Lapland War, Soviet advance, and retreat of the German army and, shortly thereafter, from
Finnmark in northern Norway was left severely damaged following the withdrawal of German forces. With the beginning of the
German withdrawal from Lapland, the initial German plan was to retain the essential nickel mines around
Petsamo in the far North held by the
19th Mountain Corps under General
Ferdinand Jodl, but events led to the
Oberkommando der Wehrmacht ordering the entire
20th Mountain Army out of
Finland to take up new defensive positions around
Lyngen and
Skibotn just to the north of
Tromsø—a new operation which came to be called "
Operation Nordlicht" (Operation Northern Light). This proved to be a huge logistical undertaking. General
Lothar Rendulic, replacing General
Eduard Dietl, who had been killed in an air crash, set about evacuating supplies by sea through Petsamo and the Norwegian town of
Kirkenes. In early October 1944, some 53,000 men of the German 19th Mountain Corps were still inside
Russia along the
Litsa River and the neck of the
Rybachy Peninsula. The plan was for them to reach
Lakselv in Norway, west, by 15 November. By 7 October however, the combined
Soviet 14th Army and
Northern fleet, consisting of 133,500 men under Field Marshal
Kirill Meretskov, attacked the weakest point of the German line, the junction between the
2nd and
6th Mountain Divisions. A Soviet Naval Brigade also made an amphibious landing to the west of Rybachy, thereby outflanking the Germans. Rendulic, fearing an encirclement of his forces, ordered the 19th Mountain Corps to fall back into Norway. With the Soviets hard on their heels, the Corps reached Kirkenes by 20 October. The German High Command ordered Rendulic to hold the Soviets at bay whilst vital supplies amounting to some could be shipped to safety. Five days later, when the German army prepared to withdraw, only around had been saved. As a result of the German
scorched earth policy, Kirkenes was virtually destroyed by the Germans before pulling out: the town was set on fire, port installations and offices were blown up and only a few small houses were left standing. This scene was to be repeated throughout
Finnmark, an area larger than
Denmark. The Germans were determined to leave nothing of value to the Soviets, as Hitler had ordered Rendulic to leave the area devoid of people, shelter and supplies. Some 43,000 people complied with the order to evacuate the region immediately; those who refused were forced to leave their homes. Some nonetheless stayed behind to await the departure of the Germans: it was estimated that 23,000–25,000 people remained in East-Finnmark by the end of November, they hid in the wilderness until the Germans had left. The Soviets pursued the Germans over the following days, and fighting occurred around the small settlements of
Munkelv and
Neiden to the west of Kirkenes around 27 October. The German 6th Mountain Division, acting as rear-guard, slowly withdrew up the main road along the coast (known as
Riksvei 50, now called the
E6) until reaching
Tanafjord, some north-west of Kirkenes, which they reached on 6 November. It was to be their last contact with Soviet troops. However, the advance of the Soviet troops stopped and West-Finnmark and North-Troms became a no-man's land between the Soviet army and the German army. Here, several thousand people lived in hiding the whole winter 1944/45. These people were called cave people, living in caves, in huts made of driftwood and/or turf, under boats turned upside down, etc. The risk of being discovered by patrolling German boats was a constant threat during the months waiting for liberation.
Exiled Norwegian troops liberate Finnmark withdrew from Norwegian territory on 25 September 1945. At the rear from right: Colonel
Arne Dagfin Dahl,
Crown Prince Olav and Commander Soviet Forces in Norway Lieutenant General Sherbakov. On 25 October 1944, the order was given for a Norwegian force in Britain to set sail for
Murmansk to join the Soviet forces now entering
Northern Norway. The convoy was named
Force 138 and the operation was called "Operation Crofter". Led by
Oberst Arne D. Dahl: • A military mission responsible for creating a liaison with the Soviets and setting up a civil administration, •
Bergkompanie 2 under Major S. Rongstad with 233 men, • A naval area command with 11 men, • "Area command Finnmark" consisting of 12 men. The force arrived in Murmansk on 6 November and went with a Soviet ship to
Liinakhamari in
North-western Soviet Union (former
North-eastern Finland), from where trucks took them to Norway, arriving on 10 November. The Soviet commander, Lieutenant General
Sherbakov, made it clear that he wanted the Norwegian
Bergkompani to take over the forward positions as soon as possible. Volunteers from the local population were hastily formed into "guard companies" armed with Soviet weapons pending the arrival of more troops from either Sweden or Britain. The first convoy arrived from Britain on 7 December and included two Norwegian corvettes (one of which was later damaged by a mine) and three minesweepers. It soon became obvious that reconnaissance patrols needed to be sent out to observe German activities and discover whether or not the population of Finnmark had been evacuated. The reports came back stating that the Germans were in the process of pulling back from the
Porsanger Peninsula, but were laying mines and booby-traps along the way, a few people were left here and there and many of the buildings were burnt down. This remained the situation into 1945. In the new year the Norwegian forces slowly retook Finnmark, helping the local population in the arctic winter and dealing with occasional German raids from the air, sea and land as well as the ever-present danger from mines. Reinforcements arrived from the Norwegian
Rikspoliti based in Sweden as well as convoys from Britain. A total of 1,442 people and of material were flown in by
Dakota transport aircraft from
Kallax in Sweden to Finnmark, and by April the Norwegian forces numbered over 3,000 men. On 26 April the Norwegian command sent out a message that Finnmark was free. When the Germans finally capitulated on 8 May 1945, the 1st company of the Varanger battalion was positioned along the Finnmark-
Troms border to the west of
Alta.
