Read Terror in the Balkans Online
Authors: Ben Shepherd
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Military, #World War II, #Science & Math, #Earth Sciences, #Geography, #Regional
lacked both trucks and men. Most of the available trucks, the Adminis-
trative Offi ce maintained in late July, were “mousetraps”; their need to
overload in order to transport suffi cient troop numbers made them sit-
ting targets. The 717th Infantry Division described the state of its trucks
as “wholly inadequate.”94
100
terror in the balk ans
In northwest Serbia, where the revolt was strongest, the Germans effec-
tively relinquished control of the villages and countryside—with its
craggy mountains, deep river valleys, and impenetrable forests—and
concentrated on holding principal towns and patrolling major road and
rail links. But in their fear of being overwhelmed they were already exact-
ing fi erce reprisals. LXV Corps frantically urged “more hunter groups,
bigger operations, brutal and vigorous action, burning of buildings and
villages from which Wehrmacht personnel are attacked, ruthless fi re in
combat, hanging of captured saboteurs.”95 One thousand Serbian citi-
zens had already fallen victim to reprisals by the end of August.96 Calls
from Hitler himself helped drive the killing; on July 24 Serbia Command
noted an order “from the Armed Forces High Command, issued via
Wehrmacht Command South-East, in which the Führer and Supreme
Commander of the Armed Forces voiced his expectation that the Com-
mander in Serbia will extinguish all trouble spots through brutal action
and the harshest reprisals.”97
Initially, the bulk of the executions was carried out by units of Einsatz-
gruppe Yugoslavia—which, with their small size, usually assigned the
actual shooting to men of the Serbian gendarmerie.98 The principal
victims were Communists and male Jews—the next step in that further
escalation in the process that would eventually see the Serbian Jews vir-
tually wiped from the land.99 In one such reprisal, one hundred Jews
and twenty-two Communists were executed in Belgrade on July 29, in
retaliation for an arson attack on German trucks by a sixteen-year-old
Jewish boy.100 In fact, much of the groundwork for a “targeted” reprisal
campaign had been set by the army leadership on the eve of the Balkan
campaign. On April 2 General Halder, chief of staff at the Army High
Command, had himself directed that the SS and police should seize
Jews and Communists in the newly-occupied territory as potential “dan-
gers to security.”101
Though there undoubtedly was an ideological motive for target-
ting Jews and Communists as reprisal victims, the Germans had other
motives also. Aside from the fact that Communist Partisans were
heading the national uprising, there was also a calculating reason for
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101
directing reprisals at Jews and Communists. In early August, after Colo-
nel von Stockhausen, the area commandant in Užice, ordered eighty-one
Serbs executed in retaliation for the death of one German policeman,
the Serbian gendarmerie began refusing to shoot its own people.102 The
Germans feared, at least during the uprising’s early stage, that such
indiscriminate killing might fatally damage relations with the general
population—not to mention waste the lives of potentially useful inform-
ers. By contrast, directing reprisals at narrow sections of the population
was less likely to provoke damaging protest from the rest of it.103 Further-
more, as Section S opined, the Germans could still cow the general pop-
ulation anyway—for, by victimizing Jews and Communists, they could
also demonstrate their
capacity
for terror.104
And to assume that the German administration in Serbia saw Jews
and Communists as separate categories of enemy is to miss the point. In
Serbia, as in the Soviet Union, German policy
equated
Jews with Com-
munists. Indeed, the SS and police in Serbia judged that labelling Jews
as Communists was a convenient, indeed automatic way of justifying
their liquidation.105 And for the Wehrmacht, Section S sought to ingrain
the image of the Jew as the enemy among both German personnel and
pro-Axis Serbian groups. Its message was that, while the Communist
Partisans were the main perpetrators of unrest, it was the Jews who were
the puppet-masters of the Communist-led uprising.106
Indeed, the Wehrmacht was complicit from the start in seizing and
killing Jews and Communists, not to mention considerable numbers of
Sinti and Roma, and became more complicit over time. Einsatzgruppe
Yugoslavia cooperated especially closely with the administrative offi ce,
which, though headed by an SS general, was integral to Serbia Com-
mand. The Wehrmacht’s own Secret Field Police and Field Gendar-
merie, as well as Reserve Police Battalion 64, became directly involved
in the killings. German army personnel were given the task of handing
over “suspects”—earmarked reprisal victims in all but name—to any
one of these bodies. Within the 704th Infantry Division’s jurisdiction
during July, for instance, the 724th Infantry Regiment reported that it
had assisted the Secret Field Police and the Field Gendarmerie in seiz-
ing suspected Communists; thirteen were arrested, for example, on the
night of July 8.107
102
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Some army
Kommandanturen
were already participating in mass exe-
cutions themselves, as well as directing the SS and police to carry them
out.108 One instance involved the commander of one of the 704th’s regi-
ments. On July 18 Brigadier-General Adalbert Lontschar, commander of
the 724th Infantry Regiment, was fi red upon in his staff car, “Lasalle,”
in the woods near the village of Razna on a journey back from Valjevo.
