Transcaucasian Front


Transcaucasian Front or Transcaucasus Front was a front of the Red Army during the Second World War. This sense of the term is not identical with the more general usage of military front which indicates a geographic area in wartime, although a Soviet Front may operate within designated boundaries.
The Transcaucasus Front describes two distinct organizations during the war.

First creation

The first version was created on August 23, 1941 from the Transcaucasus Military District, which was originally formed in 1922. The boundary of the Front extended along the border with Turkey and along the Black Sea coast from Batumi to Tuapse.

It was commanded by Lieutenant-General Dmitry Kozlov from August 1941 to December 1941.
On June 22, 1941, when the German invasion started, the Transcaucasus Military District included the 3rd, 24th, and 40th Rifle Corps, the 28th Mechanised Corps, two cavalry divisions and three separate rifle divisions. Also part of the District were three fortified regions and District troops, which included artillery and NKVD frontier units.
The initial Front organization incorporated the four Soviet armies stationed in the district in June 1941:
On August 25, 1941 troops from the Front entered Iran according to the Soviet-Iran Treaty of Friendship of February 21, 1921, which eliminated the direct threat to the Baku oil fields.

Order of Battle, Invasion of Iran, 1941

Here is the Soviet OOB for the 25th of August 1941:
44th Army
47th Army
53rd Army
In November 1941, the 51st Army joined the front after being evacuated from the Crimea.

The Transcaucasus Front was renamed the Caucasus Front on December 30, 1941.

Second creation

The second version of this front was again created from the Transcaucasus Military District on May 15, 1942 and continued in existence until its reorganization as the Tbilisi Military District on August 25, 1945 after the end of the war.
It was commanded by General Ivan V. Tyulenev, and included the 4th and 58th Armies at various periods.