Siege of Moscow, November–December 1941 visits the regiment in November 1941 at the time of its arrival on the Eastern Front By October 1941, the LVF comprised two battalions with a strength of 2,271 men, 181 French officers, and 35 German officers. They were equipped with light weapons, machine guns, and a small number of
3.7 cm Pak 35/36 anti-tank guns. From the start, there was significant rivalries and little internal cohesion within the LVF; 400 men were lost to
desertion and disease in its first months before even seeing action. There were frequent confrontations between supporters of Doriot and Deloncle, especially among the unit's highly politicised French officers. The historian Oleg Beyda writes: The LVF was deployed to
Smolensk and sent as reinforcements to the fighting near
Moscow in November and December 1941 where it became the only foreign unit to fight alongside the Germans. Beyda writes that by the time of its arrival at the front, the unit "was on its last legs". Many collaborators had feared that the unit might arrive too late at the front to see action, and its training had been cut short for this reason. The LVF was first deployed in combat near the village of Vygliadovka and participated in a successful frontal assault against Soviet positions on 1 December, but was hit by a large Soviet counterattack several days later, suffering extremely high casualties. Within months, the LVF had lost around half its manpower in action or through
frostbite; there was also a serious outbreak of
dysentery. Some individual soldiers deserted to the Red Army or committed suicide. After two weeks, they were withdrawn from the front line in
Djukovo ( from Moscow) and returned to Smolensk. Afterwards, the LVF was used only behind the front-line.
Separation and "bandit-fighting" operations, 1941–43 In the aftermath of its initial deployment, the LVF was withdrawn from front-line service and assigned to so-called "
bandit-fighting" operations (
Bandenbekämpfung) against supposed
Soviet partisans in the rear-echelons of
Army Group Centre. Almost immediately, however, it was withdrawn entirely from service soon afterwards and transferred to
Radom in the General Government to reform. Another contingent of volunteers arrived from France in December 1941 and formed the basis of the 3rd Battalion. As the LVF's 2nd Battalion had been almost entirely annihilated, the LVF still numbered two battalions numbered the 1st and 3rd. In Radom, the Germans purged the unit of more prominent political activists as well as the White Russian, Arab and African personnel whose enlistment it had already forbidden. Labonne was recalled to Paris in March 1942 and removed from his command but was awarded the
Iron Cross Second Class as a face-saving measure. After its reorganisation, the Legion's two remaining battalions were deployed separately to "bandit-fighting" operations in the region around Smolensk under the auspices of Army Group Centre. The 3rd Battalion was assigned to the 44th Security Regiment of the
221st Security Division in May 1942. In July 1942, the 1st Battalion was attached to the 2nd Security Regiment in the
286th Security Division. Although no longer operating as a single unit, the LVF's total strength grew to 3,641 men. In the course of their service in this capacity, French soldiers became known for their indiscipline and looting from civilian population. They acted with similar violence to their German counterparts who routinely killed Soviet civilians, especially Jews, who fell into their hands. According to the historian
Rolf-Dieter Müller, "brute force was used against the population, including the plundering and destruction of villages". The historian Aleksandr Vershinin states that the personnel of the LVF thought the Soviet citizens they encountered were backward, culturally inferior and even
subhuman, and sometimes drew parallels with French colonial troops involved in
punitive expeditions in North Africa. According to Beyda, the LVF proved to be largely ineffective in anti-partisan warfare as a result of a combination of low morale, disagreements with the German command, and military inexperience.
Tricolor Legion and reorganisation, 1942–44 As Laval's political influence increased, the Vichy regime announced a new formation, the
Tricolor Legion (
Légion tricolore), in July 1942. Conceived by the Vichy minister
Jacques Benoist-Méchin, the Tricolor Legion was intended to serve as a French unit alongside Axis forces on the Eastern Front and "in all theatres where French interests are at stake". Unlike the LVF, the Tricolor Legion would enjoy official and genuinely autonomous status and be considered part of the French army. Benoist-Méchin hoped that the LVF could be absorbed into the Tricolor Legion, and he was appointed to the LVF's Central Committee alongside other Vichy functionaries. Laval endorsed the project as a way to wrest political influence away from the
groupuscules in Paris. Abetz approved the new proposal, but the Tricolor Legion was rejected by Hitler and the German Army. The Vichy-controlled free zone was
invaded and occupied by German forces in November 1942 and the Tricolor Legion was quietly abandoned in December 1942. Volunteers were offered a choice between returning to civilian life and service with the LVF; most chose the former option. , Vichy minister, inspects the LVF in September 1943. Puaud is third from the right, wearing a French uniform and
kepi. The 1st and 3rd Battalions were formally regrouped into a single regiment on 1 September 1943 and were joined by the 2nd Battalion which was re-created in November 1943. The LVF was placed under the command of Colonel
Edgar Puaud who had enlisted in the Tricolor Legion. By the time of its reestablishment, the number of soldiers in the LVF had fallen to only 1,000, making it badly understrength. It was hoped
Turkmen hiwis could fill a shortfall in recruits, but these plans were abandoned after the creation of the
Turkestan Legion. All three battalions of the LVF were deployed as a single unit for the first time in a large-scale attack in January 1944 dubbed Operation Morocco against partisans in a large forested area near
Somry in Byelorussia. In the course of the operation, 1,118 supposed partisans were killed and 1,345 detained. Puaud received the ''
Légion d'Honneur'' as a result. In the aftermath of the operation, the LVF nonetheless came under increasing pressure as the strength of partisan groups grew. 22 men were killed by partisans in March 1944 alone. The historian Kuzma Kozak estimates that, during its service in Byelorussia, the LVF lost 496 men killed, 107 wounded and 16 taken prisoner.
Operation Bagration, June 1944 As a result of its own dwindling numbers and a resurgence in partisan activity, the German military authorities had decided to withdraw the LVF to Germany on 18 June 1944 a few days before the start of the major
Soviet offensive into Byelorussia. Some 400 soldiers from the LVF were hurriedly drafted into front-line service to attempt to stall the Soviet advance. They were attached a
Kampfgruppe hastily assembled around the
4th SS Police Regiment and fought a successful small-scale delaying action at Bobr on the
Moscow-Minsk road on 26–27 June 1944 with the support of a German unit of
Tiger tanks. Although 41 French soldiers were killed in the action, the losses on the Soviet side were heavy and 40 Soviet tanks were destroyed. The
Kampfgruppe retreated to
Minsk later that month, and the LVF was redeployed to
Greifenberg in
Pomerania, where it was disbanded on 1 September 1944. ==Unit commanders==