Despite ARBiH success in surrounding the summit of Mount Stolice and its important radio and television transmitter after heavy casualties were suffered on both sides, VRS reserves counterattacked and lifted the blockade.
The transmitter was destroyed by a North Atlantic Treaty Organisation airstrike in late August 1995, and territory of Mount Stolice was transferred to the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina as part of the Dayton Agreement that ended the Bosnian War.
[3] The ARBiH troops earmarked for the assault on Majevica were part of Brigadier General Sead Delić's 2nd Corps,[4] which transferred almost all of its elite formations to Colonel Refik Lendo's 25th Division sector of the front line for the attack.
TG-Majevica had the support of a battalion of the 3rd Mixed Artillery Regiment equipped with 155 mm (6.1 in) howitzers,[5] and during the previous year most of the brigades had a company of World War II-vintage T-34 tanks under command.
[3][4][5] The main thrust of the assault commencing on 20 March was against Mount Stolice and nearby Banj Brdo, but secondary attacks were launched along the front line between Čelić and Teočak.
The ARBiH formations involved in the main assault suffered very heavy casualties on the first day of the offensive, with many advancing infantry caught by VRS artillery fire.
To avoid a frontal assault, the 2nd Corps continued its encirclement tactics and used radio to call on the VRS garrison to surrender the tower and station intact, but neither approach was successful.
Two days later the same VRS forces that had broken the encirclement with their counterattack a week earlier, backed by artillery support, launched a coordinated assault which recaptured Banj Brdo and another nearby height by the end of 7 April, lifting the ARBiH blockade.
As a consequence of the signing of the Dayton Agreement which ended the Bosnian War, both Mount Stolice and Banj Brdo were shifted to the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina side of the Inter-Entity Boundary Line.
[7] In 2023, the mayors of all five Republika Srpska and Federation municipalities in the Majevica area combined to work on projects aimed at economic and infrastructure reform, as well as boosting tourism.