Read Terror in the Balkans Online
Authors: Ben Shepherd
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Military, #World War II, #Science & Math, #Earth Sciences, #Geography, #Regional
modation, were to be burned down.20
Operation Prijedor, fi nally, was prefaced by one of the harshest direc-
tives of all. It being so diffi cult to identify the enemy, the operational
orders declared that all male Serbian inhabitants between sixteen and
sixty were to be treated as though they had been encountered in battle
with a weapon in their hands. In other words, it can be presumed, all
were to be shot. As with the inhabitants, so with their dwellings: just as
in the previous operation, the Serbian villages on each side of the main
route of march, unless they could be used as troop accommodation, were
to be burned down.21 Again, the 718th’s subordinate units followed the
brutal lead. For instance, Battle Group Wutte provided a lengthy list on
March 7 of which groups of houses were to be burned down either side of
its route of march.22 Copious amounts of livestock were also seized dur-
ing Prijedor: 667 cattle, 417 sheep, and eighty-fi ve pigs.23
Yet ferocious as such ruthlessness was, it was of a different quality to
the 342d Infantry Division’s back in Serbia the previous autumn. None
of the orders the 342d or the 718th issued for these winter operations
were couched in racial terms. They did not invoke historic resentments
against the enemy, but instead dispassionately labeled Chetniks as Serb
and Partisans as Communist. One report referred to a Partisan leader’s
Jewish identity;24 otherwise, all the orders and reports relating to the
operations were racially “blind.” What suffused the orders instead was
the ruthlessly “pragmatic” doctrine of annihilating the enemy through
maximum force and maximum terror. This different motivation would,
of course, have been no comfort to the unarmed civilians whom the 342d
and 718th were killing. But it does shed a different light on what was driv-
ing the division. The 718th for one seems particularly to have believed
that such an obdurate doctrine would compensate for the diffi culties it
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was bound to encounter when its substandard troops faced the opera-
tions’ arduous conditions.
Indeed, sometimes the 718th Infantry Division and its regiments
urged their troops to be brutal not just to the enemy, but to themselves
also, if they were to best the obstacles they were facing. On January 17, at
the outset of Operation Southeast Croatia, the 718th informed the 750th
Infantry Regiment that its troops would need to dig deep within them-
selves in order to overcome the challenge ahead: “the troops’ enthusiasm
must overcome the major diffi culties, the high snow levels, and the lack
of mountain equipment, so as to ensure that all participating units make
ruthless progress.”25 Likewise for Operation Ozren, in which the 718th’s
troops were similarly hampered by high snow levels and thickly forested,
mountainous terrain,26 the division directed that “just as the troops
hammered the insurgents in South-East Croatia, so will they extermi-
nate this enemy also, despite the diffi culties of weather and terrain.”27
The 738th Infantry Regiment ordered that less capable men and horses
be left behind during the operation, and urged the troops to “do their
utmost,” through their own self-reliance, “to fulfi l the tasks with which
the division has entrusted them.”28
Such harsh exhortations certainly had plenty to compensate for. The
forces committed to Operation Southeast Croatia in particular were set
too ambitious a schedule within too limited a time frame. Prospects for
bagging large numbers of insurgents were further diminished when atro-
cious weather held the Germans up. These problems were not encoun-
tered during the smaller-scale Operation Ozren, but the 718th Infantry
Division still had to negotiate deep snow and thickly wooded terrain
during that operation.29
Moreover, the 718th went into these operations in a seriously defi -
cient state. The root problem was that both the 342d and the 718th were
ill-equipped for winter mountain warfare.30 The main division-level
order for Operation Southeast Croatia virtually acknowledged this; it
ordered that the 718th’s patchy transportation facilities be utilized to
their absolute limit. “All means of forward mobility (skis, trucks suited
to the terrain, pack animals and so on . . . ) are to be used to the point
Glimmers of Sanity
167
of exhaustion . . . All that matters is that transport is available whenever
and wherever needed.”31
Conditions during Southeast Croatia itself were execrable. The 698th
Infantry Regiment operated under the 342d Infantry Division, but the
conditions it experienced would have been familiar to all units involved
in the operation: villages, and the supply and shelter contained within
them, given the “scorched earth” treatment by retreating insurgents;
areas practically devoid of human life, and frequently meter-high snow.32
During Operation Prijedor the 718th’s troops found it immensely diffi -
cult to ensure the fl ow of ammunition, and the troops’ pack radios were
unable to maintain contact by night. This caused especially acute prob-
lems whenever offi cers tried to direct artillery fi re. And shortage of offi -
cers was preventing the division’s units from authorizing leave.33
The 718th also expected little if any real help from its Croatian allies.
