As of December 9 the 151st was part of 44th Army and was facing the extreme left wing of 1st Panzer Army, alongside the
110th Cavalry Division. As the panzers began their general withdrawal that day the two divisions took up positions screening the long right flank of the Northern Group. The 44th's initial objective was the recapture of Mozdok, but during December 12–16 its main forces only managed to advance 10–12 km. During this period the 151st was back under direct command of the Northern Group of Forces. By December 27 the city was still in German hands, and General Maslennikov issued orders which included the following:In the event these plans were shelved due to a scathing report to the
STAVKA on the Northern Group's recent operations, which Maslennikov attributed the "poor quality of the troops", especially the
Azerbaijanis, a conclusion which the report rejected. He was ordered to transfer four divisions from 44th to 58th Army and add the 151st to the former. This and other regroupings postponed the planned offensive into the new year. On January 5, 1943, the 44th Army, which was under command of Maj. Gen.
V. A. Khomenko, consisted of the 151st,
271st,
347th Rifle Divisions, and
416th Rifle Divisions, with assorted supporting units, and was directed to continue the pursuit of the German forces in the direction of Soldatsko-Aleksandrovskoye and Sadovoye, while also eliminating remaining garrisons east of the
Kuma River and capturing Otkaznoye and Novo-Zavedenskoye by January 7. Maslennikov was still facing criticism for slowness and on January 8 he issued new orders to, in part, bring the 151st to a line from the Sukhopadinskii Canal to Erastov. The next day the division reached the Gorkaya
Balka region, roughly 20 km east-northeast of Soldatsko-Aleksandrovskoye and on January 10 passed through Otkaznoye, with the forward detachment reaching Svoboda. The right wing of the Northern Group had now reached the line ordered for it on January 5, but 2–3 days behind schedule. Maslennikov now ordered 44th Army to follow a cavalry-mechanized group commanded by Lt. Gen.
N. Ya. Kirichenko in the direction of Sablinskoe and Sadovoye. By 1400 hours on January 11 the 151st was 1 km south of Mokryi Karamyk, which is 36 km northeast of Mineralnye Vody. Despite the complaints about slowness from the
STAVKA, in fact Tank Group Filippov broke into that place by surprise from the east, placing all of 1st Panzer Army in that area in a crisis. However, the cavalry-mechanized group had not reached the German rear. The next day the Northern Group attempted to accelerate in order to reach
Stavropol, which was still some 100 km distant, and during the day the division was reported as having reached Sablinskoe with its main forces while its forward detachment was 14 km farther on to the northwest. On January 13 it took positions 4 km southeast of Aleksandrovskoe and was fighting for that place alongside units of the cavalry-mechanized group. The report of Maslennikov's headquarters stated: "151st RD, after repelling three counterattacks by 9, 11, and 27 tanks against its left wing, surrounded Aleksandrovskoe with a dense ring, and prepared to attack on the morning of 14 January." This place was being defended by 3rd Panzer Division. That day's attack succeeded in taking Sadovoye after repelling a counterattack, but Aleksandrovskoe continued to hold. 3rd Panzer was forced to withdraw on January 15 and the Northern Group was now ordered to change its axis of advance to the northwest. The Sarkesian's men mounted a pursuit in that direction the next day, attempting to reach Sergievka and Bazovaya
Balka. 3rd Panzer was attempting to build a defense along the
Kalaus River. On January 17 a severe blizzard moved in, adding difficulties for both sides; the division managed to move to Sergievka, where it concentrated the next day. Transcaucasus Front now expected 44th Army to reach Donskoe and Tuguluk by January 21, Zhukovskaya and Krasnaya Polyana by January 27, and
Yegorlyk by February 1. During January 19 the 151st reached Dubovka, 26 km northeast of Stavropol. As of January 20 the 151st had a combat strength of 4,931 personnel, about average of the Army's five divisions. The next day saw Stavropol taken by the 347th Division, with the 151st and 271st concentrating in the Bezopasnoe area, some 65 km to the north. The northern movement by the two divisions gained another 20 km on January 22. The next day the 151st split from the 271st to march to the Zhukovka region. On the same day the Northern Group was redesignated as North Caucasus Front. The pursuit by North Caucasus and Southern Fronts restarted on January 25 after a short lull. 44th Army was reported as continuing to move its main forces to a line from
Peschanokopskoye to
Belaya Glina; the 151st had taken Kuleshovka and Novo-Pavlovka, while its forward detachment was "conducting fierce fighting for Novo-Pokrovskaya." The immediate aim was to encircle and destroy the
5th SS Panzergrenadierdivision "Wiking", if not all of
LVII Panzer Corps, either during the pursuit or by cutting off their escape via Rostov. North Caucasus Front's advance was being led by Kirichenko's cavalry-mechanized group with 44th Army following. On January 26 the 151st was reported as having concentrated its main forces at Novo-Pokrovskaya while its forward detachment continued to advance ahead. By now the 3rd Panzer Division was arriving to assist the right wing of 5th SS. At the end of the following day the Army was reported as being in pursuit of 3rd Panzer and the
111th Infantry Division northwest and south of Belaya Glina, with the 151st and 347th Divisions operating at Kalnibolotskaya (32 km west of Belaya Glina) against 3rd Panzer's 394th Panzergrenadier Regiment. On the same day Hitler authorized most of 1st Panzer Army to withdraw north through Rostov, which effectively ended the attempt to trap and destroy it south of the
