Slovak Order of Battle in 1939

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The Slovak Army was newly born from the disorganised remnants of the formely and well equipped Czechoslovak Army and Air Force. Such was Slovakia's lack of preparedness, that the motorised Hungarian columns initially met almost no resistance, reportedly surprising two companies of Slovaks in their beds.

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[edit] The situation of the Slovak Army

A Slovak camp near the Hungarian border, March 1939. The aim of the Germans was to establish another military ally and one that would place a political wedge between the Slavic countries of Europe. However, the army was not ready for fight when the Hungarians invaded Eastern Slovakia on March 23, 1939.
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A Slovak camp near the Hungarian border, March 1939. The aim of the Germans was to establish another military ally and one that would place a political wedge between the Slavic countries of Europe. However, the army was not ready for fight when the Hungarians invaded Eastern Slovakia on March 23, 1939.

Lieutenant-General Augustín Malár was resoncible for the defence of the eastern border with Ruthenia. VI Corps, which he had inherited from the Czecho-Slovak Army, had already been seriously disrupted the previous autumn by the Vienna Award, which had obliged it to abandon its border fortifications and remove its headquarters from Košice to Prešov. The Hungarian occupation of Ruthenia, where the garrison, the 12th Division, had come under VI Corps' jurisdiction, had further undermined it. As VI Corps had largely been based amongst ulreliable Hungarians and Ruthenes, it had a very high proportion of Czechs in its ranks. The 12th Infantry Division was involved in a fighting retreat back into eastern Slovakia over the period of March 14-18, but it then dissolved itself virtually completely as its Czech officers and men then headed for home.

Similarly, the regiments of the VI Corps' Slovak-based 11th and 17th Divisions, which should have had 2000-3000 men each, were only left with between 70 and 400 Slovaks apieceonce all their Czechs had gone home. This left the eastern border virtually undefended. Therefore, Malár began to fill out his skeleton units with the reservists called up on March 15.

At the same time, generals Jurech and Imro, in the west of the country also began to from units to support Malár as Slovak officers and conscripts began to return from Bohemia and Moravia, but their move to the east was delayed because roads and railways became crowded with Czech troops being repatriated in the opposite direction. The whole repatriation and reinforcement operation had to be organised by the various inexperienced and desperately overstretched Slovak staffs, especially that of Malár in Prešov. There was often bad feelings on both sides. One Slovak artillery officer detraining from Moravia was dismayed to be roundly abused at the station by a Slovak officer, who assumed from his rank that he must be a Czech. Some Czech troops sabotaged their equipment rather than let the Slovaks have it. Malár did manage to persuade a number of Czech officers to stay on temporarly to help Slovakia against the Hungarians, but the general confusion could not be adequately sorted out during the very brief period of hostilities with Hungary.

These factors also prevented the remains of the Czechoslovak 3rd Rapid Division, which was based in the far west of the country from being deployed to good effect in the east. Its 3rd Tank Regiment was left with only 10 out of 60 officers and 222 out of 821 other ranks when all the Czech soldiers went home. This was a decisive disadvantage, because the regiment's 70 LT vz. 34 and LT vz. 35 light tanks, 30 ČKD/Praga Tančik vz. 33 tankettes, 3 OA vz. 27 and 10 OA vz. 30 armoured cars were more than a match for the five obsolete Fiat 3000B light tanks, 70 Ansaldo 35M tankettes and 3 Crossley 29M armoured cars of the Hungarian invasion force. The only armour Malár had available in Eastern Slovakia were the 8 OA vz. 30 armoured cars and nine LT vz. 35 light tanks which the Czechs had evacuated from Carpatho-Ukraine to Humene and Prešov.[1]

However, once in Slovakia their embittered Czech crews had sabotaged all of them. As a result, none of them were immediately available when the fighting started on March 23.

[edit] VI Corps

Commander-in-Chief: Lieutenant-General Augustín Malár

  • 16th Infantry Regiment (partially)
  • 20th Infantry Regiment
  • 37th Infantry Regiment (partially)
  • 12th Artillery Regiment (partially)
  • 112th Artillery Regiment (partially)
  • Armoured Car Platoon (9 OA vz. 30 armoured cars)
  • Tank Platoon (3 LT vz. 35 light tanks)

[edit] Air Force

  • 45th Flight (based in Spišská Nová Ves with 10 Avia B-534 fighter aircrafts)
  • 49th Flight (based in Spišská Nová Ves with 10 Avia B-534 fighter aircrafts)
  • 12th Flight (based in Spišská Nová Ves with 10 Š-328 and AP-32 tactical reconnaissance aircrafts)
  • 13th Flight (based in Spišská Nová Ves with 10 Š-328 and AP-32 tactical reconnaissance aircrafts)

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ A tenth LT vz. 35 had broken down during the retreat and had had to be abandoned to the Hungarians.

[edit] Sources

  • Axworthy, Mark W.A. Axis Slovakia - Hitler's Slavic Wedge, 1938-1945, Bayside, N.Y. : Axis Europa Books, 2002, ISBN 1-891227-41-6