In the summer of 1944,
Heinrich Himmler and the
SS became interested in gaining control of the
1st Cossack Division under
Helmuth von Pannwitz. In July 1944 Himmler discussed the organisation of a Cossack fighting unit in the
Białystok region and requested from
Adolf Hitler, that the Cossack Division would be placed in the organisational structure of the SS. On 26 August 1944 he met with Pannwitz and his chief of staff. Himmler planned to gather all Cossack units to form a second Cossack division and proposed the transfer of the 1st Cossack Division to the SS. All units were to be placed under Pannwitz's command. Though initially reluctant, Pannwitz eventually agreed to place his division under SS administration. Both German cadre and Cossack troops would retain their traditional uniforms and their
Wehrmacht or Cossack rank. Pannwitz hoped to raise his unit's low morale and to receive more supplies and better equipment. The Cossacks did not wear the SS runes or receive any ideological indoctrination. In September 1944, the XIV SS Cossack Cavalry Corps was established on the basis of the 1st Cossack Division. The Cossacks fought an engagement against the Red Army on 25 December 1944 near
Pitomača to prevent them from crossing the
Drava River. The commander of the 5th Don Cossack Cavalry Regiment,
Ivan Kononov, was awarded the
Iron Cross, first class, after the battle. In November 1944 the 1st Cossack Division was taken over by the
Waffen-SS. The
SS Führungshauptamt reorganised the division and used further Cossack combat units from the army and the
Ordnungspolizei to form a
2nd Cossack Cavalry Division. Both divisions were placed under the command of the XV SS Cossack Cavalry Corps on 1 February 1945. With the transfer of the 5th Volunteer Cossack Depot Regiment from the
Volunteer Depot Division on the same day the takeover of the Cossack units by the
Waffen-SS was complete. According to Samuel J. Newland, the corps, composed of the 1st and 2nd Cavalry Brigades and the 1st and 2nd Division, was actually formed on 25 February 1945, when it was officially created by the High Command. The corps was initially subordinated to
Army Group F in
Croatia, and since March 1945 to
Army Group E in Croatia. During their time there, they were known by the locals as
Čerkezi ("
Circassians"), despite the corps' Cossack ethnic makeup. The corps supported the German offensive
Operation Spring Awakening in
Hungary by launching an offensive against a Soviet bridgehead at
Valpovo on the Drava. During April the corps was engaged in minor actions and then began to withdraw from
Yugoslavia on 3 May 1945. Senior officers had concluded that the corps should fight their way back to
Austria in order to be captured by the British. According to one source, Pannwitz felt that the West would have great use for the corps as an anti-Bolshevik formation. The 2nd Division covered the withdrawal of the 1st Division against partisan forces. Unaffected by the
German surrender on 8 May and partisan demands to surrender, the Cossack units continued fighting on their way to the
British zone. On 10 May Pannwitz surrendered to the British, while the last divisional elements reached the British zone on 13 May 1945. ==Organisation==