Read Terror in the Balkans Online
Authors: Ben Shepherd
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Military, #World War II, #Science & Math, #Earth Sciences, #Geography, #Regional
senior ones.96 Such professions did not belong to the traditional offi cer
recruitment circles of either army. But they did belong to the “reliable”
middle-class circles from which both armies were extensively recruiting
by the early twentieth century.
There were also elements of Hinghofer’s military career common with
those of Borowski, Hoffmann, and Stahl. All were continuing offi cers,
in the Reichswehr or Bundesheer, during the interwar years. Only Hoff-
mann saw any period of civilian employment. He left the army between
November 1932 and March 1935 to work as an offi cial in the area of youth
sport and physical training. He also experienced a spell of unemploy-
ment between October and December 1933.97 Further, all four men had
spent signifi cant periods serving with a specialist technical branch of
the army, a higher-level staff body, or both. In other words, all four had
pursued careers to that level of technical and professional specialization
that could limit offi cers’ wider social outlook and restrict their vision to
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perfecting their professional skills. Indeed, both Hoffmann and Hing-
hofer had gone even further; each had served in the war ministries of
their respective countries during the 1930s.98
Yet when it comes to where the four offi cers served during the Great
War, signifi cant differences do emerge. The impact the eastern front
could have upon an offi cer’s perceptions was considered in Chapter 2.
The fact that Hinghofer served there during the Great War did not in
itself distinguish him from his fellow divisional commanders in Serbia.
For one thing, Hoffmann himself spent considerable periods on the
eastern front during the Great War. After fi ghting in the initial battles
in East Prussia in August 1914, Hoffmann fought on more southerly sec-
tors of the eastern front for lengthy periods between 1915 and 1917. There
was a hiatus in 1916 when he was transferred west to fi ght in the Battle
of Verdun. He then served on the western front again throughout 1918.
Hoffmann’s own ideological convictions may have been particularly
strengthened by his experience during the march into the Baltic region
and the battle against the Bolsheviks there during 1919.99 Borowski
too served for signifi cant periods in the East, as well as on the western
front.100 Stahl interspersed homeland-based staff posts with active ser-
vice in military airships and observation balloons on a number of fronts,
the eastern front included.101But while Borowski’s and Hoffmann’s Great
War service records were less peripatetic than Stahl’s, all three men also
spent signifi cant, sometimes lengthy periods away from the eastern
front.102 Hinghofer, however, served entirely on the eastern front from
1914 through to 1918.103
An offi cer who had experienced the eastern front in this way, and for
this duration, had more time than many to imbibe that particular brew of
experiences—the region’s hostile environment, its peoples, the nature of
the fi ghting and of the opponents against whom it was being waged—that
could render him more susceptible to brutalizing infl uences later in life.
This is not to deny the brutalizing potency of other fronts, not least the
western. But it is to re-emphasize the brutalizing potency of the eastern
front. Of course, Serbia in 1941 was a different region, populated by a dif-
ferent people, to the eastern theater of the Great War. But in north-west
Serbia the 342d Infantry Division contended with a dangerous insur-
gency, an arduous environment, and a population whose reliability was
Settling Accounts in Blood
139
at best doubtful and at worst non-existent. Such conditions could brutal-
ize the view of any commander facing them. They were especially likely
to brutalize it if that commander had undergone experiences during the
Great War that made him highly susceptible to brutalization already.
Hinghofer may also have been particularly susceptible because, hav-
ing served in the Ukraine in 1918, he had already participated in an
occupation regime that prosecuted extremely harsh counterinsurgency
warfare. The Austro-Hungarian portion of the occupied Ukraine was
administered by the Eastern Army, formerly the Austro-Hungarian Sec-
ond Army. Both German and Austrian forces faced brutalizing condi-
tions in the Ukraine that year. They faced an elusive, resourceful, and
ruthless foe—no more ruthless than the Bolsheviks numbered among
their opponents. Such opponents were often indistinguishable from the
wider civilian population, and the Germans and Austrians had to com-
bat them across an area too vast for their own inadequate manpower to
master properly. Matters were made worse by the unsuitability of the
indigenous administrative personnel on whom the Central powers had
to rely, and by their own failure to develop a more coordinated occupa-
tion strategy.104
And the Austrian forces in the Ukraine were slower than the Germans
to develop an approach that sought to genuinely engage the population
instead of simply terrorize it. What may have particularly hardened the
Austrians’ own conduct was their need to stave off a domestic food situ-
ation even more desperate than Germany’s. Certainly their grain requi-
sitioning operation, and the pacifi cation measures that accompanied it,
were particularly brutal.105
Just how directly involved Hinghofer’s 11th Field Artillery Brigade
was in suppressing resistance is something that the sources that could be
accessed for this study do not reveal. At the very least, however, he would
have been acutely aware of the insurgency in the countryside, and the
danger it posed both to the Austrian occupation and to personnel such as
himself in particular. And if the insurgents could assassinate the German
military commander in the Ukraine, Field Marshal von Eichhorn, then no
German or Austrian offi cer was safe.106
Hinghofer and Hoffmann also differed on another score. Hoffmann’s
personal fi le shows him to have been a man who, in a manner all too
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uncommon among senior German army offi cers in Yugoslavia during
World War II, possessed an element of moral courage. The key event took
place after Hoffmann had been transferred from Yugoslavia to the Ukraine.
Here, in September 1943, the Wehrmacht’s Ukraine Command judged
Hoffmann as lacking the “necessary harshness for the war in the East.”
