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  • 4th soviet Guards Army

    About 4th soviet guards army.

    If i understand correctly so is this army a big reason to the failure of the spring 2000 offensive.

    1. Does it mention anywhere from ware they received it's fuel from
    It's must be a huge source of supply if you are going to move an army with 1 TD and two MRD to Poland from white Russia.

    2. Where ware these unit stationed prior to the move to Poland 2000.



    Birger

  • #2
    Fuel was from reserves in Romania.

    Comment


    • #3
      Found this.

      According to one of the rumors in Escape from Kalisz,
      "A vehicle driver tells you that the 4th Guards Tank Army was able to move so fast because it's running on gasoline! A whole month's output from the Ploesti oil fields in Romania was earmarked for the 4th Guards just so the Warsaw Pact would have one mobile army. There are thousands, maybe millions, of liters of it in the supply dumps of the division. A lot of supply officers are getting rich selling it to the black market."

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Fusilier
        Fuel was from reserves in Romania.


        with book sates that

        Comment


        • #5
          Escape from Kalisz module included in the 1st ed. boxed set.

          If I remember correctly the 4th was stationed in Belarus prior to moving out to counter the 2000 offensive.

          Comment


          • #6
            If I remember correctly the 4th Guards Tank Army was part of Group of Tank Armies that were in reserve position. The other Army by 2000 had converted over to Cavalry. The 4th GTA even with Motorized Rifle Division was quite under strength too. I believe one of the Divisions of this the 4th GTA went on rampage shortly after entering Poland, the 9th Tank Division if I remember correctly.

            The 22nd Soviet Cavalry Army, now that I remember the name of the Cavalry Army had over ran the positions of the 10th Soviet Guard Tank Division Which itself had been re-outfitted with T-55s, before it switch sides to NATO. In fact, I think many units of the 22nd Cavalry Army were themselves on the verge of declaring for NATO.

            Comment


            • #7
              Thanks gays

              Comment


              • #8
                [QUOTE=Abbott Shaull]I believe one of the Divisions of this the 4th GTA went on rampage shortly after entering Poland, the 9th Tank Division if I remember correctly.

                Which units were originally with the army when it moved from Belarus

                It sounds to you gays that it was more then the 3 units am talking about.

                Comment


                • #9
                  G2, 51D(M)
                  120100
                  120545 Jun 2000

                  ANNEX A (Enemy Dispositions) to INTELLIGENCE ESTIMATE NO 142

                  References: Per para 1, Intel Est 142

                  1. Three major groupings of Warsaw Pact forces have been identified in Poland. These are, from north to south, Baltic Front, 1st Western Front, and 2nd Western Front. Together with Central Front in Czechoslovakia, these three fronts comprise the Western Strategic Direction (Western T.V.D.) of the Warsaw Pact, the headquarters of which is believed to be located in Lublin.

                  2. The recent offensive of German 3rd Army has caused considerable losses in the Baltic Front grouping, and thus the strengths listed can no longer be considered accurate.

                  3. While the front has been quiet in the areas of 1st and 2nd West Front, it is likely that some reserve formations have been detached from these groupings and have been shifted north to deal with the German Third Army breakthrough. Fuel shortages are likely to prevent the rapid completion of this redeployment.

                  4.The following abbreviations are used in this annex:
                  TD: Tank Division
                  GTD: Guards Tank Division
                  MRD: Motorised Rifle Division
                  GMRD: Guards Motorised Rifle Division
                  MarDiv: Marine Division
                  BGB: Border Guard Brigade
                  Unit identifications followed by (C) indicate units, which are assessed as having been converted entirely to horsed cavalry.

                  NORTHERN POLAND: Baltic Front HQ: Malbork
                  1st Polish Army, HQ: Gdynia
                  Pol. 2nd MRD(C) (500 men): Wicko
                  Pol. 3rd MRD(C) (2,000 men): Lebork
                  Pol. 9th MRD (3,000 men, 10 tanks): Koscierzyna
                  Pol. 12th MRD(C) (2,000 men): Starogard
                  Pol. 19th MRD(C) (500 men): Malbork
                  Pol. 3 BGB (500 men): Gdynia
                  Pol. 12th BGB (500 men): Dabrowka
                  2nd Polish Army, HQ: Pita
                  Pol. 1st MRD (4,000 men, 20 tanks): Pita
                  Pol. 7th MarDiv (500 men): Czarnkow
                  Pol. 13th MRD(C) (1,000 men): Jastrowie
                  Pol. 4th BGB(C) (400 men): Chodziez
                  Pol. 5th BGB (500 men): Wronki

