the german antiguerrilla operation in balkan

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    C o

    p y  2

     

    w

    r

    D E

    P A R T

    M E N

    T O F

      T H

      A R

    M Y P A M

    P H L E

    T  

    N O   2

    2 4 3

    j S

    r m y   i l i t a r y  H is t o r y  

    I n s t i t u t e

    H

    I S

    T O

    R I

    C

    L  

    S T

    U D

    Y

    G   R M   N

     

    N

    M

    G

    U

    E

    R

    R

    I

    L L

     

    O

    P

    E

    R

     

    H

    O

    N

    S

     

    I N  

    T

    H

    E

     

    B

     

    L

    K

     

    N

    S

    D E

    P A R T

    M E N

    T O F

      T H E

    A R

    M Y

    A

    U G U S

    T 9 5

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    Departm

    ent of

    the

    Army Pamphlets Published

    In

      the 

    GERMAN

    REPORT SERIES

    Title

    Publicatio

    n

    date

    o

    20-201

    Military

    Improvisations During the Ru

    ssian Campaign___ Aug 51

    20-202 Germ

    an

    Tan

    k

    Mainte

    nance 

    in

     World

    War I I— — — — — — — — — —

    Jun 54

    20-230

    Russian Combat Methods in World War II.__________ No

    v 50

    20-231 Combat in R

    ussian Forests and w a m p s ————————————

    Jul

    51

    20-232 Airborne

    Operations: A German

    Appraisal.___—__— Oct 51

    20-233 German D

    efense

    Tactics Against

    Russian Break-Throughs— Oct

    51

    20-234 Operations o

    f

    Encirc

    led Forces—German Experience in

    R u s s i a — — — — — — — — — — — — —

    — — — _ — — — — — — — — — — — — — —

    Jan 52

    20-236

    Night

    Combat______________________________

    Jun

    53

    20-240

    Rear Area

    Security

    in Russia—The S

    oviet

    Second

    Front

    Behind the German

    Lines_______________..____

    Jul

    51

    20-242 German Ar

    mored Traffic Control During the Russian Cam

    paign___.___________

    __________________

    Jun

    52

    20-260 The German

    Campaigns

    in the Balk

    ans (Spring 1941 ___ Nov 53

    20-269

    Small Unit Actions During the German

    Campaign in Russia.

     

    Jul 53

    20-290 Terrain Factors in the

    Russian Campaign___________

    Jul

    51

    20-29

    1

    Effects

      of Climate on

    Combat

    in

    European Russia——

    __—

    Feb 52

    20-292

    Warfare in the Far

    North____________________

    _

    Oct

    51

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    D E P A R T M E N T O F T H E R M Y P A M P H L E T N O

     

    2  

    - 2 4 3

    G E R M A N

    A N T K M R H I A

    O

    P E R A T I O N S

    I N

    T H E

    B A L K A N S

      1 9 4 1 - 1 9 4 4 )

    D E P A R T M E N T

    O F

    T H t

    A R M Y

     

    A 8 6 D S

    T 9 5

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    DEPAR

    TMENT OF THE

    A R M Y

    W S H I N

    G T O N 25, D . C.,

    6

    Augu

    st

    1954

    Depar

    tm ent of

    the Army

     

    Pamp

    hlet 2 0- 2 4

    3

    is

     published for the

    in

    form atio

    n

    an d

     

    use

    o

    f

    a

    ll con

    cerned.

    [AG385

    (U

    un54)]

      Y

     O R D E R

    O F THE SECRETARY

    O F THE fiKY

    OFFIC

    IAL :

    J O H N A. KLEIN

    M

    ajor Genera

    l United States 

    Army

    The Adju

    tant

    General.

    M .

    B.

    RIDG W A Y

     

    General

     

    Un

    ited States

    Army

    Chief of Staff.

    D

    I S T R I B U T I O N

    Active

    Army

    Gen Sta ff D A 5)

    SS D

    A 5)

    Tec

     

    Svc D A

    26)

    Admin  Tec Svc

    Bd 10)

      TP

    10)

    OS Ma] Comd 50

    )

    Arm ies

    10)

    Corps

    10)

    D lT

     

    8)

    Brig

    3)

    Eegt 3 

    Gen Br

     

    Sv

    c

    Sen

    25)

    P M S T

    HOTO Units

    1)

    T/O

    B

    30-

    500A  

    Teams

    A A

    th rough A E 1)

    T/O B

     30-510 Te

    ams A-l

    through A-5

    1)

    T/O E 

    30-600 Teams 

    A A

    throu

    gh AE 1)

    NO

    Special.

    VSAR

    Special.

    Unless

     oth

    erwise

    noted

    distribution

     

    ap

    plies to GonU S

     

    and

    Overse

    a.

    F

    o r

    explanation of abbreviat

    ions

    use

    d see SB

    320-50-1.

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  • 8/16/2019 The German Antiguerrilla Operation in Balkan

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    C O N T E N T S

    P o r t

    On*.

    T H E BALKAN AREA AND

    ITS

    PEOPLES—

    C h a p t e r 1.

    P h y s i c a l G e o g r a p h y

    I.

    Topography...................................

    2

    II. Climate .. . _ _ — — . 3

    2. N o t i o n a l States

    I.

    General._________. ..___ 4

    II.

    Greece.__________________.. __ 4

    III. Yugoslavia. . .... ... . .. . . . 5

    IV.

    Albania. ._........___.....

    ..

    --

    6

    V .

    Bulgaria,

    Hungary, Romania, and Turkey ... 7

    3. T r a n s p o r t a t i o n a n d C o m m u n i e a t i o n i

    I. General . .. . 8

    II. Main Rail

    Lines ______. ...___......

    8

    III.

    Principal

    Highways______________

    9

    IV. Waterways, Airfields, and Signal Facilities.._....

    9

    P a r t T w o . T H E

    OCCUPATION

    OF T H E

    B A L K A N S

    AND T H E RIS E OF

    T H E

    G U E R R I L L A

    MOVEMENT

    1941-42)——.——— 10

    C h a p t e r 4. T h e O c c u p a t i o n Z o n e s

    a n d F o r c e s

    I. Division and Dismemberment-.- - 13

    II. The

    Italians___ — — —

    — — — — — — — — — —

    —— — 1 3

    III.

    The Germans____________—.-_—. 15

    IV.

    The Bulgarians and

    Hungarians ...

    17

    V . The Puppet Governments .. . .. 18

    5. The E a r l y M o v e m e n t

    a n d A x i s C o u n t e r m e a s u r e s

    I.

    Yugoslavia.._ ... ...._ ...

    20

    II.

    Greece... . . . ... . 27

    6. O r g a n i z a t io n o f G u e r r i l l a

    Units

    I. Unit and

    Command Structure——--------------- 3 1

    II.

    Communications and Supply______ —

    — — — - — — 3 2

    III. Training and

    Tactics_________

    — — — — — — —

    --

    3 3

    P o r t T h r e e . T H E

    G U E R R I L L A

    MOVEMENT

    IN G R E E C E ,

    YUGOSLAVIA,

    AND ALBANIA 1943-44)———.——.—— ———

    3 5

    C h a p t e r 7. O p e r a t i o n s

    J a n u a r y - A u g u s t

    1943)

    I. Yugoslavia..........__

    — —

    — — — — —

    3 6

    II. Greece_______________...————..-— 3 8

    III.

    The German Situation by Mid-1943. 40

    0.

    T h e D e f e c t i o n of

    Italy

    and I t s E f f e c t s

    I. General._____________ ___

    44

    II.

    Yugoslavia

    and Albania. 44

    III.

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    Vi

    C O N T E N TS

    P

    a r t T h ree . T H E

    G UE RR

    I L L A

    MOVEM

    ENT

    IN GREECE, YUGOS

    LAVIA,

    P

    a g e

    A

    ND

    A

    LBANIA (194

    3-4 4 )— Co n t in

    u e d

    C h a p t e r

    9.

    O p e r

    a t i o n t o t h e En d

      o f 1943

    I.

    General.__________............._._.

    47

    II.

    Y

    ugoslavia

    and Alba

    nia...

    ............

    ... 50

    III.

    Greec

    e______

    __. ..__

    _........_..

    _. 52

    10.

    O p e

    r a t i o n s In 194

    4

    I.

    Gener

    al .__...

    _.._____

    ._..........

    .

    53

    II. The Area

    of

    A

    rm y Group

    E . _.

    ........... 54

    III. T

    he

    A

    rea

    of

    Army  Grou

    p F

    ____...._

    _....... 64

    11.

    GEMSBO

    CKandSTEIN

    ADLER —..

    .............

    .........

    7 0

    P a r t F o u r .

    RESULTS  AND

    CONCLUSIONS-.. ————— .————.-._

    73

    A p p e n d ix

      I. C

    h r o n o l o g y o f

    Event*-..

    ..—. .——...-.

     

    — ..

    .— ...— ..

    .. 79

    II.

