contents

Army Group A(Generalfeldmarshall Wilhelm List)

1st Panzer Army(General Paul von Kleist)

Main article: Operation Edelweiss

  • Alexander Werth, The Battle of Stalingrad, Chapter 7, "Caucasus, there and back", P.648-651
  • Ivan Tyulenev, "Cherez Tri Voyny" (Through Three Wars), Moscow, 1960, P.176.
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