The division's time in the Reserve was about five weeks, during which it was moved northward by rail. On March 13 it was assigned to Western Front, where it initially came under direct Front command.
16th Army was redesignated as 11th Guards Army on May 1, and by the beginning of June the 169th had joined that Army as part of the
16th Guards Rifle Corps, along with the
1st,
16th, and
31st Guards Rifle Divisions. In the planning for the operation against German
9th Army in the Oryol salient the 11th Guards Army, under command of Lt. Gen.
I. Kh. Bagramyan, was to launch the Front's main attack. It was to defend along a front of 22km on its right flank with the
217th Rifle Division while concentrating 11 rifle divisions, including the 169th, as a shock group on the left flank. This was backed by two tank corps, four tank brigades, two Guards heavy tank regiments (KV tanks), five artillery brigades, 38 artillery regiments, plus other artillery and air assets. The attack sector was 14km wide from Glinnaya to Ozhigovo, where the German
211th and
293rd Infantry Divisions shared a boundary. After penetrating the defense the attackers were to advance in the direction of Belyi Verkh, Ulyanovo and Krapvina, and by the end of the second day the line of the Resseta River was to be reached. From here the Army was to move toward
Bolkhov in an effort to encircling the German forces there in cooperation with
61st Army of Bryansk Front. The 169th was one of six divisions in the Army's first echelon. 16th Guards Corps had the 4th Guards Heavy Tank Regiment, 29th Guards Tank Brigade, and a self-propelled artillery regiment in direct support of the first echelon. Preparations for the attack were effectively complete by July 10, while the fighting for the Kursk salient to the south was ongoing. The main offensive was preceded on July 11 by a reconnaissance-in-force to uncover the German fire plan and ascertain the forward edge of the defense. Each of the Army's first echelon divisions created a reinforced battalion for this purpose, and these attacked at 0300 hours following a 10-minute artillery bombardment. The battalions were also supported by reserve artillery fire. This fighting continued through the day and the first trench line, thinly held as expected, was taken, and the attackers continued to the second line, where the main German forces were located. On this basis many adjustments to the artillery and air preparation plan were made, while the false impression of having defeated the opening of a main offensive was left with many of the defenders. The next morning at 0300 hours the reconnaissance battalions handed their positions over to fresh forces. The artillery preparation began at 0320 and proved effective in part due to the good target intelligence. The complex bombardment lasted a total of two hours and 40 minutes and disrupted the defense to a depth of as much as 6km. A rolling barrage began at 0600 and the infantry went over to the attack at 0605, accompanied by the heavy tanks. The forward edge of the defense was penetrated by 0700 against minimal resistance, at which point the tank brigades were committed through the first echelon rifle divisions. The main resistance zone, with its many strongpoints, was soon seized while the tanks broke through to the intermediate zone. The two German divisions, supported by reserves from
LIII Army Corps, began to recover and attempt to consolidate on a line from Zhelyabova to Rechitsa while also launching counterattacks, which were driven off with heavy casualties. German air attacks increased and units of
5th Panzer Division began to appear in the breakthrough zone. By the end of the day 16th Guards Corps, developing its attack to the southwest, had reached a line from 3km northeast of Ozerny to Krasnyi Oktyabr. Overall, the Army had gained up to 12km and partly broken the second German defense line. During July 13 the 16th Guards Corps, less 1st Guards Division which was fighting near Staritsa, continued to widen the breach to the southwest and by day's end had reached a line from Chernyshino to Dudorovo, which completed the breach of the third defense line. Bagramyan's Army had now penetrated to a depth of 12-25km on a 23km-wide front, had routed the two German infantry divisions and elements of 5th Panzer, and favorable conditions had been created for a further attack toward Bolkhov or to cut the Oryol
Bryansk railroad and paved road. The German command was reacting by rushing reserves from the rear and other sectors of the front. The next day units of
20th Panzer Division and three infantry divisions arrived on the breakthrough sector, with more following during July 15-19. These were intended not only to stop the breakthrough but to counterattack the base of the penetration and restore the original line.
Fighting on the Resseta 50th Army to the north had attacked unsuccessfully on July 13, and as 11th Guards continued to advance, albeit at a slower pace, 16th Guards Corps was forced to extend its sector in order retain contact. It was now fighting along the Resseta River with its right flank units, attempting to take crossings and bridgeheads on the left bank against the influx of German reserves, including 5th Panzer and
183rd Infantry Divisions. The heaviest resistance was in the KholmishchiKhatkovoMoilovoKtsyn area, where the Corps faced continual counterattacks from infantry and tanks. In a few placed the Soviet forces were pushed back from recent gains. Despite this, after two days of fighting, on July 17 the 169th cleared Khatkovo and, developing its success, also took Suseya in a turning movement. On July 19 it cooperated with 31st Guards Division, with some support from 1st Guards, to capture the village of Brusny. By the end of this day the Corps had reached a line from the woods 2km southeast of Chishche to Brusny to the northern outskirts of Moilovo, but German forces had managed to retain Moilovo and Ktsyn, from where they continued to threaten the right side of the base of the penetration, which was now more than 70km deep. 50th Army had regrouped and attacked again on July 14, this time breaking through on a narrow frontage before going over to a general offensive on July 17. This had assisted the success of 16th Guards Corps by reducing the length of its sector. Following the capture of Brusny the Corps reached from the Kholunya River to the northeast outskirts of Moilovo on July 20 in stubborn fighting. Steady rain over the past days was also slowing the advance. While German reinforcements were arriving, the
STAVKA had decided to transfer
11th Army to Western Front, as well as
4th Tank Army and
2nd Guards Cavalry Corps, which would arrive later. Bagramyan was directed to attack with his left wing southward in order to cut the OryolByransk roads, while part of its forces would also help 61st Army to encircle and destroy the German Bolkhov grouping. In order to shorten his front the 16th Guards Corps was transferred to 11th Army. However, the 169th was shifted to the left wing, where it joined the
36th Guards Rifle Corps. 11th Guards Army itself would soon be transferred to Bryansk Front.