    B i b l i o g r a p h

    i ca l Note....—

    —_._ „.——

    ....— ——

    .. 82

    M A P

    S

    A

    o.

    1 . General Re

    ference Map-------

    -.--_-_-_----

    -------------

    ---Facing

    1

    2.

    T

    he

    P

    artition

    of

    G

    reece___

    __.______

    ______

    ____

    12

    3. The Partition

      of Yugos

    lavia_...._

    __— —

    — — — __ _

    __ 

    1 4

    4 .

    German Dispositions in

    the

    Balkans as 

    of

    Mid-A ugust

    1944....Facing 53

    5 .

    Ge

    rman Estimate

    of Guerrilla

    Strength

    and Dispo

    sitions in Greece as

    of M

    id-August 1944___

    __...__._

    _______

    __...........

      61

    6 . Germ

    an

    Estim

    ate

    of Guerrilla

    Strength and

    Dispositions

     

    in Yugos

    lavia

    an

    d

    A

    lbania

    as

    o

    f Mid-Augus

    t 1944....

    ._

    _...Facing

    6 7

    7 . Operati

    on

    GEM

    SBOCK.

    .________

    _..—

    — — — _

    _.._Facin

    g 70

    8. Operation

     

    S

    TEINAD

    LER.__..

    ______..._

    ....._. Fac

    ing  7 2

    C HA

    RTS

      o

    1 .

    G erman Ground

    Forces

    in

    O ccupied Greece

    and

    Yugoslavia

    as

    of

    July

    1

    941.........._

    _..__.—...

    ......_———

    . — —

     — _..—

    .......  1

    7

    2 . German

    Ground Fo

    rces in Occup

    ied Greece a

    nd Yugoslavia

    as of

    1 December 

    1942__

    _.______

    _____._—

    .._____._

    __

    27

    3 . G erman

    and Bulgarian Gr

    ound Force

    s in

    O ccup

    ied G

    reece, Yugoslavia

    and A lbania

     

    a

    s of 26 D e

    cember 1943.__

    ——— — — .

    .._____.

      51

    4. Germ an Gro

    und

    F

    orces

    in

    Occupi

    ed Yugoslav

    ia and

    Albania as

    of

    the

    Fall of Belg r

    ade 20 O ctober

     

    1944

    ________

    _  _______

    ___

    68

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    G E N E R A L R E FE R E N C E M A

    P

     

    T KTN

     N

    Map 1

    General re fere

    nce

    map

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    P R T O N E

    THE B LK N R E N D

    T S

    PEOPLES

    The term Balkan is derived from a Turkish word meaning

    mountain. As used by the English-speaking nations, however,

    the

    word

    refers

    to

    that

    peninsula

    of

    southeastern

    Europe

    lying

    between

    the

    Black and Adriatic Seas and extending south to

    the Mediterranean.

    To

    the north,

    the geographic boundary

    is less

    definite, but

    is

    generally

    •accepted as the area

    south

    of the line of the

    Danube

    and

    Sava,

    west

    along the Kupa Eiver,

    whence

    an

    imaginary

    line

    is

    drawn to

    the

    Adriatic port

    of

    Fiume.

    From north to south,

    the

    broad expanse of

    the

    Danube Basin gives

    •way to

    the

    mountain ranges of Yugoslavia

    and Bulgaria.

    The re

    mainder of the

    peninsula

    consists

    mainly

    of rugged

    mountains, broken

    occasionally

    by

    such

    features

    as

    the coastal lowlands

    of

    Albania, the

    area surrounding

    the Gulf

    of Salonika in Greece,

    and the

    lowlands

    of Turkish

    Thrace.

    The

    Balkan

    peoples have

    been

    in contact

    with the

    inhabitants of

    Asia Minor,

    the

    Hungarian

    .Plain, Central

    Europe,

    and

    the

    highly

    developed Mediterranean civilizations for thousands

    of

    years. Never

    theless

    it

    is still possible to distinguish such ethnic

    groupings as the

    Albanians, Serbs,

    Bulgars, Turks, Greeks, and

    Vlachs,

    the last a

    semi-

    nomadic race of herdsmen being absorbed gradually into

    the

    various

    national states into

    which

    the

    Balkan area

    is

    divided.

    Occupied

    for

    centuries by Romans,

    Turks, Austrians,

    and Hungar

    ians,

    the Balkan

    peoples were forced

    to adopt the

    methods

    of irregular

    warfare

    in

    the struggle

    against their oppressors. When

    not resisting

    foreign

    invaders,

    they

    battled one

    another

    or kept alive their fighting

    traditions in bitter blood feuds. The mountainous terrain of their

    peninsula,

    with

    few good roads or

    rail

    lines, hampered the

    counter-

    measures of

    regular

    forces and

    made possible

    sustained

    guerrilla

    operations.

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    C

    HA PT

    ER  

    PH

    YSIC

    A L GE

    OGR

    APH

    Y

    I

    Top

    og r ap

    h y

    The

     

    most

      im

    port

    ant ph

    ysical

     feat

    ure of th

    e Balk

    ans

    as

    a

    s

    cene of

     

    milita

    ry

    o

    peratio

    ns

    is  its wild

     

    te

    rrain.

    Th

    e brus

    hy m o

    untain

     cou

    ntry 

    c

    raggy

      pea

    ks,

    and

     ro a

    dless

    fore

    st are

    as of

    fer irreg

    ular

    troops

     

    num

    er

    ous

    pla ces

    to

    hide ,

    opportunity

    to  

    shift

    forces 

    unse en even

    from 

    the

    a

    ir

    and lo

    cation

    s fo

    r amb

    ush.

    To the

    west

    ,

    th

    e D

    inaric

     Alps

    fo

    llow

    Y

    ugos

    lavia s

      A

    driati

    c c

    oast

    i

    n a

     

    south

    easter

    ly d

    irectio

    n and

     bar

    access

     to the

    inte

    rior of

    the cou

    n

    try

    . A

    lthou

    gh

    so

    me

    coas

    tal areas

      are f

    ertile

    the

     lim

    eston

    e

    com

    posi

    t

    ion of th

    ese  m

    ountai

    ns

    make

    the

     

    hi

    nterla

    nd a ba

    rren

    region

     incap

    able

    of sup

    portin

    g any

    con

    sidera

    ble  po

    pula t

    ion.

    Deep

     gorg e

    s make

     

    tr

    ans

    ve

    rse

    movem

    ent diff

    icult,

    and 

    there

      are only

    few

    s

    econd

    ary ro

    ads

    and

    rail

    lin

    es u

    ntil the

    cen

    tral Yu

    gosla

    v up

    lands

      to the

    east are

     

    re a

    ched.

    F

    rom th

    e

    headw

    aters o

    f the

    Drin

     Rive

    r the l

    ength

    of Alb

    ania

    to

     

    the

    port

    cit

    y

    of  Valon

    a,

    the m oun

    tains

    dr

    aw 

    back   from

      the

    coa

    st, 

    m aki

    ng for

     

    ea

    sier ac

    cess

    to

     

    the 

    in t

    erior

    and

      assum

    e

    a  north-

    south

     

    d

    irectio

    n . Sou

    th o

    f

    V

    alona

    , the

     

    m

    ounta

    ins

    re sum

    e the

    ir

    so

    uthea

    sterly  

    m

    arch

    and m er

    ge

    in t

    o the Gree

    k  Pind

    us.

    These

     

    l

    atter

    exten

    d t

    o

    t

    he

    Gul

    f of

     

    C

    orinth

      reap

    pearin

    g

    o

    n  

    th

    e

    south

    ern

    side  of the

     g

    ulf 

    in

    th

    e

    Pe

    loponn

    esus.

    Directly

    south

    of

    Gre ece

    proper 

    is 

    the

    large 

    is land

    of 

    Crete ,

    of 

    con

    sidera

    ble st

    rategi

    c im po

    rtance

    . O

    ther

    Gre

    ek  is

    lands

      dot

    ting the

     

    Ionia

    n and A

    egean

     

    Seas

     

    are

     Cor

    fu Cepha

    lonia ,

      Z

    ante

    Rhod

    es, th

    e

    D

    odeca

    nese,  the

    Sporad

    es, th

    e

    Cycla

    des, Lem

    nos,

    and

    Khio

    s.

    T

    he cen

    tral

    upla

    nds eas

    t of

      the m

    ounta

    in c

    hain

    exte

    nding

     

    t

    he 

    length

     

    of

     the B

    alkan

     Penin

    sula

    are

     

    fe

    rtile

    enoug

    h to su

    pport

    larg

    e

    cente

    rs of po

    pulati

    on a

    nd some

      indu

    stry.

    T

    o

    t

    he

    north

     

    thi

    s regio

    n

    is drain

    ed by the

    Sa

    va and M

    orava

     Rive

    rs,

    flo

    wing in

    to

    th

    e Dan

    ube;

    to

    the

    south, by

    the

    Vardar 

    wending

    its 

    way 

    through

    M acedonia to  

    th e  

    Gulf

    of Salo

    nika

    and

     

    t

    he A

    egean

    .

