From the beginning of
Operation Barbarossa, the 44th Rifle Corps became part of the
13th Army of the
Western Front and was tasked with defending the northern sector of the Minsk Fortified Region. Between 25 and 28 August, the 64th Rifle Division fought in sustained battles, with the 159th Rifle Division fighting in the area of
Zaslavl, the 30th Rifle Regiment in the area of Rogovo, and the 288th Rifle Regiment to the north. The division was encircled on 29 June and in the first ten days of July fought its way out to the east. After breaking out of encirclement, the division was rebuilt in mid-July. Colonel
Afanasy Gryaznov, who had been a staff officer at the
Western Front headquarters, took command of the division on 15 July. Having completed rebuilding, the division conducted a forced march to the area of
Yartsevo on 26 July to join the
Battle of Smolensk. The division entered battle from the march on the night of 29–30 July despite being 20 percent incomplete. From 30 July to 6 August, the 64th fought against the German 7th, 239th and 364th Infantry Regiments on the line of Staro-Zavopye, Skrushevskiye, and the
Vop river, where it stopped the German advance and manage to force a retreat to the west. The division was transferred from the 44th Rifle Corps to the direct control of the
16th Army on 16 August. At 10:00 on 17 August the division went on the offensive in the general direction of Leskovki, and Nefedovshchina. The attack put the opposing German troops to flight, as they withdrew in disorder, abandoning weapons and ammunition. By the end of the day on 19 August, the German troops, bringing up reserves, established a new defensive line on the Tsarevich river. In these actions the division captured 18 guns, 540 shells, 30 machine guns, 250,000 rounds of ammunition, 2,000 mortar bombs, ten mortars, nine radios, 19 submachine guns, three vehicles, six bicycles and a few hundred rifles. Repeated German attacks against the 64th on 26 August were repulsed. Despite its small numbers, the division launched a counterattack against the German troops. Until 11 September the division fought in sustained battles as part of the
19th Army on the line of the Tsarevich. The division was withdrawn to the front reserve on 12 September and concentrated in the area of Gorokhovka, south of Vadino station. On 17 September, being loaded onto troop trains at the stations of Izdeshkovo and Alfyorovo, the 64th was withdrawn to the reserve, to
Voronezh. The division concentrated in Voronezh by the end of the day on 21 September. The division was converted into the
7th Guards Rifle Division on 26 September 1941. == References ==