On July 1 Marshal
S. K. Timoshenko took command of Western Front, and the 22nd Army was one of four reserve armies assigned to it on the same date. It was under command of Lt. Gen.
F. A. Yershakov. Timoshenko's immediate aim was to defend the "Smolensk Gates" along the lines of the Dvina and Dniepr Rivers, and the 22nd was initially assigned a sector from Idritsa to Polotsk. 62nd Corps also contained the
174th and
179th Rifle Divisions. Due to the chaos produced by the German advance, only 37 of Timoshenko's 66 divisions managed to reach their assigned defensive positions before the advancing forces reached the two rivers. The 3rd Panzer Group was leading this advance on the Polotsk axis. 62nd Corps was specifically assigned to defend the Polotsk Fortified Region. Army Group Center resumed its advance on July 2. The
LVII Motorized Corps led the way in the Polotsk direction, and was to advance north of Smolensk after passing the Dvina, but unexpectedly encountered 22nd Army's prepared defenses along the river. On July 4 the
19th Panzer Division managed to seize a bridgehead from
51st Rifle Corps at Disna, but 62nd Corps stymied the
18th Motorized Division opposite Polotsk. By late on July 5 the 3rd Panzer Group was in a bind, unable to advance anywhere. 62nd Corps had been moved to Ulla, 56 km west of
Vitebsk, where it was now blocking the
XXXIX Motorized Corps. Timoshenko now planned a counterstroke at
Lyepyel, relying on new mechanized forces from Moscow, but 62nd Corps was ordered to maintain its defensive stance. Despite this partly-successful counterstroke, 3rd Panzer Group penetrated the defenses of 22nd Army south of Polotsk on July 9 and captured Vitebsk by the end of the day. After a regrouping, the
20th Panzer Division, backed by the
20th Motorized Division, struck again at Ulla on July 10. With massive air support the panzer division rolled across the Dvina through 22nd Army and drove 55 km northeast to
Haradok. Timoshenko was left with no option but to begin to fight a rear-guard action. At the same time he ordered the 186th, along with other forces, to counterattack to seal the breach. In his report to the
STAVKA at 2000 hours on July 11, Timoshenko stated, in part:3rd Panzer Group was soon on the move and by nightfall on July 13 its spearhead, the
7th Panzer Division, was probing toward Nevel and
Velizh with the intention of linking up with
2nd Panzer Group east of Smolensk. Timoshenko had issued orders late on July 12 for General Yershakov to carry out a counterattack the following morning with the 186th and
214th Rifle Divisions and supporting artillery from the Haradok area south toward Vitebsk. This plan was stillborn when LVII Motorized Corps, backed by the
L and
XXIII Army Corps drove the Army from its remaining defenses along the Dvina northwest of Polotsk, cut it into two parts, enveloped its flanks and threatened both parts with encirclement. With only six divisions to defend a front 274 km wide Yershakov was soon in full retreat as the panzers drove northward toward Nevel.
Breakout from Encirclement Nevel was taken by LVII Motorized on the morning of July 16 which left four of 22nd Army's divisions (
50th, 174th, 186th and 214th) cut off and isolated between that town and Vitebsk. As the German commanders debated the size of the encircled forces and exactly how best to deal with them while also carrying out their other objectives, the four divisions did their best to escape in the general direction of Velikiye Luki, aided by the difficult terrain in the region. On July 18 the 19th Panzers captured the city but overnight elements of 22nd Army attacked and overran the thin screen being held around Nevel by
14th Motorized Division, allowing encircled 62nd Corps to escape to the east. This pressure also forced 19th Panzer to abandon the city on July 21 and Yershakov triumphantly signalled the commander of 62nd Corps:This overlooked victory was the first large city liberated by the Red Army for any length of time. The 186th managed to reach friendly lines on July 21 and two days later was defending the ShchukinoPorecheLake Serutskoe line with the 174th Division, while also assisting
19th Army's 134th Rifle Division in escaping from encirclement. Yershakov now attempted to create a new defense line along the
Lovat River although his
51st Rifle Corps had been reduced to remnants. By July 27 Yershakov had reorganized his defenses along the Lovat with the mission of "holding on to Velikiye Luki at all cost." Maj. Gen. I. P. Karmanov, commander of 62nd Corps, was to support 29th Corps in this, in part by preventing a German penetration or envelopment of General Biryukov's left flank. However, due to other priorities, the German
9th Army did not make any further moves over the coming weeks. When the advance was renewed on August 3 the 186th was reported as holding its positions. In an operational summary by Western Front issued at 2000 hours on August 21, 22nd Army was reported as counterattacking, with 62nd Corps' 186th and 174th Divisions advancing from a position 35–38 km southwest of Velikiye Luki and gaining up to 3 km against strong resistance. The next day the same source stated that the 186th had been attacked at 0600 by the
110th Infantry Division, which captured Bardino, Sopki, and Dreki, "and enemy sub-machine gunners penetrated into Slonovo, but measures are being taken to liquidate the enemy penetration." This presaged a larger drive on August 23 by panzer forces that had "disappeared" from Soviet view four days earlier.
