
Defeat at the Dnepr: The XLVIII. Panzerkorps' Counterattack at Kiev, November 1943
Simon Waring$32.26
$37.95
"Simon Waring, using German primary sources that have been previously untapped, has written a marvelous account of the failed German operations to retake Kiev in the late fall of 1943, a seminal event that marked the turning of the tide for German mobile operations on the Eastern Front. A must-read for all WWII Eastern Front enthusiasts!" -- Dr Arthur Gullachsen, PhD, FRHist, author of The Defeat and Attrition of the 12. SS-Panzerdivision series
In late 1943, the German Army on the Eastern Front was in dire straits. Its southern army group had been pushed out of eastern Ukraine, and on 6 November 1943, Kiev--one of the Soviet Union's largest cities--was retaken by an increasingly capable Soviet Red Army. To prevent the total collapse of his army group's front line, Generalfeldmarschall von Manstein had no choice but to launch a counterattack to halt the Red Army's advance and recapture the Ukrainian capital. On 7 November, two Panzer divisions attached to the XLVIII Panzerkorps plunged into the Red Army's positions southwest of Kiev, stopping the Red Army in its tracks. Five days later, two more Panzer divisions joined the counterattack, and the XLVIII Panzerkorps achieved numerous tactical victories as it marched northeast.
Commanded by General der Panzertruppen Balck after mid-November, the XLVIII Panzerkorps continued producing tactical success as it swept aside disorganized resistance from Soviet General Vatutin's First Ukrainian Front, and recaptured important towns and logistics hubs on the path to Kiev. German hopes for the city's recapture were dashed in late November, however, as Vatutin's armies were finally able to stop the German advance, inflict heavy losses, and force Balck to end the counterattack
In his postwar memoir, General der Panzertruppen Balck claimed that meddling by higher-level commanders and poor weather squandered his efforts to recapture Kiev. His Soviet opponents claimed the opposite: a superior Red Army defeated the XLVIII Panzerkorps, and claims about poor weather were merely self-serving justifications for German failure. This first full-length treatment of this forgotten battle definitively answers these questions, correcting the historical record on many unknown, ambiguous, and contentious details relating to the XLVIII Panzerkorps counterattack, and in doing so, shedding light on the nature of combat on the Eastern Front in late 1943.
Binding Type: Hardcover
Publisher: Casemate
Published: 06/15/2026
ISBN: 9781636245041
Pages: 336
In late 1943, the German Army on the Eastern Front was in dire straits. Its southern army group had been pushed out of eastern Ukraine, and on 6 November 1943, Kiev--one of the Soviet Union's largest cities--was retaken by an increasingly capable Soviet Red Army. To prevent the total collapse of his army group's front line, Generalfeldmarschall von Manstein had no choice but to launch a counterattack to halt the Red Army's advance and recapture the Ukrainian capital. On 7 November, two Panzer divisions attached to the XLVIII Panzerkorps plunged into the Red Army's positions southwest of Kiev, stopping the Red Army in its tracks. Five days later, two more Panzer divisions joined the counterattack, and the XLVIII Panzerkorps achieved numerous tactical victories as it marched northeast.
Commanded by General der Panzertruppen Balck after mid-November, the XLVIII Panzerkorps continued producing tactical success as it swept aside disorganized resistance from Soviet General Vatutin's First Ukrainian Front, and recaptured important towns and logistics hubs on the path to Kiev. German hopes for the city's recapture were dashed in late November, however, as Vatutin's armies were finally able to stop the German advance, inflict heavy losses, and force Balck to end the counterattack
In his postwar memoir, General der Panzertruppen Balck claimed that meddling by higher-level commanders and poor weather squandered his efforts to recapture Kiev. His Soviet opponents claimed the opposite: a superior Red Army defeated the XLVIII Panzerkorps, and claims about poor weather were merely self-serving justifications for German failure. This first full-length treatment of this forgotten battle definitively answers these questions, correcting the historical record on many unknown, ambiguous, and contentious details relating to the XLVIII Panzerkorps counterattack, and in doing so, shedding light on the nature of combat on the Eastern Front in late 1943.
Binding Type: Hardcover
Publisher: Casemate
Published: 06/15/2026
ISBN: 9781636245041
Pages: 336
