HISTORICAL BACKGROUND:
11th Army had captured the fortress of Sevastopol on the Crimean peninsula by July 1942. This army, along with heavy siege artillery, was to be sent to Leningrad, where several offensives were being considered by the army group following the freeing up of forces after the destruction of 2nd Shock Army in the Volkhov salient.
Some of the plans considered were the destruction of the Oranienbaum pocket, the elimination of the Pogoste pocket, which was the bulge formed by the 54th Army in the Lyuban' offensive, and finally the ultimate capture of Leningrad, known as operation Nordlicht. In the end the decision was made to concentrate on Nordlicht before diverting to the other operations, in order not to dilute the few available forces.
STAVKA, well aware that the Germans were planning an offensive in the Leningrad region in the late summer, sought to do a preemptive strike. First by trying to fully encircle II. Korps at Demyansk again, tying down German forces with a number of attacks over the summer, while they were rebuilding 2nd Shock Army. Mid august Leningrad Front attacked from the west across the Neva River by the Tosno River, as Volkhov Front was still building up forces for the offensive from the east.
This was finally started on Aug 27th, still not having fully completed it's preparations. While the crossing of the Neva River gained little more than some tiny bridgeheads, the 8th Army penetrated deeper into the German positions from the east. Reinforced by the 2nd Shock Army, the Soviet forces reached 7km away from severing the corridor. In this situation some of the forces ear-marked to the Nordlicht operation was needed to reinforce the defense in order to prevent the collapse of the front, thus postponing the operation indefinitely. The reinforcements allowed a counter-attack by the German 11th Army, once again striking at the root of the Soviet penetration.
By the end of September the front lines had been restored and the 2nd Shock Army had practically ceased to exist for the second time in less than a year. At Demyansk the Ramushevo corridor was also able to be widened by the Germans, but the attack on Leningrad never materialized before 11th Army moved away from Leningrad on November 21st, to stop the Soviet breakthrough at Stalingrad.

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Stefan O. Kristensen