The operation took place between 18 August and 1 September. The attack was made by the
87th Rifle Corps (Guards Lieutenant General A. S. Ksenofontov) of the
16th Army (Lieutenant General
Leonty Cheremisov) from the 2nd Far Eastern Front, and elements of the
Kamchatka Defense Area (
Major General Alexey Gnechko commanding). Ships and transportation were drawn from the
Petropavlovsk military base (
Captain Dmitry Ponomarev). The 128th Aviation
Division also provided support. The islands were occupied by the Japanese 91st Infantry Division (
Shiashkotan,
Paramushir,
Shumshu, and
Onekotan),
42nd Division (
Simushir), 41st Independent Regiment (
Matua), 129th Independent Brigade (
Urup), and 89th Infantry Division (
Iturup and
Kunashir). The Japanese commander was
Lieutenant General Fusaki Tsutsumi. Initial reconnaissance was undertaken on 18 August by a detachment of the 113th Separate Rifle Brigade (Captain-Lieutenant G. I. Brunshtein), carried by two mine trawlers (ТЩ-589 and ТЩ-590) to Rubetzu Bay on Iturup island. The landings on Iturup were continued by the
355th Rifle Division, which also landed on the smaller island of Urup. On 23 August, the 20,000-strong Japanese garrisons on the islands were ordered to surrender as part of the general
surrender of Japan. However, some of the garrison forces ignored this order and continued to resist Soviet occupation. From 22 to 28 August, troops of the Kamchatka Defense Area occupied the Kuril Islands from Urup north. On 1 September, elements of the 87th Rifle Corps were landed by torpedo boats, mine trawlers and transports (departing from Otomari) on Kunashir and Shikotan in the southern Kuril Islands. This was an assault landing against Japanese resistance. On 4 September, 87th Rifle Corps occupied five smaller islands (Sibotzu, Taraku-Shima, Uri-Shima, Akiuri, and Suiseto). After 4 September, Soviet forces occupied the rest of the Kuril Islands without further resistance. The islands remained part of Russia after the
dissolution of the Soviet Union, but their true legal status remains in question as part of the
Kuril Islands dispute between Russia and Japan. ==See also==