In 1945 German authorities used the Danish island of Bornholm to evacuate blockaded German groups from the Courland Pocket. The island housed a naval port and an airfield.
Despite the terms of surrender, German ships and aircraft in the area of the island of Bornholm continued fighting against Soviet forces. It was put down to German commanders having been ordered to defend the island until the arrival of British troops, to which they were to capitulate.
Soviet authorities decided to make a show of strength by landing a company of sailors and an additional rifle regiment on the island to make it surrender. The commanders of the German garrison were warned of the bombing in the event of a refusal to surrender. The garrison surrendered to Soviet forces and was replaced by the Soviet rifle regiment.
On 15 May 1945, the Soviet government announced that Bornholm had been temporarily occupied and would be immediately transferred to Denmark after “the resolution of military issues in Germany”.
On 5 March 1946, the USSR Ministry of Foreign Affairs informed the Danish government that the USSR no longer needed to keep its troops on Bornholm and offered the Danish government to take the island under its administration.
On 4 April, the deed of cession of the island was signed in a solemn atmosphere, and on 5 April 1946, the last Soviet troops left Bornholm. During the Soviet troops’ stay there, the island and the port were used for trawling the waters of the Baltic Sea and destroying sea mines.
Source:
“Denmark during World War II” by Yulia Kudrina