Read Terror in the Balkans Online
Authors: Ben Shepherd
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Military, #World War II, #Science & Math, #Earth Sciences, #Geography, #Regional
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
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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
commander for weapons so I can protect my own life against the red mob
and the Communist bands.”122
Able to secure and harness growing popular support, and unmolested
by a German occupation force preoccupied with clinging on to the main
transport arteries and urban centers, the Partisans were able to build
up their organization across the country. On September 10 Lieutenant
Klemm, of the 724th Infantry Regiment’s twelfth company, wrote that:
the enemy clearly no longer consists of isolated bands, but consti-
tutes a well-organized uprising in which the general population,
most of whom are well-armed, are taking part. Within the impen-
etrable landscape, with troops often restricted only to the one road,
proper retaliation against a rebellious population is only possible
with the help of the Luftwaffe.123
And that help, at least to any meaningful degree, had yet to be forthcom-
ing. All this meant, of course, that the Partisans could ravage the occu-
piers’ supply and communications with alacrity. A late August report
from District Command (I) 847 in the 704th’s jurisdiction, for instance,
reported that rebels had blown bridges on the Šabac-Banjani road and
over the River Tamnava in Koceljevo, blocked roads between Šabac,
Kocekjevo, Ub, and Valjevo, crippled the Šabac-Lesnica-Losnica rail
line, and plunged a whole area north and northwest of Šabac into a state
of uprising. The district command knew that the cutting of the transport
arteries between its towns placed the towns themselves in peril. “The
moment this bridge is severed, the entire district command, the town
(Šabac) and the area will be cut off from the outside world. If strong
forces are not fi nally deployed and the center of defense shifted to Šabac,
the catastrophe could happen any time.” The 724th Infantry Regiment
saw the danger too; conditions were worsening so much, it reported, that
the safety of the troops in Užice and Požega was seriously under threat.
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“Previously the bandits were only appearing occasionally and in small
numbers,” the regiment maintained. “Now they are drawing ever nearer
to Užice and Požega. Their strength can often be counted in the hun-
dreds, and their equipment is often better than that of our own troops.”124
In the face of the escalating chaos, the Germans scrapped a pledge
to allow the collaborationist government control of the Serbian gendar-
merie. On August 13 LXV Corps announced it was reorganizing the
Serbian gendarmerie into large units of fi fty to one hundred men under
local German army commanders.125 The 704th Infantry Division wanted
the gendarmerie to bear the main burden of the counterinsurgency cam-
paign, with the German army used only sparingly. It urged that the gen-
darmerie be bolstered by more reliable elements, and receive proper pay
and equipment and motor vehicles seized from civilians.126
But relying on the Serbian gendarmerie brought its own problems.
The 724th Infantry Regiment reported one engagement, albeit from a
later time, November 1941, in which the gendarmerie had not suffered
the massive losses it was claiming, but had simply withdrawn in disar-
ray. “On our own march back,” the regiment recorded, “we encountered
only one gendarme, who had disguised himself as a farmer in order to
escape.”127 The gendarmerie, the regiment believed, was incapable of
resisting the enemy energetically.128 The gendarmerie was not always
the byword for ineptitude that scapegoat-seeking German commanders
often painted it as.129 But the 704th’s reliance on it probably refl ected not
faith on the division’s part so much as desperation. The gendarmerie’s
defects were also recognized higher up the command chain. Major Jer-
sak, Wehrmacht Command Southeast’s liaison offi cer with LXV Corps,
had little faith in it: he believed that neither arming it further nor increas-
ing its numbers in particular trouble spots such as Šabac would hinder
or halt the uprising.130
The occupation divisions were compelled to take the fi ght to the
insurgents somehow or other, then, but it was an immensely diffi cult
task. And as a federal German investigation during the 1970s revealed, it
was a task to which at least some of the 704th Infantry Division’s senior
offi cers were unequal. In 1972, Max Koehler, from the second company
of the fi rst battalion of the 724th Infantry Regiment, was questioned
by the Central Offi ce of Land Administration as part of a preliminary
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107
investigation, later abandoned, into possible war crimes by that unit. He
spoke warmly of his company commander, but described Major König,
the battalion commander, as “arrogant and full of himself . . . with a cyn-
ical character, the chronic need to push himself to the forefront, and no
understanding of the civilian population.” The regimental commander,
General Lontschar, he described as “pedantic in military matters, and in
tactical questions unequal to his rank.”131
The 704th Infantry Division, like its fellow occupation divisions, was
nonetheless obliged to prosecute mobile counterinsurgency operations
to the best of its ability. Yet as well as possessing an offi cer contingent of
at best variable quality, the division also possessed insuffi cient troops to
encircle and annihilate the insurgents.132 Further problems facing encir-
clement attempts were recounted in mid-August by the 714th Infantry
Division: it suffered from a shortage of hand grenades and small-arms
ammunition, delays in its rail transport, and unreliable Serbian gendar-
merie units.133 But the 714th was not simply scapegoating the Serbian
gendarmerie. Of its own substandard troops it wrote that “sadly (they)
do not always recognize how serious the situation is.”134 In the 704th
Infantry Division, similarly, the twelfth company of the 724th Infantry
Regiment described the “
exhausted and indifferent impression
” its own
men were making by late August.135
Key to success in smaller counterinsurgency operations were the
hunter groups. But the 704th’s efforts at forming such groups, like
those of LXV Corps’ divisions in general, were blighted by problems.
In late August, for instance, the 724th Infantry Regiment’s fi rst battal-
ion bewailed the fact that, though hunter groups could be assembled
quickly, the plundered trucks they had been assigned could not negoti-
ate mountainous winding roads and were plagued by frequent tire and
motor failure.136 The 717th Infantry Division, too, was constantly frus-
trated at the Partisans’ knowledge of the area in which it faced them.137
The Germans were still mindful of the lessons in moderation afforded
by the French campaign and its aftermath; indeed, their more measured
conduct at this time recalls that relatively balanced counterinsurgency
campaign the German army had waged in the Ukraine in 1918. Hunter
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terror in the balk ans
groups were instructed to cultivate the population, not just terrorize it,
relying on help from the Serbian gendarmerie and reliable sightings of
Partisans by civilians. Though it did order the seizure of hostages, Ser-
bia Command also ordered more nuanced punishments, such as impos-
ing fi nes and compelling the population to forced labor and security
duty. It also stressed that the troops must distinguish between innocent
and guilty.138 In mid-August, the 704th Infantry Division urged that pro-
paganda be used to convince the population of the Wehrmacht’s will to
win. There was little in the way of a well-resourced propaganda infra-
structure to aid this effort. Rather, the division’s units were themselves
urged to “seek out and realise new opportunities” for propaganda.139 But
at least the intention was there.
And at least some of the 704th’s subordinate units were showing
restraint. The 734th Infantry Regiment recounted a relatively moderate