Ukraine Command reached this judgment when Hoffmann disobeyed
an order to decimate by fi ring squad a mutinous Turkic unit in German
service. The term “to decimate” was meant literally here, inspired by the
ancient Roman punishment of executing every tenth legionary in a unit
that had mutinied or deserted. Hoffmann refused to carry out the order
because, he maintained, he did not wish to impose the moral burden for
the killing upon his men. In particular, he did not wish to compel older
personnel to do the deed. The incident seems to have effectively fi nished
Hoffmann’s military career.107 He ended the war as commandant of a
POW camp.108
Courageous though Hoffmann’s stand was, it is important to keep it
in proportion. Hoffmann was anything but a dove in counterinsurgency
matters. Some of his active suggestions to Boehme were anything but
enlightened. For instance, on October 10, 1941, while still commanding
the 717th Infantry Division, he proposed a package of “Balkan-style”
measures to counter the “bandits.” His list included forced labor, house
burning, hostage-taking and reprisals, and the herding of “idle and loi-
tering” men into concentration camps. Most damningly of all, it was
under Hoffmann’s leadership that units of the 717th Infantry Division
committed killings into the thousands, albeit within the boundaries set
by General Boehme, in Kraljevo and Kragujevac. Kragujevac was the
work of one battalion, but at Kraljevo Hoffmann himself oversaw pro-
ceedings and praised his men fulsomely for their “enthusiastic fulfi lment
of what was demanded of them.”109
But Hoffmann’s conduct in the Ukraine does show that, at the very
least, he was less likely to actually surpass General Boehme’s calls for
vengeful terror in the way Hinghofer did. This does not amount to any-
thing remotely approaching moral exoneration for his actions in Yugo-
slavia. But the actions of the 342d under his command, abhorrent as
many of them were, fell within the boundaries of Boehme’s directives.
The 342d’s actions under Hinghofer’s command did not.
Settling Accounts in Blood
141
But perhaps the most decisive reason why General Hinghofer com-
bated the 1941 uprising even more truculently than his fellow divisional
commanders was that, of all them, he was the only Austrian.110 Thus,
even though Hinghofer himself did not actually serve in Serbia during
the Great War—something common to him and General Boehme—he
was more likely than his German-born colleagues to feel the decades-old
anti-Serb sentiment that Boehme exploited in the cause of crushing the
1941 uprising.111
Such are the source limitations that it is impossible to know how whole-
heartedly the 342d Infantry Division’s rank-and-fi le troops adhered to
Hinghofer’s pitiless approach. The fact that many were not Austrian
meant that they may not have felt such intense hatred towards the
Serbs.112 Indeed, some did fail to follow their commander’s directives as
enthusiastically as he would have wished. But the overall record is clear.
Of all the German army counterinsurgency divisions fi ghting in Serbia
during 1941, the 342d Infantry Division was the most ferocious by some
way. It behaved not just according to directives from above or to the
conditions it faced, but also according to its commander’s standpoint.
Hinghofer’s particular pattern of service during the Great War may well
have helped incubate his extreme obduracy. He was also Austrian-born,
and thus more likely than his German-born fellows to comport himself
viciously against the Serbs. This may also help explain why General
Borowski’s 704th Infantry Division did not comport itself as viciously as
it might have in summer 1941.
The behavior of Hoffmann, Borowski, and Stahl needs keeping fi rmly
in perspective. They had no compunction in unleashing their formations
upon the Serbian population in autumn 1941 with the full force of Gen-
eral Boehme’s directives. Indeed, there is no indication that any of them
saw fi t even to question those directives. And here it should be remem-
bered that, though it was rare in the extreme for offi cers to directly ques-
tion indiscriminately terroristic orders, it could and did happen. Two
examples demonstrate this.
In August 1941 the area commandant in Niš, Freiherr von Bothmer,
not only objected to indiscriminately shooting innocent Serbs en masse.
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He also used moral and legal arguments when he refused to shoot Com-
munists in his custody against whom no wrongdoing had been proved.
Even though he acknowledged that they would probably be executed by
the SD, he refused to endorse even that action.113 Then in October the
district commandant in Kragujevac, Captain von Bischofshausen, pre-
vailed upon the fi rst battalion of the 724th Infantry Regiment to execute
reprisal victims from “Communist-infested” villages, rather than from
Kragujevac itself, because “not a single Wehrmacht member or ethnic
German has been wounded or shot there.”114 Bischofshausen does not
appear to have been acting out of a sense of morality here, though it is
possible he was disguising moral objections with pragmatic arguments
because he felt such arguments might be more likely to be heeded.115 Yet
whatever his motive, he was showing some grasp, however compromised
it may have been, of the need to make some distinction between “guilty”
and “innocent.”
That relatively junior offi cers saw fi t to question indiscriminate bru-
tality offi cially—whether on moral, legal, or pragmatic grounds—but
divisional commanders did not, suggests that those divisional com-
manders approved of such methods. After all, Borowski, Hoffmann, and
Stahl served in an institution whose leadership had chosen to revive a
profoundly harsh strain of counterinsurgency, and which had over the
years become suffused by ideological, careerist, and technocratic ruth-
lessness. The social backgrounds, Great War experiences, and broader
career paths of all three men were in many respects similarly conducive
to such attitudes. The troops they commanded comported themselves
with according ruthlessness in 1941, be it against Jews, Communists,
or—most devastatingly—the general population. The difference, how-
ever, is that Hinghofer’s 342d comported itself with a ruthlessness even
more extreme.
As it turned out, General Hoffmann’s 342d Infantry Division began tem-
pering its ferocity just as the Germans began landing serious blows upon