Read Terror in the Balkans Online
Authors: Ben Shepherd
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Military, #World War II, #Science & Math, #Earth Sciences, #Geography, #Regional
Italian support for the Chetniks gave Muslims a further incentive to
look to their own protection. In August, the Chetniks entered Focˇa and
massacred one thousand members of the Muslim population and the sur-
viving Croatian garrison. It was unclear whether the Italians had simply
stood by or actually aided the Chetniks with artillery fi re. What was clear
was that an Italian relief column had fraternized with the Chetniks on its
arrival in the town.18 The massacre led to calls for an independent armed
Muslim force and Bosnian autonomy under the Reich. Neither would
be forthcoming. But Bosnian Muslim personnel would be employed by
Himmler in a Waffen-SS formation, the Handschar Division, in 1943.19
Meanwhile, particularly in the 718th Infantry Division’s jurisdiction,
the actions of Muslim militias were contributing to the ghastly reality
on the ground. Already in 1941, Muslims had sometimes participated in
Ustasha atrocities against Serbs.20 In May 1942 the 718th reported that
the militias were committing atrocities against Serbian villagers, women
and children included, east of Tuzla.21 By August the main Muslim
militia, the Muslim Legion, was plundering the area enthusiastically.
“Between 21 and 23 August,” it was reported, “Muslims in the vicinity of
Sapna, in cooperation with the local Ustasha and the (Muslim) Legion,
burned down 300 Serbian houses in Jovin Han. The Muslims—be they
the Legion, the Muslim militias, or just members of the general popu-
lation—were responsible for most of the low-level disturbances to the
peace of the land.”22
Navigating the mutual hatreds that animated these different ethnic
groups called for more subtlety than German army units on the ground
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terror in the balk ans
had hitherto demonstrated. “If we hadn’t arrived here in May of this
year, this pitiful country would have been completely devastated,” wrote
Lieutenant Geissler of the 714th Infantry Division. Refl ecting on the need
to read the ethnic situation with the utmost care, he remarked that “we’re
the real Croats here, and have become proper Balkan politicians. Every
division from Russia that was relocated here and tried to fi ght according
to its old method and experiences would in no time at all suffer heavy
losses, if not be destroyed altogether.”23
In the face of such chaos, co-opting the Chetniks for security duties
could seem an attractive solution. Yet its more enthusiastic advocates,
the Italians particularly, failed to recognize its perils. For the Chetniks,
of course, also actively participated in ethnic terror. Some of their actions
were directed against the Partisans, others against Croats in areas where
Serbs and Croats lived side by side and Serbs themselves were being mas-
sacred by the Ustasha. Others still were directed against Muslims in Bos-
nia and Herzegovina and in Sandjak. The worst massacres the Chetniks
perpetrated were at Focˇa in January, February, and August 1942, and in
Sandjak and southeast Bosnia in January and February 1943.24 Arming
the Chetniks, or excessively accommodating them in other ways, made
such massacres and the destabilization they brought all the more likely.
The 718th Infantry Division, though it had dabbled in cooperation
with the Chetniks, perceived the potential danger especially acutely.
Divisional command claimed to have obtained documents indicating that
the Chetnik leadership had ordered its people to cease fi ghting, hide their
weapons, and prepare themselves for renewed battle. The division was
deeply suspicious of the “sudden readiness for peace of Chetnik groups
probably in contact with Draza Mihailovic´, which is probably just a ploy
to buy time for reorganizing and equipping for a general uprising.”25
The 718th was also highly averse, again for fear of exacerbating inter-
ethnic mayhem, to arming villagers against attack. On May 13, 1942, it
requested of General Bader that it not be required to arm “so-called” vil-
lage protection groups and militias. Allowing the population to possess
weapons, divisional command argued, would destabilize the situation
further, not least because of “the strongly defi ned religious and ethnic
differences, the laws of blood vengeance which are still in force today,”
and also because of “the likelihood that arming people suffering from
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195
scarce provisions will prompt them to go ‘wandering’ into the forests to
seek subsistence there.”26
Divisional command also feared that, if it did arm civilians, those
arms would simply fall into the hands of the Partisans—particularly if
the Croatian gendarmerie was the only body there to prevent it.27 It only
partly got its wish. General Bader advised the division that, though he
did not intend to arm villagers across the board, the weakness of the
Croatian gendarmerie made some kind of “reliable” militia essential.28
By late September the 718th’s jurisdiction extended to the southwest.
