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On paper.

In reality, it was under equipped in numbers, under supplied with the basics of war, the morale of veteran and recruit alike shot to pieces and, generally, in no fit state to confront a competent enemy.

None the less, Colonel Blagoslavov received his call to arms, and started to get his ragtag unit organised for battle.

When Operation Thermopylae had finished, the remnants of a number of Soviet units were banded together and efforts began to make them fit for purpose once more.

The old 38th Guards Tank Brigade had been struck from the army list and its personnel and some of its surviving armour had ended up under Blagoslavov’s orders as a new formation.

As part of the process of recovery, Blagoslavov’s command was temporarily attached to the 3rd Guards Cavalry Corps, which unit had also suffered grievously in the battles of November 1945.

Each of the three mechanised battalions in the 412th was under strength, but it was difficult to find any Soviet armoured unit with a full TOE in December 1945.

His 1st Battalion was where Blagoslavov concentrated the main armoured firepower and offensive strength of his fledgling command, the new restyled mechanised brigades being both a response to the Allies’ own organisation and an implementation of lessons hard-learned on the battlefield.

Eight IS-II’s, one IS-III, and five T-34/85’s, supported by two full battalions of infantry, plus support units, gave the 1st presence and hitting power.

The 2nd Battalion was mainly based around six SU-100’s, supported by six T-34m43’s, armed with the 76mm gun. A new infantry battalion, fresh from training, provided the manpower, supplemented by engineer and mortar companies. Short in numbers, the green soldiers made up for the lower establishment with their apparent enthusiasm.

3rd Battalion was a patchwork of anything else that came to hand, mostly Soviet armour that had seen better days, the occasional enemy vehicle, and even a brand-new Pershing tank that had been captured during the US retreat in Southern Germany.

The real strength of the 3rd lay in its infantry element. Dismounted Cossacks and Guards infantry from the slaughtered 3rd Guards Tank Corps, a total of five full companies, all high quality troops, plus good mortar and anti-tank gun support units.

The 412th also had two recon units, each of four T-70 light tanks supported by more guardsmen from the old 3rd, carried into battle in recently seized US halftracks.

An engineer company and artillery battery completed the strength of the 412th.

On paper.

Blagoslavov knew better than to believe pieces of paper.

2nd Battalion was presently virtually useless to him, half of its vehicles non-runners left behind in a field east of Hagenau, awaiting spares for both the SU-100’s and the worn out T-34s.

The 2nd’s infantry component was closer to hand and, with the commencement of firing nearby, he had ordered it to halt its training and make the short journey from Weitbruch to the south.

The 1st Battalion was settled in north of the Selterbach, but not of any great use, its armour affected by mechanical problems, shortages of everything from lubricants to ammunition. A recent check with the commander probably meant that it could put three of its IS-II’s into the field, supported by a similar number of T-34’s, if they scrounged ammo from the non-runners and the mechanics toiled like hero workers, which, of course, they would,.

The 3rd Battalion, with its diverse tanks and experienced infantry, was concealed in a modest gully just off Route 140, roughly one thousand five hundred metres north of Geudertheim.

On the flank of Durant’s assault force.

A line of vehicles and men came out of the growing darkness, moving slowly, but with purpose.

Stepanski was looking elsewhere on the battlefield and the call from his gunner startled him.

He looked to his front, his binoculars seeking out any details with which to identify these new targets.

He did so, at least with a few of them, but decided not to complicate his message with that sort of detail just now.

“Dora One-five, all Dora. Enemy tanks, minimum ten vehicles, and infantry in battalion strength approaching from north of Geuderheim, range seven hundred metres. Engaging!”

In the command halftrack, Durand checked his map.

In Braun’s Panther, another map received urgent attention.

Both men decided that this was trouble with a big T.

Braun acted first.

“Dora-zero-one to Dora One. All Dora one, reorient to face northeast… assume defensive positions.”

He checked the map once more before he directed instructions to the Panzer IV unit.

“Dora-zero-one to Dora Two. All Dora two, take position on river line, facing north. Engage new enemy force.”

Happy that his HQ vehicles would stay on station to support Durand’s infantry, Braun switched to the command net and briefed his superior.

His report was met with some consternation, the presence of this new force undetected and, probably much worse, unsuspected.

Fig #96 – The Soviet surprise, Brumath, 4th December 1945.

Allied intelligence had missed the 412th completely, and the Legion was about to pay the cost. A small mathematical error on the part of a young navigator from Alberta was not detected by either his squadron intel officer or RAF photo interpreters. That resulted in some six square miles of Alsace remaining unphotographed; the six square miles containing the 412th Mechanised Brigade.

“Dora-one-five to Dora-zero-one, over.”

“Go ahead, Dora-zero-one, over.”

“One-five, the enemy armour is a mixed type force. At least one American M26 and two Shermans. I see a Panther for certain. Total fourteen armoured vehicles identified at this time, over.”

Remembering to unkey the mike, Stepanski howled with delight, as his gunner sent one of the Shermans into the next world.

“Zero-one, roger. You must hold. Zero is pushing on with plan. Help’s on its way, over.

Stepanski reply was never sent, his radio disabled as a 90mm shell from the M26 wiped the side of his turret, removing one of the Soviet POWs in the process.

It had been a mighty blow, and the smell of damaged electrics filled the turret space.

Smoke then arrived from somewhere. There was no clue to its cause or whereabouts.

Stepanski switched to the intercom.

“Gunner, fire on your own authority. Crew, check for damage. There’s burning somewhere.”

The extractors were working at full pelt, but failing to make gains on the sickly smoke, the taste of which brought back horrible memories for men who had seen their friends die in burning tanks.

The loader complained that he couldn’t open the rear hatch so the spent 75mm shell case went out the cupola, closely followed by Stepanski.

“Commander out.”

Stepanski levered himself out of the turret and found the cause.

A dead grenadiere was hanging on the side of the turret, blocking the ejection hatch. The body was burning steadily.

To Stepanski’s first sight, it seemed that a phosphorous grenade had been detonated whilst still attached to the unfortunate soldier, and it was the products of the burning uniform and flesh that had been drawn inside the Panther.

Noting the live grenade still attached and already warming in the fire, Stepanski gave the corpse a shove with his boot, sending it to the ground alongside the tank.

He rapped his knuckles on the ejection hatch and immediately heard the sounds of metal clips being opened. He was nearly struck as a hot shell case sailed out in short order.

The 75mm cracked again, the recoil nearly breaking his grip on the cupola as he dropped inside the Panther again.