On February 27, German operational group of cavalry general
Rudolf von Frommel was formed as part of the combined division of Major General
Karl Dieffenbach from the regiments of the
XI Corps, the consolidated brigade of Major General
Dietrich Karl Hermann Freiherr von Stein from the 17th and
XIII Corps, the reinforced reserve brigade of Major General R. von Zenker, the
XXV Reserve Corps (49th and
50th Reserve Sivisions, the consolidated reserve division of Lieutenant General von Menges) and the
9th Cavalry Division. The group was reinforced with heavy artillery - 12 batteries of 150mm howitzers, 4 batteries of 100mm heavy guns, a battery of 210mm mortars. On March 5, the divisions of Dieffenbach and Menges, the brigades of Stein and Zenker broke through the Russian defenses on the Pilica River in a section of 8 km and began to develop an offensive to the north, cutting off Russian troops from Warsaw. The Germans captured 3,400 prisoners and 20 machine guns. The headquarters of the 5th Army began urgently transferring regiments from the 4th Army Corps to the breakthrough site (1st Rifle Brigade, 2nd Brigade of the 2nd Infantry Division) and brought the 25th Infantry Division into battle; a neighbor from the left flank - the commander of the 4th Army, General of Infantry A. Evert - sent the Germans to the flank from behind the Pilica river of the
18th Infantry Division of the
14th Army Corps. On March 6, the 5th Army, in which the group of Lieutenant General
N. Korotkevich was formed, and the detachment of Lieutenant General
P. Papengut from the 4th Army, launched a counterattack and pushed the Germans back, but after the start of attacks on the Russian Grenadier Corps from the German army of Infantry General
Remus von Woyrsch near
Łopuszno and the resumption of the onslaught of the Frommel group left
Żdżary. On March 7, Korotkevich's detachment was reinforced by militia brigades, the 59th Infantry Division and the 6th Siberian Rifle Division. The
Landwehr Corps stopped attacking due to deteriorating weather and lack of ammunition, and from March 8 went on the defensive. To develop the offensive, A. von Mackensen decided to completely transfer the XI, XIII, and XVII Corps to R. von Frommel. Attempts by the detachments of Korotkevich and Papengut to restore the situation on the Pilica River were unsuccessful. Attempts to advance were thwarted by the dominance of German heavy artillery. On March 8-10, in the battles for Domanevice, all Russian attacks were repulsed by the Germans. On March 1, R. von Frommel's group (G. von Menges's Division, 22nd and 38th Infantry, 9th Cavalry Divisions, X. von Stein's brigade) resumed attacks. The defense of the Russian troops of the 5th Army turned out to be stronger this time: despite the new trophies (in total, during the fighting, the Germans captured 7,150 soldiers and officers and 16 machine guns), the Germans failed to move forward. The serious situation in the armies of the
Southwestern Front in the
Carpathians and the failure of attempts to go on the offensive against the German group of von Frommel on the Pilica River was led to the demand of the Commander-in-Chief of the armies of the North-Western Front to the headquarters of the 5th Army to return the detachment of Papengut to the 4th Army. The offensive of the Germans here was already unlikely, only fettering actions were carried out, since the entire supply of shells was used up. The casualties of the von Frommel group reached 10,000 men, including 2,200 killed and 339 captured. In the battles until March 18, the detachment of Korotkevich lost 36 officers and 3,114 soldiers killed, 7,150 prisoners, 111 officers and 11,744 soldiers wounded, 30 machine guns, several guns. 5 officers and 351 soldiers were taken prisoner. The chief of staff of the 5th Army, Major General N. Sievers, informed the headquarters of the armies of the North-Western Front that the army was moving on to strengthening its positions, not hoping to quickly regain the territory lost at the beginning of the battle. The losses of the 4th Army (a detachment of Papengut and the Grenadier Corps) amounted to 774 killed, 71 missing, 2,709 wounded; the German
Landwehr Corps lost 120 killed, 22 missing, 445 wounded. In general, the cessation of active operations on the Pilica River made it possible to transfer the
23rd Infantry Division from the 4th Army to the Carpathians. From the German 9th Army, the 25th and 35th Reserve Divisions were sent to the Carpathians. On March 21, R. von Frommel stopped the attacks. == Outcome ==