Read Terror in the Balkans Online
Authors: Ben Shepherd
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Military, #World War II, #Science & Math, #Earth Sciences, #Geography, #Regional
reprisal its men exacted on August 23. In one house, they found a sackful
of rifl es and a duplication machine with Communist appeals produced
on it, obtained the names of fi fteen absent villagers who were known
Communists, and ordered the police to burn down three of their homes.
This was a harsh measure indeed, but less harsh than an indiscriminate
mass shooting.140
There were also displays of genuine humanity by the 704th’s men. On
one occasion a sixteen-year-old who had been shot trying to evade capture
had his wounds bound by German soldiers, who left him with two local
women to take care of him.141 Even as late as September, relations with the
population could be positively convivial—too convivial, in fact, for divi-
sional command’s liking. “There is greater need than ever,” it proclaimed
on September 16, “for members of the Wehrmacht to keep themselves
fully distanced from the Serbian population.” The division particularly
bemoaned the “unworthy” practice of “sitting round the kitchen table or
in private quarters, chatting with Serbs over cups of coffee.”142
But overall, throughout July and August, in line with the mounting repri-
sal activity across all Serbia, the 704th Infantry Division exacted a grow-
ing death toll of civilians. Some of the killings in its jurisdiction, such
as the reprisal carried out by the local district command following the
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attack on General Lontschar’s car near Razna on July 18, were the work
of units outwith the division’s own command chain.143 Elsewhere, how-
ever, it was the 704th’s troops themselves who exacted the death tolls.
From the death toll of thirty-eight, cited earlier in this chapter, that the
fi rst company of the 724th Infantry Regiment exacted on August 17, only
three machine-guns and twelve rifl es were seized. The only Axis casu-
alty was an Albanian gendarme shot in the head.144 On that same day, the
regiment had ten farmsteads burned down and another fi fteen destroyed
by artillery.145 And in a fi refi ght near the railway station at Dublje, west
of Šabac, in late August, men of the eighth company of the 750th Infantry
Regiment, temporarily under the 704th Infantry Division’s command,
killed twenty-fi ve “bandits” at a loss to themselves of just one dead.146
It is clear from such instances that not just insurgents, but civilians
also, were perishing in ever greater numbers at the 704th Infantry Divi-
sion’s own hands. The 704th might be failing to crush the uprising in its
area, then, but it was certainly exacting a mounting death toll. And the
fact that it felt increasingly impotent and frustrated may have been one
of the very forces fueling its brutality. Indeed, some units were spilling
too much blood even for divisional command’s liking. While the 704th
urged its units to inform the divisional intelligence section if any Ser-
bian offi cials were suspected of sabotage, contacting Communists, or
tolerating illegal activities, it also stressed that Serbian offi cials generally
should not be taken hostage.147 LXV Corps detected a wider malaise,
declaring on August 23 that:
It is understandable that troops fi red upon in the back by Commu-
nist bands will cry out for vengeance. This often results in people
found in the fi eld being arrested and shot. But in most cases it is not
the guilty who are caught, but the innocent, and this only results in
the hitherto loyal population being driven into the arms of the ban-
dits by fear or bitterness.148
Tellingly, LXV Corps also stressed that it was better that the Serbian gen-
darmerie or the Serbian authorities apprehend insurgents. Presumably
LXV Corps preferred this to leaving the job to German soldiers who might
themselves kill informers or other members of the “loyal” population.149
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It also reminded its troops that the “loyal” population included women
also: “It goes without saying that no woman, except when she goes armed
against the troops, should under any circumstances be shot without due
legal process.”150 Clearly higher Wehrmacht offi ces were still seeking
to keep the general population onside. Similarly, on September 5 Weh-
rmacht Command Southeast, Field Marshal List’s skepticism toward
Serb–German collaboration notwithstanding, urged “active, intensifi ed
propaganda in the Serbian language with every means available (wireless,
leafl ets, newspapers, posters and so on) . . . increased use of informers . . .
full use of the infl uence of the Serbian government.”151
In September the Germans’ situation grew even more alarming. For it
was now that Tito and Mihailovic´ temporarily made common cause.
Mihailovic´ felt he could no longer remain on the sidelines of such a wide-
spread revolt. Tito saw a Partisan–Chetnik alliance as a means of cultivat-
ing potential Partisan support among the Serb peasantry and politicians.
He also sought to utilize the Chetniks’ assistance, at least for a period,
in training Partisans. However calculating the two men’s motives, the
immediate result was that Mihailovic´’s Chetniks now openly joined the
revolt.152 The most important joint Partisan–Chetnik operations were
near Krupanj, Valjevo, and Kraljevo, and the epicenter of their coopera-
tion was northwest Serbia. The Germans’ increased Luftwaffe support,
mainly in the form of Stuka dive bombers, could only achieve so much
in the face of them.153
The principal town in the 704th’s jurisdiction was Valjevo. But, due
above all to explosions on the Valjevo-Užice road, the danger to the
town’s supply was growing daily, and coal stocks were so low that the
troops were forced to plunder the coal supply in the munitions factory
in Vistad. Meanwhile, every insurgent act of sabotage against roads,
railways, and bridges increased the town’s isolation.154 On September
12 General Borowski was forced to fl y from Belgrade to the 704th’s head-
quarters in Valjevo because of the insurgent roadblocks crisscrossing the
main road.155 Many of the division’s units were also cut off, and some—
such as the 724th Infantry Regiment’s tenth and eleventh companies, sta-
tioned in Krupanj—faced annihilation.
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The reports compiled by these two companies convey such a sense of
approaching doom, and of the brutalizing fear it spawned, that they are
worth recounting at length.
