The
Red Army units assigned to the attack were the
8th Estonian Rifle Corps and
109th Rifle Corps. The troops were transported to the first beachhead at Kuivastu on Muhu Island using
lend-lease landing craft, including amphibious
DUKWs on 29 September 1944. Many of these troops were Estonians, most conscripted into the ranks of the advancing Red Army as was usual as the Soviets recaptured territories. While boosting the units' strength on paper, these untrained conscripts often had limited combat abilities. The Finnish
detachment Arho took part in the operations, especially on 4 and 5 October, providing logistic support to the Soviet infantry units. The Allied controlling committee for Moscow's intermediate peace treaty between the Soviet Union and Finland had asked for 100
galeases and 100 motorboats with their Finnish crews, but Finland negotiated the number of vessels to half of what was asked, 50 galeases and 50 motorboats. There were a captain, a chief motor operator and two other crew members on every galeas and two crew members on every motorboat. The Germans withdrew the garrison on Muhu after weak initial resistance, destroying the causeway between Muhu and Saaremaa; they also withdrew the forces on Hiiumaa to Saaremaa, landing the
218th Infantry Division and
12th Luftwaffe Field Division as further reinforcement. The Soviet plan had originally envisaged clearing the archipelago not later than 5 October but bad weather and German resistance interfered with their advance. After securing Hiiumaa, Soviet forces landed between Jaani and
Keskvere in the north of Saaremaa on 5 October. The German forces retreated across the island with occasional rearguard actions. They planned to make a stand at the narrow, more easily defensible
Sõrve Peninsula on the southwestern side of Saaremaa. Several sharp engagements took place, most notably the
Battle of Tehumardi, but by 8 October, all remaining German forces had been forced back to the peninsula. The rest of the island, including the city of
Kuressaare (German: Arensburg), was now in Soviet hands, who reinforced their attacking units with the
30th Guards Rifle Corps. The Soviet attacks failed to make progress. The Germans had constructed solid defensive positions, built upon remnants of the Soviet positions from 1941. To provide an observation platform in the flat terrain, the Soviets launched two tethered observation balloons. From there, they were able to direct artillery fire against German positions and supply columns. The Soviets tried amphibious attacks behind the German lines but these were repulsed, inflicting severe losses on the attackers. A few days before the end of the battle, the Germans received effective naval gunfire support from flotillas, including the heavy cruisers and . The Soviets also had naval support, and there were minor clashes between the navies. After several weeks of fighting, the most powerful German formation, the 12th Luftwaffe Field Division was pulled back to
Courland on 12 November, forcing the German units back to successive defensive lines. The number of German combat losses reported in the Soviet literature is up to 7,000 killed and 700 prisoners of war. == Withdrawal ==