End of German occupation Towards the end of the war, in March 1945, Norwegian
Reichskommissar Josef Terboven had considered
plans to make Norway the last bastion of the Third Reich and a last sanctum for German leaders. However, following
Adolf Hitler's suicide on 30 April, Hitler's successor Admiral
Karl Dönitz summoned Terboven and General
Franz Böhme, Commander-in-Chief of German forces in Norway, to a meeting in
Flensburg, where they were ordered to follow the General headquarters' instructions. German forces in Denmark surrendered on 5 May, and on the same day, General
Eisenhower dispatched a telegram to resistance headquarters in Norway, which was passed on to General Böhme; it contained information on how to make contact with Allied General Headquarters. With only around 30,000 troops on hand, General Montgomery opted to exclude the surrender of Norway from the May 5 surrenders that included Denmark, Holland and northeast Germany and tasked Sir
Andrew Thorne, GOC-in-C Scottish Command, to negotiate the surrender of some 350,000 German troops in Norway. Dönitz dismissed Terboven from his post as
Reichskommissar on 7 May, transferring his powers to General Böhme. At 21:10 on the same day, the German High Command ordered Böhme to follow the capitulation plans, and he made a radio broadcast at 22:00 in which he declared that German forces in Norway would obey orders. This led to an immediate and full mobilisation of the Milorg underground resistance movement—more than 40,000 armed Norwegians were summoned to occupy the
Royal Palace, Oslo's main police station, as well as other public buildings. A planned Norwegian administration was set up overnight. to
Terje Rollem on 11 May 1945. The following afternoon, on 8 May, an Allied military mission arrived in Oslo to deliver the conditions for capitulation to the Germans, and arranged the surrender, which took effect at midnight. The conditions included the German High Command agreeing to arrest and intern all German and Norwegian Nazi party members listed by the Allies, disarm and intern all SS troops, and send all German forces to designated areas. Several of the high ranking Nazi and SS officials chose to kill themselves rather than surrender. Among those who committed suicide between 8–10 May were Terboven, Rediess and Roch. At this time there were no fewer than 400,000 German soldiers in Norway, which had a population of barely three million. Following the surrender, detachments of regular Norwegian and Allied troops were sent to Norway, which included 13,000 Norwegians trained in Sweden and 30,000 Britons and Americans. Official representatives of the Norwegian civil authorities followed soon after these military forces, with
Crown Prince Olav arriving in Oslo on a British cruiser on 14 May, with a 21-man delegation of Norwegian government officials headed up by
Sverre Støstad and
Paul Hartmann, with the remainder of the Norwegian government and the London-based administration following on the UK troopship . Finally,
on 7 June, which also happened to be the 40th anniversary of the
dissolution of
Norway's union with Sweden, King
Haakon VII and the remaining members of the royal family arrived in Oslo onboard the British cruiser
HMS Norfolk. General Sir
Andrew Thorne, Commander-in-Chief of Allied forces in Norway, transferred power to King Haakon that same day. Following the liberation, the Norwegian government-in-exile was replaced by a coalition led by
Einar Gerhardsen which governed until the autumn of 1945 when the first postwar general election was held, returning Gerhardsen as prime minister, at the head of a
Labour Party government. Norwegian survivors began to emerge from the German concentration camps. By war's end, 92,000 Norwegians were located abroad, including 46,000 in Sweden. Besides German occupiers, 141,000 foreign nationals were located in Norway, mostly now-liberated prisoners of war held by the Germans. These included 84,000 Russians. A total of 10,262 Norwegians lost their lives in the conflict or while imprisoned. Approximately 50,000 Norwegians were arrested by the Germans during the occupation. Of these, 9,000 were consigned to prison camps outside Norway, including
Stutthof concentration camp. ==Aftermath==