Battle of Wilno (1939)

The Battle of Wilno was fought by the Polish Army against the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939, which accompanied the German Invasion of Poland in accordance with Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact.[1]:82 On 18–19 September, Soviet forces took over the city of Wilno (now Vilnius). Polish forces, concentrated in the west, were relatively weak in the east. The Polish commanders, unsure whether to actively oppose the Soviet entry into Poland, did not use the full defensive capabilities of the town and nearby fortifications, although the outcome of the battle would not have been likely any different, given the overwhelming Soviet numerical superiority.[1]

Battle of Wilno
Part of the Soviet Invasion of Poland in the European theatre of World War II

Soviet troops entering Wilno, 1939
Date18–19 September 1939
Location54°40′N 25°19′E
Result Soviet victory
Territorial
changes
Vilnius is awarded to the Republic of Lithuania
Belligerents
 Soviet Union Poland
Commanders and leaders
Mikhail Kovalyov
Pyotr Akhlyustin
Semyon Zybin
Jarosław Okulicz-Kozaryn
Strength
Two cavalry divisions
three armoured brigades
10 infantry battalions
(6,500 men)
18-22 guns (including AA guns)
~40 MGs
Casualties and losses
Soviet counts:
13 killed
24 wounded
five BT tanks destroyed
one BA-10 armoured car destroyed
three other AFVs damaged

Prelude

Vilnius, the capital of the Wilno Voivodship (province or region), was an important industrial centre in the north-eastern part of Poland and the sixth largest city in that country at the time. Administratively a part of the Grodno-based III Military Corps Area and under Józef Olszyna-Wilczyński, it was also an important garrison and mobilization centre. In the pre-war period, the city housed the entire Polish 1st Legions' Infantry Division, as well as the headquarters and the 4th Uhlan Regiment of the Wileńska Cavalry Brigade. Air cover was provided by the majority of the Polish 5th Air Regiment stationed at the nearby airfield of Porubanek (modern Kirtimai). In addition, the city of Vilniuswas a mobilization centre for the Polish 35th Infantry Division.

Before the outbreak of war, the 1st Division had been secretly mobilized and sent towards Różan in northern Mazovia. The Wileńska Cavalry Brigade soon followed and in the first days of September 1939 left the city for Piotrków Trybunalski. The air assets were attached to the Modlin Army and the Narew Group fighting against the German units trying to break through from East Prussia. By 7 September the 35th Division was fully mobilized and transported to Lvov (modern Lviv, Ukraine); the city was left defenceless.

The military commander of the city, Colonel Jarosław Okulicz-Kozaryn, decided that in case of attack by German or Soviet forces, he had insufficient forces for a successful defence and thus his task could only be to allow civilians to evacuate to neutral Lithuania (this was also realised, albeit not very clearly, by General Józef Olszyna-Wilczyński, commander of the 3rd military district which Vilnius was also in).[2]

On 17 September, the city had 14,000 soldiers and militia volunteers, but only 6,500 of them were armed. Before the battle, the numbers of armed soldiers rose slightly as some disorganized units trickled in, but the number of unarmed volunteers decreased, as Okulicz-Kozaryn ordered unarmed volunteers not to participate in any hostilities. Before the Soviets arrived, the Polish forces formed about 10 infantry battalions, supported by approximately 15 light artillery and anti-tank guns and about five anti-aircraft guns. The defenders also had some 40 machine guns.

On 18 September, the commander of the Belarusian Front, Comandarm (roughly a general), Mikhail Kovalyov, ordered the capture of Vilnius by groups of the 3rd and 11th Armies. The 3rd Army delegated the 24th Cavalry Division and the 22nd and 25th Armoured Divisions under Combrig (senior to colonel but junior to divisional commander), Pyotr Akhlyustin, to advance from the northeast and the 11th Army delegated the 36th Cavalry Division and the 6th Armoured Division under Combrig Semyon Zybin to advance from the southeast. Their task was to secure the city by the evening of 18 September; but due to logistical difficulties and the overestimation of the Polish defences, the operation was revised with the aim of securing the city by the morning of 19 September.

Battle

Soviet Army, Belorussian Front
3rd Army 24th Cavalry Division
22nd Tank Brigade
25th Tank Brigade
11th Army 7th Cavalry Division
36th Cavalry Division
6th Tank Brigade

On 18 September, at around 17:00, Okulicz-Kozaryn received reports of Soviet forces approaching from Oszmiana (today, Ashmyany). They consisted of armoured scouts which had engaged Polish infantry units on their approach. Okulicz-Kozaryn then ordered all units to fall back toward the Lithuanian border, Korpus Ochrony Pogranicza units, as the most experienced, were to screen the withdrawal. Podpułkownik (Lieutenant Colonel) Podwysocki was dispatched to inform the Soviets that Polish forces did not intend to defend Vilnius, but he was shot at and returned to the Polish lines. As Okulicz-Kozaryn had already left the city, Podwysocki decided to defend it, even though most of the forces previously in the city had left with Okulicz-Kozaryn.

The first Soviet attack on the evening of the 18 September was repulsed by the Polish defenders. Subsequently the Soviets continued to push into Vilnius. By the end of the day the Soviets had secured the airfield and made several thrusts into the city, taking the Rasos Cemetery.

By the morning of 19 September the advanced Soviet armoured units had been reinforced with infantry and cavalry. The Polish defenders delayed the Soviet advance, particularly by holding the bridges, but later that day the poorly coordinated Polish defence collapsed and the Soviets took control of the city.

Aftermath

Polish units had either surrendered, or withdrawn, disorganized, towards the Lithuanian border or deeper into Poland.

The Soviets transferred Vilniusto Lithuania according to the Soviet–Lithuanian Mutual Assistance Treaty. Lithuanian troops entered the city on 27–28 October.[3]

The defence of Vilnius has been criticized by some Polish historians, who point out that if properly organized, the Polish forces would have been able to hold on to Vilnius and delay the Soviets by several days, similar to the defence of Grodno (in which some of the units which withdrew from Vilnius took part). Nonetheless this could have only been a symbolic defence, as the Polish forces had no real way of stopping the overwhelming Soviet advance.

References

  1. Zaloga, Steven J. (2002). Poland 1939: The birth of Blitzkrieg (Campaign). Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 9781841764085.
  2. Czesław Grzelak (2002). Wilno-Grodno-Kodziowce 1939. Warszawa: Wydawn. Bellona. pp. 67, 150–151. ISBN 9788311094574 via Google Books.
  3. Žygis į Vilnių 1939 – Newsreel from 1939

Bibliography

  • Czesław Grzelak, Wilno 1939, Warszawa 1993,
  • Lech Iwanowski, Wilnianie we wrześniu 1939 r.: prolog epopei, Bydgoszcz 2000.
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