Read Terror in the Balkans Online
Authors: Ben Shepherd
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Military, #World War II, #Science & Math, #Earth Sciences, #Geography, #Regional
up in tandem with an Allied invasion. But their closeness to Nedic´ was
embroiling them in a double game, one that would increasingly turn
them into de facto collaborators rather than freedom fi ghters. The impli-
cations for their movement, and for Yugoslavia, would be immense.
But in November 1941, the Chetnik–Partisan split offered Boehme one
major opportunity. Free now to turn his fi re entirely against the Parti-
sans, he shortened his front by concentrating his forces on selected areas.
The Partisans, recklessly overconfi dent following the revolt’s early suc-
cesses, had already played into his hands. They had declared the area
around Užice a “free zone” and visibly concentrated their forces there.
This, of course, made it much easier for Boehme to target them in a con-
ventional kind of operation. The operation also succeeded for mundane
practical reasons: the stripping of the fi elds during harvesttime deprived
the Partisans of a major source of cover.132
Though the Partisans were not destroyed outright during Operation
Užice, they came close. According to German reports, two thousand
Partisans were killed during the operation. And the reports’ claim that
2,723 guns were recovered from the Partisan dead indicates that this
time it was armed fi ghters, not defenseless civilians, who had perished
in great numbers.133 The remnant of Tito’s force had to fl ee for its very
existence. It seems the 342d Infantry Division only failed to press its
pursuit of them for fear of antagonizing the Italians with a probe into
their territory. This was probably the closest the Germans ever came to
killing or capturing Tito.134 They would come to rue this lost opportu-
nity at length. Yet for now, the Communist Partisan movement had been
dealt a fearful blow. Tito himself even offered to resign on December 7,
although the offer was rejected.135 His main force now comprised only
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147
two thousand fi ghters in the fi eld,136 for whom the only hope of survival
lay in fl eeing Serbia for the mountains of the NDH.
General Boehme departed with the staff of XVIII Corps for the east-
ern front on December 6. His successor, General Bader—who assumed
the title Commander in Serbia rather than Plenipotentiary Commanding
General—was aware that the insurgency had not been crushed conclu-
sively. He feared that the spring thaw could bring new unrest, particu-
larly given the amount of weapons and munitions still in Serb hands. But
for now, in the aftermath of Operation Užice and amid further successful
mopping-up operations, Bader surveyed a situation far less perilous than
that of three months earlier. He felt suffi ciently confi dent, on December
22, to replace Boehme’s now unworkable 1:100 reprisal directive with
one that instead stipulated that “only” fi fty Serbs should be shot for
every German soldier killed.137
The Wehrmacht’s defeat of the Serbian national uprising of 1941 trum-
peted its readiness to employ terror to the utmost. German documents
record that, between August 1 and December 5, the Germans killed
eleven thousand insurgents in combat and executed nearly twenty-
two thousand reprisal victims, at a cost to themselves of fewer than six
hundred killed or wounded.138 But such was the attitude of at least one
particular divisional commander, and the life experiences and life infl u-
ences that had shaped him, that he demonstrated his own ferocity even
more emphatically than his fellows demonstrated theirs.
During 1942, however, a rather different picture would emerge from
the German army occupation divisions operating in the NDH.
c h a p t e r 7
Standing Divided
The Independent State of Croatia, 1942
At first sight, the prognosis for the Partisans in the NDH at
the dawn of 1942 did not look promising.1 Not only had the Axis
expelled them from Serbia. In the NDH, they remained too strongly
associated with the Serbian struggle for them to be yet able to extend
their appeal to the NDH’s Croat and Muslim populations. And such
was Chetnik strength in parts of the NDH, particularly eastern Bosnia,
that the Partisans also faced a serious challenge for control of the NDH’s
remaining Serbian population.
Yet the NDH offered the Partisans potentially fertile territory. In
the NDH’s Croatian regions, they benefi ted from a strong Communist
organization of long standing. They would also benefi t, in time, from a
particular groundswell of support from the oppressed Croatian popula-
tion of Italian-occupied Dalmatia.2 And in Bosnia, the Partisans stood
to benefi t from a particular combination of rugged terrain, strong Com-
munist organization, and considerable potential support.
In 1931, Bosnia’s diverse population of Muslims, Orthodox Serbs,
and (predominantly Croat) Catholics stood at just over 2.3 million; this
was an increase of almost half a million in just ten years.3 The increase
was due to the rapid expansion of that constituency from which the
Bosnian Communists could expect to draw their fi rmest support, the
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149
urban working class. But the rural population, nearly 85 percent of Bos-
nia’s population in total, was potentially fertile ground also.4 This was
due in large part to the Communists’ collaboration with the League of
Farmers. After defending the rights of Bosnian Serb peasants against
Muslim landlords during the interwar years, the League enjoyed a strong
following among the ethnic Serbs who in 1931 comprised almost half of
Bosnia’s rural population.5
More generally, the Bosnian Communists’ growth had been aided by
the interwar expansion of Bosnia’s education system. This had brought
together different ethnic groupings as well as urban and rural popula-
tions. It had also engendered an emerging left-wing intelligentsia, partic-
ularly among teachers and university students, from which the Bosnian
Communists drew much of their leadership.6 In the early days of the
Axis occupation the Communists sought to appeal to a collective “Bos-
nian patriotism” among the region’s population groups. They stressed
the brotherhood of all Bosnians and depicted the struggle against the
occupiers as a continuation of the struggle for Bosnian liberation that
had been waged against an oppressive, centralizing government in Bel-
grade during the interwar years.7
By the beginning of 1942, the Communists’ main strength was in
urban areas, western Bosnia, and certain parts of eastern Bosnia. It was
in these areas that the nascent Bosnian Partisan movement now devel-
oped.8 Throughout the war, the Serbs would predominate within the
Bosnian Partisan rank and fi le. But in time, Croats and Bosnian Muslims
would become more visible also.9 Yet in the eastern part of Herzegovina,
Bosnia’s southern region, the Communists were numerically strong but
organizationally weak. And among many population circles of eastern
Bosnia it was the Chetniks who held sway.10
On 25 January 1942, following its expulsion from Serbia and brief hia-
tus in Sandzak, the remnant of Tito’s own Partisan force arrived in Focˇa
in eastern Bosnia.11 Chetniks and Partisans had been tensely coexisting
in eastern Bosnia since the beginning of the Serbian national uprising.
