The 154th began forming on June 20, 1940, at
Ulyanovsk in the Volga Military District. Its personnel were recruited from several nationalities of the Volga region, including Russians,
Tatars,
Bashkirs,
Chuvashes, and others. At the time of the German invasion a year later it was near full establishment strength with 12,796 personnel and a nearly full complement of equipment, with the exception of 76mm cannons. Its order of battle was as follows: • 437th Rifle Regiment • 473rd Rifle Regiment • 510th Rifle Regiment • 571st Artillery Regiment (from September 12, 1941) • 580th Howitzer Regiment (until August 29, 1941) • 143rd Antitank Battalion • 278th Antiaircraft Battery (later 464th Antiaircraft Battalion) • 239th Reconnaissance Battalion • 212th Sapper Battalion • 292nd Signal Company (from August 22, 1942 292nd Signal Battalion) • 183rd Medical/Sanitation Battalion • 173rd Chemical Defense (Anti-gas) Company (later 154th) • 182nd Motor Transport Battalion • 350th Field Bakery (later 154th Motorized Field Bakery) • 122nd Divisional Veterinary Hospital • 154th Divisional Artillery Workshop • 670th Field Postal Station • 539th Field Office of the State Bank Col. Yakov Stepanovich Fokanov had taken command of the division on July 16, 1940. This officer had previously led the
61st and
129th Rifle Divisions and came to the 154th from the 18th Reserve Rifle Brigade, and would be promoted to the rank of major general on July 31, 1941. When the war began the division was in 66th Rifle Corps, which also contained the 61st and
117th Rifle Divisions. As part of 21st Army it was on the move by rail toward Belarus. The Army was in the
STAVKA Group of Reserve Armies
Battles in Belarus By July 1, 66th Corps had the 154th and
232nd Rifle Divisions under command. On July 2, as the division joined the fighting, Marshal
S. K. Timoshenko took over command of Western Front, which included the 21st, which would soon be led by Col. Gen.
F. I. Kuznetsov. The Army, which was anchoring the Front's southern flank, launched a partially-successful reconnaissance-in-force on July 5, and then a series of resolute and somewhat effective counterattacks against the right flank of 2nd Panzer Group in the area of Rahachow and Zhlobin. By July 10 the 154th had been reassigned to 63rd Rifle Corps, still in 21st Army. This Corps also contained the 61st and
167th Rifle Divisions. Given his Army's successes to date, on July 11 Timoshenko ordered Kuznetsov to "tie down the operations of the enemy and force him to fear the possibilities of our attacks" by dispatching "mobile detachments with sappers, antitank guns, and tank destroyer commands for operations in the direction of Zborovo,
Chigirinka, Gorodishche, Zhlobin,
Parichi and Bobruisk". These detachments were to destroy German tanks and disorganize the rear through "the destruction of transport, communications, radio transmitters, warehouses, and so forth, the destruction of supply routes, and the emplacement of mine traps." In addition, Timoshenko wanted Kuznetsov to "prepare an operation and keep units in readiness for a surprise seizure of Bobruisk and Parichi." At 0241 hours on July 13 Kuznetsov ordered his Army to expand its offensive by conducting an assault against 2nd Panzer Group's right wing in the
Bykhaw region jointly with
4th Army. 63rd Corps was to attack along a front from Rahachow to Zhlobin, in cooperation with 66th Corps, beginning at 1700, to "destroy the enemy's Rogachev and Zhlobin grouping, capture Bobruisk, and, subsequently, prepare to attack toward the north." The 154th was deployed on the east bank of the Dniepr roughly between Lebedevka and Zhlobin. The Corps as a whole, under command of Maj. Gen.
L. G. Petrovskii, assaulted across the river and advanced 8-10km into the defenses of the advance elements of
LIII Army Corps' 52nd and
255th Infantry Divisions. In doing so it retook Rahachow and Zhlobin and forced a German withdrawal to the west. Meanwhile, 66th Corps crossed the Dniepr between
Rechytsa and
Loyew and struck the defenses of the forward elements of
2nd Army's XII Army Corps and began exploiting northwestward toward Babruysk deep in the German rear. The 232nd Division made an impressive advance of 80km to the west. 63rd Corps was brought to a halt by the main forces of the two German divisions which threw up a credible defense line after some delay. The success of 63rd Corps was unique for the Red Army at this time, but it was also fleeting, as LIII Corps recaptured both Rahachow and Zhlobin within a week. The series of counterattacks by 21st Army were such a serious threat to 2nd Panzer Group's right flank that Army Group Center was forced to intervene with two divisions of the reserve
XXXXIII Army Corps. The absence of these infantry divisions would soon be felt in the fighting around
Smolensk. During this operation one battalion of the 437th Rifle Regiment was under command of Cpt. Fyodor Alekseevich Batalov. Under his command the men of the battalion prevailed against stubborn opposition in the fighting for Rahachow and Zhlobin, capturing the railway depot of the latter place and several populated places. On August 9 he was made a
Hero of the Soviet Union. Before he could actually receive his awards he was killed while breaking out of encirclement northeast of Gomel on August 17. Western Front's operational summary issued at 2000 hours on July 16 stated, in part, that the 154th and 167th Divisions were attacking to the west, but no further information was available. At the same hour two days later the Front stated that 21st Army was attacking toward Babruysk against "four enemy divisions" and 63rd Corps was "defending its previous positions and repelling local enemy counterattacks, with 15 killed and 300 wounded and 6 tankettes destroyed." The report at 0800 on July 21 reported that the Corps was still holding on its previous line, fighting off repeated attacks by LIII Corps. Timoshenko issued orders to Kuznetsov that evening to attack again beginning on the morning of July 23. 63rd Corps specifically was to continue to push toward Babruysk, in cooperation with Gorodovikov's Cavalry Group, which had advanced into the salient created by 232nd Division. At this time the 154th was deployed between Krasnya Slabada and Malevichy. Meanwhile, the
STAVKA created the new
Central Front, with 4th,
13th, and 21st Armies under command of Kuznetsov, although the shattered 4th would immediately have its survivors incorporated into the 13th. 21st Army came under command of Lt. Gen.
