'' rank collar. Out of the around 11,000 soldiers in the Galicia Division who fought at Brody, ultimately only around 3,400 escaped the encirclement and returned to German lines. The others were killed or taken prisoner by the Soviets, and some of the survivors decided to escape and join the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA). Another source estimated that an additional 2,000 survived, but in the retreat either joined the UPA or were combined into other German units, before returning to the Galicia Division weeks later. Freitag resumed his role as the commander of the Ukrainian survivors who made it out of the pocket and retreated west with the remnants of XIII Corps. The German high command believed that the Ukrainians had performed well given the conditions at Brody. Freitag and his chief of staff met with Himmler, who had taken a personal interest in the Galicia Division, in Berlin after the battle. Himmler defended the Ukrainians' performance in the battle when Freitag proposed that the division be disbanded, and gave the order to rebuild the Galicia Division on 8 August 1944. The survivors entered the
Hungarian Carpathian Mountains, along with remnants of the 8th Panzer Division and the
18th SS Division Horst Wessel, where they rested for a short time before going to the Neuhammer training camp for the rebuilding of the Galicia Division. The surviving veterans were combined with 8,000 men who had come from the division's Training and Reserve Regiment, and the officer and NCO candidates who had completed their training courses around that time. More German officers and NCOs were also added to the Galicia Division. Many of the reassigned Germans were
Volksdeutsche from
Hungary and
Slovakia. More volunteers from Galicia were accepted into the division as well, though they were different from those who had joined in 1943. Many of them joined for reasons other than Ukrainian nationalist sentiment, such as to escape from the difficult conditions in Galicia, and had very little interest in the Ukrainian national cause. The training of the new recruits was also of lower quality, due to the lack of time, equipment, and ammunition. After the division was rebuilt, it reportedly had 286 officers and 13,999 NCOs and soldiers. On 30 September 1944, Freitag was awarded the
Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross for his role as the Galicia Division commander at the Battle of Brody. In late August 1944, a rebellion broke out in Slovakia against the pro-German government of President
Jozef Tiso. It involved 20,000
Slovak Army troops and local guerilla fighters, along with Soviet partisans and paratroopers who were airlifted into Slovakia. On 22 September 1944, the Galicia Division was ordered to send a battlegroup to Slovakia to assist German forces in putting down the
Slovak Uprising, before 28 September, when the entire division was ordered to go. The battlegroup, led by
SS-Obersturmbannführer Karl Wildner, consisted of one battalion from the 29th Regiment and several companies of support troops. From 28 July to 3 November 1944, a detachment of 1,000 Ukrainian soldiers from the Galicia Division's Training and Reserve Regiment was dispatched to central Poland, in the
Legionowo and
Warsaw area, where it was used to reinforce the under-strength
5th SS Panzer Division Wiking, a mixed German-Scandinavian-Dutch-Flemish unit in the
IV SS Panzer Corps. They fought against the troops of the
1st and
2nd Belarusian Fronts. In early November the 700 of them who were still alive rejoined the rest of the Galicia Division in Slovakia. They were commended for their performance by the Wiking Division commander,
SS-Oberführer Karl Ullrich.
Slovakia The forces of
Kampfgruppe Wildner were the first Galician units to arrive in Slovakia, on 29 September 1944, at
Zemianske Kostoľany. It operated in the area around
Zvolen and
Žarnovica, in western Slovakia, together with other SS units. They recaptured several towns and villages from Slovak partisans during October.
