Battle of Ustechko (1916)
The Battle of Ustechko was a military engagement between the troops of Russian Empire of against the forces of Austria-Hungary between January and March 1916. On 19 March, after a few months of pressure, Russians captured the enemy bridgehead over the Dnister river around the village of Ustechko, Ternopil Oblast, nowadays south-western Ukraine. Actions at Ustechko were coordinated with the start of Russian Lake Naroch offensive against German forces and also the final success of Russian attempt to break Austro-Hungarian lines in Bukovina, starting with their January 1916 offensive. PreludeThanks to the Central Powers armies successes during the summer and autumn of 1915, Russian army began their Great Retreat and moved its positions far more east, behind some of the mayor rivers. In autumn Austro-Hungarian troops secured a bridgehead across the Stokhod near and south of the village of Ustechko, which could eventually serve as an important starting point of the following offensive actions. As Ustechko bridgehead became one of the eastest positions held by the Central Powers in the region, Austro-Hungarians fortified the post in a half-circle shape and several stronghold points defended by machine guns or field cannons.[1] Russians gained a new initiative at the end of 1915, as they launched the battle of the Strypa River in late December 1915. The offensive of the 9th army in the Dniester region had only an auxiliary purpose and after some minor military gains, like the advance near the city of Chernogorod, [2] on 13 January, General Alekseyev gave the order to freeze the fighting.[3] Neverthenless, after the replacement of General Ivanov for General Brusilov at the position of the Russian high command, who decided to continue in pushes in Dnister front, Ustechko bridgehead became in January 1916 de facto permanently besieged and until the mid-March faced several Russian attacks. BattleInfantry and artillery forces of the Russian 9th Army began the intense assault actions in late January. Due to fighting during February[4] and beginning of March Russian fire barrages badly damaged Austro-Hungarian trenched and fortified posts and the attacks of overpowering Russians deprived forces of the defenders. The final Russian push came on 19 March, the same day as Lake Naroch offensive against German positions started. Men of Cavalry Regiment No. 67 under the command of Oberst Julius Planckh made the last Austro-Hungarian attempt to hold their post, but they were overpowered: Austrian-Czech soldier Raimund Vlček, battle survivor, later declared that on the final day of the attack just 30 defenders faced 400 Russians.[5] At 5 p.m. Planckh gave the order to evacuate the positions on the other Dniester bank.[6] German sources declared Austro-Hungarian losses of about 6,000 men killed or wounded during eight weeks of fighting.[7] Raimund Vlček also claimed, that few days after taking Ustechko Russian troops invaded Ustechko garrisonand massacred some of the remaining Austro-Hungarian wounded. AftermathAustro-Hungarian high command informed about their defeat on 21 March.[8] German and Austro-Hungarian media informed about the battle as a moment of extraordinary heroism of the bridgehead defenders. Some of the Russian troops tried to continue in advance in direction of Toporoutz, but were stopped in a few days. In summer 1916 Ustechko bridgehead was successfully used during the Brusilov offensive operations. In artIn April 1916 the events of the battle were adapted on one of the stages of the Viennese War Exhibition, where the soldiers of the 11th Dragoon Regiment, survivors of the battle, who were permitted with a leave from the front, joined the performance as actors.[9] This specific event is mentioned in satirical theatre play The Last Days of Mankind by Austrian writer Karl Kraus, who criticised Viennese War Exhibition performance as humuliating and unhumane for the joined eye-witnessed men. See alsoReferences
Bibliography
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