Battles for Bolkhov The 36th and
8th Guards Rifle Corps, with
25th Tank Corps, went back to the offensive on July 23 and by the 25th had reached the jumping-off point for a decisive attack on the Bolkhov grouping. The two Guards Corps were to break through the German defense along the PerkovoLuchki sector, secure the commitment of 4th Tank Army into the breach, and subsequently outflank
Khotynets from the east while part of their forces followed 4th Tanks in the general direction of Borilovo. The final offensive on Bolkhov began on July 26 after an hour-long artillery preparation. 36th Guards Corps made little progress against powerful defenses. Under the circumstances the 4th Tanks had to be committed to try to make the actual breach. Despite this defensive success the German command issued orders in the evening to evacuate Bolkhov. On July 29 units of 11th Guards Army finally broke through and by the evening the 61st Army had cleared the town. The following day the Corps, in conjunction with 25th Tanks, continued a slow advance to a line from Brezhnevskii to Proletarskii by July 30. On July 31 Sen. Lt. Pyotr Evpsipovich Tatarkin was killed in action near the village of Korobetskoye. He was the commander of a battery of
regimental guns of the 434th Rifle Regiment who distinguished himself in the first days of the offensive. On July 12, while accompanying the advancing riflemen, he had directed fire which destroyed five firing points, two bunkers, and suppressed the fire of a German mortar battery while causing roughly 200 casualties. The next day, as one rifle battalion was counterattacked by up to two battalions, Tatarkin's battery was in support, and was surrounded with the riflemen. Leaving his subordinate to direct gunfire at point-blank range he led most of his gunners into the attack, which was followed by the riflemen. After hand-to-hand combat the attackers fell back with losses, of which 27 were credited to Tatarkin personally, in spite of suffering an arm wound. On April 6, 1944 he would be posthumously made a Hero of the Soviet Union.
Battles for Khotynets From July 31 to August 5 Bagramyan's Army, along with 4th Tank Army, was involved in stubborn fighting for control of the paved road and railroad between Oryol and Bryansk. By the morning of August 6 it had again handed over its right-flank sector to 11th Army and had regrouped for an offensive on Khotynets. 36th Guards Corps occupied a start line on a 7km-wide sector from the
Vytebet River west of Ilinskoe to the northern outskirts of Brezhnevskii and was to attack with
1st Tank Corps in the direction of Studenka and Obraztsovo, outflanking Khotynets from the northwest and east. 11th Guards Army as a whole was to break through between Ilinskoe and Gnezdilovo to create a breach for 4th Tanks and then encircle and capture Khotynets before developing the offensive toward
Karachev. 36th Guards Corps, with 1st Tanks, was to attack toward Studenka and Obreztsovo, which would outflank Khotynets from the northwest and east. For this purpose it was reinforced with a tank brigade, a tank regiment, two self-propelled artillery regiments, and several artillery assets. The renewed offensive began with reconnaissance operations by each first-echelon division at 0600 hours on August 6, followed by an artillery and airstrike preparation at noon. The 8th and 36th Guards Corps with heavy tank support went over to the attack at 1300 and quickly broke through the forward edge of the German defense, which was soon falling back to its intermediate line. The garrison of Ilinskoe attempted to slow the assault, but was outflanked by the 169th and the
18th Guards Rifle Division on either side. This led to a rout in which some 1,000 dead and considerable weaponry was left on the battlefield. By 1530 hours the infantry had penetrated up to 3km and the 1st Tanks was committed. Late in the day the right-flank units of 36th Guards Corps were successfully advancing and reached the approaches to Klemenovo the next morning. Despite these initial successes the German forces used broken ground and village strongpoints to delay the offensive. On August 8 units of the
25th Panzergrenadier Division appeared on the approaches to Khotynets. Further reserves arrived the next day and two armored trains were coursing along the railroad. Despite this, on August 9 fighting began on the immediate approaches to the town and individual strongpoints changed hands several times. By day's end elements of the 36th Guards Corps and the 1st Tanks were fighting along the outskirts of Abolmasovo, Voeikovo and Khotynets itself while units of 8th Guards Corps and 25th Tanks outflanked Khotynets from the south and cut the railroad. The town was now outflanked from three sides and on the morning of August 10 was completely cleared of German forces as remnants fell back to the west; the battle had cost them 7,500 officers and men, 70 armored vehicles and 176 guns and mortars. In the pursuit the next day the 36th Corps reached the eastern outskirts of Yurevo and straddled the KhotynetsKarachev road southeast of Yakovlevo. The 169th was now moved to Bagramyan's reserve and concentrated in the area of Moshchenoe. On September 5 it was assigned to 8th Guards Corps, but on September 19 it was moved to 63rd Army, still in Bryansk Front. In late September the Army was transferred to
Central Front (soon renamed Belorussian Front) and the 169th soon became part of
40th Rifle Corps. == Battles in Belarus ==