Both companies believed the disaster that befell them in early Sep-
tember could have been foreseen. Eleventh company claimed that “this
catastrophe came about because both companies were situated far from
the battalion in bandit-infested, diffi cult terrain. It requires no strategic
ability to cut the troops off from all relief and strike at their backs.”156
Particularly when, in the words of tenth company, the “bandits” were
obviously so strong:
Alarming news about the frequency of bandit unrest in the Krupanj
area was increasing during the fi nal days before the attack. Accord-
ing to these rumors, 1,000 men had gathered near Kamenica. In Ban-
jevac, a village next door to Krupanj, another 400–500 bandits were
said to be active. In the direct vicinity of Krupanj post offi ces and
administrative offi ces were being plundered. Headmen, truck driv-
ers, and workers who had ignored the bandits’ warning were being
shot. Small individual Wehrmacht units were being attacked, motor-
ized columns fi red upon and observation posts in Bela Orvka and
Stolica attacked. Despite all efforts, nothing could be done against
the bandits. These events undermined the Wehrmacht’s status and
reliability in the eyes of the Serbian population.157
As a result, the population’s support for the insurgents was growing: “in
the behavior of the population towards Wehrmacht members, an inner,
icy aversion and an all-unifying hatred towards anything German could
be felt.”158
The prelude to the main insurgent attack was a clash on the morning
of September 2. This engagement, and the fear that affl icted the troops
in Krupanj in its aftermath, are described by tenth company:
On Monday 9/1 at 22.00, NCO Seifert reported in from the watch at
Stolica with the news that the watch had been attacked by a strong
bandit group. On 9/2 at 06.00, a commando of fi ve squads led by
Lieutenant Rehmer and Lieutenant Halder, together with Medical
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NCO Heinrich,159 set out for Stolica to clarify the situation. On the
way, at the north-west exit of Pirstica, the commando encountered
a road block (two-deep felled trees, several meters high), which was
nevertheless undefended. About 800 meters in front of Stolica the
commando encountered an escaped troop from the Stolica watch
consisting of two NCOs and eleven men. At the same time, two
armed men were observed on the heights south-east of Stolica. The
commando opened fi re immediately; this was answered with heavy
fi re from rifl es and light machine-guns on the heights either side of
the road. Lieutenant Rehmer took two squads onto the slopes east of
the road. The enemy could not be seen.
In consequence of the ever more frequent reports that the bandits
were massing and that Stolica had been attacked, the company had
already been in a state of high alert for the past week. The hospi-
tal had been converted into a defensive strongpoint . . . That the
population of Krupanj had deliberately fl ed (from the Germans) was
clear from the behavior of the district chief. At 13.00 I entrusted him
with providing 20 men for a work detail. The mayor arrived himself
and explained that he could not carry this order out, even on pain
of being arrested or shot, for the entire population of Krupanj had
disappeared into the forest. It is clear from this that the whole popu-
lation was informed of the attack in advance, and that its behavior
indicates that it had been working with the bandits closely.160
“On Tuesday 9/2 at 20.45,” reported tenth company, “our watch brought
in an envoy with an offer to capitulate.”161 This part of the story is best
conveyed by eleventh company, which was stationed in the school
and received the ultimatum sooner. At eight in the evening a boy had
appeared with a note for tenth company from the leader of the Chetnik
forces surrounding them: “I demand your unconditional surrender; you
are completely encircled, no one will be harmed, you will be held pris-
oner until the end of the war. If you accept, fi re three fl ares off at 21.00.
If you refuse, the attack will resume at this time and you will be slaugh-
tered.”162 Both companies rejected the ultimatum. Then, “on Wednes-
day night at 00.30 a new attack began. It was a noise from hell, for the
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volume was doubled in the valley. They bombarded our positions, par-
ticularly in the hospital, with grenade launchers.”163
Tenth company then picks up the story:
At 00.30 on 9/3 the bandits opened up a heavy fi re on our fi ve out-
posts. These pulled back into the hospital buildings. We returned
fi re, even though all we had to aim at was the fl ashes from the mouths
of the enemy guns. The enemy attacked in this way four times dur-
ing the night, whereby the fi nal attack, at 06.00, was the heaviest of
all. During the day the hospital was subjected to persistent light rifl e
fi re, and even to machine-gun fi re from time to time. Sharpshooters
fi red from a distance of 100 to 200 meters upon doors, windows, and
walkways in the hospital. The fi re grew heavier when they spotted
our men moving around. We could only move by crawling, jumping
or dragging ourselves from place to place, and that with the greatest
care. It was impossible to leave the building. During the time follow-
ing the attack on Stolica the men could neither sleep nor relax, but
remained in a state of constant alert.164
Our machine-gun posts and grenade-launcher post on the south
side of the roof had to be abandoned when dawn broke, because the
enemy had fi red upon them with a 3.7 cm gun . . . Our machine-guns
took up position by the windows on the third fl oor of the hospital.
From the day of the fi rst attack it was impossible to prepare warm
food for the men, because the kitchens . . . were under constant fi re.
The men received only greatly reduced amounts of cold provisions
such as meat conserve, eggs, and iron portions.
In the night Corporal Volmer was wounded with a shot to the head.
The next morning NCO Ulrich was wounded in the thigh when
relieving a machine-gun post.165 In addition, three wounded from
the Stolica watch lay in the police station.
At the break of darkness the fi re attacks began again, bigger than
before, and increasing in intensity and duration. Between 23.00 and
24.00 fl ashes of light were seen in the direction of Stolica and Moi-
evica at fi fteen-minute intervals, coming nearer and nearer to Krupanj.
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