1st Ukrainian Front had liberated Kiev on November 6 and had continued its offensive westward toward
Fastov,
Korosten, Zhitomir and
Berdichev; Fastov was taken the following day and Zhitomir fell to
38th Army on November 12. The defending
4th Panzer Army was reinforced by the
XXXXVIII Panzer Corps and went over to the counteroffensive, recapturing Zhitomir and Korosten before being halted. The commander of the Front, Army Gen.
N. F. Vatutin, appealed for reinforcements and was sent both the 18th Army and
1st Tank Army. Meanwhile, the commander of Army Group South, Field Marshal
E. von Manstein, suspended the counteroffensive on December 24, hours before he received news that elements of 1st Tank Army and 1st Guards Army were advancing west on both sides of the KievZhitomir road. This offensive expanded over the next two days and by early on December 28 18th Army had joined it. While von Manstein wrangled with Hitler over tactics the left flank of 4th Panzer Army was in full retreat west of Korosten and an early 60km-wide gap had opened in its lines north of Zhitomir, which the German forces soon evacuated. In recognition of its role in the re-liberation of the city the division was granted an honorific:Through January and February the Front continued trekking westward via
Novohrad-Volynskyi,
Shepetivka and
Rovno, reaching
Lutsk and
Dubno by March 1. By the beginning of April the 18th Army had only the three divisions of 22nd Corps (
161st and
317th Rifle, 129th Guards) under its command.
Lvov–Sandomierz Offensive Later that month the 129th Guards was transferred to the
30th Rifle Corps of 1st Guards Army, joining the
141st and
30th Rifle Divisions. The division would remain in this Army for the duration of the war. From July 14-20 the Front's northern armies successfully penetrated the deep German defenses on the
Rava-Ruska and
Lviv axes and with all available German reserves committed or already destroyed the Front prepared to expand the offensive on the direction of
Drohobych. 1st Guards and 18th Armies had been fighting local actions during this first week in order to pin German forces in place while the reserve 107th Rifle Corps and 4th Guards Tanks had shifted to 38th Army's sector to exploit its breakthrough toward Lvov. On the night of July 19/20 forward elements of the 30th and
74th Rifle Corps conducted a reconnaissance-in-force to determine German dispositions; 20 prisoners were taken and on several sectors the forward defenses were penetrated. In order to exploit these successes the forward detachments of 30th Corps, including those of the 129th Guards, went over to the offensive after noon and soon determined that the German forces had begun to withdraw to the west, covered by strong rearguards. 1st Guards Army went over to the general offensive on the morning of July 21 and after dislodging the rearguards advanced from 6-22km during the day. The Army's commander, Col. Gen.
A. A. Grechko, was now ordered to develop an aggressive offensive and capture
Stanislav by the end of July 24. During July 23 units of 30th Corps forced a crossing of the
Dniestr River near Petryluv and fought to expand the bridgehead while driving back German counterattacks. From July 24-26 the Army continued to advance against stubborn resistance and took Stanislav on the 26th. At about this time the 129th Guards was transferred to 107th Corps. In order to prevent any German regrouping in the DrohobychBorislav region, Grechko was ordered on the morning of the 27th accelerate his drive even further, up to 70km in three days. Despite these directions the advance on Drohobych slowed in the face of a stubborn defense along the Dniestr and repeated counterattacks by tanks and infantry. Effective at 2400 hours on August 5 the 1st Guards Army came under command of 4th Ukrainian Front, where it would remain for the duration. The next day Drohobych was finally liberated and the 330th Guards Rifle Regiment (Lt. Col. Ryabov, Aleksandr Vasilevich) was awarded its name as a battle honor. On August 16 the 320th Guards Rifle Regiment would receive the
Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky, 3rd Degree, while the 124th Guards Sapper Battalion was given the
Order of the Red Star, both for their roles in this victory. ==Into the Carpathians==