    The easte

    rn

    po

    rtion

    of the p

    eninsu

    la

    is

     

    bi

    sected

     

    b

    y the

    Balka

    M

    ount

    ains. 

    To the

    nort

    h th is

     

    are

    a

    desce

    nds to the

     Dan

    ubian

      pla

    in;

    to

    th

    e

    south

    ,

    to

      the

    stepp

    e-like

      lands

     of Turk

    ish

    THrac

    e.

     

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    GERMAN

    ANTIG UERRIUA

    OPERATIONS

    IN THE

    B A

    UCANS 1941-1944)

    II

    Cl imate

    With the ex

    ception

    of

    its coastal ar

    eas,

    the Balkan Peninsula has a

     

    central Eu ropean

    climate,

    characterized

    by

    warm and

    rainy

    summers

    and cold w

    inters, differing

    little

    from

    the

    Danubian lands to the

    north.

    The

    Dalmatian coas

    t

    of Yugoslavia, facing the  Adriatic,

    and the

    Io

    nian

    and western

     

    Aegean coasts of Greece

    enjoy

    variations

    of

    th

    e

    M editerranean typ e of

    climate, with warm, dry

    summers

    and

    mild,

    rainy winter seasons; o

    ther coastal

    areas have

    a

    climate

    betw

    een that

    of central Euro

    pe and

    the

    Mediterranean—for example, the north

     

    Aegean coast with its

    hot summers

    and

    cold wint

    ers and

    the

    Black Sea

    coast with its

    moderately

    hot

    su mmers

    and

    cold

    winters.

  • 8/16/2019 The German Antiguerrilla Operation in Balkan

    13/94

    CH

      P

    TER

     

    NAT

    IO

    NA

    L S

    T T

    ES

    T

    he p

    eace

     

    t

    reat

    ies fo

    llow

    ing

     

    the

     

    Ba

    lka

    n

    Wa

    rs of

      191

    and

     

    1

    913

     

    W or

    ld  W

    ar

     

    I

    and

     

    the

    G

    ree

    k-T

    urk i

    sh

    co

    nfli

    ct endi

    ng

    in

     192

    3 reso

    lved

     

    th

    e fro

    ntie

    rs

    of  the

     va

    riou

    s  Ba

    lkan

      sta

    tes

    unti

    l 193

    9.

    I

    n

    tha

    t y

    ear,

    Italy

    occupied

    Albania  

    and 

    proceeded 

    to  

    implement

    her

    designs

    for 

    d

    omi

    nati

    ng  the

     B

    alka

    n P

    eni

    nsul

    a.

    Th

    e

    c

    reat

    ion

    of

    thes

    e sta

    tes

    ha

    d

    sati

    sfie

    d m

    any

     na

    tion

    al a

    sp i

    ratio

    ns,

    but num

    erou

    s

    m i

    nori

    ty   an

    te

    rrito

    rial

     

    pro

    blem

    s

    wer

    e  le

    ft u

    nset

    tled

    ,

    an

    d b

    oth  

    Ita

    lian

    s

    a

    nd G

    erm

    ans

      we

    re ab

    le

    to 

    turn

     them

     

    to

    thei

    r

    o

    wn

    adv

    anta

    ge;

      A

    mon

    g  the

     diss

    atisf

    ied 

    w

    ere th

    e

    Hun

    gar

    ians

     in

     

    th

    e

    part

     

    o

    f n

    ort

    h

    c

    entr

    al Y

    ugo

    slav

    ia th

    at

    ha

    d on

    ce bee

    n

    pa

    rt o

    f the

     Aus

    tro- 

    H

    un

    gari

    an E

    mp

    ire; th

    Ital

    ians

     

    a

    long

     

    Y

    ugo

    sla v

    ia s

     

    nor

    thw

    este

    rn

    b

    or

    der

    ;

    tii

    e M

    ace

    don

    ians

    ,

    torn

     

    amo

    ng 

    th

    e

    Bu

    lgar

    ia ns

    ,

    Y

    ugo

    slav

    s,

    and

     

    Greeks;

    and

    the 

    la

    rge

     

    colonies

    of A

    ust

    rian

    s

    and

    G

    erm

    ans

    i

    n

    n

    orth

    ern

     

    Yu

    gosl

    avia

    .

    T

    here

     

    w

    ere

     a

    lso bit

    ter r

    ival

    ries

     

    b

    etw

    een

     me

    mbe

    r  na

    tion

    of

    th

    e

    s

    ame

      sta

    te, as

    th

    e  Se

    rbs

    an

    d  C

    roats

      of

      Yug

    osla

    via,

      and

     

    both

     

    Y

    ugo

    slav

    ia

    an

    d

    B

    ulg

    aria

      w

    ere

    re

    sent

    ful of G

    reek

      p

    osse

    ssio

    n  o

    f  the

     

    A

    ege

    an

    co

    ast. 

    Des

    pite

      the

    eff

    orts

     

    o

    f  som

    e

    B

    alka

    n

    l

    ead

    ers

    to

      fo

    ster

     

    i

    ntra

    -Bal

    kan

     co

    ope

    ra tio

    n  an

    d g

    ood

     

    w

    ill

    pr

    ior 

    to 194

    1  t

    hese

      so

    urce

    s of

    anim

    os

    ity  a

    nd

    fri

    ctio

    n

    r

    ema

    ined

      to

    ham

    per

     resi

    stan

    ce

    to Ital

    ian 

    and

     

    G

    erm

    an

    sub

    juga

    tion

    .

    II

    G reec e

    Sli

    ght

    ly

    sm

    all

    er

    in

      area

      th

    an En

    glan

    d

    Gre

    ece

     

    h

    ad a

     

    pop

    ulat

    ion of

    l

    ess  t

    han

     eig

    ht

    m

    illi

    on

    in

     

    1

    941

    . M

    igra

    tio n

    s  a

    nd  ex

    cha

    nges

      of p

    opu

    la

    tio

    n, ch

    ief

    am

    ong

      the

    m t

    he rep

    la c

    eme

    nt

    of

    Tu

    rks i

    n

    w

    est

    ern

    Thr

    ace

     

    wi

    th a m

    illio

    n

    an

    d a

    qua

    rter

    Gr

    eeks

      exp

    elle

    d from

     

    Asia

      M

    in o

    r in

     

    19

    22 -2

    4

    co

    ntri

    bute

    d  t

    o mak

    in g

      the

     i

    nhab

    itan

    ts of

     the

    He

    llen

    ic   st

    ate

    p

    red

    om i

    nan

    tly G

    reek

      b

    y  the

     o

    utbr

    eak

      of

    W

    orld

     

    W

    ar

    II.

    Alth

    oug

    h

    the

    re

    w

    ere

    a

    num

    ber o

    f Al

    bani

    ans

     

    a

    nd

    Vl

    achs

     in 

    the

     Pin

    dus

     

    M

    oun

    ta in

    s

    area, 

    they presented

    no

    minority 

    problem.

    A

    then

    s, the

     cap

    ital,

     w

    ith

    its 

    por

    t city

     

    o

    f Pi

    raeu

    s w

    as

    the nu

    cleu

    s

    of

    th

    e Gr

    eek 

    m a

    ritim

    e

    sys

    tem;

      S alo

    nik

    a  wa

    s a

    ce

    nter o

    f lan

    d

    tra

    nsp

    orta

     

    t

    ion 

    and

      an im

    po

    rtan

    t s

    eapo

    rt  

    for t

    he m

    ore

    nor

    ther

    ly o

    f the

     Balk

    an

    c

    oun

    tries

    .

    W

    ith

    an

      e

    con

    omy

      base

    d

    ch

    iefl

    y

    o

    n o

    cea

    com

    mer

    ce a

    nd

    a

    gric

    ultu

    re,

    G

    reec

    e ha

    d

    n

    o hea

    vy 

    ind

    ustr

    y.

    B

    ath

    er it

     res

    tric

    ted 

    its

  • 8/16/2019 The German Antiguerrilla Operation in Balkan

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    G E R M A N

     

    ANTI GUERRI L L A O P ERA

    T I O NS IN

    THE B A L K ANS 1941-1944

    )

    processing

     of goods

    mainly to olive

    oil, currants, and

    tobacco.

    Cereals

    l

    ed among heavy food

    im ports, since

    G re

    ece 

    co

    uld not

    feed its

    own

    populati

    on

    o

    n its do

    mestic pr

    oduction.

    When

    Italian

    forces

    attacked from 

    occupied

    Albania

    on

    28

    October

    1940,

    the Gree

    ks

    adop

    ted a strategy

     

    of

    holding ligh

    tly

    on the

    ir

    lef

    t,

    a

    llowing Italian

    columns

    to advance deep into

    the barren Pindus, while

    they

    re

    sisted

    strongly and t

    hen

    launch

    ed

    a

    counteroffens

    ive on their

    right. Their

    advance brou

    ght the

    G r

    eeks in

    to

    Alb

    ania,

    w h

    ere

    they

    presented

    a

    serious

    threat to the l

    eft

    flank o

    f th e Italian

     

    f

    orces to   the

    south.

