Read Terror in the Balkans Online
Authors: Ben Shepherd
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Military, #World War II, #Science & Math, #Earth Sciences, #Geography, #Regional
240
terror in the balk ans
Together, all these factors prevented the Germans from destroying
the Partisan movement before early 1943. By then, even though the Ger-
mans were now committing greater air and land forces to the task, the
Partisans had grown too strong, militarily and organizationally, for them
to be defeated conclusively by those forces.
The Germans, reinforced on the ground and in the air, were still able to
land blows on the Partisans in the months following the White opera-
tions. The fact that the Partisans increasingly resembled a regular army
in form, size, and organization certainly refl ected their growing strength.
But it also made them a more visible target, particularly for air attack. In
May 1943’s Operation Black, a revised version of the postponed Opera-
tion White III, the Germans even came close to destroying Tito’s main
Partisan force. Yet even if they had succeeded, so benefi cial was the
NDH’s chaotic state to the Partisan cause, and so incomplete the Ger-
mans’ ability to station suffi cient troops on the ground permanently,
that the Partisans might well have been able to reconstitute themselves
anyway. In any case, close as they came, the Germans did not suc-
ceed.12 This was partly because, even by this stage, they failed to accord
destroying the Partisan movement the proper importance, and sought
instead to defeat decisively both Partisans and MihailovicĆhetniks dur-
ing the operation.13
Operation Black also saw German brutality towards civilians
reach new heights of ferocity.14 In addition, General Löhr successfully
demanded that the region in which the White operations had taken place
be taken out of the NDH and designated a German operational area.
This enabled Himmler to build up the German police presence within
the region, and call upon ethnic German manpower to fi ll the ranks of
the Police and Waffen-SS. Himmler increased his power further in June
1943, when the entire NDH was declared a “bandit area.”15
The Axis in general remained riven by dissension. The Croatian army
continued to hemorrhage its personnel and weapons—both of which
went over to the Partisans in increasingly large quantities—and the NDH
its support. Within German–Italian relations, trust had broken down
entirely; the Germans even concealed their plans for Operation Black
Conclusion
241
from the Italians.16 But Italy’s capitulation to the Allies in summer 1943,
far from unifying the Germans and the NDH, merely removed a buffer
between them and set them at loggerheads even more.
The Germans exploited the NDH’s economic resources ever more
rapaciously. They antagonized the Pavelicŕegime by bypassing it in the
decision-making process, recruiting Croats into the Wehrmacht and
Waffen-SS en masse and, at the end of 1943, embarking on full-scale col-
laboration with the MihailovicĆhetniks. Given the Chetniks’ manifest
indiscipline, incompetence, and military bankruptcy, this new alliance
exemplifi ed the increasing desperation of German efforts against the
Partisans. The Pavelicŕegime also feared that German sponsorship of
the NDH Muslims, which peaked when Himmler handed over Muslim-
dominated northeast Croatia for the Muslim troops of the Waffen-SS
Handschar Division to occupy, would prompt them to secede from the
state. Relations hit a new low when the Prinz Eugen Division massacred
two thousand Croats in early 1944.17
The Ustasha, meanwhile, entirely lost what remained of its grip, par-
ticularly after the loss of eastern Bosnia to the Partisans in October 1943.
It violently reescalated its anti-Serb policy, yet also secretly negotiated
with both the Partisans and the Allies. Yet when the Germans learned
of the negotiations, it led merely to a reshuffl e of the NDH leadership
rather than the abolition of the regime itself. Hitler, disillusioned with
the NDH at last, wanted it absorbed into the Reich or turned into a pro-
tectorate. But the increasingly precarious situation at the front precluded
such radical surgery.18
It was also in 1943 that the western Allies, frustrated at Mihailovic´’s
inaction and his real or de facto collaboration with the Axis, formally
switched their support to the Partisans.19 Following Italy’s fall, this sup-
port comprised not just material aid but also Allied airpower operating
from southern Italian airfi elds. The Partisans were also well placed to
seize vast quantities of abandoned Italian military equipment and hith-
erto Italian-controlled territory.20 Thus were they able to expand and
consolidate their territory, repel the Germans’ ever more desperate offen-
sives, and eventually take the offensive themselves. In early summer 1944,
following earlier aborted attempts, they recommenced their advance into
Serbia, linking up with the Red Army now advancing on the Balkans
242
terror in the balk ans
following the destruction of Germany’s front in the East. This was yet
another blow in a sequence that would eventually culminate in the loss
of all Yugoslavia to Tito’s Partisans and the Red Army.21
German army commanders’ excessive reliance upon bludgeoning ter-
ror and force, then, was a major reason why the Axis campaign against
the Partisans failed. It was not the most decisive reason; such were the
overarching weaknesses of the Axis occupation edifi ce in Yugoslavia
that, ultimately, no amount of restraint, moderation, or constructive
engagement by individual units would have brought more than a tem-
porary reprieve. Yet German army commanders’ terroristic proclivities
are still centrally important to this study’s primary concern. For this
study’s primary concern has been not with outcomes, but with motives:
why some German army units employed more constructive counterin-
surgency measures, others employed them less extensively or eschewed
them entirely, and others still employed terror and brutality on a scale
surpassing even higher command’s ruthless directives. It is to
that
cen-
tral question that this conclusion now turns.
