Read Terror in the Balkans Online
Authors: Ben Shepherd
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Military, #World War II, #Science & Math, #Earth Sciences, #Geography, #Regional
had resolved to form “volunteer units” of Chetniks, under Partisan com-
mand but with a degree of autonomy. Yet these units proved of dubious
loyalty at best. Indeed, the Axis offensives of April to June 1942 embold-
ened some “volunteer” Chetniks to attempt coups in several Partisan for-
mations.96 Individual Partisan units, at odds with the more sensible line
now directed by their central leadership, also weakened their support
by continuing to commit the kinds of brutal sectarian excesses—pur-
portedly against fi fth columnists—that could cripple their wider appeal.
In eastern Herzegovina in particular, all these factors eroded the Parti-
san movement’s strength to such a degree that the Trio/Focˇa offensives
merely provided the fi nal push that destroyed it there.97
Yet, overall, the Partisans took more steps forward than backward
during spring and summer 1942. Even the losses they had sustained
in battle came to their aid. For the destruction of poorer-quality units
enabled them to concentrate more committed fi ghters in elite units.98
Proletarian brigades, as mobile forces without affi liation to any particu-
lar region, gave them an edge in combat, even though, as “outsiders,”
they were often viewed with hostility in Bosnian Serb areas. The Par-
tisans also imported the NOOs onto Bosnian territory and intensifi ed
their propaganda campaign.99
One aim of the Partisans’ propaganda effort was to wean their Serb
rank and fi le off the Great Serbian idea. To this end, they also imported
workers and students from the towns and thereby increased the element
within the Partisans that harbored civic, multinational, “Bosnian” val-
ues. They also increasingly engaged with religious groups. In order to
attract support from Croats, Muslims, and Serbs, the Partisans often
employed language designed to pit the “working masses” against the
bourgeoisie in all three ethnic groups. A further perennial theme of
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Partisan propaganda was the treacherous and reactionary nature of the
government-in-exile with which the Mihailovic´ movement was so closely
associated. Organization and control improved at the Partisans’ lower
levels also. From June 1942, they made ever greater use of “mobile” bat-
talion- and detachment-level commissars. These were usually of consid-
erably higher quality than the company-level commissars. The following
month, in order to drive home the advantage that this measure created,
the movement’s Operational Staff decreed that all new recruits must
undergo political instruction.100
Further, given that the Partisans’ burgeoning combat effectiveness
increasingly enabled them to protect the population against the Ustasha,
the Ustasha’s murderous persecution of the Serbs was increasingly likely
to feed the fl ow of Partisan volunteers. The dire state of Croatian admin-
istration, and the Germans’ own thinly-stretched manpower, made it
harder still for the Germans to keep the Ustasha’s barbaric conduct in
check. In June and July’s German-led Operation Kozara, for instance,
the SS reported that the Ustasha was killing the old, orphaned, and
chronically ill among the deportees. In August, the Ustasha was able
to wage a campaign of mass killing in the Syrmian lowlands by taking
advantage of the absence of German troops busily combating Partisans
in the Fruška mountains.101
Meanwhile, German army commanders responded to the burgeoning
Partisan threat by reasserting their faith in “systematic and organized”
terror. Operation Kozara was executed by Combat Group West Bosnia,
headed by General Stahl of the 714th Infantry Division. The immediate
spur for the offensive was the Partisans’ capture of Prijedor and its mine
works, and the severe disruption to communications that had followed.
Kozara saw thirty thousand German and Croatian troops, including
four battalions of the 714th Infantry Division newly arrived from Ser-
bia,102 pitted against thirty-fi ve hundred Partisans. But this was also an
operation against civilians. No serious attempt was made to distinguish
between “guilty” and “innocent,” and in a new and unusual develop-
ment for the Yugoslav campaign, all men over fourteen seized during the
operation were to be held in camps or deported as labor to the Reich. In
the event, the Ustasha murdered huge numbers of civilians seized in the
operation in its concentration camp at Jasenovac.103
Glimmers of Sanity
181
Operation Kozara, which also had support from the air and from the
Hungarian Danube Flotilla, infl icted very heavy losses on the Partisans
in western Bosnia.104 But it failed to pacify the region permanently. Once
the bulk of German and Croatian troops had been withdrawn after the
operation, no effective attempt was made to keep the region pacifi ed with
comprehensive hearts and minds measures, a permanent German troop
presence, or frequent and numerous hunter group patrols. Other opera-
tions which the Germans executed in western Bosnia that summer, even
those which enjoyed some short-term success, similarly failed to achieve
any long-term impact.105
But while the German forces in western Bosnia seem not to have fully
grasped some of the fundamentals of successful counterinsurgency, the
718th Infantry Division’s grasp of them was altogether surer.
For one thing, the 718th favored fl exible hunter group tactics. In moun-
tainous Bosnia such tactics could be more effective than large-scale oper-
ations that, though they might infl ict mass butchery, failed to deal the
Partisans decisive blows. The division employed hunter groups particu-
larly prominently in June 1942. Between June 3 and 22 the 718th, supported
again by Croatian units, sought to winkle out and destroy the Partisan
group in the mountain forests east of Zenica and south of Zavidovicí.