Kampfgruppe Wildner was then used to provide security in that area. As this was happening, the rest of the division arrived at
Žilina, in northwest Slovakia. Taking over from
Panzer Division Tatra, the Galician regiments and battalions were spread out in an area that was 47 miles from north to south and 65 miles from east to west. The Galicia Division maintained order in the towns there and carried out successful actions against Slovak partisans, according to the German military commander in
Bratislava. Several other Axis units were also operating in northwest Slovakia, near the Galicia Division, including various SS units and the
Hlinka Guard. On 27 October, the division's
Kampfgruppe Wildner were the second Axis unit to enter
Banská Bystrica, [following Kampfgruppe Schill] the center of the insurgency, and remained in the suburbs. None of its members were personally decorated by Slovak President Jozef Tiso. German commanders and members of Tiso's Slovak government acknowledged that the Ukrainians from the Galicia Division had a significant role in fighting the uprising in northwest Slovakia. Ukrainian and German sources claim that the troops of the Galicia Division generally had good relations with the Slovak civilian population, and that Slovak guides mainly from the Hlinka Guard worked with the division, though there are accusations from Slovak sources that some of them carried out repraisals against civilians and destroyed entire villages during anti-partisan operations. Ukrainian civilian refugees also left Galicia for Slovakia around that time, where they were given refuge by the Tiso government, and some members of the division thought they might find their relatives in the country. It was also reported that about 200 Ukrainian soldiers defected from the Galicia Division to the Slovak partisans while they were stationed in Slovakia. Additionally, a November 1944 report on the UPA and the OUN by the German general
Reinhard Gehlen, the head of
military intelligence on the Eastern Front, claimed that Galicia Division members were in contact with the UPA and were giving their equipment to the Ukrainian nationalist underground. In December 1944 and January 1945, a second battle ground formed around I./WGR 29 known as
Kampfgruppe Dern fought against the Soviet
40th Army of the
2nd Ukrainian Front that launched an offensive into Slovakia from Hungary. In mid-January the frontline was approaching close to the division's headquarters in Žilina. On 21 January 1945 the division received an order to move from Slovakia to the
Austria–Slovenia border region, in
occupied Yugoslavia, to be subordinated to the Higher SS and Police Leader in
Ljubljana. The Ukrainians had about 16,000 troops at the end of 1944 and the start of 1945, including the Training and Reserve Regiment. There were claims in Slovak sources that the Ukrainian troops were involved in looting supplies from the civilian population as they evacuated. Around that time the unit was renamed as the 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Ukrainian), being called the Ukrainian Division for the first time by the German military command. Many of the division's members remained unaware of this change and continued using the name Galicia.
Yugoslavia The division departed Slovakia for
Maribor, Slovenia, in two separate groups on 31 January 1945, marching there because the railway lines were unavailable. The division had the opportunity to continue rebuilding and rearming itself while in Slovakia, as well as gaining experience in security operations, and the march to its new posting was successful. Divisional units were spread out in the Slovenian region of
Styria and its adjacent Austrian region,
Steiermark. They completed their arrival by 28 February. There the Galicia Division faced the
Yugoslav Partisans, who were much better organized and more capable than the partisans in Slovakia. The SS leader in Ljubljana was satisfied with the division's early successful operations against the local Yugoslav Partisan units, and decided to expand their role, sending some Ukrainian units to assist the Wehrmacht in the mountains south of Ljubljana. They carried out two large-scale operations against the partisans, neither of which were successful, as the partisans were able to evade and escape from the Galicia Division due to the mountainous terrain slowing down the division's movements and giving the partisans time to detect their approach. During its stay in this area the Galicia Division was reinforced with another Ukrainian battalion under German leadership, known as the Ukrainian Self-Defence Legion, along with Ukrainians from various other German units that sought to join the division as the Third Reich faced collapse. In April 1945 they also absorbed about 2,500
Luftwaffe ground personnel and pilots from the
10th Parachute Division.
Austria In late March 1945, the Ukrainian Division was assigned to the
I Cavalry Corps by
Army Group South headquarters. As Hungarian resistance collapsed and the Soviet
3rd Ukrainian Front succeeded in
breaking through to Austria, the division was ordered to relocate to the
Bad Gleichenberg–
Feldbach area, south of
Vienna. The evacuation from the Yugoslav side of the border into Austria was completed on 1 April 1945. The division fought against Soviet troops, including the
3rd Guards Airborne Division, in southeast Austria alongside other German units, such as the IV SS Panzer Corps. From 15 to 17 April, the Galicia Division defeated a Soviet attack on Gleichenberg, which had placed the village's castle, held by Ukrainians, under siege. A relief force from the rest of the division reached the troops in the castle and pushed back the Soviets. == 1st Division of the UNA ==