After the evacuation 51st Army joined the
North Caucasian Front at Kuban. In July, Marshal
Budenny received orders to combine the
Southern Front and North Caucasian Front into a single formation retaining the title of North Caucasian Front, and 51st Army joined the 'Don group' of that front under General Lieutenant
Rodion Malinovsky, along with the
12th Army and the
37th Army. On 22 July, army commander Major general
Nikolai Trufanov was relieved of command. As part of the
Stalingrad Front (from 1–5 August), then briefly with the Southeast Front (from 6 August until 27 September), and then back with the Stalingrad Front it took part in the
Battle of Stalingrad. On 31 July when it came under Stalingrad Front control it was so worn down by its previous rough handling that it was only 3,000 men strong. It was attacked on the same day by the
4th Panzer Army, which was able to break through. During
Operation Uranus, the counterattack from Stalingrad, the
4th Mechanized Corps began its attack from the 51st Army's sector. In early December, 51st Army was deployed to cover the
Kotelnikovo approaches against German relief attempts by the
LVII. Panzerkorps. On 24–25 December 1942, the commander of 51st Army, Major-General N.I. Trufanov, organized a local offensive operation on the right flank with the forces of three rifle divisions, and moved to the north bank of the Aksay River, on the eve of the Kotelnikovo offensive operation, which eventually defeated the German efforts made as part of
Operation Winter Storm to relieve the
Sixth Army in Stalingrad. On 30 January 1943, the ''Luftwaffe's
Kampfgeschwader 51'' destroyed the 51st Army's Headquarters, near
Salsk. Dropping 100 – 250 kg bombs, a wave of
Junkers Ju 88s and
Heinkel He 111s destroyed the communications center, working offices of the chief-of-staff, the operational headquarters and the offices of the operational duty officer. Up to 20 buildings and personnel billets were also destroyed. Casualties among personnel were also very high. After January 1943 as part of the Southern Front, that became the
4th Ukrainian Front on 20 October 1943, the 51st Army took part in the Rostov, Donbass (August–September 1943),
Melitopol (September–November 1943) and the
1944 Crimean offensive operation. On 1 June 1943 the
2nd Guards Breakthrough Artillery Division was part of the 51st Army. On 1 April 1944, 51st Army included the
1st Guards Rifle Corps (
33rd Guards,
91st and
346th Rifle Divisions),
10th Rifle Corps (
216th,
257th, and
279th Rifle Divisions),
63rd Rifle Corps (
263rd,
267th, and
417th Rifle Divisions), the
77th Rifle Division, the 78th Fortified Region, artillery, armor and other support units. During these operations, the 51st Army's attacks trapped the German
XXIX. Armeekorps against the
Sea of Azov. The army was withdrawn to the
Reserve of the Supreme High Command (
Stavka Reserve) on 20 May and relocated to the area of
Polotsk and
Vitebsk in Belarus. As part of the
1st Baltic Front it participated in operations clearing
Latvia and
Lithuania – the
Baltic Offensive. Leading the penetration of 1st Baltic Front into German lines, 51st Army reached the
Bay of Riga on 31 July 1944, cutting off German
Army Group North to the northeast of
Riga. Under tremendous pressure, the Germans organized an armored counter-attack (
Doppelkopf) from 16 to 27 August 1944 that succeeded in re-opening a 40-kilometer wide corridor through which Army Group North retreated westward into the
Courland region of Latvia. After regrouping in September 1944, the 51st Army attacked westward in October, reaching the
Baltic coast north of
Memel, and with other 1st Baltic Front armies, definitively cut off Army Group North in Courland, where the German force would remain for the rest of the war. Thereafter, 51st Army took up position on the far western flank of the Soviet forces arrayed against Army Group North (later renamed
Army Group Courland). Of the six major
battles for Courland, 51st Army's only real progress was during the first Courland battle, from 15 to 22 October 1944, in which the army pushed some ten kilometers north against bitter resistance of the German
III. SS-Panzerkorps. Thereafter, the front lines in this area of the Courland front changed little. After 9 May 1945 it accepted the capitulation of the German Army Group Courland. Order of Battle 1 May 1945: •
1st Guards Rifle Corps (
53rd Guards,
204th,
267th Rifle Divisions) •
10th Rifle Corps (
91st,
279th,
347th Rifle Divisions), •
63rd Rifle Corps (
77th,
87th,
417th Rifle Divisions)
World War II Commanders ==Postwar==