The group was reportedly disrupting the railway line between Sarajevo
and Brod, and terrorizing and plundering the local population.106 The
division was able to commit only four infantry battalions and one of its
batteries to the operation. The remaining forces—four battalions and
four batteries of various types—were provided by the Croatian army.107
Experience had taught the 718th that it lacked enough troops for a com-
prehensive encirclement, something the terrain in the Zenica-Zavidovicí
region rendered harder still. Lieutenant Peter Geissler, now serving with
the 714th Infantry Division, knew this situation only too well. “With us,
sadly, it’s usually a question of wearing down the Partisans and scattering
them, not exterminating them,” he wrote in July 1942. “In these loath-
some mountains it’s hard to do anything else.”108
But the 718th aimed to overcome this hurdle by ordering hunter
groups into the area in a series of speedy, direct, independently operating
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attacks. The division hoped among other things that this would confuse
the Partisans so much that they would think they were facing more Ger-
man troops than they actually were.109
The division later judged such tactics vindicated, particularly when
the units taking part also distributed propaganda material. “At present,”
the division declared, “such a hunter group stands ready within every
company of the 718th Infantry Division. They stand ready for every
eventuality. They will naturally be strengthened according to each even-
tuality.”110 A further advantage of the hunter group was that, small as it
was, it was easier to equip more formidably.
The 718th Infantry Division submitted a fairly upbeat report at the
close of the Zenica-Zavidovicí operation. It declared that, though the
insurgents, particularly the Partisans, were gaining ever more recruits and
increasingly unsettling hitherto undisturbed areas elsewhere in the NDH,
insurgent activity had fallen in its own operational area signifi cantly.111
Mutual hatred between Partisans and Chetniks aided German paci-
fi cation efforts considerably. The two movements’ totally incompatible
aims, and numerous truces struck between Chetnik and Ustasha units
during 1942,112 had now led the Partisans to identify the Chetniks as
their principal enemy. Where the Partisans lacked the organization on
the ground to properly dominate the country, they simply terrorized
the Chetniks and their settlements as far as they could.113 “The Chet-
niks are fi ghting (in Bosnia as elsewhere) for Greater Serbia, the Parti-
sans for Bolshevik Russia,” the 718th reported. “But Draza Mihailovic´
depicts Communism as being as great an enemy of the Serbian idea as
the occupiers.”114 Following bloody fi ghting between the two groups in
the Majevica and Ozren regions, many Partisans had withdrawn over
the River Sava, or southward into Italian-administered territory. Some
Chetnik groups in the division’s area had agreed to aid the Croatian
authorities against the Partisans.115 One German offi cer approvingly
reported of one such agreement that “the Chetnik group in the Majevica
region is in every respect committed to complying with the necessary
terms as precisely as possible, and has ruthlessly eliminated those of its
own people who have not complied.”116
Yet there was no room whatsoever for complacency. For the Partisans’
partial defeat in Operation Kozara left many areas, including Syrmia,
Glimmers of Sanity
183
Samarica, and northern Herzegovina, where they remained active. In
eastern Bosnia, the 718th Infantry Division’s area of operations, a rela-
tive quiet descended, but it did not last.117 During July and early August,
the 718th tried to engage Partisan groups moving northwest from Mon-
tenegro, but were prevented by the failure of the Ustasha troops serving
alongside them.118 In early August, together with troops from the 714th
and 717th Infantry Divisions, it was assigned to intensive border patrol-
ling. The aim was to prevent the battle between the Chetniks and Usta-
sha from spilling over into Serbia, and also to prevent Chetnik groups
from both sides of the Drina from linking up. Meanwhile, conditions
across the NDH grew ever more alarming. On August 21 Serbia Com-
mand reported that the NDH administration had lost all infl uence north
of the River Sava.119
But the 718th Infantry Division still sought to engage the popula-
tion; indeed, it was striving to this end more than ever. In addition to
the directives it had already issued, it now forbade its troops to burn
down houses and farms from which shots had been fi red or in which
ammunition had been found. For, according to the 718th, this had led
in the past to “sometimes pointless destruction on the greatest scale,
and to the burning of all elements, including those who may have been
innocent, in the troops’ rear.”120 The division also stressed, in capi-
tal letters, that “THESE ORDERS ARE TO BE MADE CLEAR TO
THE TROOPS BEFORE THE OPERATION BEGINS.”121 This
directive illuminates the barbarism many rank-and-fi le troops must
still have been practicing, despite their commanders’ exhortations to
the contrary. But it also highlights how conscientiously the division
was seeking to rein in such barbarism.
Throughout the fi nal week of August the 750th Infantry Regiment,
with Croatian backup, conducted Operation S in the Šekovicí region.
This too was a small-scale affair. Few Partisans were killed or captured,
and the Germans lost more men to illness than to the enemy.122 The oper-
ation’s only signifi cant military effect was that heavy grenade launchers
showed their worth during its course, boosting the men’s morale partic-
ularly strongly when they were fi red in unison. “For the Partisan war in
eastern Bosnia it is our best weapon—we cannot have too many of them,”
the division declared.123
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Operation S was more important for demonstrating the 718th’s ongo-
ing commitment to engaging the population. “Every opportunity must
be taken,” it declared on August 17,
to make clear to the population, in word and deed, that this action
is directed entirely against the Partisans, and that those who are
willing to work will enjoy the protection of German and Croatian
arms. It is therefore forbidden to burn down houses unless the battle
makes it unavoidable, and also forbidden to deprive the population
of its livestock or food supply.124
The 718th ordered the use of Chetniks who, before the fi ghting began,
had declared themselves willing to fi ght the Partisans. It even ordered
its troops to make use of those captured Partisans willing to help guide
efforts to winkle out their former comrades.125 Finally, in Operation S’s
aftermath, Battle Group Faninger embarked on a “propaganda march,”
aided by willing Majevica Chetniks who helped guard the propaganda
troops against both Partisans and a hostile Chetnik group from Serbia.126
The 718th observed in a report of August 2 that:
although the inhabitants of Bosnia seem to lead a disinterested and