                  WEST CENTRAL POLAND: 1st Western Front, HQ: Poznan
                  1st Soviet Guards Tank Army, HQ: Gorzow Wielkop
                  Sov. 9th GTD (4,000 men, 25 tanks): Swiecko
                  Sov. 11th GTD (500 men, 5 tanks): Sulechow
                  Sov. 25th TD (1,000 men, 5 tanks): Swiebodzin
                  Sov. 1st TD (3,000 men, 10 tanks): Rzepin
                  1st Polish Tank Army, HQ: Poznan
                  Pol. 5th TD (4,000 men, 35 tanks): Lwowek
                  Pol. 10th TD (2,000 men, 25 tanks): Steszew
                  Pol. 17th MRD(C) (3,000 men): Smigiel
                  Pol. 8th BGB (500 men): Poznan
                  Pol. 7th BGB (1,000 men): Kornik
                  8th Soviet Guards Army HQ: Gorlitz, Germany
                  Sov. 131st MRD (2,000 men, 15 tanks): Skwierzyna
                  Sov. 20th GMRD(C) (1,000 men): Miedyrzecz
                  Sov. 39th GMRD (3,000 men, 25 tanks): Kostrzyn

                  SOUTHWEST POLAND: 2nd West Front HQ: Legnica
                  2nd Soviet Guards Army, HQ: Gorlitz, Germany
                  Sov. 94th GMRD(C) (500 men): Swiebodzin
                  Sov. 21st GMRD (1,000 men, 5 tanks): Bautzen, Germany
                  Sov. 103rd MRD (4,000 men, 30 tanks): Cottbus, Germany
                  Sov. 117th MRD(C) (100 men): Gorlitz, Germany
                  Sov. 157th MRD (1,000 men, 5 tanks): Hoverswerda, Germany
                  20th Soviet Guards Army HQ: Gubin
                  Sov. 132nd MRD(C) (3,000 men): Peitz, Germany
                  Sov. 12th GMRD (4,000 men, 30 tanks): Gubin
                  3rd Soviet Shock Army HQ: Legnica
                  Sov. 12th GTD (2,000 men, 20 tanks): Legnica
                  Sov. 129th MRD (3,000 men, 5 tanks): Jelenia Gora
                  Sov. 127th MRD(C) (2,000 men): Glogow
                  Interior Forces:
                  Pol. 6th BGB (500 men): Lodz
                  Pol. 11th BGB(C) (500 men): Lublin

                  OTHER ARMED COMBATANT FORCES:

                  Polish 14th MRD: Last reported strength 2,000 men and 5 operational tanks. Commanding officer (Col. Julian Filipowicz) is believed to have refused orders to join forces moving against the allied concentration on the Baltic coast, and to have set up a semi-independent region in the vicinity of Gliwice. Agents attempting to open relations with him have not returned, and he must be assumed to be hostile to all parties to the war.

                  Polish 1st Free Legion (formerly 1st Border Guard Brigade): Last reported strength 600 men. Actively supports the Polish Government in exile, and has on occasion cooperated with DIA intelligence operations. Commanded by a former sergeant (S. I. Mastelarz). Radio contact recently lost with this unit. Believed to be operating in the area between Poznan and Glogow.

                  Polish 2nd Free Legion (formerly 10th Border Guard Brigade): Last reported strength 200 men. Commanded by Major M. K. Sikorski. Actively supports the Polish Government in exile and has engaged in extensive guerrilla attacks against Soviet troop convoys. Believed now to be operating in the area between Chojnice and Malbork.

                  Polish 8th Motorised Division: Last reported strength 2,000 men. Previously served as garrison of the city of Krakow. When Krakow declared itself a free city, the division apparently did not leave the city and is presumed to form the cadre of the city's defensive force, which the former division commander, Major General Zygmunt Bohusz-Szyszko, may now be commanding.

                  Soviet 10th Guards Tank division: Last reported strength 1,000 men and six operational tanks. Unit has nominally defected, but current attitude of unit and exact nature of command structure not known. There have been reports of contacts between senior officers of the unit and the CIA. Believed to be in the vicinity of Warsaw.

                  Soviet 6th Guards Motorised Rifle Division: Last reported strength 2,000 men and 10 operational tanks. Commanding officer Colonel Ya. N. Chekanov. An outstanding combat unit, three months ago the unit withdrew from the lines in the area between Frankfurt and Gorlitz, apparently without orders, and has not answered numerous radio communications from Warsaw Pact command. Current location and disposition unknown.

