As the offensive continued towards
Botoșani the 206th staged an assault crossing of the
Dniestr River and took part in the capture of the city of
Beltsy, for which it was decorated on April 8 with the
Order of Suvorov, 2nd Degree. It was now part of the
35th Guards Rifle Corps. While the
52nd Army staged diversionary actions towards
Iași, the shock group of the Front, including both Corps of 27th Army, thrust southward across the
Prut River 16–60 km northwest of Iași. The initial mission was to reach the Târgu Frumos,
Pașcani and
Târgu Neamț regions and, ideally, to take those towns from their Romanian defenders by surprise. The advance was complicated by heavy terrain, multiple rivers and streams, and spring flooding. On April 24 the 206th would be further decorated with the
Order of Kutuzov, 2nd Degree, for its successful forcing of the Prut.
First Battle of Târgu Frumos The 232nd Rifle Division captured Botoșani on April 7, forcing part of the Romanian
8th Infantry Division southward toward Târgu Neamț. Meanwhile, to the east, the
3rd Guards Airborne Division also attacked to the south, driving the main forces of the Romanian division back towards the town of
Hârlău, flanked by the 202nd and 206th Divisions. The next day the 206th drove the Romanian group out of Hârlău, which placed it just 27 km north of Târgu Frumos. All that separated the 27th Army from its objectives were the disorganized remnants of the Romanian
7th and 8th Divisions. By now, however, the Romanian
4th Army had managed to assemble enough forces to man the
Strunga Defense Line from Târgu Neamț to just south of Iași. 35th Guards Corps resumed its advance towards Târgu Frumos at mid-morning on April 9 with the 202nd and 206th Divisions in the first echelon. The 206th quickly cleared the Romanian troops from the town and the adjacent region and dug into defensive positions to the southeast and southwest. Forward detachments of the
2nd Tank Army tried to reinforce the Corps but were unable to break contact with a battlegroup of the
24th Panzer Division north of
Podu Iloaiei. The German 8th Army was already moving to counter the threat from 27th Army by moving the
Großdeutschland Division from well east of Iași. During the afternoon this division's 52nd Assault Engineer Battalion launched a counterattack which managed to seize and hold a small foothold in the southern part of Târgu Frumos, but the 3rd Guards Airborne soon came up to reinforce the 206th. By nightfall the three Soviet divisions had carved a menacing salient 5–10 km deep into the Romanian defense south and southeast of the town and were anxiously awaiting the arrival of the main body on 2nd Tank Army which was struggling through virtually roadless and muddy terrain. Early on April 10
Großdeutschland, which fielded 160 tanks including 40
Panthers and 40
Tigers, attacked westward along the road from Podu Iloaiei to Târgu Frumos in two columns on each side of the road. This was just as the 206th, 3rd Guards Airborne and
93rd Guards Rifle Divisions were preparing to resume their assault to the south so that only their rear elements remained behind in to town. The German attack tore these rear links and lines of communications apart. Their forward detachments were also struck by the Romanian 7th Infantry and
1st Guards Armored Divisions. The three divisions had no choice but to fight their way out of the developing trap; their only saving grace was that most of the motorized infantry of
Großdeutschland had fallen behind leaving gaps between the tank groups that the riflemen could escape through overnight. By the next morning the survivors took up new defenses north and northeast of Târgu Frumos while the German forces built up positions to defend it. During the day on April 12 German infantry and assault guns cleared isolated parties from the 206th and 3rd Guards Airborne from a small pocket west of the town before further digging in. By the end of the day the three Soviet divisions held a line from the east bank of the
Seret River near Pașcani east to the village of Munteni, 16 km northeast of Târgu Frumos. The next day the Grenadier Regiment of
Großdeutschland began probing the defenses of 35th Guards Corps. This produced a penetration in the sector of 3rd Guards Airborne which required the 93rd Guards to be brought back to the front line from second echelon. Further jockeying for position by both sides continued through the next ten days. Overnight on April 24/25 the 206th was relieved-in-place by the
36th Guards Rifle Division which almost immediately came under attack by
Großdeutschland and Romanian 1st Guards Armored.