Croatian army units assigned to the 718th during Operation Southeast
Croatia, the division reported, possessed appalling levels of fi ghting
power, and were blighted by constant supply problems and a complete
lack of comradeship between offi cers and men.34 The command of the
division’s armored train concurred that the Croatian troops were indeed
useless. It regarded small-unit combined operations with the Croatian
military as pointless, because the Croats always rapidly degenerated into
a disorganized shambles. They also preferred to hang back rather than
support German raiding parties actively.35 During Operation Prijedor,
meanwhile, the 750th Infantry Regiment, under the command of Colo-
nel Rudolf Wutte, reported that “the Croatian mountain column . . . is
more a hindrance than a help to the troops.”36
Such excoriating reports, generated as they were by German army
units anxious to cover up their own failures, must be approached cau-
tiously. But given the manifold problems blighting the Croatian army,
such reports clearly contained a substantial element of truth. And dur-
ing Operation Ozren the 718th found that it could not always rely even
on German units. On February 7 General Fortner reported that the
697th Infantry Regiment, loaned from the 342d Infantry Division, had
failed to follow orders to extend the attack on its right as far as the River
Spreca. The 750th Infantry Regiment had had to cover for it, but this
had enabled the enemy to slip past the Germans’ left fl ank. The 718th
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came under even more pressure when the 697th was relocated while the
operation was still going on.37
None of this helped, of course, in trying to locate and vanquish an
adversary who was proving increasingly elusive and resourceful. Opera-
tion Southeast Croatia set the tone. Only one regiment of the 342d Infan-
try Division was able to properly come to grips with the enemy, the
majority of whom took advantage of a weak Italian cordon to escape over
the Italian demarcation line.38 During Southeast Croatia, Territorial
Battalion 823 noted the speediness of the insurgents’ communications
system, a system aided substantially by the efforts of local villagers. It
regularly enabled the enemy to anticipate the Germans’ approach, disap-
pear before it, and then resurface in the same place days later. Matters on
this score grew worse during Operation Ozren. The heavy snow on the
roads impeded the Germans’ progress further.39
Especially vexing in Operation Ozren was the fact that the Germans
thought they had thoroughly encircled the area beforehand. They had
employed several artillery batteries and ten Croatian infantry battal-
ions, and checked the cordon’s impenetrability every night. But Serbia
Command realized that the operation had overlooked the enemy’s abil-
ity to escape in small groups through supposedly impassable terrain. It
also believed that many other insurgents, even if they had not actually
escaped, had been able to disappear into the mountains using the snow
prints of the men in front to conceal their true numbers, and that they
would resurface and reestablish themselves after the operation.40
The 718th lacked the sort of specialist mountain troops who might
have been able to pursue escaping insurgents successfully. LXV Corps
urged that each regiment convert and equip one of its companies as such
troops. It also urged more time to prepare for operations in future, so
that the Germans could ready specialist troops, properly assemble com-
munications, and set smaller and more realistic daily targets. Otherwise,
it asserted, such operations were pointless.41
Operation Prijedor, meanwhile, brought a further worrying develop-
ment. The insurgents stopped trying merely to escape, and began to
show not just themselves but their teeth also—not, however, in a way
that enabled the Germans to get to grips with them. They frequently
fi red upon the Germans from skillfully concealed positions:
Glimmers of Sanity
169
They often let our own troops approach to within 20 meters before
opening fi re. Single rifl emen also often fi re from great distances,
with carefully targeted fi re from very well concealed positions,
whereby they avoid using even houses, but rather dig themselves
into the landscape . . . The rifl emen, scattered across the landscape,
hide in their nests until they can escape under cover of darkness.
These lone rifl emen often fi re for just a few minutes, and even then
only with a few, carefully targeted shots. For this reason, locating
these lone rifl emen is very diffi cult.42
The 750th Infantry Regiment described the Partisans’ appearance, as
well as their very diverse composition:
According to an ethnic German whose property is next to the rail
bridge on Height 127, and who allegedly spent a week as a hostage of
the insurgents, the insurgents are, overall, well uniformed, with black-
colored Yugoslavian uniforms, and equipped with rifl es and hand gre-
nades. They consist of fi fteen to twenty per cent Communists, ten per
cent Muslims and the rest Serbs and Croats. On their caps the Serbs
wear Serbian national colors, the Croats their provincial colors, the
Muslims the Crescent and the Communists the Soviet star.43
These winter operations whittled down the 718th’s manpower alarm-
ingly. During Operation Prijedor, for instance, the 750th Infantry Regi-
ment’s combat strength fell from 692 offi cers, NCOs, and men, to 564.
Total losses for Prijedor were severe, the Germans suffering thirty-four
dead and the Croats seventeen, for ninety-seven Partisan dead.44 There
were major gaps in the 738th Infantry Regiment’s manpower also;
according to its roll call of March 1, its second battalion now possessed
319 offi cers, NCOs, and men, as against the fi rst battalion’s 376.45
Yet the 718th Infantry Division, and its subordinate units, showed restraint
as well as ruthlessness during these operations. In a display of moderation
during Operation Southeast Croatia, the 718th relayed orders from the
342d Infantry Division declaring that “women and children will not be
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shot or carried off, unless they demonstrably have taken part in combat
or message-carrying.”46 Perhaps it was this provision alone that led both
divisions to proclaim, apparently without irony, that “Croatia is a country
that is friendly to us. The troops must be aware of this, and avoid any
exceeding of their duties.”47 For Operation Ozren, the division directed
that Chetniks were to be treated as prisoners, not shot, if they surrendered
unconditionally with their weapons.48
Much impetus for these particular measures seems to have come from
General Bader. Bader, it appears, had begun to see the wisdom of some
restraint even as he spurred his troops to ruthlessness. On January 21 he
had ordered that, while armed opponents who resisted the Germans in
the course of Operation Southeast Croatia were to be shot, those who
gave themselves up were to be treated as prisoners of war. Villagers in
whose houses weapons were found, but who had not themselves partici-
pated in the fi ghting, were to be treated similarly.49 This order contrasts
with Bader’s ferocious exhortation of just days previously, when on Janu-
ary 8 he had announced that any person encountered in the area being
cleansed was to be viewed as an enemy.50 Bader’s likeliest motive for the
change was more calculating than enlightened. Deescalating the opera-
tion’s violence would enable the DangicĆhetniks, whom Bader would be