                  Soviet 9th Tank Division: Last reported strength 2,000 men. Unit mutinied in September of 1999 and later disintegrated into smaller bands of armed marauders, now believed to infest the area between Lodz and Czestochowa.

                  Soviet 207th Motorised Rifle Division: Last reported strength 600 men. Attached to Polish 1st Army but sustained serious losses in the attacks by German 3rd Army. Believed to have disintegrated, and bands of deserters may now infest the area between Pila and Bydgoszcz, the last reported position of the division.


                  Also a summary of enemy units within the Kalisz area as of 17JUL00:

                  Sov 22nd Cavalry Army at Torun last in Byelorussia Location believed to be in the Torun Area
                  Sov 89th Cavalry Division last been identified as being deep in Byelorussia location unknown
                  Sov 96th Cavalry Division last encountered at Krosniewice
                  Sov 43rd Cavalry Division Location unknown
                  Pol 8th Border Guard Brigade location unknown

                  Sov 4th Guards Tank Army
                  Sov 21st Motorised Rifle Division - Kalisz
                  Sov 20th Tank Division last reported in Ukraine last encountered by 1st brigade in the Ozorkow / Uniejow area.
                  Sov 124th Motorised Rifle Division on the road between Kalisz and Sieradz
                  Pol 10th Tank Division - Kalisz
                  Pol 6th Border Guard Brigade Zgierz
                  Pol 11th Border Guard Brigade formerly at Lublin now Zdunska Wola / Lask

                  Sov 3rd Shock Army
                  Sov 12th Guards Tank Division had been in reserve near Legnica location unknown
                  Sov 127th Cavalry Division location unknown
                  Sov 129th Motorised Rifle Division location unknown
                  If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives.

                  Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect"

                  Mors ante pudorem

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Looks as if the 4th GTA was position to move either north or south if it was in the Ukraine, that not much was happen to the south....

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Hybris
                      Thanks gays
                      Originally posted by Hybris
                      It sounds to you gays that it was more then the 3 units am talking about.
                      HAH! I was eating when I read these and now I've had to wipe my screen down.

                      Priceless.
                      sigpic "It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli

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                      • #12
                        Didn't notice what he had typed until I read the quotes...hmmm.

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                        • #13
                          Now I am a happy camper with all the information I need.


                          Thanks

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                          • #14
                            One question Ive always had about Fourth Guards Tank Army is how this particular fight came about. To what degree did the Soviets know about the planned Summer 2000 offensive by NATO To what degree was Fourth Guards Tank Army prepped and stocked as an operational matter-of-course To what degree was a gasoline-run Fourth Guards Tank Army intended for a Soviet offensivea mission that was changed as a consequence of the NATO offensive The answer is probably a combination of all three possibilities, as they naturally blend into each other. Still, it would be interesting to know how much the Soviets knew about NATO intentions. By the same token, how serious were the Soviets about using their mobile reserve offensively, if NATO did nothing but stand pat during the first part of the 2000 campaign season

                            Webstral
                            “We’re not innovating. We’re selectively imitating.” June Bernstein, Acting President of the University of Arizona in Tucson, November 15, 1998.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              It would make sense that the Soviets High Command or what was left was planning for Offensive in their own right. Or were there two offensives planned. First one involving the 22nd Cavalry Army who were suppose to sweep aside units that were no longer responding, and then 4th Guards Tank Army would then make it way to the front.

                              Don't think the Soviet had much advance notice, we have to remember after the initial strike by the XI Corps that the advance would be stop and go. They would have to stop to hole up, and set up the stills for a while to fill gas tanks. I don't think they had much notice in advance, due to the fact the loyalty of the Poles was questionable at best, and even Soviet units had stop accepting orders too along the line.

                              The 22nd Cavalry Army seemed to have gotten to their objectives just a tad too late, but soon enough to effective close a trap. To me it seems like the 5th Mechanized had surge forward sooner then expected. The plan seemed to have 22nd Cavalry and 3rd Shock Armies to pin down the 5th while the 4th went on through to help handle the XI Corps and 3rd German Army. Also one has to remember the 8th Mechanized had been on break out too.

                              I think both sides were quite unaware of the planned offensives the other side was planning, just happen the NATO launched their first. Then the counter-offensive that the Pact had to launch put other plans behind.

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