    Despite their vi

    ctories over

    the

    Italian

     

    invaders, the Greeks

    could

    not

     

    l

    ong resist the

    fast-moving German forces

    that inter

    vened in the

    G reek-Italian

    conflict on

    6

    April

    1941.

    Greece

    surrendered to the

    G er

    m

    ans o

    n

    23 Apri

    l, an

    d

    was

    then required to su

    rrender to   the Italians

    as w ell. T

    his

    subm

    ission t

    o

    an

    enemy

     

    t

    hey

    had

    all

    b

    ut defeated aroused

    the rese

    ntment

    of

     th e G

    reeks. Later coupled with

    the occupation of

    most of

    Greece

    by

    Italian forces,

    it contributed i

    n

    no s

    mall measure

     to

    the

    rise of the

     

    Greek

    re sistance mo

    vement.

    III

    Y u g o

    s lav ia

    A

    most

    heterog

    eneous

    state, the homeland of

     th e Serbs, C

    roats, and 

    Slovenes,

    derived

    its

    name

    from

    the

    Slavic 

    te rms

    for

    South  Slav

    and

    became

     a state following

     

    W

    orld War I.

    Yugoslavia had

    a population 

    of nearl

    y

    sixteen

    millions by 1941,

    and

    in

     geographic area

    w as slightly

    smaller than th

    e state of

    W

    yoming.

    Almost one half

    of

    its

    inhabitants,

    or six

    and one-half milli

    on

    peop

    le, were Serbs, oc

    cupying the

    areas

    o

    f

    t

    he form er Kingdom of

     S

    erbia and the old pro vinces

    of

    Bo

    snia, Herce-

    govina, and D

    almatia. The Serbs used t

    he Cyrillic

     

    alphabet,

    pro

    fessed

    mainly th e Orthodox faith

    tho

    ugh many Serbs were

    Moslems,

    a

    nd

    stubb

    ornly resiste

    d

    th

    e C entral Powers in

    World

    War

    I. Serbian

    Belgrade

    w as 

    th e 

    seat

    of the 

    Yugoslav

    national

    government,

    le nding

    credence to the

    claim of

     

    the

     

    minor

    ities that th

    e

    Serbs do

    minated

    the

    sta te. t was

    the Se

    rbs' violent protest to

    Regent

    P

    aul's

    acco

    rd

    with

    Hit

    ler and their overthrow

    of the go

    vernment

    in

     M arch

    1941

    tha

    t pre

    cipitated the German

    attack th e follo

    wing month,

    and

    it w a

    s

    f

    rom 

    among the Serbs

    that the C

    hetniks

    r

    ose to resist the

     

    occ

    upation

    forces.

    Next in numbers

    to th e Serb

    s

    were

    the C roats, som

    e three an

    d

    thre

    e-

    qu

    arter million,

    inhabiting the

    northwestern

     

    part

    of

    Y

    ugoslavia. The

    tradit

    ional capit

    al of the Croats was

    Zagreb ,

    and

    the

    ir

    territory

    was

    part

    of the Austro-Hun

    garian Empire

     

    until

    the

    end of

    Worl

    d

    War I.

    The Croats were

    culturally more

    ad vanced than

    the Serbs, were west

    ern European in their outloo

    k,

    and

    the

    majority profes

    sed

    C a

    th oli

    cism.

    Although

    th

    eir

    language was related

      closely to that of

    the

    Serbs,

     the

    Croats used the Latin

    alphabet. German

     influence among

    the C r

    oats

    in t

    he pre-194 1

     period

    w

    as strong, and it was on

    th e

    trad

    i-

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  • 8/16/2019 The German Antiguerrilla Operation in Balkan

    16/94

    G E R M A N   ANTIG UE

    R R IUA

    O PE RA TIO

    NS IN TH

    E

    B A L K

    A NS  1941

    -1944)

    manage

    d to

    produce

    so

    me oil a

    nd 

    complete

    d

    part

    of

     

    the s

    hort rail

    li

    ne from Tira

    na to the

     Adria

    tic after

    their

    occupa

    tion

    of

     

    the 

    co

    untry

    in 1939 .

    In 

    normal

    times,

    Albania

    exported 

    quantities

    of

    w ool,

    dairy

    prod

    u

    cts, t

    obacco,

    hides, and

    som e

      cattle.  Texti

    les  

    and

    o

    ther

    finished

     

    produ

    cts   led

    amon

    g imports.

    Exploi

    ted

    by

    the 

    Italia

    ns Alba

    nia furnished

      12,000

    auxi

    liaries   to

    M us

    solini s d

    isastrous  

    campaig

    n

    a

    gainst G

    reece in 1940.

    A

    large 

    number of

     

    th

    ese, howev

    er, prom

    ptly

    deserted

    . In

    t

    he

    rugged  

    moun

    tain

     

    areas of

     

    Alban

    ia,

    Italian con

    trol w as Uttle^m

    ore than

     

    nomi

    nal,

    and

     

    the

    o

    ccupation

     

    garri

    sons  us

    ually re

    stricted thems

    elves

    to

    the

    few

    towns

    , t

    o

    the

    throu

    gh ro

    ads,

    a

    nd to the

    coas

    ta l regions.

    V.

    B u l

    gar ia H u n

    g a r y R

    o m a n ia

    an

    d

    Turi

    c ey

    Sin

    ce

    Bulg

    aria,

    R

    omania, and Hun

    gary succum

    bed to

     G erm

    an

    pres

    su

    re

    to

     

    be

    come partne

    rs

    of

    the

    Europea

    n A

    xis,

    an

    d Turkey

      rem

    ained

    neut

    r l until the

    end o

    f

    W

    orld Wa

    r

    II

    this

    study 

    will co

    nsider these

     

    c

    ountries

    bu

    t briefly.

    Bulga

    ria, ap

    proximat

    ely the si

    ze  of O

    hio, had a

    popu

    lation 

    of a

    little

    mo

    re

    th

    an seven

    milli

    on

    in 194

    1. Ethni

    cally

    close

    to

    the

     Rus

    sians, the

    la n

    guage of

     

    the

    Bulga

    rians w as Sl

    avonic.

    With an econo

    my

    primarily

    agricultural 

    the

    chief

    Bulgarian

    exports  

    w ere

    fruits

    and

    dairy

    produc

    ts .

    Hungary

    not

    a

    tru

    e Balka

    n c

    ountry

    b

    ut

    adjacent

      to

    t

    he Balka

    n

    area an

    d continu

    ally

    involved in its

      pr

    oblems, had a

    popul

    ation

    of

    slightl

    y  o

    ver nin

    e m illion and

      was approxim

    ately the

    siz e

     of

    In

    diana.

    The eco

    nomy o

    f Hung

    ary w as agr

    ic ultural,

      w ith m

    eat  and

    cerea

    ls

    t

    he c

    hief e

    xports.

    Rom

    ania,

    also

    outside

     

    th

    e Balkan

     

    a

    rea

    proper,

      was approxim

    ately

    th

    e size

    of O

    regon, and h

    ad a

     

    p

    opulation

      of fifte

    en and

    one-half

     

    million,

    three 

    quarters 

    of

    whom  were engaged

    in

    agriculture.

    With 

    its

     

    ri

    ch Ploes

    ti

    fields, Roma

    nia w as the l

    argest

    oi

    l

    produc

    er in the

    Balkan-

    Danubian

      ar

    ea.

    Turkey, as

     

    la

    rge as

      Texa

    s and

    M aine combined,

      had

    a populati

    on

    of

    nineteen

     

    and

    one-ha

    lf millio

    an

    d

    a

    n gr

    icultur l econ

    omy in

     

    1

    941 . 

    In

    jthe

    Balkans

    proper

    , Turkey had

    only

    a

    few

    thousand

     

    square

     

    m

    iles

    in

     

    ea

    ste rn

    Thrace

    .

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    CH

    APTE

    R

    T

    RA N

    SPO

    RTA

    TION

     

    AN

    D

    COM

    MUN

    ICA

    TIO

    NS

    I

    Gene

    ral

    The

     rug

    ged

    terrai

    n of

    the B

    alka

    ns prop

    er h

    as

    been a

     

    hea

    vy

    hand

    ca

    p to t

    he deve

    lopm

    ent of

     an ad

    equat

    e

    tran

    sport

    ation

     

    and

     com

    muni

     

    c

    ation

     

    net, 

    and

     the fr

    equen

    t wa

    rs and 

    cha

    nges

    in th

    e

    p

    olitic

    al fro

    ntier

    s

    w

    ithin

     the

     area

    have m ade

    the

    extension 

    and 

    improvement of facilities

    even

     mo

    re diffic

    ult.

