Hungary becomes a battlefield Until March 19, 1944, Hungarian Regent Admiral
Miklós Horthy surrounded himself with anti-fascists. Relations between Hungary and Germany became more and more difficult. Horthy met Hitler on March 16 and 17 at German headquarters, where he told Hitler, "We Hungarians have already lost one hundred thousand men in this bloody war, counting dead, wounded and missing. Those we have left have but few arms with which to fight. We cannot help you one bit more. We are through. We are doing our best to stave off the Bolshevik menace and we won't be able to spare a single man for the Balkans." The German dictator arranged to keep Horthy busy by conducting negotiations while Hungary was quietly and efficiently overrun by German ground forces in a quick and bloodless invasion,
Operation Margarethe. Soon all of Hungary was to become a battlefield. By mid-August 1944, German Colonel-General (Generaloberst)
Johannes Friessner's
Army Group South was on the brink of collapse. To the north, the Soviet's
Operation Bagration was completing the destruction of the Axis
Army Group Centre. To the south, Germany's former ally, Romania, declared war on Germany on August 25, 1944, as a result of the
Yassi-Kishinev strategic offensive (August 20–29, 1944). On the eve of the Soviet East Carpathian strategic offensive (September 8–28, 1944), as Soviet forces crossed the Hungarian border, Bulgaria, too, declared war on Germany. The subsequent Budapest strategic offensive (October 29, 1944 - February 13, 1945) attack by the
Ukrainian Second and
Third Fronts far into Hungary destroyed any semblance of an organised German defensive line. By this time,
Fyodor Tolbukhin's Ukrainian Third Front, aided by the Ukrainian Second Front under
Marshal of the Soviet Union Rodion Malinovsky, had annihilated thirteen Axis divisions, capturing over 100,000 men.
Wartime mobilization On August 30, 1944, Hungary mobilized a reformed Hungarian Second Army and the
Hungarian Third Army. Both armies were primarily composed of weak, undermanned, and underequipped reserve divisions. General of Artillery
Maximilian Fretter-Pico's recently reformed
German Sixth Army represented the nucleus of what remained of Friessner's force. By October 1944, seeing that his Hungarian allies were suffering from low morale, Friessner attached the recently reformed Hungarian Second Army under the command of Lieutenant-General Lajos Veress von Dalnoki to Fretter-Pico's army. The combination of German and Hungarian armies was designated
Army Group Fretter-Pico (
Armeegruppe Fretter-Pico). The desertions of Bulgaria and Romania had opened a 650-kilometer gap in Friessner's Army Group South. As Friessner desperately struggled to reform a defensive line, news filtered through to Berlin that the Hungarian leader, Admiral
Miklós Horthy was preparing to sign a separate peace with the Soviet Union. If this happened, the entire front of
Army Group South Ukraine would collapse. In August, Horthy replaced Prime Minister
Döme Sztójay with the anti-fascist General
Géza Lakatos. Under Lakatos's regime, acting Interior Minister Béla Horváth ordered Hungarian gendarmes to protect any Hungarian citizen from being deported. On October 15, 1944, Horthy announced that Hungary had signed an armistice with the Soviet Union. But most Hungarian army units ignored Horthy's orders, and the Germans reacted swiftly with
Operation Panzerfaust. Commando leader
Otto Skorzeny was sent to Hungary and, in another of his daring "snatch" operations, kidnapped Horthy's son,
Miklós Horthy Jr. The Germans insisted that Horthy abrogate the
armistice, depose Lakatos's government, and name the leader of the
Arrow Cross Party,
Ferenc Szálasi, as Prime Minister. Instead, Horthy agreed to abdicate. Szálasi was able take power in Hungary with Germany's backing.
Success at the Battle of Debrecen and the end Late in 1944, a reformed Hungarian Second Army enjoyed a modest level of combat success as an integral part of German General Maximilian Fretter-Pico's Army Group Fretter-Pico. From September 16 - October 24, 1944, during the
Battle of Debrecen, Army Group Fretter-Pico achieved a major success against the
Debrecen Offensive Operation. While avoiding encirclement, Army Group Fretter-Pico managed to maul three Soviet corps under the command of
Issa Pliyev. The defeat of the Soviet cavalry-mechanised by the combined German and Hungarian forces contrasted with Pliyev's earlier victory over the
Hungarian Third Army. However, the victory ultimately proved too costly to the Hungarians' armor and ammunition reserves. Unable to replace equipment and personnel lost in the
Battle of Debrecen, the Hungarian Second Army were smashed on December 1, 1944. Surviving units of the Second Army were transferred to the Third Army. By 1944, the main battle tank of the Second Armored Field Division was the Hungarian
Turan medium tank, a limited improvement over the Czech
Panzer 38(t) and the Hungarian
Toldi tanks used by the First Armored Field Division in 1942. However, the Turan I tank (with a 40 mm gun) and the Turan II tank (with a short 75 mm gun) were still no match for a standard Soviet
T-34 tank, and, compared to the
T-34/76, the Soviets had many much-improved T-34/85 tanks by 1944. Manufacture of the potentially more effective Turan III tank (with a long 75 mm gun) never developed beyond prototypes. Only a few of the better quality German
Panzer IV tanks,
Panzer III tanks, and
Sturmgeschütz III assault guns were made available to the Hungarians. == See also ==