Shiloy Tshernez
Russia, January 17th
1942 by Richard Baber
With the onset of winter the Germans and their allies quickly found their units were losing all mobility; in an effort to reverse this they ordered all formations to form ski companies. The 250th Infantry Division (the Spanish Blue Division) followed suit and formed its own ski company (Compania de Esquiadores) under the command of Captain Ordas.
Teniente José Otero de Arce.After Marshal Zhukov`s offensive in December halted the German drive on Moscow, the Soviets turned their attention to Army Group North! By January 8th They had smashed through the German 290th Division along the River Lovet and surged forward across the steppe fifty kilometres to the outskirts of Staraia ( the main supply dump of X and II Corps).
For the next few days the company patrolled the coastal area and made firm contact with other German units in the vicinity. The company was temporarily placed under the command of the German 81st Division (Gen. Erich Schopper) which was almost totally cut off and pinned along the shores of Lake Il`men, Capt. Ordas established his command post at Pagost Uzhin.
Tabletop Scenario
This is based on an actual action fought by elements of the
ski company and suitable for any skirmish set of tabletop rules.
Terrain and notes
We fought the action in 20mm (our favoured size/scale) on a
3ft x 3ft tabletop.
The terrain consists of rolling snow covered hills with some
small patches of trees. The village consisted of 6-10 wooden buildings with
some small sheds, wood piles and fencing; we placed the village in the centre of
the table to allow for manoeuvre and flanking attacks by the mobile ski troops.
On January 17, Teniente (Lieutenant) Otero de Arce and 36 men
from the ski company set out on a combat reconnaissance patrol to the
south-east. The Spaniards were reinforced by 40 Latvians from the German 81st
Infantry Division. Moving through snow which at times was higher than waist
deepand with temperatures as low as -40 degrees the patrol moved through a
couple of abandoned hamlets before coming to Shiloy Tshernez. Here smoke
drifting from chimneys alerted the patrol to the Soviet presence. Teniente De
Arce ordered an immediate assault using the ski troops to out flank and
surround the village and converge from all sides.
Axis Forces
Teniente de Arce
36 Spanish Soldados (2 LMGs) ski equipped
40 Latvian Soldats (2 LMGs) ski equipped
All men are armed with rifles and SMGs, some P40 rifle AT
grenades and magnetic AT grenades too.
Russian defenders
Only 1-3 sentries and 2 men manning the Maxim should be
alert at the start, the rest take 1D6 to awake and get their boots on.
Officer
20 men (rifles & grenades)
1 x Maxim MMG & 4 crew
2 x T26 tanks
20 men (rifles & grenades, 1 x DP LMG) ski equipped
Historically the Spanish and their allies took the village
with little trouble, however they then pushed their luck and continued on with
the patrol to the next village where they ran into more Soviets this time
prepared! A strong group of soviet ski troops backed by some light tanks drove
the patrol back beyond Shiloy Tshernez with considerable losses.
The ski company was equipped with the two-piece white snow
suit which had a double thick hood; thick soled ski boots, leather gauntlets
and anti-glare goggles. Over the suit they wore standard German leather
Y-straps and ammunition pouches. Several illustrations I`ve seen show Spaniards
wearing Spanish Army uniform belts (these would be brown and not black), these
belts also had silver buckles (again not black). The Spaniards also wore
Spanish insignia and rank badges instead of German.
The ski company was armed as any other German infantry unit - 98K Mauser, MP40 and MG34; but they quickly learned to appreciate the value of captured Russian automatics and would actively trade and buy these from German units as well as scavenging off the battlefield. The excellent PPSH41 SMG and Degtyarev DP LMG were both highly popular. The Spaniards of course had the standard German stick grenades. round anti-personnel grenades and rifle grenades too.
Figures
We have played a few differnt games using various scenarios available on the internet involving the Blue Division. For this game we used a mix of Revell "Battle of the Bulge" figures in winter gear; Revell "Siberian" ski troops, Airfix "German Mountain Troops" and the odd metal figure. Our Latvians were regular German Infabtry in great coats (so we could tell the units apart across the tabletop).
Sources
Agony of a Neutral by Raymond L. Proctor (Idaho Research Foundation, Inc 1974)
Spanish Soldiers in Russia by Pedro V. Roig (Ediciones Universal 1976)
Hitler`s Spanish Legion by Gerald R. Kleinfled & Lewis A. Tambs (ISBN 0-8093-0865-7)
Germany`s Spanish Volunteers 1941-45 by John Scurr (Osprey Men-at-Arms 103, ISBN 0-85045-359-3)
Blue Division Soldier 1941-45 by C. Caballero Jurado ((Osprey Warrior 142, ISBN 978-1-84603-412-1)
Espanoles Contra Stalin (La División Azul en el Frente Del Voljov Oct 1941 - Agusto 1942) by Carlos Caballero Jurado (ISBN 978-84-677-2718-0) Spanish text
Lovely bit of research. Reminds me of the retreat of the Italian 'Mountain' Division from flanks of Stalingrad!!! Carl PS I must try and game this one.
ReplyDeleteI read a great book about those Italians in Russia, their equipment was just so poor - you had to feel sorry for them.
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