Wrangel's plan was to leave Crimea and conquer
Northern Taurida, which would make it easier to feed his army and strengthen its defensive positions. On 6 June 1920, the 2nd Army Corps under the command of
Yakov Slashchov landed at
Kyrylivka on the shore of the
Sea of Azov, at the rear of the
13th Red Army. At the same time, the 1st Army Corps commanded by
Alexander Kutepov tied down the main forces of the enemy by crossing the
Isthmus of Perekop, while the corps of , composed mainly of
Kuban Cossacks, attacked the reds from the direction of
Chonhar. The White forces managed to surprise the Reds and forced the 13th Red Army to retreat. Over the next few days, Pisarev's troops captured
Melitopol, while the 1st Army Corps reached
Oleksandrivsk and threatened
Katerynoslav. The Whites captured 8,000 prisoners, 30 artillery cannons and two
armoured trains. The commander of the Russian Army, however, decided not to continue his march north, knowing that the 13th Army had not yet been defeated and that his own troops were still too weak to continue. Instead, Wrangel hoped to further expand his troops in the captured territory, twice as large as that controlled when they had first evacuated to Crimea. At the end of June, the command of the 13th Army directed a cavalry corps under the command of
Dmitry Zhloba against the 1st Army Corps, tasking it with cutting off the White forces participating in the operation from Crimea. But Zhloba's poor leadership allowed the Whites to achieve a decisive victory; in the area of
Tokmak and the German settlements of Lindenau and Heidelberg, Zhloba's forces were completely destroyed. In July 1920, Wrangel decided to only send two small units to
Pryazovia. The first group of 1,000 people landed east of
Mariupol and briefly took the Nikolaevskaya riverside hostel before being defeated by the Reds. The second group of 800 people managed to recruit a further 700 volunteers, and for several weeks conducted guerrilla warfare against the Bolsheviks, ultimately failing. == Kakhovka Bridgehead ==