Second Battle of Târgu Frumos The commander of 2nd Ukrainian Front, Marshal
I. S. Konev, was still determined to take Iași and organized a new offensive to begin on May 1. As part of this 2nd Tank Army was to support 27th Army in recapturing Târgu Frumos by enveloping the town from the east and then exploiting towards
Vaslui in the south or through Slobodzia to capture Iași. The 16th Tank Corps was to support and exploit the assault by the 206th and 3rd Guards Airborne Divisions.
Großdeutschland continued to man defenses on a wide arc from northwest to northeast of the town, supported by 1st Guards Armored on its left and a regiment of the German
46th Infantry Division on its right. In the event Konev had to postpone the start of the offensive by 24 hours. On May 1 the shock groups of 27th Army attempted to carry out reconnaissances, but were met by German artillery fire and bombing attacks. In one of the latter Colonel Kolesnikov "perished" and Colonel Nosal, commander of 722nd Rifle Regiment, was wounded. By the next morning the division occupied positions south and southeast of Lake Hirbu. The 27th Army's combat journal for May 2 describes the first day of the offensive:The 3rd Guards Airborne and 206th Divisions had shattered the defenses of the Fusilier Regiment of
Großdeutschland from Hill 192 eastward to just west of the village of Polieni, captured the hilltop strongpoint, and driven the Fusiliers back towards Facuti. The supporting armor, including 16
IS-2 tanks of the 6th Guards Heavy Tank Regiment, reached the northern outskirts of that village and soon penetrated into it. This thrust was met by a battlegroup of 24th Panzer and the Panzer Regiment of
Großdeutschland and stalled with losses to both sides. Meanwhile the 206th, supported by the
164th Tank Brigade and 16th Motorized Rifle Brigade, was attacking the German strongpoint at Polieni, which was defended by one battalion of the 46th Infantry. During the afternoon the German armor renewed its attack at Facuti and in a matter of hours defeated and drove back the 3rd Guards Airborne and 16th Tank Corps. During the day 35th Guards Corps and 54th Fortified Region lost a total of 160 soldiers killed and 289 wounded. Overnight Marshal Konev refined his offensive plan, ordering his forces to concentrate on far narrower sectors than the day before. The 78th Rifle was to replace the 206th on the Polieni sector, after which it was to regroup to the west and take up assault positions due north of Hill 192. 16th Tank Corps was to regroup on a narrow 1.5 km sector between the village of Nikola and Hill 197. Altogether the 206th, 3rd Guards Airborne and 93rd Guards were concentrated, left to right, on a 6 km-wide front backed by about 70 armored vehicles and most of 27th Army's artillery, in order to penetrate the German defenses and support the commitment of 2nd Tank Army towards Târgu Frumos. Overnight the German
LVII Panzer Corps, which now included the
3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf, regrouped the bulk of its forces precisely opposite the sectors where Konev intended to deliver his main attack. The journal of 27th Army for May 3 states:No further progress was made on May 4, at a cost to the Corps of 55 killed and 237 wounded. Konev now gave up all hopes of resuming his offensive.
Operation Katja At 0550 hours on May 7 the LVII Panzer Corps began a counteroffensive against Konev's positions north and northeast of Târgu Frumos. After failing to halt the German attack the 206th began to withdraw toward Hill 192, which was lost to units of the 24th Panzer and 46th Infantry Divisions before an intervention by 16th Tank Corps stabilized the Soviet line. 35th Guards Corps lost another 86 killed and 291 wounded during the day and lost most of the gains made since May 2. The next day both sides went over to the defense. Later that month the division was transferred back to 33rd Rifle Corps. In the last days of May
Großdeutschland and 24th Panzer were assembled near Tăutești for a spoiling attack designated Operation
Katja. The 206th was just arriving in this area to form the second echelon of its Corps. The attack began on June 2 and quickly penetrated 33rd Corps' forward defenses. The 206th hastily manned defenses at and forward of
Epureni before the 24th Panzer arrived late in the day as a few tanks of
11th Guards Tank Brigade arrived to reinforce. At nightfall the Soviet armor, along with the remnants of the 206th and 202nd Divisions and the heavy weapons crews of 54th Fortified Region, were able to establish stable defenses just south of Movileni Station and the high ground to the west; more tanks from 16th Tank Corps arrived after dark. By now part of this sector of the Axis front had been turned over to the Romanian
18th Mountain Infantry Division. In the morning the Grenadier Regiment of
Großdeutschland renewed the assault on Epureni and by evening had advanced to within 2 km of that village in the face of counterattacks by up to 20 tanks, including several IS-2s. The heavy fighting south of Epureni continued through June 4; at this point the German division had just four Tigers still serviceable. The next day the Romanian 18th Mountain took over the entire front facing Epureni as the panzers shifted to the east. On June 7 the 33rd Corps, now reinforced with the 93rd Guards and
409th Rifle Divisions, counterattacked toward Zahorna and took Hill 181 from the Romanian force.