Three shots went into the car from above, only one of them causing
any injury to its occupants. But because the densely wooded terrain
prevented the culprits from being seen, the local district command, in
cooperation with the SS and police and the Serbian gendarmerie, had
fi fty-two Jews, Communists, and other individuals shot. This was retali-
ation for an attack in which no one had actually been killed.109 And at
least one unit of the 724th was already bloodying its own hands sub-
stantially; an operation southwest of Užice on August 17 involving the
regiment’s fi rst company saw fi fteen Communists shot in combat and
twenty-three executed afterwards, “nineteen of whom were hanged at
the railway station in Uzici [
sic
] because they had been supplying ban-
dits in the Gradina (internment) camp with provisions.”110
On July 17, Einsatzgruppe personnel were distributed as “security
advisers” among the army’s four area commands. And on August 13,
LXV Corps instructed its battalion commanders to assemble mixed
hunter groups. These could incorporate personnel not only from the
German army, but also from the SS and police, as well as from the Ser-
bian gendarmerie. The establishment of such groups made it more likely
still that army personnel, this time from the occupation divisions rather
than the
Kommandanturen
, would become more extensively involved in
the killing of Jews and Communists.111
Nevertheless, establishing just how far the divisions’ troops were actu-
ally involved in such killing, whether in collusion with other agencies or
not, can be far from straightforward. For one thing, the division-level and
regional command-level sources for summer 1941 do not specify which
hunter groups mixed army and SS and police personnel. Presumably
many would indeed have had mixed personnel, simply because of the
important role the SS and police played in seizing suspects. Irrespective
of the groups’ composition, however, it is unclear just how far they were
actually targeting or killing Jews and Communists.
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103
This is apparent in a report of 10 October. Here LXV Corps recorded
that, between August 14 and September 26, all hunter groups across its
subordinate divisions had between them shot thirty-three Communists
and arrested another twenty-nine. These Communists, one assumes,
were unarmed civilians rather than actual insurgents, because LXV
Corps recorded the ninety-three insurgents its hunter groups had report-
edly killed under the separate category of “bandits.” LXV Corps also
distinguished between Communists and “suspects” more generally; the
hunter groups, it reported, had arrested one hundred and thirty-eight
such persons. 112
It is distinctly possible that Jews were being mixed in with any or all of
these categories. The particularly strong suspicion arises that the hunter
groups, in line with the practice of the SS and police in Serbia, were
using the term “Communist” as a covering label for Jews.113 Indeed, this
consideration arouses a more general suspicion as to the racial identity
of a great many of the “Communists” who were being killed during the
summer months.
However, the majority of killing operations which divisional troops
carried out—the majority of these, in turn, being the work of those same
hunter groups on whom LXV Corps compiled its October 10 report—
were smaller than those in which the
Kommandanturen
were involved.
This was due, if nothing else, to the easier access to interned Jews and
Communists which town- and city-based
Kommandanturen
possessed.
Some examples of large-scale reprisals involving the
Kommandanturen
have been cited already. A further example is the actions of the area com-
mand in Belgrade during August and September. Over the course of these
two months, the area command cooperated with the SS and police in a
sequence of major raids on suspect Communists, Communist leaders, and
Communist Party offi ces. On September 29, the day after one such raid,
an “attack” on German soldiers in Belgrade—the report makes no men-
tion of whether any German soldier had actually died as a result—brought
the execution of one hundred and fi fty Communists in reprisal.114
Yet by October, the Serbian national uprising having mushroomed
alarmingly and German attitudes having hardened further, divisional
troops were themselves more extensively involved in the seizing and kill-
ing of increasingly large numbers of Jews and Communists.115 Those
104
terror in the balk ans
summer Wehrmacht decrees that had victimized such groups, directed
army units to collude ever more extensively with the SS and police, and
already bloodied the hands of some units among both the
Kommandan-
turen
and the occupation divisions, helped lay the groundwork for this
later murderous escalation.
More generally, meanwhile, the 704th Infantry Division, like its fellow
divisions, strove ever more desperately to stave off the occupation edi-
fi ce’s collapse. The division had help from Reserve Police Battalion 64,
which dispatched a car-borne company to Užice in July.116 But it faced
a thankless task nonetheless. The insurgents were infi ltrating and co-
opting the population with ease. In late July, for example, Reserve Police
Battalion 64 committed a company to no fewer than eleven seek-locate-
destroy missions that, launched as they were on the basis of imprecise
tip-offs from locals, proved an utter waste of time. The insurgents were
invariably able to slip away, and the battalion was certain that civilians
had forewarned them.117 A little later, a battalion of the 724th Infantry
Regiment judged that the insurgents “possess an excellent and far-reach-
ing information service which works very rapidly and reliably . . . its
timely warnings always make it possible (for the insurgents) to escape
encirclement.”118
Co-opting the population so easily also enabled the Partisans to move
undetected within it. LXV Corps reported that a band of Communists
had attacked a town by disguising themselves as farmers in order to
smuggle their weapons through the marketplace.119 The Germans’ own
efforts in intelligence-gathering were limited among other things by the
paltry Luftwaffe forces available. There were no operative units in the
Yugoslav theater, so Wehrmacht Command Southeast was reduced to
imploring the High Command to transfer a Luftwaffe training school to
Serbia, even if it was equipped only with primitive machines.120
The insurgents also targeted pro-Axis collaborators with ease. So
reported the 724th Infantry Regiment on August 20: “the district head-
man of Gucˇa appeared today in the regimental offi ce . . . He had been
a prisoner of war, and would rather be one again than remain district
headman in Gucˇa if the Wehrmacht were not there. He claims that the
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105
Serbian gendarmerie commands no respect and is in no fi t state to pro-
tect the place. He also claims that there are a large number of Commu-
nists in Gucˇa itself, and that there are numerous mayors who sympathize
with the bandits.”121 More anguished still was the cry for help from the
collaborator Danilac Kostic´: “I ask the German Wehrmacht and German