Read Terror in the Balkans Online
Authors: Ben Shepherd
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Military, #World War II, #Science & Math, #Earth Sciences, #Geography, #Regional
in Yugoslavia was allocated just two such regiments. The divisions pos-
sessed cycle, reconnaissance, engineer, and signals troops at company
strength only; by contrast, frontline infantry divisions commanded
entire battalions of such forces. Nor did the occupation divisions pos-
sess medium mortars or medium machine-gun companies, or antitank
or infantry-gun support. They did possess other forms of artillery, but,
unlike frontline divisions, they were allotted an artillery section of circa
three batteries, rather than a full regiment.40 Their mainly reservist
personnel hailed from older age-groups, and such training as they had
received was incomplete when they arrived in Yugoslavia.41
Between May 7 and 24, all four divisions were transported to their new
jurisdictions.42 Initially, they were assigned to guarding rail communica-
tions with Greece and Bulgaria. This was an important task, on which the
southern fl ank of Operation Barbarossa and the Axis position in southeast
Europe depended, but scarcely arduous in itself. Yet these divisions were
destined to provide the bulk of the German security forces in Yugoslavia
well into 1942—a task that would become infi nitely more arduous. They
embodied what was in fact an established approach within the German
military—a cut-price military occupation, employing second-rate com-
manders, the better to resource the army’s frontline formations.43
The fact that about half the personnel across the four divisions hailed
from the Eastern March would bring no particular benefi t. That Austrian-
born personnel were so numerous was due greatly to the logistical ease of
moving troops down to Yugoslavia from the proximate Eastern March.
Granted, senior Austrian-born offi cers would likely bring some regional
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expertise to their duties, something of which Hitler himself was con-
scious.44 Some Austrian offi cers were profi cient in mountain warfare, a
specialism that might serve them well in Yugoslavian terrain.45 But not
until 1943 would their units be resourced to anything like the extent
required for such a role. The ferocity with which many of them, and
their units, would soon be comporting themselves—partly in an attempt
to compensate for their many defects—would prove much more telling.
All these formations faced increasingly daunting conditions as 1941
wore on. By summer, they would bear the brunt of a Communist-led
uprising, sparked by the campaign of expulsion and killing the Usta-
sha inaugurated in early June, which threatened to engulf them entirely.
The danger the uprising posed grew most severe when the Communists
made common cause with a group towards whom, during the interwar
years, they had felt only hostility—Serbian nationalist irregular fi ghters,
or “Chetniks.”46 How the German army units on the spot reacted to this
threat reveals much about what motivated them.
The travails the 704th Infantry Division faced during 1941, and its
response, are the next chapter’s main focus.
c h a p t e r 5
Islands in an Insurgent Sea
The 704th Infantry Division in Serbia
Brigadier general heinrich borowski, the 704th Infantry
Division’s commander, was born in eastern Prussia in 1880 to
the family of a police inspector. He served as an offi cer in the 1st Field
Artillery Regiment during the Great War, fi rstly on the western front,
then on the eastern front from April 1915 onward. Aside from a month
serving under the German military administration in Warsaw in Sep-
tember 1915, he remained on the eastern front until January 1917. After
fi ghting on the western front in 1917 and 1918, he remained a career
offi cer throughout the interwar years, and commanded two artillery
regiments in succession from 1939 onward.1 It was a reasonably distin-
guished career. It was no preparation for the type of warfare he and his
troops would face in Yugoslavia.
For during summer 1941 the 704th Infantry Division would face lev-
els of resistance that threatened not only the Axis occupation structure,
but also the very survival of the division itself. The intense pressures
which the 704th’s offi cers and men faced on the ground, the mind-set
of the military institution to which they belonged, and the perceptions
of their own commander all played a part in determining how they
responded.
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terror in the balk ans
Initially, the 704th and the other occupation divisions enjoyed rela-
tively benign circumstances in Yugoslavia. The great majority of the
704th’s troops, its main infantry force comprising the 724th and 734th
Infantry Regiments, had been born between 1908 and 1913.2 The divi-
sion described its equipment as “complete”, the makeup of its person-
nel “good.” Its sickness rate was just over 5 percent.3 As yet, there was
little sign of unrest. The 704th was especially well disposed towards the
region’s “friendly and obliging” Muslim population.4 In late May, after
releasing hostages it had been holding to help ensure the population’s
good behavior, it detected a further improvement in the popular mood.5
So relaxed was the atmosphere that in early June the 704th permitted its
personnel to bring reliable civilians along to assist on hunting expedi-
tions. They were forbidden to carry weapons, but this suggests German
troops had been so at ease with the locals that they had been entrusting
them with weapons before.6 Indeed, the division warned its troops that
“social or private relations with the natives may not develop from rela-
tions formed in the course of hunting expeditions. Necessary arrange-
ments (for the expeditions) may not be discussed in private homes.”7
All across Serbia, the Germans were in reasonably sanguine mood
that spring. Serbia Command’s intelligence section observed that the
population “acknowledged German order and the disciplined behav-
iour of Wehrmacht personnel.” It also noted the population’s relief that
it had not been left at the mercy of the Hungarians,8 for the particularly
brutish behavior of many of the Habsburg Army’s Hungarian troops had
marked Serbs’ collective memory of the last war. Hunger, always likely
to turn a subjugated people against its occupiers, was being headed
off by food transports laden with fl our and sugar. The work of Serbia
Command’s intelligence section in building up favorable German- and
Serbian-language newspapers was just one way in which the Germans
sought to exploit this favorable climate.9
It helped, of course, that German troops were not yet mishandling the
population.10 Immediately after the invasion, divisional and higher com-
mands ordered the troops to behave correctly and refrain from plunder.