Großdeutschland was forced to intervene with what was left of its assault gun brigade. It was now clear that
Katja could make no further progress and both sides went over to the defense the next day.
Second Jassy-Kishinev Offensive On July 5 General Kalinin was hospitalized to convalesce from earlier wounds and was replaced in command the next day by Col. Aleksei Maksimovich Abramov. At about this time, as the division was rebuilding, it was noted as having about 80 percent of its personnel of Kazakh nationality, while most of the remainder were Russian. By the beginning of August it had returned to 35th Guards Corps, but before the start of the summer offensive it was again transferred, now to the
104th Rifle Corps. In the plan for the offensive the 27th and
52nd Armies were to provide the shock group for 2nd Ukrainian Front and the 104th and 35th Guards Corps were in 27th Army's first echelon. The 104th Corps deployed the 206th and
4th Guards Airborne Division in its first echelon on a 4 km-wide attack front, backed by the 11th Artillery Division, a heavy howitzer brigade, and 15 attached artillery brigades and regiments; in all the 206th would have 514 guns, mortars and rocket launchers firing in support. 27th Army was deployed along its previous lines, northeast of Târgu Frumos. Overnight on August 17/18 the 202nd Division took over a wide sector of the front from the 206th, allowing the latter to concentrate for its attack. The offensive began on the morning of August 20 following a powerful artillery preparation which lasted an hour and 40 minutes. 27th Army broke through the Axis front northwest of Iași between
Spinoasa and Zahorna along a 20 km-wide front and as early as 1100 hours had forced the
Bahlui River. By 2000 hours the Army's forces had advanced 7–12 km. In the face of Axis counterattacks by the end of the day the 104th Corps was southeast of a line from Kosiceni to
Păușești. The first echelon rifle divisions had successfully carried out their combat tasks for the day; among these was opening a breach to allow the
6th Tank Army to be committed and begin its exploitation role. Among the Axis forces facing 2nd Ukrainian Front four Romanian front-line divisions and the German
76th Infantry Division suffered heavy losses and 3,000 officers and men were taken prisoner. The following day the offensive resumed at 0600 hours. Assisted by the
5th Guards Tank Corps the 104th Corps crushed the resistance of the Romanian 18th Mountain and
13th Infantry Divisions and the German 76th Infantry and
1st Panzer Divisions before fighting through heavy forest to overcome the Mare ridge. By the end of the day the 104th Corps reached a line east of
Sinești to
Schitu Stavnic. On August 22, while the Corps crossed the
Bârlad River the 206th was pulled back into second echelon and concentrated in the Boresti area. The Front's goal for the next day was to help close the encirclement of the Axis
Chișinău group of forces in conjunction with 3rd Ukrainian Front and by day's end 104th Corps had reached a line from
Ivănești to
Corodesti. On August 24 the 27th Army advanced as much as 30 km as the remnants of the Romanian units it faced ceased offering resistance. By the end of the day the Corps was operating on a line from Oprișești to Fatacuni. On September 15 the 748th Rifle Regiment would be decorated for its role in the capture of the cities of
Roman and
Bârlad with the Order of Kutuzov, 3rd Degree. ==Into the Balkans==