Read Terror in the Balkans Online
Authors: Ben Shepherd
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Military, #World War II, #Science & Math, #Earth Sciences, #Geography, #Regional
a restructuring of the high command system. Out went the old War Minis-
try; in came two new bodies, the Army High Command (
Oberkommando
des Heeres
or OKH), which from June 1941 would be concerned primarily
with coordinating the war against the Soviet Union, and the Armed Forces
High Command (
Oberkommando der Wehrmacht
or OKW). The OKW
was effectively Hitler’s personal military offi ce, and would from 1941 be
responsible for coordinating the war across the rest of Europe. Hitler’s
inner military circle now consisted largely of careerists, sycophants, or at
best offi cers who, able though they were, refrained from criticizing Hit-
ler’s decisions openly. He now pursued his foreign policy program ever
more recklessly. In March 1939, he seized the remaining Czech lands of
Bohemia and Moravia. Hitler’s next move, against Poland, led directly to
war, the dictator wrongly calculating that Britain and France would be
deterred from intervening by the cynically utilitarian Nazi-Soviet Pact of
August 1939. But while the Germans took one month to vanquish Poland,
Britain and France were powerless to intervene.
Bridging Two Hells
67
Many army offi cers, particularly those originating from eastern Prus-
sia, were eager to settle accounts with Poland.41 Yet triumphant in the
fi eld though the army was, the invasion also exposed the moral degen-
eration that by now affl icted its leadership and, increasingly, its offi cer
corps more widely. Hitler’s speech to his highest commanders on August
22 had set the tone for the way the Polish campaign was to be waged:
“Close your hearts to pity. Proceed brutally. Eighty million people must
have what is theirs by right. Their existence must be secured. The stron-
ger has the right. (Exercise the) greatest harshness.”42
Now, after years of growing accommodation with the Nazi regime and
burgeoning enthusiasm for its military and ideological policies, the army
largely stood by as Nazi murder squads—the
Einsatzgruppen
of the SS-
run Security Service (SD)—fanned out behind the advancing troops to
“cleanse” Polish territory of “dangerous elements.” The Einsatzgrup-
pen were charged with rounding up and liquidating all Poles who might
conceivably threaten the German occupation’s stability. They netted
political fi gures, the intelligentsia, former army offi cers, and many Jews.
Several thousand individuals, in a portent of far greater slaughter later in
the war, were shot en masse.43
In failing to protest effectively at these killings, the offi cer corps of the
German army crossed a further moral line. In turn, they emboldened
the SS to cross lines even more bestial in the future. A number of army
offi cers did object, but few used moral arguments.44 Most other protest-
ing offi cers, whether because they were not morally affronted in the fi rst
place or because they perceived that appeals to morality would simply
be ignored, objected more mildly on “pragmatic” grounds instead: their
fear for the discipline of army troops in the vicinity of the killings or their
concern at the damage that might be wrought on the army’s “good name”
were it to be tainted by association with them. And no protesting offi cer
received any backing whatsoever from the supine head of the army, Gen-
eral von Brauchitsch.
Many offi cers, meanwhile, did not protest at all. Moreover, whether
because their own anti-Slavic and anti-Semitic beliefs were infl uencing
them, because their scruples were diluted by careerism, or because they
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terror in the balk ans
obsessed over needing to preemptively crush any potential opposition
to German occupation, they were liberally bloodying their own hands
in the name of “security”—sometimes, indeed, in co-operation with the
SS. Any civilian resistance posed to the German invasion of Poland—
and of civilian resistance in Poland, in contrast to Belgium and France
in 1914, there was plenty—was answered with massively disproportion-
ate reprisals.
German interwar military doctrine, besotted as it was with mobile,
technical, and tactical superiority at the front line, had in fact paid
relatively little attention to counterinsurgency. But in Poland in 1939,
the German army’s leadership chose to resurrect that singularly harsh
counterinsurgency doctrine that had led German soldiers to commit
brutal acts of suppression such as those in German Southwest Africa
in 1904–1905 and Belgium and northern France in 1914. That the army
leadership acted thus was not simply because German generals were pre-
programmed to counter irregular warfare with terror. After all, the Ger-
mans’ relatively balanced counterinsurgency campaign in the Ukraine in
1918 had demonstrated that they were not thus preprogrammed.
But the senior German offi cer corps of 1939 was harder and more
radical than its predecessor of 1918. It was also enmeshed, for the greater
part willingly, in a criminally brutal regime, and extensively shared that
regime’s ideological contempt for “Slavic races.” And brutal counterin-
surgency conduct of the Belgium 1914 variety dovetailed perfectly with
the Nazis’ steadfast belief that terror and suppression were the only sure
means of keeping an occupied population in line—particularly if both
parties regarded that population as racially inferior.45 Such sentiments
would go on to underpin the German army’s counterinsurgency cam-
paigns in both the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia.