    Such

    ra

    il cons

    tructi

    on

    a

    s c

    ould

    be  comp

    ared 

    fa

     

    vor

    ably to

     

    th

    at of 

    we

    stern Eu

    rope

     in

     

    194

    1

    w

    as

    r

    estric

    ted

    to the

     int

    er

    nat

    ional

      li

    nes co

    nnec

    ting

    the

    capita

    l cities

     

    an

    d so

    me lin

    es

    in t

    he

    l

    ow

    land

      regio

    ns

    in

    the no

    rth.

    A

    lthou

    gh 

    the road

    s affo

    rded 

    som

    ewha

    m

    ore

    c

    omple

    te  c

    overa

    ge 

    tha

    n

    the

     ra

    il l

    ines, the

    re 

    were

     

    few

     

    h

    ard-s

    urfac

    e h

    ighw

    ays as

    ide fr

    om

    tho

    se

    paral

    leling

      the

    main

      railro

    ads.

    Th

    e

    terra

    in

    m

    ade

    ne

    cessa

    ry

    n

    umero

    us serpe

    ntine

    s

    and br

    idges,

     an

    d deto

    urs

    were

     

    o

    ften

    dif f

    icult or

    im possible .

    On 

    the

    whole  

    road 

    repair

    was very 

    deficient.

    Cab

    le s conn

    ectin

    g

    the

      vari

    ous Ba

    lkan

    capi

    tals we

    re

    laid

    befor

    e

    Wo

    rld

    W

    ar

    an

    d som

    e im pr

    ovem

    ents 

    w

    ere 

    m

    ade

    d

    urin

    g th

    e

    p

    eriod

     

    prec

    edin

    g

    th

    e at

    tack

    in  194

    1 .

    Howe

    ver,

    little

     wa

    s do

    ne to  estab

    lish

    a

    unif

    ied and ef

    ficien

    t cab

    le n

    etwo

    rk thro

    ughou

    t the

     Bal

    kan co

    untrie

    s.

    To

      rem

    ain

    with

    in 

    the sc

    ope 

    of thi

    s stud

    y i

    t

    will

     be

    n

    ecess

    ary to

    lim

    it consi

    derat

    ion

    of

    the

    tran

    sport

    ation

     

    an

    d  co

    mmun

    icatio

    n n

    et to

    th

    at of

    imp

    ortan

    ce to the

     occu

    patio

    n f

    orces

     

    a

    nd th

    e irreg

    ulars

    arra

    yed

    again

    st

    them

    .

    II

    Main

     

    R

    ail L

    ines

    At

     

    th

    e t

    ime Germ

    an

    fo r

    ces

    over

    ran the

      Balk

    ans

    Yug

    oslav

    ia had

    appr

    oxim

    ately

      6 00

    0

    miles

     

    and

    G

    reece

      1 70

    0

    m

    iles o

    f

    railro

    ad  lines;

     

    bo

    th count

    ries

    us

    ed th

    e

    s

    tanda

    rd

    Eur

    opean

      gau

    ge. Th

    e m

    ost im

     

    por

    tant

    lin

    es w

    ere

    th

    ose c

    onver

    ging 

    on

    Zag

    reb

    from A

    ustria

      I

    taly 

    a

    nd H

    ung

    ary;

    the

    line Z

    agreb

    -Belg

    rade

    -Nish

    ;

    a

    nd

    the

    lines

    Nis

    h-

    Sofiy

    a and

     

    N

    ish-S

    alonik

    a-At

    hens.

     

    All

     

    we

    re

    vit

    al to  th

    Itali

    an-

    G

    erma

    n wa

    r

    e

    ffort

    sinc

    e B

    ritish

     ai

    and n

    aval

    a

    ctivi

    ty

    m

    ade su

    pply

     

    by 

    sea difficult

    and

    the

    Germans 

    did

    not

    have 

    the 

    necessary  

    truck

    tra

    nspo

    rt

    fa

    ciliti

    es.

    Too

      in

     

    a

    dditi

    on t

    o t

    he

    oc

    cupat

    ion

    fo

    rces, th

    ose

    unit

    s and inst

    allatio

    ns s

    uppo

    rting 

    th

    e Ger

    man a

    ir and n

    aval

    effor

    t i

    n

    th

    e

    east

    ern

    Medi

    terran

    ean

    had

    to 

    be su

    pplie

    d by rail

      a

    long

    the  line

     

    Z

    agreb

    -Belg

    rade

    -Nish

    -Salo

    nika-

    Athe

    ns.

     

  • 8/16/2019 The German Antiguerrilla Operation in Balkan

    18/94

    GERM

    AN A

    NTIOU

    ERRIU

    OPER

    ATION

    S IN

    TH

    E BA

    UtANS

     

    19

    41,19

    44)

    III.

      Pr

    i n c i p

    a l H ig

    hw a

    ys

    T

    he r

    oads o

    f Gre

    ece

    an

    d Yu

    gosl

    avia we

    re

    poo

    r, wit

    h the

     

    e

    xcep

    tion

    of a

    t w 

    international

    highw ays and limited areas

    in

    and about the

    ca

    pital

    s  and 

    majo

    r c

    ities.

      O

    th

    e

    v

    ariou

    s

    ro

    ad

    n

    ets,

    t

    he 

    be

    st w

    ere

    t

    hose i

    n nor

    thwe

    stern

     Y

    ugos

    lavia

    , in the

     areas

     tak

    en

    from

     

    t

    he A

    ustr

    o-

    Hun

    gari

    an  E

    mpi

    re;

    abo

    ut

    B

    elgra

    de;

    t

    hrou

    gh S

    kopl

    je to Salo

    nika

    ;

    in

     

    the 

    indu

    stria

    l

    area

     

    abo

    ut

    S

    alon

    ika;

      and

     in

     

    the

     At

    hens

    -Pira

    eus 

    in

     

    d

    ustri

    al

    a

    nd sh

    ippin

    g

    comp

    lex.

    T

    o

    t

    he 

    Ger

    man

     

    an

    d It

    alian

     

    o

    ccup

    ation

      for

    ces, the

     

    mo

    st imp

    orta

    nt

    road

     ne

    ts we

    re t

    hose

     

    r

    ough

    ly p

    arall

    eling

     the

    rail

    line

    s thr

    ough

     

    nor

    th

    er

    n

    Yug

    oslav

    ia, inc

    ludin

    g Be

    lgrad

    e;

    along

     th

    e V

    arda

    r Bi

    v«r 

    to Sa

     

    lonika, thence along 

    the 

    Aegean

    coast

    to

    Athens;

    a

    system 

    of

    road?

    th

    roug

    h

    the

     n

    orth

    ern h

    alf

    of t

    he P

    elop

    onne

    sus; a se

    ries 

    o

    f sec

    onda

    ry

    ro

    ads

    alo

    ng t

    he Ad

    riati

    c coa

    st

    of Y

    ugos

    lavia

    ; som

    e t

    ortuo

    us r

    oads

     

    thro

    ugh

     th

    e

    Di

    naric

     A

    lps;

     

    an

    d

    a few

     m

    ain roa

    ds

    in we

    stern

     G

    reec

    e.

    Th

    ough

     s

    ome of

    the

    se

    r

    oads

     we

    re

    pav

    ed, th

    e m

    ajor

    ity we

    re buil

    t of

     

    cru

    shed

     stone

     an

    d u

    nab le

     to sup

    port

     sus

    taine

    d traff

    ic an

    d he

    avy t

    ruck

    in an

    y  nu

    mbe

    r w

    ithou

    t con

    stan

    t

    re

    pair

    . I

    n

    man

    y plac

    es,

    lengt

    hs of

    pa

    ved

    road

     

    alt

    erna

    te d 

    with

     str

    etche

    s

    of crush

    ed st

    one.

    IV . 

    Waterw ay s  

    Air f ie ld s

    an d

    Si g n a l

    Fac i l i t ies

    W

    hil

    e

    t

    he D

    anub

    e pla

    yed

    a

    s

    igni

    fican

    par

    t

    in

     the

     log

    istica

    l supp

    ort

    of  th

    e att

    ack f

    orces

    , th

    wat

    erwa

    ys with

    in  Gr

    eece

     and

     Y

    ugo

    slavi

    a

    p

    rope

    r play

    ed li

    ttle

    part

     in  th

    e lat

    er su

    pply

     

    o

    f t

    he o

    ccup

    ation

     troop

    s.

    P

    erhap

    s th

    at put

    to

    the

    most

     

    ext

    ensiv

    e u

    se

    wa

    s

    the

    Cor

    in th

    Can

    al,

    link

    in g  t

    he  G

    ulf

    of

     

    C

    orin

    th

    and

     the

     Aege

    an. B

    y

    us

    ing th

    is 

    cana

    l,

    the

     Itali

    ans w

    ere a

    ble

    to cut

     

    the

     

    distan

    ce

    from

     

    the

    ir s

    uppl

    y ba

    ses

    alon

    g

    the

      Adri

    atic a

    nd

    Ionia

    n Se

    as

    to

    Pirae

    us  and

     A

    then

    s  b

    y s

    oma  1*

    6

    m

    iles,

    av

    oidin

    g the

     

    o

    pen

    sea a

    nd

    Brit

    ish ai

    rcraf

    t base

    d

    Egyp

    t.

