The Donbas operation began on 13 August 1943 with the offensive of the right wing of the
Southwestern Front. These troops forced the
Donets river and advancing along the right bank of the river, helped the
Steppe Front with the
liberation of Kharkiv. On 16 August, the
Southern Front troops went on the offensive and broke through the German defense on the Mius River. Between 25 August and the morning of 27 August, the Soviet forces paused briefly for ammunition and supplies to be brought up. Despite this apparent opportunity to reform the line, and withdraw west at best speed, General
Hollidt was unable to secure approval, with dire consequences for the XXIX Corps. The 27th saw the Soviet assault renewed in earnest, and quickly it became apparent that Sixth Army was on the verge of collapse. Desperate fighting was had all across the front, but men of the 2nd Guards and 5th Shock armies forced their way forward, threatening to encircle XXIX Corps. On 30 August,
Taganrog was liberated in combination with a naval operation. Meanwhile, the
13th Panzer tried to reestablish contact with the isolated corps, but to no avail. By 31 August, 6th Army made a new attempt to relieve and withdraw the remaining men in the pocket. With the
17th Panzer division leading the way, and with support form the
3rd GebirgsJäger division, a tenuous connection was made with the
XXIX Army Corps. Quickly, and under remorseless Soviet artillery fire, the pocket was swiftly (albeit with heavy costs) evacuated just south of Konkowo. The 15th Luftwaffe Field Division alone suffered heavy casualties, its 30th Lw. Jäger Regiment was reduced to 400 men, from an authorized strength of 2,400. As
Army Group South was threatened with dismemberment and destruction, Hitler finally allowed Manstein to withdraw across the
Dnieper on 15 September. On 1 September 1943, German troops had already begun to retreat on the entire front in the Donbas. On 5 September, Soviet troops liberated
Horlivka and
Artemivsk (now Bakhmut), and on 8 September, the largest Donbas city, Stalino (now
Donetsk). During this time, the southern wing of
1st Panzer Army had difficulty remaining in contact with the retreating elements of the German 6th Army. By 6 September 1943, this section of the front had been broken apart by continual fighting and Red Army pressure. After the fall of Stalino, Manstein was forced to continue his retreat to the
Dnieper river, all the while under heavy pressure from Soviet tank and mechanized units. On 9 September, however, an opportunity presented itself to 1st Panzer Army. The 3rd Guards Army, in particular the 1st Mechanized Corps, was overexposed in the gap between the German armies, and had not properly protected its flanks. A
kampfgruppe was quickly formed from elements of the
23rd Panzer Division and 16th PanzerGrenadier Division that struck the 1st Mechanized from the north and south. In the course of 3 days the gap had been successfully closed, with the majority of two Soviet corps now behind enemy lines. Unfortunately for the Germans, this victory could not be exploited to its fullest extent, and the retreat westward continued. During the withdrawal, Manstein ordered
scorched earth actions, and Soviet partisans hampered the retreating German Army. Pursuing the enemy, the troops of the South-Western Front on September 22 chased the Germans behind the Dnieper at Dnipropetrovsk (
Dnipro) and
Zaporizhzhia, while troops of the Southern Front on the same day reached the
Molochna River. This ended the Donbas operation. == Results ==