The Chetniks here had even paid some lip service to the rights of Croats
and Muslims.12 But here as in Serbia, long-term cooperation was never
in prospect. As in Serbia, the leaderships of the two groups here had
fundamentally different aims—and already by mid-November 1941, the
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terror in the balk ans
mere presence of Muslims and Croats in the Bosnian Partisans’ ranks
was becoming a particular deal-breaker for the Bosnian Chetniks.13 The
breakdown of relations between the two movements in Serbia further
removed any incentive to cooperate in eastern Bosnia.14
Moreover, from the early days of the Axis occupation, the Chetniks
were offered cooperation with the Italians instead. In July 1941, as the
interior of the NDH grew increasingly lawless, the Italians sought to
improve their Croatian territory’s economic security and safeguard its
inland communications. Thus, to the Ustasha regime’s great alarm, they
extended their area of occupation as far as Zone III in the NDH.15 To
avoid overstretching themselves, they began employing Chetnik groups
on the ground. They wooed the Bosnian Chetniks with offers of arms
and money to fi ght the Partisans, and wooed Bosnian Serbs more gener-
ally by pledging to protect them from the ravages of the Ustasha.16
But what Italian protection meant in practice would rapidly become
clear—it provided ideal cover for the Chetniks to vent themselves mur-
derously against their Croat and Muslim neighbors. Even without the
Ustasha massacres, Bosnian Chetniks felt intense hostility towards
the NDH’s other ethnic groups. They drew no distinction between
the Ustasha and other Croats, and referred to Bosnia’s Muslim popu-
lation as “Turks.” This particular antagonism was a legacy not just of
centuries-old Muslim–Christian enmity, but also of recent history. Bos-
nian Muslims in Habsburg service had often behaved savagely towards
Serbs during the Great War. During the 1920s, the League of Farmers
had defended Bosnian Serb peasants against Muslim landlords, and
throughout the interwar years Serb and Muslim political parties had
clashed bitterly. All this, and the fact that Bosnia’s Muslim population
was larger than its Croatian one, meant that Bosnian Serbs if anything
hated Muslims even more than they hated Croats.17
What the Italians gained in the Chetniks was relief from administrative
and security duty, and—they believed—a force they could use to increase
their leverage against the NDH. They also believed that, by co-opting
the Chetniks, they could drive the Partisans to more brutal lengths and
thus isolate them from the general population. But the Italians’ machina-
tions would eventually backfi re. It was not the Partisans but the Chet-
niks who would come to alienate many potential supporters, even among
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the Bosnian Serbs.18 Partly this was because their quiescence against the
occupiers, and their increasingly open collaboration with them, would
increasingly cause many among the population to perceive them as Axis
stooges. Partly, it was because of the fearful cruelty and massacre to which
they subjected the territory’s Croat and Muslim populations.
And the Chetniks were not just exacting revenge for Ustasha outrages;
indeed, in 1941 the Ustasha killings in eastern Bosnia had been consider-
ably less extensive than elsewhere.19 Their actions belonged instead to a
wider campaign of massacre, expulsion, and subjugation. The Chetniks
were conducting it not only to settle local scores but also to provide the
foundation of a “Great Serbia.” Unlike the Ustasha, the Chetniks lacked
the state apparatus, the strong (albeit vicious) ideology, or the practical
“expertise” that would have enabled them to conduct this program more
thoroughly. But commanders on the spot incited copious mayhem and
butchery in those areas they controlled.20 Mihailovic´ fully supported
the expulsions, though it is much less clear how much he knew of, or
approved of, the killings that were taking place. But there was little,
if anything, he could have done to prevent the killings even if he had
wanted to.21 Horrifi c as the Chetniks’ conduct was, the Partisans would
reap long-term benefi t from it.
But in January 1942, the Partisans seemed far from gaining the upper
hand. For one thing, they faced a diffi cult balancing act. The mainstay of
Partisan rank-and-fi le manpower, as well as Chetnik manpower, was the
Bosnian Serbs. But the Partisans’ Communist leadership did not wish
to appear too partial to Serb interests for fear of alienating the NDH’s
Muslim and Croat populations. As yet though, they lacked the resources
necessary to properly reeducate their Serb rank and fi le to embrace
Yugoslavism.22 The result was that rank-and-fi le Bosnian Serb Partisans
could feel as antagonistic towards Muslims as did Bosnian Chetniks.
And even if they themselves did not perpetrate massacres against Mus-
lims, they were not above actively enabling the Chetniks to do so.23
Yet it was not just rogue Partisan groups, but also the Communist
leadership of the Partisan movement whose exercise of terror in early
1942 was stymieing the support levels the movement might otherwise
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have enjoyed. Already the Communists had lost much ground to the
Chetniks in Montenegro because, since the July revolt there, they had
spent too little time building popular support and too much time indulg-
ing in terroristic class war. They had been eliminating opponents real or
perceived with a zeal that not only was excessively ruthless, but had also