Operation Tanne Ost
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Operation Tanne Ost | |||||||
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Part of Lapland War (World War II) | |||||||
Location of the Åland Islands, Suursaari, and Kronstadt. |
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Combatants | |||||||
Germany | Finland Soviet Air Force |
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Commanders | |||||||
Captain Karl-Conrad Mecke | Ltn-Col Martti Miettinen | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
2,700 | 1,612 | ||||||
Casualties | |||||||
155 KIA 1,231 POWs |
45 KIA 69 WIA 7 POWs |
Lapland War |
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Suursaari Island – Tornio – Rovaniemi |
Operation Tanne Ost ("Fir East") was a German operation during World War II to capture the island Suursaari (Swedish Högland, Russian Gogland) in the Gulf of Finland before it could fall into Soviet hands. Suursaari was especially important because it worked as a lock in the Finnish gulf guarding the minefields keeping the Soviet Baltic Navy in Kronstadt.
The operation was initially planned with another operation to capture the Åland Islands (Tanne West), which was not carried out.
On September 15, 1944, a first wave of 1400 men from both the Wehrmacht and the Kriegsmarine were loaded on ships in Tallinn. Before the assault the German commander tried to negotiate with the Finnish commander on Suursaari, as he thought the Finns might leave without resistance. The negotiations were a complete failure and the invasion had to begin. When the German ships approached Suursaari the Finnish crew on the island opened fire. However most of the troops made it to the beaches, but there the difficulties continued, somewhat because of the Finnish defense being much more numerous than expected. After sunrise the Soviets made bombing runs on the German ships and later bombed both German and Finnish positions in the island. A second wave of untrained Kriegsmarine troops was withdrawn before they could land. Finnish Navy motor torpedo boats sank several German vessels. After that German ships decided to leave because they failed to make radio connection to the landed troops. The operation ended in a complete failure, with the Finns capturing 1231 German prisoners.
Soviet Air Force made three attacks against German positions and ships. The attacks also caused some Finnish casualties. Germans didn't let Prinz Eugen support the invasion, as Soviet air threat in the area was shown by these attacks.
This operation marked the beginning of hostility between German and Finnish troops, known as the Lapland War. Before this, the Germans had conducted their withdrawal from Northern Finland without incident.
[edit] Finnish Order of Battle
Finnish forces consisted of Coastal Artillery Regiment 12 (RTR 12). Defence was organized into four sections as follows.
Northern section, 1st Battalion (strength 340 men)
- 10th Coastal Defence Company
- 1st Section/201st Light Artillery Battery
- 24th Heavy AA-Battery
- 5th Light Coastal AA-Battery
- 1st Platoon/Heavy mortar Company
Mountain section, 2nd Battalion (strength 475 men)
- HQ-Company/Coastal Artillery Regiment 12
- Section/9th Motorised Heavy Artillery Battery
- 2nd Platoon/Heavy Mortar Company
- 1st Platoon/1st Coastal Engineer Company
- 8th Coastal Defence Company
Middle section, Coastal Infantry Battalion 7 (strength 295 men)
- 7th Coastal Defence Company
- 9th Coastal Defence Company
- 34th Heavy AA-Battery
- Training Company
Southern section, 3rd Battalion (strength 418 men)
- 2nd Company/Coastal Battalion 7
- 3rd Company/Coastal Battalion 7
- 3rd Platoon/Heavy Mortar Company
- 2nd Section/201st Light Artillery Battery
See also: List of military operations
[edit] Sources
- Maanpuolustuskorkeakoulun Historian laitos (ed.) (1994). Jatkosodan historia 6: Meri- ja ilmapuolustus, hallinto ja sotatalous, huolto ja aselajit, kotijoukot.. Werner Söderström osakeyhtiö. ISBN 951-0-15332-X. pp. 114–119