    Airfield facilities

    in

    Greece 

    and 

    Yugoslavia,

    .though

    not

    extensive,

    wer

    e m

    ore

     tha

    n adeq

    uate

     for

     the n

    eeds

    of the

    G

    erm

    ans

    and I

    talia

    ns.

    S

    tock

    s

    o

    f ga

    solin

    e an

    d  o

    ther

    supp

    lies le

    ft b

    ehin

    d in G

    reece

     by

     

    t

    he 

    Br

    itish

     

    w

    ere 

    put

     to

    use,

     

    an

    d

    the slig

    ht

    dam

    age

     to f

    ighte

    r

    b

    ases

    wa

    s

    n

    ot

    enou

    gh

    to  prev

    ent

    their

      im

    me

    diate

     utili

    zatio

    n.

    Perh

    aps

    mo

    st

    im

    por

    tant stra

    tegic

    ally

     w

    ere th

    e exc

    ellen

    t ba

    ses on 

    C

    re te an

    d

    in 

    t

    he 

    At

    hens

    -Pira

    eus 

    are

    a.

    S

    ignal

     facil

    ities

     in

    the

    Var

    ious

     

    Balk

    an

    c

    ount

    ries at

    the t

    utfe o

    f t h s

    occ

    upat

    ion we

    re in

    capa

    ble o

    f sup

    porti

    ng

    he

    avy tr

    affic

    .

    To

    o, 

    it

     wa

    s

    simple

    m

    atter

     for th

    e

    guerri llas

    to 

    d

    isrup

    t th e f

    ew

    lon

    g-di

    stanc

    e

    c

    ables

     

    a

    nd  ov

    erhe

    ad w

    ires

    th

    at exis

    ted.

    The

    moun

    tain

    ous na

    ture

     

    of

     

    the

    te

    rrain

     

    c

    ircu

    mscr

    ibed

    the u

    se o

    f  radio

    , b

    ut

    it w

    as on

    this

      and

     

    f

    ield

    telep

    hone

     

    lin

    es,

    pl

    us lia

    ison

     

    air

    craf

    tha

    t

    th

    e occ

    upat

    ion f

    orce

    s u

    suall

    y

    had

    to rely.

  • 8/16/2019 The German Antiguerrilla Operation in Balkan

    19/94

    P A R T TW

    O

    T H E O C C

    U P A T IO

    N O F

    T

    H E  

    B A L KA

    N S

    AND 

    T

    H E R IS

    O F  

    T H E

    G

    U E R R I L

    LA

    M

    O VE M

    E N T

    1941-4

    2)

    The Germ

    an combat troo

    ps,

    scheduled  to

    leave

    alm

    ost imm ediat

    ely

    t

    o refit for Ope

    ration BARB

    AROSSA

     

    (the assault on the

     Soviet

    Unio

    n),

    h

    ad little

    time  fo

    r

    pris

    oners after

    their quick

    co

    nquest

    of

    Y

    ugoslavia,

    and captu

    red

    Greeks were

    paroled as

    a

    gesture

     of res

    pect

    for their heroic ef

    fort in

     

    d

    efense of the

    ir country

    . Thus, short

    ly after

    the

    cessati

    on

    of

    hostilities,

      the Yugosla

    v   and

     

    Greek 

    force

    s were   de

    mobili

    zed, their

    pers

    onnel

    id le, and

    stunn

    ed

    rather

    than crushe

    d by

    their

    sudden

    defeat.

    Many

    had

    never 

    seen

    the

    enem y,

    others

    had

    recently be

    en

    o

    n th

    e

    offe

    nsive, as

    the G reek forces

     in Albania,

    and

    had

    been

    forced to stop

    fighting

     only   when enc

    ir cled by th

    G

    ermans o

    r

    because h

    igher command

    ers had surre

    ndered.

    The G

    erm an aut

    horities

    were cognizan

    t

    of

     

    the.

    threat

    of

    t

    hese u

    n

    em

    ployed e

    x-soldiers a

    nd other dissiden

    t elem

    ents uni

    ting

    to

     fo rm

    a

    res

    istance m

    ovement .

    M ore

    over,

    the

    commence

    m ent of

    hostiliti

    es

    wit

    h

    the

    Soviet

    U

    nion

    2

    m

    onths

    later

    m

    ade ex

    ternal suppo

    rt of su

    ch a

    m o

    vement most

    probab

    le;

    aid

    by the R

    ussians would

    serve

    to

    div

    ert

    G

    erman divisions

     

    from

    the 

    Russian th

    eater of w

    ar, gain

     

    the

    Kre

    mlin

    an opening

    wedge

     

    for th

    e communica

    tion of the

    Bal

    kans,

    and

    possibl

    y

    even permi

    t

    realization of the

    age

    -old Russian des

    ire for access

    to the

    Adria

    tic and

    M

    editerranea

    n.

    Little

    was done to

     

    fore

    stall

    title obvi

    ous

    threat o

    f revolt.

      Perhap

    s

    the G erm

    ans c

    onsidered

    the few divisions

    th e

    y were  leav

    ing behind

    su

    fficient t

    o secure Gree

    ce and Yugosla

    via and

    ke

    ep

    up

    an  un

    in

    terrupted flow of raw

    materi

    als to the G

    erman war

    machine

    . Most

    certainly

    German

    planners

    were,

    preoccupied

    with

    the

    approaching 

    campaign

     ag

    ainst

    th

    e Soviet U

    nion. At

    any rate,

    German

    prepara

     

    tions to contain

    and destr

    oy large-scale

      risings

    were  inadequa

    te .

    Be

    lated Ge

    rm an

    efforts as time

     

    pass

    ed

    succeede

    d

    only

    in quel

    ling

    t

    emporarily t

    he

    growing surge

     

    of

    resistanc

    e inareas wher

    e

    th

    e

    occupa

    tion authoriti

    es could

    m ass

    superior  forc

    es. Suppress

    ion

    o

    f the re-

     

  • 8/16/2019 The German Antiguerrilla Operation in Balkan

    20/94

    G ER

    M N NTIGU

    ERRIU OPER TIONS

    IN TH  B

    IK NS 194

    1-1944)

    s

    istance movemen

    t

    became

    and

    rem

    ained

    f

    or ov

    er 2 years

     

    a

    makeshif

    t

    affair, 

    with the guer

    rill s bein g

      pursued  

    from one ar

    ea to a

    nother,

    sufferin

    g heavy casual

    ties,

    but never be

    ing destroyed.

    During this

    2-year

    period

    duty 

    in

    the

    southeast was

    regarded

    as

    relative

    ly saf

    e

    by 

    the average Land

    aer so

    ldier); n

    ot 

    as

    pleasa

    nt, 

    per

    haps, as

    assignm

    ent to

    occup

    ation d

    uty in

    France Belgiu

    m , or Ho

    l

    land,

    but infinitely

     preferabl

    e to

    service

    in  

    the Soviet

    Union or North

    Africa. F

    or

    i

    ts part,

     the A

    rm ed Forces H

    igh

    Comm

    and consid

    ered

    its

     Balkan

    theat

    er

    a

    bulwark

    against attack fr

    om th

    e south an

    d

    its

    possession nec

    essary  for

    the secu

    rity of th

    e

    forces

      in the

     southern

     

    p

    art

    of the

     Soviet Union

    The R

    eich s

    primary

     

    inte

    rest in

    th e

    are

    a itself

    once the

    se securit

    y

    objective

    s

    had been achieved, w

    as

    as a source of

    strategic

    raw m aterials.

    Its

    im portance increased when 

    the

    supply 

    of 

    chrome

    f

    rom

    Tur

    key was

    stopped

    and the Turks beg

    an to

    drift toward 

    the Allied cam

    p.

    The

    Germ a

    n attitude

    toward th

    e population

     

    was on

    e of

    mistrust

    .

    The maj

    ority of

    th e

    inha

    bitants

    were

    S

    lavs, a

    nd

    o v

    n a

    ultmr (lac

    king

    cu

    lture).

    H

    owever, as in

     

    th e other occupied

    countries,

    the Germans

    felt th

    ey

    could

    re

    ach a modus v

    iven i to   achieve

    their

    military

     

    and

    political

    aim

    s; the 

    p

    opulation  coul

    d be kept

    under cont

    rol by

    a

    p

    ro

    gram of dividi

    ng and ruli

    ng well

    illustrat

    ed by th

    e

    establis

    hment of a

    Croatian

    state

    out

    of

    the

    body 

    of

    Yugoslavia.

