The enemy continued to press on the
13th Army and General
Yakov Kreizer's
3rd Army, which was defending to the north. Further south, in the direction of
Kastornoye, the
9th Panzer and
16th Motorized Divisions of the enemy failed to advance. The Military Council of the Southwestern Front decided to defeat the German Yelets grouping, which would improve the situation on the neighboring Western Front. In the rear of the 13th Army in the
Terbuny Area, a mechanized cavalry group of troops was urgently created from the front reserves under the command of Lieutenant General
Fyodor Kostenko:
5th Cavalry Corps (
3rd, 14th and
32nd Cavalry Divisions), 1st Guards Rifle Division, 129th Tank and 34th Motorized Rifle Brigades, 4th, 7th Guards Mortars and
642nd Cannon Artillery Regiments, in addition, the
121st Rifle Division was transferred to the operational subordination of the group commander from December 6. The counter–offensive against the 2nd Field Army of the Germans began on the northern flank of the 13th Army with the actions of the mobile group of forces of General
Kirill Moskalenko, which pulled off part of the forces of the enemy group. From the line of the city of
Efremov, the enemy was attacked by the formations of the 3rd Army of General
Yakov Kreizer. The main blow was struck by the troops of Fyodor Kostenko. For the German command, the appearance of this group of forces on December 7 was a complete surprise. The 5th Cavalry Corps and the 1st Guards Rifle Division broke through to the flank and rear of the enemy grouping in the general direction of Yelets and to the west. The 34th Motorized Rifle Brigade was sent to
Livny for deep coverage of the enemy. At the same time, the 13th Army was advancing to the southwest. All this threatened the complete encirclement of the German group. In the battles in the area of the city of
Yelets, two enemy infantry divisions were completely defeated. The enemy lost 12 thousand killed and wounded on the battlefield. On December 12, the cavalrymen of General
Kryuchenkin defeated the corps headquarters (the corps commander managed to leave the headquarters by plane). The encircled enemy forces tried to force their way westward, violently attacking the 3rd and 32nd Cavalry Divisions. On December 15, the commander of the German
134th Infantry Division, General Cochenhausen, personally led the surrounded Germans to a breakthrough. The cavalrymen held out, General Cochenhausen was killed in this attack, the remaining Germans surrendered or fled through the forests. The Chief of the German General Staff of the Ground Forces,
Franz Halder, again sadly wrote on this occasion: "the command of the troops on the front sector between
Tula and
Kursk has gone bankrupt". ==See also==