The Army High Command declared on April 21 that “requisitions are to
be restricted to what is absolutely necessary, and it is essential that they
be carried out by offi cers in exchange for payment or an IOU note . . .
Islands in an Insurgent Sea
85
Anyone who, in the course of service, maliciously or willingly damages
the population’s property will be punished for plunder in accordance
with Article 132 of the Military Penal Code.”11 Both command levels also
wanted to impress the population with German discipline, the better to
dispose the population towards the Germans and win its cooperation.12
Such a spectacle apparently belies German counterinsurgency’s sin-
gularly ferocious image. Yet it was not the France of 1914 providing inspi-
ration here, but the France of 1940. During the campaign in the West that
year, and the military occupation that followed, the German army gener-
ally treated civilians with considerable restraint.13 The contrast with its
conduct in Poland was startling. Some of the contrast was due to com-
manders’ concerns for their troops’ discipline. Much of it was due to the
fact that, in Nazi terms, the French were not an inferior race like the Poles.
And while the Serbs, as southern Slavs, sat lower on the Nazi racial scale
than the French, they sat higher than the Poles. The Germans in Serbia
also had a simpler reason to suppress terroristic urges: they had yet to
face meaningful resistance. Even offi cers schooled in German counter-
insurgency doctrine were unlikely to rain terror on civilians without fi rst
feeling “provoked.” They were even less likely to do so when, in contrast
to 1914, their superiors were not inciting them.
There was a sinister exception to this picture, one that presaged a cam-
paign of racial mass killing soon to unfold across all Serbia. This campaign
would coagulate with similarly murderous “initiatives” across Axis-occu-
pied Europe that summer and autumn. Together, they would culminate
in the emergence of the Nazis’ “Final Solution” of the “problem” of Euro-
pean Jewry.14 This was a process which, in Serbia, would become closely
intertwined with the Wehrmacht’s counter-insurgency campaign.
From the occupation’s start, Wehrmacht authorities were instru-
mental in marking out and discriminating against Serbia’s twenty-three
thousand Jews.15 The fi rst steps were piecemeal. But within weeks, the
measures being enacted—including dismissal from public and private
operations, transfer of goods and property to “Aryan” ownership, ghet-
toization, forced labor, and the wearing of the yellow star—were being
implemented much more systematically.16 The Wehrmacht inaugurated
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terror in the balk ans
such measures because they satisfi ed not just its anti-Semitic proclivities,
but also its practical needs. For instance, seizing Jewish property freed up
accommodation for its own troops.17 All branches of the German occu-
pation regime were complicit in these acts. But it was the Wehrmacht
Commander in Serbia who not only approved and oversaw all of them,
but who also, within weeks of the occupation commencing, had put them
on that much more systematic footing.18 The historian Walter Manos-
chek writes that “in registering the Jews, marking them out with yellow
armbands bearing the inscription ‘Jew,’ imposing special taxes on them,
‘Aryanizing,’ imposing trust companies on Jewish fi rms, excluding them
from public life and driving them from society, the German occupiers
had concluded the fi rst phase of robbing the Jews in Serbia of their rights
and possessions.”19 On May 30, Serbia Command issued a proclamation
authorizing similar treatment for Serbia’s Sinti and Roma.20
In the 704th’s jurisdiction, anti-Semitic measures affected not only
Serbian Jews, but also several hundred Jewish refugees, mostly from
Austria, who were interned in the town of Šabac. In July these Jews
were set to work in the area command headquarters, the local hospital,
and German offi cers’ private quarters.21 It was the
Kommandanturen
,
rather than the occupation divisions, that had direct responsibility for
enacting the relevant measures. In the 704th’s jurisdiction in late May,
for instance, the town commandant in Valjevo forbade the troops to visit
the town’s Jewish dentist, and announced that “all Jews in Valjevo and
its environs have been instructed by the mayor and the local authorities
to wear a yellow armband from 1 June onward.”22
A letter from Corporal Gerhard Reichert of the 11th Infantry Divi-
sion conveyed the wretchedness to which the Serbian Jews were already
being reduced. He described how “all the Jews have been penned up. In
the towns they’ve even put aside quarters for them, which they’re abso-
lutely forbidden to leave. The roads heading out have been blocked off
with a tangle of wire, and a guard stands before it. I wouldn’t want to be
a Jew.”23 Not every soldier followed anti-Semitic dictates as completely
as they might have done: in late June, Serbia Command’s operations
section complained that some troops, housed in formerly Jewish homes
earmarked for their accommodation, were still allowing Jews to stay in
them.24 But the corrosive effect of years of anti-Semitic indoctrination of
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87
German soldiers is easy to imagine. Corporal Ludwig Bauer of Supply
Battalion 563 demonstrated it when he wrote that “yesterday there was
a raid on the Jews where we were; they were all hauled off to the edge of
the town. It was really interesting to see what specimens they are. Truly
the scum of humanity.”25 The Wehrmacht reinforced the effect by sub-
jecting its troops to ongoing anti-Semitic propaganda; the 704th Infantry
Division’s troops, for instance, were provided with cinema showings of
the anti-Semitic propaganda fi lm
Jud Süss
.26
And though the 704th Infantry Division, and the other German occupa-
tion divisions operating on Serbian soil, were not directly involved in this
fi rst wave of discriminatory measures, they nevertheless helped to facili-
tate it—simply by allowing the
Kommandanturen
to enact such measures
without hindrance or comment. And the 704th’s example indicates that