M. G. Yefremov. In a strength return prepared that day the 154th's divisional staff reported that the rifle regiments still had all their regimental
76mm guns and
120mm mortars, and the 571st Artillery Regiment had been fully equipped with
76mm cannons and
122mm howitzers, but the 580th Howitzer Regiment had only two
152mm pieces remaining. The changes in command arrangements could not overcome the facts that by the last week in July Mogilev had been taken, 2nd Panzer Group was driving deep toward the east, and 21st Army was wearing itself out in an unequal battle with three army corps of 2nd Army now in the Babruysk, Rahachow, and Propoisk area, which were threatening the Army's forces west of the Dniepr with complete destruction. Yefremov immediately asked for permission to take 63rd Corps back to more defensible positions on the east bank, but this was refused.
Defense of Gomel Through this entire period the 21st Army had its headquarters at Gomel. By the end of the first week of August the 2nd Panzer Group was placed to push southward across the
Sozh River as part of a combined operation with 2nd Army into the Gomel and Rahachow regions. This was in response to Hitler's Directive No. 34 of July 30; anticipating this, Stalin had made command changes on August 7, sending Kuznetsov to the Crimea, putting Yefremov in command of Central Front, and making his former chief of staff, Lt. Gen.
V. M. Gordov, the new commander of 21st Army. The German thrust began just after dawn on August 8 when the
3rd and
4th Panzer Divisions of
XXIV Motorized Corps crossed the Sozh between
Roslavl and
Krychaw, accompanied by
VII Army Corps on its left flank and
10th Motorized Division in the rear. This attack easily broke the thin defense on the right wing and center of 13th Army, leading to several days of heavy fighting in which the 13th was largely destroyed. After dealing with the 13th by late on August 12 the XXIV Motorized reassembled east of Krychaw to continue its drive to the south. By now, 2nd Army had joined the offensive, pushing south across the Sozh toward Gomel with eight divisions of XII and
XIII Army Corps. Army Group Center's commander, Field Marshal
F. von Bock, had considered the capture of the city essential since the start of 21st Army's counterattacks the previous month. Despite finally being pulled back over the Dniepr the pincer move by 2nd Army and XXIV Panzer had encircled the bulk of 63rd and 67th Rifle Corps, a total of some six rifle divisions including the 154th, in a pocket on the east bank of the river northwest of Gomel. The trapped formations made repeated efforts to break out toward the city, forcing 2nd Army to commit all of XII and LIII Corps to contain and destroy them. Gordov had asked for permission from Stalin to allow 63rd Corps to withdraw to Gomel before being encircled, but this was denied. During August 17-18 the trapped men either surrendered or escaped in small groups, while General Petrovskii was killed near the village of Skepnia. General Fokanov organized a breakout toward Gomel that took the
134th Infantry Division by surprise, overrunning its headquarters at Gubich. Escaping the pocket were 236 men of the 510th Regiment, 100 of the 473rd, 203 of the 437th, plus 634 of other units and some 70 wounded, with a total of six artillery pieces, three tractors, and 176 horses. By the end of the month the division was withdrawn to the reserves of Bryansk Front to be rebuilt.
In Bryansk Front Bryansk Front had been formed on August 14, under command of Lt. Gen.
A. I. Yeryomenko. The
STAVKA was planning a general counteroffensive by Western and
Reserve Fronts to begin August 30-September 1, and Yeryomenko was ordered to support this with a general offensive of his own. The 154th was presently in no state to take part in this, as it had just 3,071 personnel on strength with 36 machine guns and a pair of
45mm antitank guns as its only artillery. The division was one of five under direct Front command. In addition, Yeryomenko had four armies and two small operational groups, but most of his forces were in a shape as poor as that of the 154th, or worse. His most serious problem was trying to plug a gap over 20km wide between 21st Army and the rebuilding 13th Army. The
STAVKA attempted to solve this by forming
40th Army on August 26 as part of
Southwestern Front. In a report by Yeryomenko's headquarters at 2000 hours on September 6 the division was reported as "filling out in the Bryansk area," and 24 hours later was stated as preparing defenses west of the city. Despite the failure of the Front's counteroffensive the
STAVKA was still pressing it forward on September 12, after Southwestern Front had been encircled east of Kyiv. == Operation Typhoon ==