The first Soviet partisan units sent into territory of Latvia from the end of 1941 to mid 1944 were quickly annihilated. Activity picked up in the second half of 1942, one year after the first winter war, but real work by the partisans in Latvia started only in 1943 after the German
Army Group B stalled at Stalingrad and
Kursk. The partisan regiment
Par Padomju Latviju (For Soviet Latvia) was organized under the command of Vilhelms Laiviņš and
Otomārs Oškalns and started training in June 1942 in
Leningrad and from
Staraya Russa, three small Latvian partisan units (about 200 men) headed for Latvia. July 7, the regiment with combat reached Latvian
Kārsava region, but there the German found and dispersed them with great losses and only several partisans escaped. Next partisan unit was formed September 1942 near Moscow from volunteers, from
201st Latvian Riflemen Division and
Par Padomju Latviju combatants. Commander of these units was , who later became a Soviet historian. In March this unit was renamed to Latvian Partisan Brigade. This partisan regiment combat began East of Latvian borders and only at the end of 1943 they entered the territory of Latvia. Since the local population in Latvia would not support Soviet partisans, they could not gain a foothold. 3,000-man unit of Vilis Samsons was credited with the destruction of nearly 130 German trains; however, this seems to be a fabrication. Leningrad partisan brigade, which consisted only of Russians (commander M.I. Klementjev) fought around
Lake Lubāns. In 1944 and 1945 in
Courland they formed many small partisan units (2 to 12 men each) but very active. The most active one was the
Sarkanā bulta ('The Red Arrow'). The Latvian Red partisans suffered great losses, and many from smaller groups were eliminated. According to statistics of
Communist Party of Latvia, from 1941 to 1944 4055 military trained, armed and tested soldiers, organizers and lookouts were deployed to Latvia from the USSR. On January 4, 1944, Latvian Partisan Movement Headquarters had 812 soldiers at its disposal. This testifies that 3243 (80%) of the soldiers early deployed to Latvia either died, were wounded, or were declared missing in action. During Nazi occupation of Latvia, Latvian Soviet partisans produced and distributed several illegal newspapers («
Mūsu zeme» («Our land»), «
Par Dzimteni» («For the Motherland»), «
Jaunais Latvietis» («Young Latvian»), etc.) and several hand-written
leaflets. ==Local resistance==