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The
Red Army entered Poland in January 1944, in pursuit of the Germans.
The Soviets refused to recognise the legitimate Polish
authorities loyal to the Polish Government-in-Exile based in
London. Thus, as they progressed, they disarmed the Home Army (AK)
detachments they met along the way which remained loyal to their
government. This persuaded the Polish authorities to return to a
concept that had been shelved earlier, of staging an uprising in
the capital – Warsaw. The Commander-in-Chief of the Home Army,
General Tadeusz Komorowski (pseudonym “Bór”) was to explain
later: “Fighting everywhere, we could not remain passive on
our own land… The nation that wants to live in freedom, cannot
be passive at moments when its fate is being decided.”
On
July 26, 1944, the Polish Government-in-Exile authorized General
Bór-Komorowski and its Home Delegate – J S Jankowski, to
commence armed action with the aim of liberating Warsaw. Soviet
radio-stations were also calling for an uprising. With news of
the Soviet forces approaching the city, on July 31, 1944,
General Bór-Komorowski gave the order to rise up. This order was
given to Colonel Antoni Chrusciel (pseudonym: “Monter’)
who issued an order setting the time of the uprising to commence
at 17.00 hours on August 1, 1944.
The
Home Army forces of the Warsaw District numbered about 50,000
soldiers of whom 23,000 were combat-ready. Their state of arms
on August 1 was as follows: one thousand rifles, 300 automatic
pistols, 60 sub-machine guns, 7 machine guns, 35 anti-tank
guns and PIAT bazookas, 1700 pistols, and 25,000 grenades. In
the course of the fighting further arms were obtained through
air drops and by capture from the enemy (including several
armoured vehicles). Also, the insurgents’ workshops were busy
all the while producing: 300 automatic pistols, 150
flame-throwers, 40,000 grenades, a number of mortars and
bazookas, and even an armoured car.
In
the course of the fighting against the Germans, detachments from
smaller Polish resistance formations joined in. Mostly, these
were detachments from the Peoples’ Army, the Polish Peoples’
Army, the Security Corps and the National Armed Forces,
numbering some 1700 people all told.
The
German forces on the left bank of the river Vistula initially
numbered about 15 to 16,000 men, including the garrison of 10 to
11,000 men under the command of General Stahel. On the first day
of the Uprising, the Poles managed to take a significant part of
the left bank of Warsaw but the attempts to take the bridges
proved unsuccessful. Fighting on the right bank died down on
August 2. The maximum territorial hold of the Uprising was
attained on August 5, 1944, (see Map 1), just as the German
reinforcements were arriving.
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Map 1:
Warsaw - 5.VIII.1944 r.
The
position on 5 August 1944: the highest point of the
insurgents’ control in Warsaw
Source:
Armia Krajowa w
Dokumentach, Vol. IV. London 1977
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Large
German reinforcements already arrived on August 3 and 4 (several
thousand policemen and SS-men). SS Reichsfuehrer Himmler issued
the order: “Every inhabitant should be killed, no prisoners
are to be taken. Warsaw is to be razed to the ground and in this
way the whole of Europe shall have a terrifying example.”
The
basic aim of the Germans was to drive east-west thoroughfares
through the city towards the bridges on the Vistula, and
subsequently, to close off and destroy the insurgent areas. In
the first place it was to be those which were alongside to the
river. A German strike was delivered from the direction of the
Wola district on August 5 – 6, towards Kierbedz bridge.
This divided the areas controlled by the Home Army forces. In
the occupied areas, particularly in the Wola district, the
German forces perpetrated crimes of a massive scale on the
civilian population (about 25 to 30,000 people executed by
firing squad). The areas controlled by the insurgents were split into three as the run of the battle took its course:
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The
northern area including the cemeteries, the former Jewish
ghetto, the Old Town, the district of Zoliborz and the
forests to the north of Warsaw
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The
region of the city centre (Sródmiescie) together
with two riverside areas - Powiśle and Czerniaków |
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The
southern region – the district of Mokotów together with
the sub-district of Sadyba and the Home Army detachments in
the forests to the south of Warsaw
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From
the first days of the Uprising, a surrogate form of normality
informed everyday life - with a food distribution system, and a
postal service run by scouts. The insurgent radio station Blyskawica
(“Lightening”) made its inaugural broadcast on August 8.
Meanwhile,
the Germans systematically reinforced their armies in Warsaw. SS
General Erich von dem Bach Zalewski took
charge of quelling the rising. By August 20, his forces
increased to about 25,000 men. Periodically, detachments from
three panzer divisions – the 25th, the 19th
and the “Hermann Goering” divisions – were drafted into
action. Besides bomber aircraft, the Germans used numerous
sub-units of sappers, self-propelled “Goliath” mines and
exploding tanks used for demolishing fortifications, rocket
launchers and the heaviest artillery (including the 600mm
“Karl” mortars).
The
last point of resistance in the Ochota district fell on August
11, with the Home Army forces being simultaneously pushed out of
the Wola district. On August 19, the Germans launched a mass
assault on the Old Town. The Home Army made two unsuccessful
attempts, on August 20 and 22, at breaking through the German
redoubts, in the open terrain separating the Old Town from Zoliborz district. This cost 400 dead and wounded. The
insurgent detachments were a lot more effective in built up
areas which to some extent compensated for the German
superiority in weapons and equipment. The biggest successes of
the Uprising in the latter part of August were the taking of the
German stronghold entrenched in the building of the Polish
Telephone Company (PAST-a) on Zielna Street on August 20, and the
police centre in Krakowskie Przedmiescie Street and the
telephone station on Piusa XI Street on August 23.