  • 8/16/2019 The German Antiguerrilla Operation in Balkan

    21/94

    GE

    RMA

    N R

    E P O

    R T S R I

      S

    Y

    U

    O

    SL

     

    VI

     

    THE

     P

    ART

    ITIO

    N OF

     GRE

    ECE

    Arto

    t O c

    c u p i

    ed

    r b

    y  

    t h a I tal

    lo n s

    A r

    «s t O

    c c u p

    ied

    b y

    ta

     

    O

    trma

    at

    A

    reas

      A n a

    e i e t f

     

    b y t h

    «  B u lg a r lo n t

    it T

    h «

    Gt

    rm on

     

    h o

    d A

    i r F o

    re* b

    ait

    an d

     var i

    o u i

    a d m in i t t r a t lv * In * fo l ia t i o n s

    t o

    tht

    Athtr.i-Pirocvi arta

     

    ap 2

     

    he

     

    p

    art

    itio

    n of

    G

    reec

    e

  • 8/16/2019 The German Antiguerrilla Operation in Balkan

    22/94

    CHAPTER

    4

    THE OCCUPATION ZONE

    S ND FORCES

    I D i v i s i on

    a n d

    D i s m e

    mbe r men t

    To free German troops for

     employment

    in

    Operation BARBA- 

    KOSSA and in

    compliance with comm

    itments to Mussolini, the

    occupation

     of

    the

    Balkans was

    to

    be primarily

    a

    responsibilit

    y of the

    Italians.

    German

    interests

    in

    the

    area, as

    def ined

    by

    Hitler,

    included

    only

    the

    secur

    ity of

    sup

    ply routes and

    communications to German

    air

    bases in Gr&ece and

    Crete, the safeguarding of the copper-pro

    ducing area

    in

    northeastern Serbia,

    the protection of a

    n

    open shipping

    r

    oute on the Danube, and

     

    reten

    tion of the

    econc-mic

    privileges

    granted

    Germany

    by

    t

    he

    former Yugos

    lav Gov

    ernment.

    In

    addition to Albania, which they had

     

    held since 1939,

    the Italians

    assumed control of

    Greece, with

    the

    exception of German-held areas

    around Salonik

    a and

    Athens, th« island

    of Crete, and a number

    of the

    Aegean

    Islands.

    Another

    exception was western

    Thrace,

    which

    was

    annexed by

     

    the

    Bulgarians.

    (M

    ap 2.)

    In Yugoslavi

    a, the Italians

    incorpor

    ated western

    Slovenia, includ

    ing Ljubljana, into Italy, and

    annexed Dalmatia and

    Montenegro.

    A

    small

    portion of southwestern Serbia

    was

    detached

     and

    added

    to

    Greater Albania,

    The

    It

    alians also dominated the newly

      pro

    claimed kingdom

    of Croatia, which fo

    r

    purposes

    of

    security and

    antigue

    rrilla

    opera

    tions

    was

    divided

    into

    Ge

    rman and Italian zones

     

    of interest by a line along the

    axis Visegrad-Sarajevo-Banj

    a

    Lnka-

    north to the border

    of

    the

    German-annexed

    portion o

    f Slovenia;

    the Germans

    were permitted to send

    tro

    ops into the area

    east of this

    line

    and the

    Italian troops

    could

    operate

    west of the

    line.

    F

    or their

    part, th

    e

    Germans

    incorporated into Greater Germany that

    portion

    of Sloveni

    a that had once been

    part

    o

    f

    the

    Austri

    an

    province 6f

    Carinthia,

    an

    d occ

    upied

    Serbia and the Banat.

    The Bulg

    arians

    an

    nexed

    Y ug

    oslav Macedonia and,

    in

    early

    1942,

    occupied

    south

    eastern Serbi

    a;

    the Hu

    ngarians annexed the Batchka and

    Baranya

    and a small portion

    of

    eastern 

    Slovenia.

    (Map

     

    3.)

    II The

    I ta l ians

    T

    hree Italian armies and

    a total of

    4

    5 divisions had pa

    rticipated

    i

    n the campaigns

    against Greece

    and

    Yugoslavia.

    The armies were

    the Secon

    d,

    Ninth,

    and Eleventh, all directly under t

    he omm ndo

    13

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    G ERMA N

     

    ANTIGUERRIUA

    OPERATIONS IN THE BAUC A

    NS

    1941-

    1944) 15

      upremo (Supreme General

    Staff),

     

    under  which

    they

    remain

    ed for

    the

    period of the

    occupation.

    By early

    August 1941 the army head

    quarters

    had been redesignated as

    area

    commands

    and

    the

    total

    num

    ber of

    divisions

    reduced

    to

    32.

    The

    commander

    of

    the

    Italian

    Sec

    ond

    Army became

    Armed

    Forces Commander

    , Slovenia and Dal-

    matia, with

    8

    divisions; the commanding

    general of the N

    inth

    Army

    became Armed 

    F

    orces

    Commander, Albania and Montenegro,

    with

    12 divisions; the

    Eleventh

    Ar

    my commander

    became the

    Arm

    ed

    Forces Commander, Gre

    ece, with divisions. One

    addi

    tional

    div

    i

    sion

    was

    stationed in the Dodecanese

    Islands.

    A

    change in this

     

    organization was made when

    the

    Ar

    med

    Force

    s Comma

    nd,

    A

    lbania

    and

    Montenegro, was divided between

    the Armed

     

    Forces Comm

    and,

    Albania,

    and the M ilitary

    Command,

    Montenegro.

    The

    policy

    of the

    Italian

     occupation

    authorities

    was waverin

    g and

    irresolute,

    and the Italians accom

    plished Pttle

     

    or noth

    ing

    toward

    restoring the economy of

    the areas un

    der

    their

    contro

    l. Com

    mandei-s

    were slow to

    react to

    guerrilla

     

    forays,

    and the common soldier hoped

    for a

    state of mutual

    toleration with the population. This

    reluct

    ance

    to act

    firmly,

    after their poor showi

    ng in the

    1940-41 campa

    igns,

    earne

    d the Italians the

    disdain of the

    Greek

    s and Yugoslavs

    and

    encouraged depredations. Harsh and

    arbitrary

    reprisals,

    when

    action

    was

    undertaken,

    further 

    increased

    tha

    resentment of 

    the

    popu

    lation to

    ward

    the Italians.

      Individual punishment was

    often in

    flicted

    w

    ithout

    trial, and on many

    occasio

    ns entire

    villages were

    burned to discourage d

    isorders. From disdain, the  attitud

    e of the

    Greeks

    and Yugoslavs soon changed

    to one of hatred.

    The 

    German

    Twelfth Army,

    w

    hich

    had driven the length of the

    Balkan

    Peninsula

    and

    conquered

    Greec

    e, was assigned to

      the occupa

    tion

    of

    the

    German-held

    areas

    in

    the southeast,

    with headquarters

    near Athens, whence it moved on

    27

    Octob

    er to

    Salonika.

    The  com

    m a

    nder of Twelfth

    Army, 

    Generalfeldmarsc

    hall Field M arshal)

    Wilhelm List, also becam

    e

    A

    rmed

    Forces

    Commander, Southeast, on

    9

    June 194

    1,

    thereafter

    functioning in a dual role.   As

    Armed

    Forces

    Commander, Southea

    st, Field Marshal

    List

    was

    the supreme German

    military

    authority

    in the

    Balkans 

    and was

    answerable directly to

    Hi

    tler. His

    responsib

    ilities in

      tMs capacity included the preparation

    and direction

    of

    a coordinated defen

    se agains

    t attack,

    th

    e

    suppression

     

    of

    internal

    unrest,

    and the

    conduct

    of

    relations with

    the

    Italian

    and

    other Axis milit

    ary authorities in the area. Mars

    hal List was further

    charged 

    with the

    sec

    urity

    of

    German supp

    ly

    routes

    through the

      Hereaf

    ter

    the term   Armed Forces

    Commander, Southeast, w

    ill

    be useO

    to refer to the

    officer

    holding

    the title W ehrmachlbefehlshab

    er

    Suedoe

    t, while

     

    tlie

     

    abbreviate

    d

    title

    WB

    Southeast will be used to   refer

    to

    his

    headquarters.

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    B

    alkans

    and the m

    ilitary

    ad

    ministrat

    ion

    o

    f the

    German-

    occupied

     

    ar

    eas.

    These last

    w

    ere thre

    in

     

    num

    ber:

    Serbia

    p

    roper;

    t

    he Salon

    ika

    region

    and

     the is l

    ands of L

    emnos, M yt

    ilene. Kh

    io s,

    and Skyros

    ; and 

    southe

    rn

    Greece, in

    cluding th

    e

    citi

    es o

    f Ath

    ens and Pirae

    us,

    and the

    islands of C

    rete,

    Cythera

    , and

     

    Melos.

      Se

    rbia

    w a

    s plac

    ed under,

    the

     

    Military

    Commander,

    Serbia, 

    with 

    headquarters

    at

    Belgrade; the

    S

    alonika 

    area un

    der the

     Milit

    ary

    C

    ommande

    r. Salon

    ika-Aeg

    ean, wi

    th

    headqu

    arters at

    Salonik

    a; 

    and Athen

    s and Pira

    eus und

    er the M

    ilitary 

    Com

    mander,

     S

    outhern Gre

    ece, w ith

      head

    quarters at

     Athens.