Don River. In a report on January 28 the strength of the division is given as 4,100 personnel, 6,400 short of establishment, with just 45-50 percent of its establishment transport. North Caucasus Front stated overnight on the 28th/29th that the 44th Army had overcome strong resistance from 3rd Panzer and the 151st was fighting 3 km east of Nezamaevskaya. The next day a counterattack was launched by
11th Panzer Division south of Mechetinskaya, and threw 44th Army on the defensive, with the 151st still fighting in its previous positions although part of its forces were in the northwest outskirts of Kalnibolotskaya. Despite this success 11th Panzer had only about 15 tanks, so was unable to exploit it. During January 30 it continued to hold while also attempting to take Nezamaevskaya, but this effort was defeated by German artillery. The next day it continued to envelop this objective from the north while it captured Ploskii and Veselyi on the Eya River with part of its forces. A sudden thaw set in on January 31, then a flash freeze overnight which thwarted the advance on Rostov for the time being. February 2 saw the start of
Operation Star by Bryansk, Voronezh and Southwestern Fronts, which was planned to reach the
Donbas region. The commander of Army Group Don, Field Marshal
E. von Manstein, had no choice but to pull all the remaining panzer forces south of Rostov to the north as a countermeasure. This left the 151st and 416th facing two weak security divisions. The 271st caught up with Kirichenko's forces on the same day, followed by most of the rest of 44th Army on February 3. By 1600 hours the 151st had one regiment in Alekseevka, another in Tsukurovka
Balka, and the third in Krasnyi, all of which were some 15–20 km south of Novo-Bataysk. General Khomenko now decided to press on to that objective with the 151st covering the right flank. The following day the division attacked from the latter two places toward Kugei. Over the day the Army lost 300 men killed or wounded and 80 frozen; there was also an acute shortage of fuel and ammunition and just 1.3 days' supply of food. LVII Panzer Corps was able to pull back from its line south of the Don without significant damage.
Capture of Rostov During February 5 the 44th and 28th Armies, with Kirichenko's group, did their best to exploit the withdrawal of 5th SS. The 151st "overcame enemy resistance to reach the Burkhanovskii, Budenovskii, and Molod'va line [15-30km southwest of Novo-Bataysk] and captured these points." The next day
Bataysk, the suburb of Rostov south of the Don, was liberated by 28th Army, which captured 50 fully loaded trains, and 44th Army, along with the cavalry-mechanized group, was transferred to Southern Front in accordance with
STAVKA Directive No. 30037 of February 4. The division was pulled back to the Army's second echelon at
Azov on February 7. Southern Front planned to begin a general offensive at 0200 hours on February 8, and the two Armies were detailed to soften up the defensive of Rostov itself and points west. To this end, 44th Army attacked into the frozen delta of the Don west of the city. Kirichenko's Tank Group Titov had roughly 25 operational vehicles, nearly all of which were light
T-60s and
T-70s, able to cross the ice. The 151st followed the 347th with directions to enter battle on its left and then strike for Rogozhkino to take Siniavka on the north bank of the
Mertvy Donets. In confused fighting in the predawn and daylight the division had to overcome German rearguards and move through continual air attacks to reach Polushkin and Lagutnik Farm. The
320th Rifle Division attempted to come to its assistance but was hampered by the same resistance from the air. The 151st was halted on February 9 in the Siniavka area by strong resistance from two battalions of the
454th Security Division backed by two mortar batteries. The 271st Division was forced to withdraw from its bridgehead over the Mertvy Donets by German counterattacks. By now all the divisions of 44th Army were reduced to 3,000-4,000 personnel reach, of which some 1,500-2,000 were "bayonets" (riflemen and sappers). The German forces were similarly weak. During February 10 the 151st again attacked toward Siniavka and Morzhanovka, with little success. General Khomenko appealed to Southern Front for air support to restore his advance, and on February 12 officially went over to the defense. Ammunition, fuel, manpower, and even food, were all so short that further attacks were out of the question. The division took up positions at Nedvigovka and Morskoy Chulek with two regiments and Lagutnik Farm with the other. Despite this stalemate it was clear to all that a German withdrawal was forthcoming. Overnight on February 13/14 units of 28th Army were involved in heavy fighting within Rostov before going over to a general offensive which soon cleared the city. The 151st and 320th, covered by the 271st on the right flank, attacked again at Siniavka and Nedvigovka without any success. By February 15 the division was fighting with just 500 active "bayonets". The next day the Front's
5th Shock Army reached the Mius River during its pursuit, beginning fighting for
Matveyev Kurgan at midnight. The next day the division was still running into stiff resistance some 2 km east of Morskoi Chulek. This place, 30 km southeast of
Pokrovskoye, was taken on February 17, as the advance to the Mius continued, but in the Army's report at 2200 hours, the division's losses were given as 112 men killed or wounded, while claiming 57 killed and 176 wounded from the German forces. It was also reported as being completely out of ammunition. == Into Ukraine ==