Already
in August, the insurgents were widely exploiting the network of
sewer canals to communicate beneath enemy-controlled areas.
Thus, as the fighting for the Old Town abated to August 2, most of
the defenders fled via these canals – 4,500 to the City Centre
and 800 to Zoliborz.
The
insurgent forces were conspicuously supported by air dropped
supplies which commenced on the night of August 4 to 5, 1944.
The RAF were to make a total 116 sorties, the Polish Air Force
– 97. Losses during these missions were considerable: the RAF
lost 19 aircraft, the Poles 15, which was just over 16% and 15%
respectively. Plans of there-and-back flights by American Flying
Fortresses with stopovers for refuelling and reloading at Soviet
bases behind the Eastern Front, were torpedoed by the Soviets.
Up
to September 10, 1944, the Soviet armies, which were
massed barely a few kilometres outside Warsaw, remained
completely impassive, giving the Luftwaffe freedom of the
skies to destroy the city with impunity. Soviet propaganda
described the uprising as a fracas obstructing Red Army
operations.
Between
September 3 and 6, the Germans pushed the insurgents out of Powisle,
and the struggle for Czerniaków commenced on September 12. It
was only on September 10 that the Russians began to move into
action against the Germans in the Warsaw region. Some supplies
were air dropped and Soviet fighter planes began to chase German
bombers from the skies above Warsaw. This persuaded the Home
Army leadership to discontinue the initiated capitulation
negotiations. In the prevailing circumstances, the half-hearted
Soviet aid to the Uprising helped to extend the struggle which
was only weakening both the Germans and the Poles to Soviet
advantage. In the period September 13 to 15, the Soviet armies
and detachments of the 1st Polish Army subordinated to the
Soviets, pushed the Germans out of the right bank of the city.
After a long period of waiting for Soviet acquiescence, an air
drop operation mounted by 107 American Flying Fortresses which
then landed in the Ukraine, took place on September 18. Between
September 16 and 19, 1st Polish Army detachments made landings
in several points of left bank Warsaw (in Czerniaków, Powisle
and Zoliborz) but due to inadequate Russian support, these
bridgeheads were unsustainable. The last groups of Home Army
insurgents and Ist Polish Army soldiers fought on in Czerniaków
to September 23 (some of these managed to escape via the sewers
or back across the Vistula. The Germans, upon gaining control of
the sub-districts of Sadyba and Sielce in the southern part of
the city, went onto the offensive on September 24, to quell the
insurgents in the Upper Mokotów area.
Its evacuation via the sewers was ordered on September
26. A day later, the last defenders capitulated. A strong German
attack against Żoliborz commenced on September 29 (mainly
the 19th Panzer Division), leading to that
district’s capitulation the following day.
The
two-months’ fighting for Warsaw was a tremendous ordeal for
the city’s inhabitants, especially for the hundreds of
thousands of civilians seeking refuge in the cellars. Tens of
thousands dead and wounded, illnesses, lack of water, hunger – these
were the realities of the last weeks of insurgent Warsaw. On
October 1, 1944, in the face of unavoidable defeat, the
Commander-in-Chief of the Home Army, General Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski, who as from September 30 was also the
Commander-in-Chief of the Polish Armed Forces as such, nominated
General Leopold Okulicki (pseudonym “Niedzwiadek”) as his
successor in the Polish underground. (The areas of fighting on
October 1, 1944 – see Map 2).
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Map
2
Position
of the insurgents in Warsaw on 1 September 1944
fallowing
the fall of the Old Town
Source:
Armia Krajowa w
Dokumentach, Vol. IV. London
1977
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A
ceasefire agreement was signed on the night of 2 to 3 October in
Ozarów near Warsaw. Over 15,000 insurgents went into
captivity together with General Bór Komorowski. About 18,000
insurgents were killed and 6,000 were seriously wounded during the
fighting. Also, over 150,000
civilians perished in consequence of the fighting. The
Germans lost about 10,000 in dead and wounded. After the
capitulation, the Germans proceeded to systematically destroy
the surviving buildings in the city. By January 1945, when the
Red Army resumed its offensive, they had demolished 70 percent
of the city.
Stalin’s
vetoing of Allied help for Warsaw tore off his mask to reveal to
the world the true nature of his policy towards Poland. At the
same time, the 63 day battle for Warsaw – despite the military
defeat – proved the will of the Poles to fight for their own
sovereign state. This theme was given expression in the address
of the Council of National Unity (RJN) and the Domestic
Council of Ministers .(KRM)
to the Polish nation of October 3, 1944: “The Warsaw
Uprising has again put the Polish question before the world in
the final phase of the war, not as a problem for diplomatic
behind-the-scenes haggling, but as an issue relating to a great
nation, fighting bloodily and unremittingly for freedom, unity
and social justice in the lives of peoples and nations, for the
noble principles of the Atlantic Charter, for everything that
the better part of the world is fighting for today.’
Tadeusz
Kondracki, Warsaw
Translated
from Polish by Antoni Bohdanowicz
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