Second Battle for Velikiye Luki Western Front's summary at 2000 hours said that, after the 186th's sector had been penetrated the previous day, a larger German force, including tanks, had:Yershakov was scrambling to respond while being forced to move his headquarters. The next day, the summary identified the 19th and 20th Panzer Divisions as well as a panzer brigade and
206th Infantry Division, and that a captured order indicated that their objective was to encircle 22nd Army. The situation on 62nd Corps left flank (essentially the 186th) was said to be "unclear"; Yershakov had sent most of the
98th Rifle Division to support the 186th, but both had been effectively smashed by the attack and the 174th Division was forced to flee to the northeast. These German moves were in response to Hitler's decision on August 21 to move 3rd Panzer Group northeast to assist Army Group North's stalled advance on Leningrad. Later on August 23 the two panzer divisions made a headlong assault of Velikiye Luki from the east, while the 110th,
102nd, and
256th Infantry Divisions attempted to liquidate the remnants of 62nd Corps while also pushing into the rear of
29th Army and the objective of Toropets. Timoshenko, unaware of the full scope of the disaster, ordered Yershakov:29th Army scrambled to protect its flank. On August 24 the 110th and part of the 102nd Infantry Divisions encircled and destroyed most of the 186th and 174th southeast of Kunia Station. Late in the day the rear elements of the 186th were reported as reaching Toropets in disorder. Overnight, up to 20,000 men of the main body of 22nd Army (29th and 51st Corps) managed to escape the pocket around Velikiye Luki, while another 25,000 fought on until death or capture. The city was retaken on August 25.
Fall of Toropets On August 26 the deputy chief of staff of Western Front, Lt. Gen.
G. K. Malandin, was sent to 22nd Army's headquarters at Podsosone, 15 km southeast of Toropets to assess the situation. Near midnight he reported to his superior, Lt. Gen.
V. D. Sokolovskii, that the 186th was at 30-40 percent strength but "needs to have order restored." It was assigned a sector in the former forward line, along with a unit called Latkin's Detachment. In the absence of Yershakov, who was cut off from his headquarters, Malandin did his best to organize a defense of Toropets. The 186th was again facing the 102nd Infantry, which was now assigned to
XXXX Motorized Corps. On August 27 this Corps resumed its advance eastward. Malandin's report implicitly admitted that it was most unlikely that 22nd and 29th Armies would be able to defend either
Staraya Toropa or Toropets. Nevertheless, at 2300 hours on August 28 the division was assigned the task, along with the Latkin Detachment, to seize and defend the Tarasy and Fedotkovo sector, 38 km west-southwest of Toropets. Due to the advance of XXXX Corps these orders were hopelessly out-of-date and the city was taken in the morning of August 29. Meanwhile, the LVII Corps advanced easily and split the defenses of 22nd Army, and both German corps continued their advance on
Andreapol and
Zapadnaya Dvina on August 30. On the same day, Timoshenko sent a message to Stalin addressing the situation in the 22nd Army's sector. He stated that the 186th was fighting in the western and northeastern outskirts of Toropets, but he also stated that General Biryukov was being turned over to a military tribunal for wilfully abandoning his positions. In the event this was not carried out. By the end of the month the 186th consisted of roughly 2,000 personnel, with three
76mm cannon, two
45mm antitank guns, and two
122mm howitzers left from its entire artillery park. On September 1, Timoshenko again attempted to go over to the counteroffensive, aiming at
Dukhovshchina with his main forces, but 22nd and 29th Armies were in no position to take part. Two days later, the 186th was reported as "fighting with enemy forces which have penetrated into the Suvorovo and
Ivanova Gora region" some 18 km south of Andreapol. A further report the next day stated:An operational summary from Western Front at 2000 on September 5 indicated that the counteroffensive was effectively finished; the two divisions, along with a unit called Antosenko's Detachment, were said to have attacked for a second time from woods 2 km east of Suvorovo to Hill 236.2 to Frolovo to the Yaldy line (17–22 km south of Andreapol) with "unknown results". General Biryukov was wounded and hospitalized on September 12, being replaced by Col. Anton Petrovich Pilipenko. Biryukov returned to lead the
214th Rifle and
80th Guards Rifle Divisions, and later the
20th Guards Rifle Corps, before the end of the war. He would be made a
Hero of the Soviet Union on April 28, 1945, for his leadership in the
siege of Budapest, and was also promoted to the rank of lieutenant general. He died in Moscow on June 30, 1980. In the far north,
Karelian Front had formed a militia (
opolchenie) division called 1st Polar (
Polyarnaya) on September 5 to serve in the defense of
Murmansk. On September 28 it was decided to regularize the division by giving it the number '186th'. No explanation has been publicly shared as to why the division was given the number of a division that had not been disbanded. Not only did the two divisions share the same number, most of their subunits did as well, which explains the several redesignations of the original division's regiments as seen above. This anomalous situation continued until June 26, 1943, when the second 186th was redesignated as the
205th Rifle Division.
Transfer to Kalinin Front By the beginning of October the 62nd Corps had been disbanded, and the 186th was under direct command of 22nd Army, as it fell back toward the
Valdai Hills. The Army's four remaining divisions continued to arrive along the line
OstashkovSelizharovoKamenitsaPlekhanovo during October 9. On October 19 it came under command of the new Kalinin Front, led by Col. Gen.
I. S. Konev. Later in the month the weather deteriorated, slowing the pursuit of the defeated 22nd. On October 24, elements of 9th Army were pushing it north, advancing in small groups toward Lukovnikovo against the remnants of the 186th, 179th, and
250th Rifle Divisions. The next day, Colonel Pilipenko was transferred to the staff of 22nd Army, and he was replaced by Maj. Gen. Aleksei Ivanovich Zygin. This officer had previously led the 174th Rifle Division. == Moscow Counteroffensive ==