Battle of Nowa Grudak (1924)
Battle of Nowa Grudak (1924) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of Kyotakavian-Svogardan Conflict | |||||||
Union Guard on the Mbersk Road. (19 August 1924) | |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
KLA Union Guard |
PISF SVDF USC | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Regan Klaidev Tomasz Kelskiv Boris Wazkon † Elaria Vodin Katlania Tzekic Mattias Holgav |
Col. Emirus Talian Lt. Col. Terion Gallus † Lt. Col. Eric Malion Uzluz Rex † Breton Kalionox † Ferus Malliox Eurius Nelton † Kaston Kevrani † Alexandra Longian † Darion Zelanius | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
3,500 7,800 Total: 11,300 |
4,000 8,200 2,500 Total: 14,700 | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
158 killed, 313 wounded, 14 missing |
412 killed, 1,006 wounded, 29 missing 7 armoured cars destroyed | ||||||
2,137 civilians killed and wounded |
The Battle of Nowa Grudak was a street battle that took place throughout late 1924 in Nowa Grudak. Kyotakavian paramilitaries fought their Svozgardan counterparts who were aided (and chiefly directed) by the Protectorate Internal Security Force and was seen as the last battle of the larger, and long-running Svozgardan-Kyotakavian conflict, before the beginning of the Third War for Independence.
The Battle
Mbersk Road car-bombing
Three days after the street battles had begun, on the 1 August, Alexandra Longian, an SLA Representative for a list seat, and Commander of the United Svozgarda Corps paramilitary, visited a forward USC post along the Mbersk Road's western section, stopping for five minutes to converse with local commanders. During that time, KLA member Josiv Celkov ducked into her car and planted a 5-pound bomb inside the boot with a timer set for twenty-minutes before fleeing the scene with the help of KLA observers. Longian climbed back into the car with the local commander, intending to drive up Mbersk Road, before turning into the Svozgardan section of the city and driving to the USC headquarters.
The twenty-five minute drive brought Longian into view of the building, where she stood to wave to a nearby supporter who gave her a thumbs up. The bomb detonated only a few seconds later, propelling Longian out of the car, blowing out the back, killing all three nearly instantly and sending shrapnel flying, causing three injuries. The attack shocked the Svozgardan's, and the USC became engaged in a leadership struggle for the next five months, not even recovering fully by the outbreak of the Third Independence War and local USC Commanders took action without direct orders, and often with very little success.
Atzan Lane bombing
On the 27 August 1924, Deputy Chief of the PISF, Lieutenant Colonel Terion Gallus entered a meeting with the SVDF Eastern and Western Commanders; Uzluz Rex and Breton Kalionox, at the Atzan Loyalist Club in Northern Nowa Grudak. It was arranged as a planning meeting between the PSIF and SVDF, to arrange and plan a strategy to push the Union Guard out of Mbresk Road and a total of 13 SVDF and PISF senior officers were in attendance. After brief introductions, Terion, Uzlus and Breton entered the second floor office where 4 SVDF, and 2 PISF attendees were in discussion. Three minutes later, a 25-pound explosive device, planted by the KLA two nights prior, detonated, killing all 9 people in the room immediately. A guard stationed outside the bathroom opposite the room was also killed, as well as 2 civilians who were walking past the building when the bomb went off. A total of 38 people were injured, of which 21 were SVDF members, and windows of the neighbouring building were blown whilst the second floor collapsed onto the first.
The bombing would be the only time the KLA successful killed a member of PSIF leadership, but the attack additionally crippled the SVDF and threw the succession of the Western and Eastern commands into disarray for nearly a month. It was the second time that the KLA had managed to kill commanding figures in the Svozgardan paramilitary movement in just one month and reprisal mortar attacks were conducted on the 28 and 29 of August in retaliation for the assassination.
Casualties
A total of 1,442 people were killed over the course of the battle, making it one of the bloodiest of the wider conflict and especially noted for the high number of civilian casualties resulting from indiscriminate mortar attacks that had become a staple of the SVDF by August 1924. This means that the majority of casualties were focused in the southern portion of the city, specifically civilians who were killed by bombardment with very few KLA or Union Guard members killed during such attacks.
Actual casualties resulting from firefights during street battles remained relatively low, only around 35% of all paramilitary and security force casualties came from such engagements with the majority being caused by the KLA bombing campaign that targeted either specific leadership figures, or local Headquarters.
Responsibility
Approximately 75% of civilian casualties were killed by Svozgardan loyalists, 7% by security forces and 18% by Kyotakavian nationalists. The SVDF was responsible for around 43% of all casualties, with the KLA responsible for 27%.
Responsible party | Paramilitary | Security forces | Civilians |
---|---|---|---|
Kyotakavian paramilitaries | |||
KLA | 233 | 51 | 103 |
Union Guard | 65 | 41 | 53 |
Svozgardan security forces | |||
PISF | 89 | N/A | 60 |
Svozgardan paramilitaries | |||
SVDF | 57 | 2 | 554 |
USC | 12 | 0 | 102 |
Total | 471 paramilitary members, 93 security force members, 872 civilians |
Assassinations
Throughout the battle, both sides made numerous attempts to assassinate the leadership of paramilitary and security forces of their opponents. Security force assassination attempts usually involved the storming of headquarters or ambushes of senior figures though because of the regular use of both tactics broadly, it can be hard to accurately assess how many were done explicitly as assassination attempts. The PISF had some overall success regardless, successfully ambushed the Southern KLA Commander Boris Wazkon in August 1924 and killing three senior KLA members during a storming of the Northern HQ on Mbersk Road. Both the SVDF and USC made multiple attempts on KLA Leadership throughout the battle, including 4 bombing attempts against Regan Klaidev, leader of the NLP, in a single day. Success was rare however, and Svozgardan Paramilitaries struggled to launch effective attempts into the Southern portion of the city often resorting to indiscriminate mortar attacks that killed numerous civilians.
Kyotakavian paramilitaries had far more success in assassination that their Svozgardan counterparts; the Union Guard rarely made attempts outside of sniping efforts, which successfully killed Eurius Nelton, the successor to SVDF East Commander Breton Kalionox who was killed by the KLA in early-October. The KLA on the otherhand made multiple bombing attempts on senior leadership of both security forces and paramilitaries with at least 7 were personally targeted at PISF Colonel Emirus Talian though with no success. This however, was an exception rather than the rule, of the other 19 bombing attacks made against leadership figures, 17 were successful, and the KLA bombing campaign ultimately resulted in the decapitation of the SVDF leadership following the Atzan Lane bombing in late-August, which killed both the Western and Eastern SVDF commanders as well as the Deputy Chief of the PISF.
So effective was the KLA assassination campaign that by the end of the conflict, they had killed 4 SVDF Commanders, the USC Commander-in-Chief and the Deputy Chief of the PISF, at least 39 other senior commanders in both the security forces and paramilitaries, and a numerous junior officers which had functionally decapitated the entirety of the SVDF Eastern Command, and substantially damaged the Western SVDF's leadership structure.
Responsible party | Attempts | Successful | Success Rate |
---|---|---|---|
Kyotakavian paramilitaries | |||
KLA | 29 | 19 | 65.5% |
Union Guard | 6 | 1 | 16.7% |
Svozgardan security forces | |||
PISF | 9 | 2 | 22.2% |
Svozgardan paramilitaries | |||
SVDF | 41 | 3 | 7.3% |
USC | 18 | 0 | 0.0% |
Total | 93 |