The social and institutional environment of the offi cer corps of the
Imperial German Army, and of the Royal-Imperial Army of the Austro-
Hungarian Empire, already provided a bedrock of harshness before and
during the Great War. In some respects, particularly before 1914, this
environment was relatively benign. In other respects, it emphatically was
not. These respects were reinforced by the changing nature of warfare,
politics, and society in Germany and Austria during the decades leading
up to the Great War.
In the case of both offi cer corps, offi cer cadets were joining institu-
tions that were deeply conservative and sought to instill a correspond-
ing mentality among their personnel. But at the same time, both offi cer
corps needed to reach some sort of accommodation with the forces of
social and political change. Had they not done so, they would have failed
to attract that larger, more socially diverse intake of offi cers that was
essential to their viability. Yet by embarking on this course, they were
absorbing larger numbers of men from milieus increasingly susceptible
to new and radical social and political infl uences.
Conclusion
243
Foremost among these were Social Darwinism and its anti-Slavic and
anti-Semitic corollaries—sentiments that were already making their pres-
ence felt in both offi cer corps. The suppression of colonial revolts by the
German military saw Social Darwinism combine with terroristic counter-
insurgency doctrine to terrible effect. Add to all this the fact that both offi -
cer corps, presaging the rise of the “specialist in mass destruction” during
the interwar years, were increasingly preoccupied with the organizational
and technological dimensions of the new industrialized warfare. A picture
thus emerges of institutions whose personnel were increasingly suscep-
tible to radical ideology, intellectually unsuited to countering its malign
infl uence, and increasingly preoccupied with the devastating opportuni-
ties afforded by ominous trends in modern warfare.
But it would be wrong to exaggerate the strength of these phenomena
during the years before the Great War. Some were not unique to Ger-
many and Austria. Within the Habsburg offi cer corps in particular, offi -
cers were subjected to other infl uences that fostered open-mindedness
instead of diminishing it. And the same institutional conservatism that,
in many respects, eroded offi cers’ ability to withstand the strengthen-
ing currents of destructive ideology, in other respects protected them
against it. The stress both offi cer corps placed on good character, their
aversion to notions of unquestioning, zombifi ed obedience, and the
ongoing prevalence of traditional Christian values were all more benefi -
cial elements of such conservatism.
It was the Great War and its chaotic two-year aftermath that made
the violent radicalization of both offi cer corps, and their eventual amal-
gamation with National Socialism, much more likely. It was not just the
annihilative ferocity of so much of the fi ghting that played a part in this
process. So too did the squalor and hardship of conditions in the fi eld,
and the manner in which the merciless, all-encompassing “total” nature
of the Great War impressed itself upon offi cers and men.
And there were important respects in which the Great War was a
battle not just against the enemy’s armies, but against his culture also.
This element was particularly strengthened when offi cers and men came
into direct contact with ethnic groups who had long attracted disdain
or animosity in military and societal circles in Germany and Austria—
eastern Jews, eastern Slavs, and Serbs. As the war continued, moreover,
244
terror in the balk ans
many offi cers increasingly associated the fi rst two of these groups with
the emerging specter of Bolshevism. The odium with which offi cers
regarded Bolshevism was fueled by what they perceived as Bolshevism’s
danger to social and moral order and, more directly, to the discipline and
fi ghting power of their own troops. Meanwhile counterinsurgency war-
fare often, albeit not always, saw German and Austro-Hungarian troops
perpetrate acts of utilitarian and ideologically colored brutality.
The obduracy all these infl uences collectively strengthened was
further buttressed by the trauma of defeat, by the urge to blame it on
perceived enemies internal and external, by the violent aftershock that
followed defeat, and by the resolution to wage future wars in a more sin-
gle-mindedly ruthless as well as technically superior manner.
Yet even then, neither the German nor the Austrian offi cer corps was
fi rmly set on an irreversible path towards criminal complicity in the Nazi
regime. Granted, the Reichswehr offi cer corps of the 1920s and early
1930s was an exclusive, elitist institution, contemptuous of democracy
and set on restoring its prominence within a militarily resurgent Ger-
many. Granted also, the Bundesheer was instrumental in crushing the
Austrian political left and sustaining the Austrofascist dictatorship that
abolished democracy during the early 1930s. But none of this, in itself,
was synonymous with embracing Nazism. That particular endpoint was
the result of a series of further developments—military, political, and
diplomatic—that were in train throughout the 1930s.
Still further developments during the two years following the out-
break of war in 1939 cemented the process by which the two offi cer
corps, now merged into the single offi cer corps of the German army,
eventually became enmeshed in a war of conquest and annihilation in
National Socialism’s name. The moral degeneration that gathered pace
after the fall of Poland; the hubris following the fall of France; and the
ideologically, militarily, and economically determined readiness to wage
a war of unparalleled ferocity against the Soviet Union all contributed
to sealing the pact. And the invocation of much older enmities, enmi-
ties originating from before 1914 but radicalized during the Great War’s
course and aftermath, further ensured such a brutal endpoint. The ruth-
less, ideologically suffused mind-set that now characterized so much
of the senior offi cer corps ensured that the army’s counterinsurgency
Conclusion
245
doctrine in Eastern and south-eastern Europe would be shaped less by
relatively measured precedents such as the Germans’ 1918 counterinsur-
gency in the Ukraine, than by precedents that were much more ruthless.
It is clear, then, that the Wehrmacht’s higher command levels extolled
a brand of counterinsurgency in Eastern and south-eastern Europe that
was based primarily upon the pitiless exercise of terror. But it did not auto-
matically follow that all commanders in the fi eld would blindly adhere
to it. After all the Wehrmacht, like other Reich agencies, often issued