As 50th Army continued the first stage of its counteroffensive the 217th was operating on a front roughly 4.5km wide. On the morning of December 8 the Western Front directed Boldin to throw the German forces back to the Upa. Its center divisions (217th, 290th and 154th), advancing on converging axes where to encircle them in the Kosaya Gora
Yasnaya Polyana area: Overnight the division captured Nizhnee Yelkino and Pirovo from elements of the
296th Infantry Division. Overcoming stubborn resistance from this division and the
Großdeutschland Regiment by the end of December 10 the Army had reached a line from Aleshnya to Prudnoe to Teploe. The 217th was then ordered to capture Yasnaya Polyana on December 11 in conjunction with the 112th Tanks. In the event the division was still fighting on the approaches to
Tolstoy's birthplace on December 14. In new orders the next day the 413th and 217th were to, in cooperation with 1st Guards Cavalry, to complete the rout of the German grouping in the ShchekinoZhitovo area after which they would turn to the west. The division continued fighting for the former place late into December 16, which finally fell the next day. Overnight the Army put itself in order and prepared for further attacks.
Kaluga Offensive Operation A new directive from the Front on December 16, in addition to specifying the Army's objectives for December 18, also directed Boldin to form a maneuver group for striking toward
Kaluga from the south in conjunction with 49th Army. This mobile group was based on the 154th Rifle and 112th Tank Divisions while the objectives of the 217th and 413th remained basically unchanged. By December 20 the 217th had reached a line from Zhitnaya to Markovo to Andreevka and was echeloned to the rear and left of the 50th Army's front with the 413th. The next day the Army's forward detachments began to liberate Kaluga, and by December 24 the division had reached the east bank of the
Oka River along the sector KorekozevoGolodskoeMekhovo and was preparing to attack toward
Peremyshl. This town had been made into a powerful strongpoint and was defended by elements of the
137th Infantry Division. Meanwhile the 1st Guards Cavalry had captured Odoevo and reached the Oka and one rifle regiment of the division was moved to the area of
Vorotynsk station in preparation for a deep envelopment of Kaluga from the southwest and west. During December 24-25 the 217th fought a stubborn battle for Peremyshl, which it liberated on the second day, following which it pursued isolated units to the northwest. By this time 50th Army had advanced 110-120km since the start of the counteroffensive. Kaluga finally fell on December 30. On the same day the division reached the rail line between
Maloyaroslavets and
Sukhinichi along the Vysokoye
Babynino sector before continuing its advance in the direction of Uteshevo. After the fall of Kaluga, Boldin was tasked with getting the main forces of his Army into the rear of the German grouping based at
Kondrovo and then to develop the pursuit in the directions of
Myatlevo,
Medyn and
Yukhnov, while during January 1-6, 1942, the 217th and 413th continued advancing on Uteshevo. By the end of this week the Army was encountering a stronger defense and the 217th had one rifle regiment defending along a line from Troskino to Yeremino covering the flank of the shock group attacking Yukhnov. After this date the Army's forces was involved in increasingly stubborn battles along the approaches to this city where the 137th and
52nd Infantry Divisions were operating. The division liberated Koptevo and Karmanovo on January 7 but the next day was counterattacked by infantry and up to 18 tanks operating from west of the latter place; this was beaten off. It reached the Warsaw highway by January 11 along the PushkinoKotilovo area but ran into heavy fighting on the approaches to both places. Three days later the division was attacked by fresh units of up to two infantry regiments and was forced back to a line from Sergievskoe to Ugolnitsa to Palatki. On January 18 the 217th and 340th Divisions with tank support unsuccessfully attacked Upryamovo three times before falling back to their jumping-off point. 50th Army's front now extended more than 70km with its troops scattered along several axes. By the end of January 22 the division, having blockaded Upryamovo, was fighting for Ploskoe and Trebushinki, but still faced stiffening resistance. On January 27 Boldin ordered the 217th to attack in the direction of Trebushinki in a further effort to bypass Yukhnov from the southwest, but with the arrival of further German reinforcements the rate of advance slowed to a crawl and the city was not finally liberated until March 5. In February the division was transferred to 49th Army. During March the 766th Rifle Regiment was disbanded due to severe losses. It was replaced by a new 766th created from the Tula Workers'
Opolcheniye Rifle Regiment, which carried the name "Tula" for the duration of the war.
Rzhev–Vyazma Offensive The offensives of Western and
Kalinin Fronts had jointly created the
Rzhev salient by late February. Due to counterattacks the
33rd Army, attacking toward
Vyazma, had been encircled and late in February the 49th and 50th Armies received orders from Western Front to break the German lines to effect a rescue by March 27. These efforts failed and 33rd Army was mostly destroyed by mid-April. On May 2 General Trubnikov handed his command to Col. Pyotr Fyodorovich Malyshev. Trubnikov was soon appointed to deputy command of 16th Army and became a close associate of
K. K. Rokossovskii, eventually gaining the rank of colonel general in February 1945. Although plans were made for 49th Army to take a role in the summer offensives around the Rzhev salient these proved abortive. The 217th spent the summer and fall holding its lines on the salient's southeastern shoulder, rebuilding from the winter battles and in August it was again transferred, now to 16th Army, still in Western Front. On October 14 Colonel Malyshev was replaced by Col. Efim Vasilevich Ryzhikov, who came over from the headquarters of 16th Army; this officer would be promoted to the rank of major general on September 1, 1943.
Oryol Offensive In February of 1943 the German
9th Army continued to hold the Rzhev salient although, unknown to the
STAVKA, it was making preparations to evacuate. In orders issued on February 6 the re-created Bryansk Front was directed to eliminate the German OryolBryansk grouping with four armies while "...the Western Front's 16th Army will attack from the Bryn', Zavod area in a general direction through Zhizdra to link up with the
13th Army's attack." These two Armies were expected to liberate Bryansk by February 23-25. In preparation the commander of 16th Army, Lt. Gen.
I. K. Bagramyan, formed a shock group based on the
8th Guards Rifle Corps, which consisted of the 217th, the
11th and
31st Guards Rifle Divisions, and the 125th and 128th Rifle Brigades, supported by three tank brigades. The Corps was largely facing the
5th Panzer Division, with the
9th Panzers in reserve at Zhizdra. In the event the offensive did not begin until dawn on March 4. By this time the 9th Army had begun
Operation Büffel, freeing up reserves for employment elsewhere. In four days of intense fighting the 8th Guards Corps made minimal gains of 3-4km at a heavy toll in casualties. After regrouping, Bagramyan renewed his attack on March 7 with even less success; severe losses forced a halt on March 10. Following this the two panzer divisions counterattacked on March 19 and drove the 217th and the rest of the shock group back to its initial positions. == Operation Kutuzov ==