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The German Sixth Army (German: 6.Armee Oberkommando) was a World War II field army and the protagonist of the tragic Battle of Stalingrad in 1942. Western campaignsThe Sixth Army was formed on October 10, 1939 with Field Marshal Walther von Reichenau in command. Its primary mission was to guard the western defences of Germany against British and French attacks during the Polish campaign. During the invasion of the Low countries, the Army saw active service linking up with paratroopers and destroying fortifications at Eben Emael, Lüttich, and Namur. The army was then involved in the breakthrough of the Paris defences on June 12, 1941 before acting as a northern flank for German forces along the Normandy coast. Eastern campaignsThis army began its perfomance in Russian Campaign as spearhead of the Army Group South front attack. After the death of von Reichenau in an aircraft accident, his successor was General Friedrich Paulus. Despite the grey antecedents of Paulus as a commanded, he managed to obtain with the Sixth Army the major victory in Kharkov during the spring of 1942. But this victory sealed the army's destiny because the OKW designated it for the attack to Stalingrad. The Sixth Army failed to obtain a quick victory. The winter came and with it Operation Uranus -- the massive attack of Soviet forces to the flanks of the German corridor between the Don and Volga rivers. The Sixth Army was isolated and the attempts at rescue were useless (Operation Winter Storm). Paulus was promoted to the rank of Field Marshal on January 31 1943. On that same day, Von Paulus surrendered to the Soviet Forces Adolf Hitler ordered a new Sixth Army to be constituted on March 5 1943, commanded by General Karl Adolf Hollidt. The army fought in the Ukraine and Romania as part of Army Group Don. Commanders
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