By the beginning of January 1944 the 88th, one of just four divisions remaining in 31st Army, had been assigned to the
114th Rifle Corps with the 251st Division, but by a month later it was a separate division. In February it came under command of
71st Rifle Corps with the 331st Division; it would remain in this Corps for most of the rest of the war. On 27 February General Gluzdovsky was ordered to prepare yet another assault on the Orsha axis in cooperation with
49th Army to his south. Since most of his Army was involved in offensive operations in the
Babinavichy sector he only had his 71st Corps for this new attack, which began on 5 March and continued over the next four days. In the event the effort was unsuccessful at the cost to the two armies of another 1,898 killed and 5,639 wounded. On 11 April Western Front was disbanded and 31st Army was assigned to the new 3rd Belorussian Front, where it would remain until the last month of the war. Over the next two months the 88th got a much needed respite for rebuilding and replenishment. In the buildup to the Soviet summer offensive against Army Group Center on 12–13 June the 88th and
192nd Rifle Divisions of 71st Corps were shifted north to make room for the deployment of
11th Guards Army on the sector north of the Dniepr. When the offensive began with probing attacks on 22 June those of 31st Army were driven back by heavy artillery and mortar fire. The following day the first echelon divisions of 71st Corps broke the German defense north of the Dniepr, and advanced 3 km before being halted by increasing enemy resistance. During the fighting near the Kireevo railway station Sen. Lieutenant
Anna Alekseevna Nikandrova, a
Komsomol leader of the 426th Rifle Regiment, was distinguished for her gallantry. She used a hook ladder to help the soldiers of her company through an antitank ditch; later that day she blocked the embrasure of a German machinegun bunker with her body and was killed. On 24 March 1945 she was posthumously made a
Hero of the Soviet Union. Over the next two days the 11th Guards and
5th Armies developed much more momentum along the Orsha and
Bogushevsk axes, leaving 31st Army behind. Meanwhile, in the fighting around the Vitebsk salient, by 24 June the Soviets were torn by the classic dilemma of blitzkrieg warfare—how many units to use to close the pocket and how many to keep pressing forward before the enemy had time to create defensive positions.
39th Army, which was responsible for 3rd Belorussian Front's part of this encirclement, had only its
84th Rifle Corps available for the battle for the city itself. As a result, the 88th was moved north and attached to this Corps. Elements of 39th Army linked up with forces of the
1st Baltic Front late on the 24th, leaving the German
LIII Army Corps trapped in Vitebsk and in several smaller pockets along the road leading to the southwest. Over the next two days, as Hitler refused permission for the Corps to break out, the Soviet forces prepared to liquidate the pocket, which began at 0900 hours on 27 June, preceded by a massive barrage of artillery and rockets. By noon the defenders had been broken into small pockets and during the afternoon the remnants surrendered. The German Army lost 20,000 killed and 10,000 prisoners. For its part in this fighting the division was awarded a battle honor:
Minsk Offensive After the battle for Vitebsk the division advanced along the highway to Minsk to rejoin 71st Corps as it and the
36th Rifle Corps were consolidating the success of
5th Guards Tank Army which was operation ahead. 31st Army had been assigned a leading role in the liquidation of the defeated and mostly encircled German 4th Army and the liberation of the Belorussian capital, which was completed on 4 July. On the previous day a decree of the
STAVKA read, in part:In addition to these battle honors on 23 July the 88th as a whole would receive the Order of the Red Banner for its part in the clearing of the city.
Vilnius-Kaunas Offensive During 5–6 July the 71st Corps pursued the German forces to the west, advancing up to 40 km and reaching a line from Pershaie eastward along the north bank of the
Islach River as far as Rakuv. Over the next two days the entire Front continued its pursuit in the direction of
Vilnius, which was reached by
3rd Guards Mechanized Corps on the morning of 7 July. At the same time the 71st Corps was overcoming limited resistance in the
Naliboki forest with the assistance of partisans and reached the
Berezina River by the end of the day. The battle for Vilnius would continue until 13 July, but meanwhile on 8 July the 31st Army had advanced another 25–30 km towards the
Neman River. Hitler regarded this as his "line of catastrophe" to be held at any price. During 12–13 July the Army successfully pursued the German forces 55–60 km while its left flank advanced towards
Grodno. By the next day most of the remaining defenders had begun deploying along the river line as 3rd Belorussian Front began preparing to force the Neman and also to liberate
Kaunas. That day a forward detachment of 36th Corps seized a crossing north of
Grodno. On 15 July it was joined by elements of 71st Corps which took two more bridgeheads in the same area. At this point the Army commander, Col. Gen.
V. V. Glagolev, was ordered to regroup his forces to the right flank and force the Neman along the Army's entire front. By the end of 17 July the 11th Guards, 5th and 31st Armies had together breached the river line on a 110 km front and repelled all counterattacks. After further gains the
Stavka of the Supreme High Command ordered the Front over to a temporary defense on 20 July. In recognition of the 88th's success in the Neman crossing on 12 August the 426th Regiment would be decorated with the Order of the Red Banner, while the 611th and 758th Regiments would each receive the
Order of Aleksandr Nevsky. ==Into Germany==