To the south, a major Red Army assault aimed at the juncture of the 1st and
4th Panzer Armies was not repulsed on 14 July by the division-sized
Korpsabteilung C. It was repulsed primarily by the 349th Infantry Division. The 1st Ukrainian Front shifted their attack further south, and after an immense artillery and air bombardment assaulted the depleted
349th and
357th Infantry Divisions. The 349th Infantry Division did not collapse under the assault, although it was hit very hard and the survivors temporarily fell back in disarray. Even a cursory glance at its War Diary demonstrates that this division continued to take part in offensive operations form 14 to 19 July. Korpsabteilung C initially played virtually no part in opposing the Soviet breakthrough. The 357th Infantry Division, 349th Infantry Division, the SS-Freiwillge Division 'Galizien' and the III. Panzer Korps, in particular the 8th Panzer Division, helped to contain the breakthrough and limit it to a gap wide. Only because of their massive overwhelming superiority in every respect was the 1st Ukrainian Front able to advance towards the towns of
Zolochiv and
Sasiv, driving a wedge between XIII Army Corps and the neighboring
XLVIII Panzer Corps. German artillery from both Corps and the
18th Artillery Division tried but failed to saturate the narrow breakthrough area dubbed the Koltiv Corridor because it was too spread out on the high ground to be able to concentrate its fire to be effective. A hasty counterattack by the
1st Panzer Division and the
8th Panzer Division took place, accompanied by elements of the
SS Division Galicia. While the infantry fought well, the 1st Panzer Division and the 8th Panzer Division were hit by a massive air assault. The 8th Panzer Division fared worse as its commander General Friebe disobeyed orders and moved his tanks on an open and exposed road. The German command responded to this unforgivable mistake by declaring that Friebe was "sick" and replacing him as the divisional commander. Despite initial gains, the 1st Ukrainian Front finally managed to halt the German attack, with the help of the 2nd Air Army, which dropped 17,200 bombs on the attacking German tanks. The absence of the 8th Panzer Division meant that the attack was doomed to fail. The commander of 8th Panzer Division had ignored his orders and tried to lead his force on a short cut. Instead, the division was strung out on the Zolochiv–
Zboriv section of the Lvov–
Ternopil road, and suffered immense losses from Red Air Force
Il-2s. Despite this, the southern attack was slowing. On 16 July, Konev took a great risk and committed the 3rd Guards Tank Army (Lieutenant General
Pavel Rybalko) to the southern assault. This meant that the Army would have to travel through the narrow Koltiv Corridor, constantly under artillery fire and fierce German counterattacks. The 3rd Guards Tank Army tilted the balance in the Lvov direction, and soon the Soviet advance resumed its course west. The commander of the XIII Army Corps realised that his Corps needed to retreat if it were to avoid encirclement. The order was given for all Corps units to fall back to the
Prinz-Eugen-Stellung, a series of unmanned defensive positions built in June 1944 which ran partly along the
Strypa river about west of Ternopil. Strong 1st Ukrainian Front attacks throughout 17 July captured parts of the
Prinz-Eugen-Stellung. The 349th Infantry Division, the SS Division Galicia and the fusilier Battalion of Korpsabteilung C joined the combat to recapture these lost positions but after some success, failed, due to overwhelming Soviet superiority. XLVIII.Pz.Kps command still believed that its III. Panzer Korps could restore the German front and so the Corps commander, General
Arthur Hauffe, did not order further withdrawal, condemning the three XIII Army Corps divisions and Korps-Abteilung C in the Brody salient to their fate. On 18 July, 1st Ukrainian Front attacks resulted in a breakthrough in the Lvov operational direction. Late in the day, the 1st Ukrainian Front spearheads met near the town of
Busk. The encirclement was complete. 45,000 men of the XIII Army Corps were trapped around Brody, and a breach had been created along the Army Group North Ukraine's front. ==Annihilation at Brody: objectives redefined==