This made matters worse because that jurisdiction now encompassed
more Partisan groups. Meanwhile, the Muslim Legion was creating
havoc as ever, and of the other three groups the 718th’s intelligence sec-
tion drily observed that “Ustasha, Partisans, and Chetniks are, as before,
competing to carry off the Strife Cup.”29 More generally the division
commented that “there is hardly a Serb, Croat, or Muslim in the whole
of eastern Bosnia, who does not have some kind of blood feud to settle
with another.”30
The idea of arming the Chetniks to counter the Serbs’ persecutors
remained one that the 718th regarded with consternation. It still believed
that, despite the increasingly mortal danger the Serbian population
faced from the Ustasha and the Muslim militias, arming the Chetniks
would only make matters worse—especially when the Italians seemed
to indulge them so much.31 More widely, there were even reports that
the Italians were buying off the Partisans with weapons, sometimes even
fi eld guns, in exchange for the return of Italian prisoners. Glaise von
Horstenau, the Wehrmacht’s General in Agram, believed this practice
too was being sanctioned from on high.32
The Chetniks in the 718th’s area, divisional command drily observed,
were essentially seeking to butter up the Germans to obtain peace and
quiet, the Italians to obtain weapons, and the Croats to obtain both.33 This
local-level Chetnik-Croat accommodation was replicated more widely
across the NDH during 1942, as both the Chetniks and the NDH regime
increasingly grasped the need for some degree of co-operation against the
burgeoning threat which the Partisans now posed to them both.34 But the
Chetniks within its jurisdiction, the 718th argued, were in a latent state
of war with the Croatian army, as well as in a real state of war with the
196
terror in the balk ans
Ustasha. The division argued that “the present, inconsistent treatment
of the Chetniks (as fi rm friends by the Italians, as comrades-in-arms by
the 714th Infantry Division, with refusal by the 718th Infantry Division, as
mortal enemies by the Ustasha, as partners in cooperation by Croatian
government representatives) holds massive dangers. Above all, it awak-
ens in the Chetnik leadership the impression that German, Italian, and
Croatian civil and military authorities are divided, and can be played off
against one another.” The 718th considered it essential that the Chetniks
be disarmed and suppressed, even though a unifi ed effort with the Italians
would be needed in order to achieve this.35 But the 718th also recognized
that it needed to be evenhanded. As it opined to General Bader, once the
Chetniks were disarmed, the Ustasha and the Muslim militias would need
disarming also. Failure to do this would only cause a resurgence of the kind
of chaos that would enable the Chetniks to renew themselves.36
It is clear from the 718th’s comments that a fellow German army divi-
sion, General Stahl’s 714th Infantry, was much more open to the idea of
cooperating militarily with the Chetniks than General Fortner’s 718th
was.37 Given the relative restraint with which the 718th had been con-
ducting itself for much of 1942, it is unlikely that Fortner was averse to
arming Chetniks for anything other than pragmatic reasons. That said,
it is only consistent with this study’s approach to consider the possibility
that something in Fortner’s past might have instilled in him some hard-
ened ideological objection to arming the Chetniks.
Between 1914 and his capture by the British in 1916, Fortner served as
an infantry offi cer on the western front. This was perhaps a more brutal-
izing way to spend the Great War, even if it did only last two years rather
than the entire four, than the service with the Imperial German Army’s
air wing which Stahl had undergone. Further, Fortner was a reactivated
offi cer, reentering military service in 1935. During his service in the civil-
ian police during the 1920s and early to mid-1930s, he had risen to the
rank of colonel. The police service of the Weimar period, still more of
the fi rst two years of the Nazi dictatorship, rivalled the Reichswehr offi -
cer corps for authoritarian harshness.38 On the other hand, both Fortner
and Stahl hailed from central western Germany. This was not a birth-
place that would have suffused either of them with anti-Serb contempt as
extensively as an Austrian birthplace would have done.39
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197
More telling than any biographical nugget is the pragmatic tone
and considered wording, devoid of racist or ideological overtones, that
the 718th employed to argue against arming the Chetniks. More tell-
ing still is the growing commitment to more measured forms of coun-
terinsurgency that the 718th had been displaying throughout much of
1942. Clearly, this was a unit of which pragmatism was a more powerful
driver than National Socialist values. The most likely reason why the
718th’s divisional command recoiled from arming Chetniks during 1942,
then, is also the most likely reason why it was so merciless towards the
MihailovicĆhetniks in its operations at the year’s outset—not ideologi-
cal hatred, but a fi rm intent to stamp on any threat it perceived to the
region’s security and stability.
And in eastern Bosnia, the threat the Chetniks posed to security and
stability was particularly acute. For eastern Bosnia, unlike the regions
further west in which the 714th Infantry Division was operating, con-
tained a Muslim population that outnumbered the Serb population.40
Far from stabilizing the region, then, giving armed Chetniks a promi-
nent security role would have unleashed the Chetnik fox on the Muslim
hen coop with all the havoc that would have entailed. Perhaps even more
frightening were the possible consequences of an armed clash between
the Chetniks and the Muslim Legion on the 718th’s turf.
Conversely, the 714th had its own practical reason to be
open-minded
about arming the Chetniks. It was an especially hard-pressed formation
operating in the particularly ferocious Partisan cauldron of western Bos-
nia. Operation Fruška Mountains, which the 714th headed in August
1942, was only its single largest operational commitment in a particu-
larly unrelenting schedule that summer. A formation under considerably
more immediate pressure than the 718th at this time may have been con-
cerned to arm the Chetniks as a quick fi x to its own problems.
This, then, was the serpentine ethno-political backdrop to the 718th
Infantry Division’s fi nal operations of 1942.41
Meanwhile, over three months during spring and summer 1942, enduring
harrowing conditions along the way, the four thousand Partisans accom-
panying Tito had completed the two-hundred-mile trek to the Bosanska
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terror in the balk ans
Krajina region of western Bosnia. By late September they had founded a
liberated area of approximately twenty thousand square miles, centered
on the town of Bihac´.42 After the loss of much liberated territory in Her-
zegovina, eastern Bosnia, Montenegro, and the Sandzak, this major new
base provided the Partisans with safety and several considerable advan-
tages. The region had long possessed a particularly strong Communist
organization. It was also adjacent to the similarly robust Communist
organization in Croatia. The Germans had greatly reduced their pres-
ence in Bosanska Krajina when they had transferred the 718th Infantry
Division to eastern Bosnia in late 1941. The region’s distance from the
Serbian border largely dispelled the danger that Chetniks from Serbia
might infi ltrate it. Finally, so slaughterous had been the Ustasha perse-
cutions that had taken place there in 1941 that Partisan combativeness
appealed to the region’s Bosnian Serb population much more than did
the Chetniks’ duplicitous waiting game.43
Above all, the new base enabled the Partisans to further consolidate
their organization and propaganda. They impressed Bosanska Krajina’s