The 24th Tank Corps was formed in 1942 during re-establishment of the
tank corps as a formation. It was equipped with a mix of
T-34 medium,
T-60 light,
KV-1 heavy, and U.S.
Lend-Lease M3 Stuart light tanks. General Major of Tank Forces
Vasilii M. Badanov was placed in command. It was assigned to the
6th Army and participated in the
Stalingrad Defensive Operation on the
Don River in July 1942, where it lost approximately two-thirds of its tanks. Its 24th Motorized Brigade conducted offensive operations along the Don together with
25th Guards Rifle Division. After rebuilding, the corps was assigned to the
3rd Guards Army under the command of General
Dmitri Danilovich Lelyushenko, to participate in encircling German
Army Group A in
Operation Saturn during the
Battle of Stalingrad. The 24th Tank Corps consisted of the 4th Guards Tank Brigade (Colonel G.I. Kolypov); 54th Tank Brigade (Colonel V.M. Polyakov); the 130th Tank Brigade (Colonel S.K. Nesterov); and the 24th Motor Rifle Brigade (Colonel V.S. Savchenko). Support units included the 13th Mining Engineer Company; the 158th Mobile Repair Base; and the Corps Train. The Corps undertook the
raid on Tatsinskaya during
Operation Little Saturn, from 16 to 28 December 1942. It had to pull out of threatened encirclement under cover of darkness. Much of the matériel and many men were lost during the break-out, but the damage to the Germans had been done. German forces engaged in the relief of Stalingrad had to be withdrawn to deal with the raiders, and many irreplaceable transport planes of the Luftwaffe had been destroyed, with their crews and ground personnel mostly killed. The 24th Tank Corps claimed the destruction of 84 tanks, 106 guns, the killing of 12,000 Axis soldiers and the capture of almost 5,000 more in this operation. In the midst of the successful raid it was renamed the 2nd Guards Tank Corps and given the honorific 'Tatsinskaya.' It was also among the first recipients of the newly created
Order of Suvorov for this operation. After the raid Badanov was promoted to General-Lieutenant. During the year at some points the corps was assigned to the
1st Guards Army.
2nd Guards Tank Corps The 2nd Guards Tank Corps initially was based on the same units as the 24th Tank Corps. Its individual combat units were also renamed and renumbered as Guards units. With changing organization and equipment during the war, additional units were added. Depending on the specific tasks assigned to the Corps, units from the
Reserve of the Supreme High Command (
Stavka Reserve) could be added to help it achieve its mission. At the
Battle of Kursk, the following Order of Battle (OOB) applied: Main Combat Units (totaling 187 tanks at Prokhorovka): • 25th Guards Tank Brigade • 26th Guards Tank Brigade • 4th Guards Tank Brigade • 4th Guards Motor Rifle Brigade • 47th Guards Breakthrough Tank Regiment • 1500th SU-regiment (Self-propelled Artillery) • 1695th AA-regiment • 273rd Mortar regiment • 755th Anti-Tank Battalion Support Units (unconfirmed) • Aviation Liaison Section (F.A.C.) • 51st Sapper Battalion • Corps Train In the remainder of 1943 the Corps fought during the
Third Battle Of Kharkov; during the
Battle of Prokhorovka at Kursk where it was heavily damaged; in
Operation Polkovodets Rumyantsev; and at the
Battle of Smolensk. On 31 August 1943 Badanov handed over to Major General of Tank Forces
Alexei S. Burdeinei; Badanov was then appointed commander of the
4th Tank Army. In 1944, the Corps fought at during
Operation Bagration, during which, in the
Minsk Offensive, the 4th Guards Tank Brigade was the first Soviet unit to enter Minsk. On 11 February 1944 corps commander Burdeinei was promoted to General-Lieutenant. Guards Sergeant
Mariya Oktyabrskaya was awarded the
Hero of the Soviet Union posthumously in 1945 for her actions in the fighting around
Vitebsk in March 1944. The Corps then took part in the
Baltic Offensive. For the successful operations during the liberation of the capital of Belarus, the city of Minsk, the corps headquarters, as well as the 4th, 25th, 26th Guards Tank and 4th Guards Motor Rifle Brigades, by decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of 23 July 1944, were awarded the
Order of the Red Banner. The 4th Guards Tank Brigade was awarded the honorary title "Minsk." Members of the corps committed the notorious
Nemmersdorf massacre during the
Gumbinnen Operation, torturing and killing tens of German civilians in October 1944. The corps was withdrawn to the 3rd Belorussian Front reserve on 2 December 1944. It fought in the Insterburg-Königsberg Offensive, part of the
East Prussian Strategic Offensive Operation. The corps was tasked with developing the offensive beginning on the morning of the second day of the Insterburg-Königsberg Offensive, without being bogged down in protracted combat with the German defenders and swiftly bypassing strongpoints, in order to capture the large highway junctions of
Groß Skaisgirren and Mehlawischken highways by the end of the fourth day of the operation. The breakthrough of the corps was planned to be exploited by the
5th Army. Before the beginning of the East Prussian offensive, the corps had a strength of 187 T-34, 21 SU-76, and 21 SU-85 at 1900 on 12 January 1945. After suffering heavy losses during the offensive, the corps was withdrawn to the front reserve on 3 February, and did not return to combat again.
Wartime assignments In 1943 the corps was assigned to the
3rd Tank Army and the
5th Guards Tank Army, and in 1944 to the
11th Guards Army and the
5th Guards Tank Army. == Postwar ==