Once Yukhnov was taken 50th Army ground to a halt, and remained roughly on a line from that town to
Mosalsk until March, 1943, playing a limited role in the follow-up to the German
9th Army's evacuation from the Rzhev salient, ending up facing its defenses north of
Spas-Demensk. In January Col.
Ivan Sidorovich Lazarenko had been appointed the 413th's deputy commander, a post he would hold until November 16, when he took command of the
369th Rifle Division. Lazarenko went on to be promoted to major general but was killed in action near
Chausy in late June, 1944, posthumously being named a
Hero of the Soviet Union in July. On May 24 Col. Ivan Stepanovich Khokhlov took over the 413th from General Tereshkov; Khokhlov would be promoted to the rank of major general on October 16. In the same month it was assigned to the
38th Rifle Corps. During
Operation Kutuzov, 50th Army took a secondary role, acting as a flank guard for
11th Guards Army, but still made substantial gains during July. From July 18–21 the 1322nd Regiment was fighting for several villages, including Paliki.
Starshina (sergeant-major) Stepan Ignatievich Khirkov was a deputy platoon commander and the political organizer for a company of the regiment. He had already been acclaimed within Western Front for his political work and had received the
Order of the Patriotic War, 2nd degree, from General Boldin in person. Khirkov helped to lead the defense of his company's positions, personally destroying two German tanks, and led a counterattack on July 21 which finally drove the German forces back, but suffered fatal wounds and died the same day. On June 3, 1944 he was posthumously made a Hero of the Soviet Union. In August, in preparation for the summer offensive towards Smolensk, 50th Army was transferred to
Bryansk Front and the 413th went back to being a separate rifle division, but was then assigned to
46th Rifle Corps in September; it would be in that Corps for most of the rest of the war. When Bryansk Front was disbanded on October 10, 50th Army joined
Central Front, which was soon renamed
Belorussian Front.
Novyi Bykhov-Propoisk Offensive By the third week of November the left (south) flank of 50th Army had reached the confluence of the
Sozh and
Pronya Rivers east of the town of
Propoisk, which is on the west bank of the Sozh. The Front commander, Army Gen.
K. K. Rokossovsky, ordered his 3rd and 50th Armies to attack across the Sozh, with the 3rd beginning on November 22 and the 50th two days later in a supporting role. At this time the 413th was again a separate division in the Army, which was facing the German 9th Army's
XXXXI Panzer Corps. The division, with the
110th Rifle Division, attacked in the Uzgorsk and Krasnaia Sloboda sector just north of Propoisk after a ten-minute artillery raid with the
108th Rifle Division in second echelon. These forces were able to cross the river and penetrate the German defense despite
rasputitsa conditions and an almost complete absence of roads; in fact, the attack developed quite slowly until
10th Army to the north entered the offensive on November 28 and the commander of 9th Army, Gen.
Walter Model, convinced Hitler to allow him to withdraw to new defenses closer to the Dniepr. By November 30 the Army had advanced from 16 to 30 km on a 37 km front, with the 413th still in the first echelon.
Bykhov-Chausy Offensive General Rokossovsky planned an offensive to begin in the first days of January, 1944 in the direction of
Bykhov to be mounted by his 3rd and 50th Armies. By this time the 3rd Army had reached the Dniepr and a large grouping of German forces were partially encircled east of the river around Bykhov, presenting an inviting target. The 413th, again with the 108th and 110th Divisions, supported by the 233rd Tank Regiment, attacked the positions of the
95th Infantry Division early on January 4 across the Ukhliast River on the 7 km-wide sector between Smolitsa and Krasnitsa with the initial objective of taking the German strongpoint in the latter village. The first day's attack took one German position but was stopped short of Krasnitsa. On January 6 the 324th Rifle Division arrived to reinforce the assault, but the defenders were also reinforced by a battalion-sized battlegroup from the
18th Panzer Grenadier Division which helped to bring the attack to a standstill. Late on January 8 Rokossovsky ordered the offensive halted.
Rogachev-Zhlobin Offensive Later in January the division was put under command of the
121st Rifle Corps, still in 50th Army. On the morning of February 22 the left wing of the Army (110th, 108th, 324th and 413th Divisions) went over to an offensive along the Mshatoe Swamp to
Adamenka line. On February 24 the 121st Corps assaulted across the Dniepr west of Selets-Kholopeev. The arrival of a battlegroup from
20th Panzer Division stabilized the situation but did not eliminate the bridgehead. Shortly after the end of the operation on February 26 the division was moved back to 46th Corps, 50th Army in the renamed 1st Belorussian Front. Rokossovsky's next target was the German bridgehead east of the Dniepr centered on
Mogilev. He prepared an operation in late March which was to finally liberate both Bykhov and Chausy on the south side of the bridgehead with his 10th and 50th Armies backed by the 1st Guards Tank Corps. General Boldin formed a shock group consisting of the 121st Corps plus the 108th and 413th Divisions of 46th Corps in the 10-km wide sector from Vetrenka to Krasnitsa. The group was supported by the tanks of 233rd Tank Regiment and the
SU-76s of 8th SU Brigade, and faced about half each of 18th Panzer Grenadier and
31st Infantry Divisions. The assault began at dawn on March 25 but made little headway over the next six days, gaining between 1 – 3 km and capturing the southern outskirts of Krasnitsa but unable to do more before the offensive was shut down on March 31. ==Operation Bagration==