The campaign in the West of spring 1940 radicalized virtually all ele-
ments of the National Socialist regime. The Wehrmacht achieved in six
weeks what the Kaiserheer had failed to achieve in four years—the con-
clusive defeat of France herself, and the apparent prospect of imminent
peace with Britain. The stunning victory, and the euphoric accolade that
followed it, combined to infuse Hitler and the Nazi regime with immense
hubris. Consequently, when Britain refused to make peace, they believed
it well within their capabilities to compel Britain to the negotiating table
Bridging Two Hells
69
by defeating her last potential ally on mainland Europe. This potential
ally, the small matter of the Nazi-Soviet Pact notwithstanding, was the
Soviet Union. Invading the Soviet Union sooner or later had always been
a long-standing aim of Hitler’s; he believed that the German people’s
long-term future could only be secured by annihilating the mortal dan-
ger the Soviet Union’s “Jew-Bolshevik” leadership posed and seizing the
country’s economic wealth and vast rural spaces. But the aim of sapping
Britain’s will to resist by defeating the Soviet Union sooner rather than
later certainly infl uenced the timing of his decision to invade.46
The army leadership’s complicity in the invasion of the Soviet Union,
code-named Operation Barbarossa, is the most resonant statement of
how far it had by now debased itself, and the army, in the name of National
Socialism. Hitler and the leading power blocs of the Third Reich did not
regard the attack on the Soviet Union as an ordinary invasion. They con-
ceived it instead as a “war of extermination,” one aimed at destroying an
entire nation, plundering its resources, annihilating its “Jew-Bolshevik”
leadership class, and decimating and enslaving its population. It was a
war the army’s leadership and senior offi cer corps broadly supported.
By now, they were even more heavily under the infl uence of Hitler and
National Socialism, enthused at the opportunity to provide the ultimate
demonstration of their army’s fi ghting prowess, and animated by anti-
Semitism, by anti-Slavism and, perhaps above all, by anti-Bolshevism.
While this fi nal motive may have been muted by short-term exigencies
such as the Reichswehr’s erstwhile clandestine collaboration with the Red
Army, it was now established as a major driving force.47 Typical of many
generals’ views on the eve of the invasion were those of General Erich
Hoepner, commander of the Fourth Panzer Group. “The war against the
Soviet Union,” he wrote early in May 1941, “is an essential component of
the German people’s struggle for existence. It is the old struggle of the
Germans against the Slavs, the defense of European culture against the
Muscovite-Asiatic fl ood, and the repulsion of Judeo-Bolshevism.”48
The war of extermination against the Soviet Union was also a war
into which, through saturation propaganda and ruthless directives,
the generals would endeavor to embed their troops.49 The Barbarossa
Decree, issued by the Armed Forces High Command a month before
the invasion on May 19 1941, declared that “Bolshevism is the mortal
70
terror in the balk ans
enemy of the National Socialist German people. It is against this sub-
versive world-view and its carriers that Germany is fi ghting. This battle
demands ruthless and energetic measures against Bolshevik agitators,
irregulars, saboteurs, and Jews, and the total eradication of any active
or passive resistance.”50
Ultimately, the hubris that shaped the pitiless conception of the invasion
of the Soviet Union, and indeed the decision to invade in the fi rst place,
would be the Nazi regime’s undoing. It would lead it, in its planning
of Barbarossa, to fatally underestimate the Soviet Union’s capabilities
and fatally overestimate Germany’s own. But in spring 1941, it was the
culmination of a series of developments which had seen the leadership
of the German army become increasingly radicalized and brutalized,
increasingly intertwined with the Nazi regime, and increasingly set on
a course that would implicate it in the regime’s worst deeds. It was a
process to which many if not most of the army’s senior offi cer corps,
including those offi cers who are this study’s concern, had become party
sooner or later.
From the years before 1914, through the Great War and the interwar
years, and up to 1941, the forces that eventually brought the army’s senior
offi cer corps to this threshold had been many and varied. By 1941, a suc-
cession of developments had ensured that senior offi cers were now tech-
nocratic, ruthlessly utilitarian, and ideologically hardened to an extent
that would have been barely conceivable, if at all, to their late-nineteenth
century predecessors. The merging of the two armies in 1938 and their
assimilation into the Nazi state had accelerated the process. Senior offi -
cers now belonged to a body that, as a whole, stood ready to wage a
singularly brutal form of warfare in the service of National Socialism.
Just how far each individual offi cer was prepared to go in the service of
that cause would be determined by the infl uences and experiences that
had shaped him over the course of his life. But the strength of convic-
tion now animating the senior offi cer corps as a whole would manifest
itself with brutal clarity in the campaign the Wehrmacht would conduct
in Yugoslavia that year, just as surely as it would in the Wehrmacht’s
campaign against the Soviet Union.
Bridging Two Hells
71
Yet neither the collective mind-set nor the personal attitudes to which
offi cers subscribed fully explain how those offi cers actually went on to
behave. Yugoslavia’s topography, the political conditions under which
the German occupation regime would operate, and the conditions on
the ground in which German army units would fi nd themselves all
helped shape the circumstances that would in turn determine how offi -
cers’ attitudes translated into action. The interplay of all these forces,
and the behavior that resulted, are the concern of the book’s remaining
chapters. The very next chapter outlines the topographical, political,
and military backdrop of the Wehrmacht’s invasion and occupation of
Yugoslavia in 1941.
c h a p t e r 4
Invasion and Occupation
Yugoslavia, 1941
In march 1941, the impending drive into the Soviet Union was
delayed by events in a different quarter. The Reich’s hapless ally, Italy,
had sought to extend its infl uence in the Balkans since 1939. But so defi -
cient was the Italian army that even the fi rst step, the seizure of Albania
in 1939, had gone far from smoothly. Less smoothly still went the course
of Italy’s next attempted venture, the conquest of Greece.1 Italy’s ongo-
ing failure to subdue the Greeks raised the ominous prospect of Britain
propping Greece up and threatening Germany’s southeastern fl ank in
the run-up to Barbarossa. This threat needed neutralizing before Bar-
barossa was launched. Thus began preparations to divert German forces
southward into an attack on Greece.
But on March 27, 1941, matters became vastly more complicated. That
day, the broadly pro-Axis government of Yugoslavia—the erstwhile
Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes—was toppled in a coup
orchestrated by Serbian offi cers of the Yugoslav air force. The offi cers
were hostile to the Axis, and believed that excessive Croat infl uence