    Since 

    much

    of the

     

    Ge

    rman

    air effo

    rt in the

     eastern M

    editerra

    nean was

    di

    rected

      f

    rom Ath

    ens, the hea

    dquarter

    s of th

    e Militar

    y Comm

    ander,

    Southern

     Gr

    eece,

    w as

      staffed

    larg

    ely by the

     Air Forc

    e.  The

    naval

    and

     

    air for

    ce headq

    uarters

    in th

    e

    Ba

    lkans

    were p

    laced under c

    ontrol

    of Marshal

    List for

    operational

    purposes, as were

    the

    v riou

    s

    liaison 

    uiS-scrs 

    and military m

    issions

    wi

    th

    the It

    alians,

    Bulgari

    ans, Hun 

    gari

    ans, an.d

     Croats.

    At the

    time hostil

    ities ende

    d  in April,

    Twelf

    th A

    rmy had un

    der

    its

    control four

     corp

    s

    he

    adquarte

    rs  an

    d a to

    tal of

    t

    w elve div

    isions,

    fou

    r of

    them arm o

    red. By

     

    22

    J

    une,

    w

    hen Ope

    ration BA

    RBARO

    SSA

    began,

    three of the co

    rps h

    eadquart

    ers, all

    the

    arm

    ored

    divisio

    ns, and

    all

     

    b

    ut 2

    mounta

    in

    and infantry

     divisions

     

    had been  rede

    ployed.

    Th

    is redis

    tribution

     

    o

    f forces

     

    l

    eft T

    welfth Ar

    my  wi

    th the X

    Vin

    Mountain

    Corps,

    with

    headquarters

    near 

    Athens,

    to which  were 

    attac

    hed  th

    e

    5th

     

    and 6th  M

    ountain D

    ivisions

    ,

    o

    n C

    rete and

    near

    At

    hens,  r

    espective

    ly; the 1

    64th Infan

    try

    D

    ivision, 

    in

     

    Salon

    ika

    and 

    on

     

    the Aeg

    ean

    I

    slands;

    and

    t

    he

    125th

     

    I

    nfantry Eegime

    nt Sepa

    rate),

    in

    Sa

    lonika.

    The

     gap

    create

    d

    b

    y the

    depart

    ed

    uni

    ts was'

     

    fil

    led partially

     by tl i

    rec

    ently

    creat

    ed

    L

    XV Corps

     

    Co

    mmand,

    an area,

     rather

    than a

    tactic

    al,

    h

    eadquart

    ers st

    ationed

    in Bel

    grade. To

     

    this

     headqu

    arters w e

    re at

    tached 

    the 704t

    h,

    714th, an

    d

    7l7th

     

    Infan

    try

    D

    iv isions,

     spread

    over

    Serbia

    proper, and  the

    718th

    Infantry

    Division,

    stationed in

    the

    Germ

    an

    zone of i

    nterest in

     Croatia

    , with 

    headqua

    rters

    at

    Banja

    Luk

    a.

    ( Chart

    1.) In

     contr

    ast to the troo

    ps the

    y

    repl

    aced, m

    ore than o

    ne-half

    of

    the

    personn

    el

    of

    th ese

     

    division

    s, par

    ticularly

     th

    e platoon

     

    lea

    ders

    and

    nonc

    ommissi

    oned off

    icers,

    were  ove

    r

    a

    ge for

      infan

    try

    service.

    The

     

    co

    mbat

    experie

    nce of m

    ost of

    the  com

    pany a

    nd highe

    r com

    man

    ders w as li

    mited to

    World Wa

    I

    and the divi

    sio ns lacked

    their

    full

    complem

    ent of

     

    m

    otor vehicl

    es

    and logist

    ical services

    .

    Tr

    aining

    h

    ad been int

    errupted

     by th

    e assi

    gnment t

    o

    o

    ccupation 

    d

    uty

    to

    the

     

    ext

    ent one

    division 

    had only co

    mpleted

    battali

    on exe

    rcises.

    Germ

    an

    str

    ength

    in the

    Balkans

    remain

    ed

    at 

    a

    pproxima

    tely t

    his

    level

     

    until

    mid

    -Septemb

    er

    1941,

     the

    only

     change

    b

    eing

    in mi

    d-August

    ,

    when

    the 6

    th Mount

    ain Div

    ision left. Th

    e 713th

     Infantry

     Div

    ision.

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    G E RM A N ANTI GU ER

    RI L L A O P E R A T

    IO N S

    IN

    THE

    B A L K A N S

     

    1941-1

    944)

    17

    C H A R T

    N o

     I-GERMAN G R OU N D

     

    F O R

    C E S IN

    O C C U P I E D G R E E C E

    A N D Y U G O S L AVIA

     

    S O F

    JUL Y 1941

     

    MII O

    Soul

    G re

     

    X"

    X

    om dr

    hern

    ec e

    i

      ©

    SMtn"

    XX

    X

    M l lC o m d r

    Serbia

    A r m e d

    Far

    South

    ei

    Twelft

    C

    omJr

    hArmy

    i

    i

    LXV

    Military M

    illion to

    Bulgarians

     

    a

    nd

    Croon

    X

    XX

    ©MILC o

    m d c

    XVIII Mtn

    Salonika

    -

    egean

     

    J^

     

    SMtn 

    \ Q

    64

    704 71 4

    " N o

    r m a l l y   A t t a c h e d t o

    XVIII M o u n t a i n

    C o r p i . P

    a r t i c i p a t e d n C a p t u r t o f   C r e t e a nd Re t

    a i n e d Te m p o r a r i l y

    t o r

    I t l a n d D e f e n t e .

    Chart

    1

    of the same typ

    e as the

    divisions a

    ttached to

     

    the

    LXV

    Corps

    Com

    mand, m oved into the

    Balkans

     shortly

     

    efor

    th

    e

    departure

    of

    the

    mou

    ntain divisi

    on.

    The

     military

    occupatio

    n task

    w as

    m ad

    e dif ficult

    by

    the

    presence of

     

    various SS and police

      ag encies

    in

    the 

    oc

    cupied

    te

    rritories.

    Acting

    d

    irectly  unde

    r

    the

    ei

    chsfuehrer SS and

    Chie

    f

    of

    Ger

    man Polic

    e  

    Himm

    ler th ese

     

    a

    gencies  w

    ere

    th

    e cause of

    constant irritat

    ion 

    to

    the

    military

     

    co

    m manders .

    O ste

    nsibly respo

    nsible for

    security their a

    c

    ti

    vities

    overlapped

     

    thos

    e

    of

     

    the 

    mil

    itary, and

    local com m a n d

    ers

    were

    not

    perm

    itted

    to c

    ontrol them or to

     

    restri

    ct their

    activ

    ities. Various

    civilian

    agenc

    ies, su

    ch as the

    Germ

    an

    Foreign

    Office, wer

    e

    a

    lso rep

    r

    esented i

    n Greece an

    d Yugoslavia, f

    urther

    complicating

     

    the

    task of

    the

    military com

    m anders.

    The

    policy of the

    G erman

    s

    was st

    ern but

    consisten

    t, com pared to

    th

    at of

      the Italians.

      Ser

    bia prese

    nted

    the

    G e

    rmans

    w

    ith

    a

    special

    problem,

     

    ho

    wever,

    wi

    th the

    traditional

     

    Serb hostil

    ity

    to everything

     

    G

    ermanic,

    the

      rugged

    ind

    ependence of the

    people,

    and the former

    position

     

    of

    predo

    minance the

    Serbs had 

    held in the Yugos

    lav s

    tate.

    IV. T h e

      B u

    l g a r i a n s and H u

    n g a r i a n s

    T

    o maintain order in

    the

    ir

    n

    ew 

    ter

    ritories,

    the Bulgaria

    ns dis

    p

    atched

    their V Corps, compose

    d of three

     divisions,

      to  Yugosla

    v

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     8

    GERM A N REPORT S R S

    Macedonia,

     and

    their

    C orps

    to Thrace.

    A

    subse

    quent reassignme

    nt

    of u

    nits,

    with the

    movement of

    Bu

    lgarian troo

    ps into

    th

    e G e r m

    an zone

    in

     Yugoslavia,.b

    rought the

    I Corps to

     southeastern Serbia and

     

    a

    pro

    visional

    Aegean

    Corps

    to

    Thrace. Later in the

    w

    ar,

    the

    Aegean

    C orps was rel

    ieved by the

    II

    C or

    ps. A nu

    mber

    c

    Incidents involvi

    ng

    t

    he native

    population

     

    in

    Macedo

    nia caused the

    Bul

    garians

    to tur

    n

    from

    a

    b

    enevolent

    to a

    harsh

    pol

    ic y

    o

    f pacificatio

    n.

    n G r

    eece, w

    here 

    they

    fe

    lt they w ere rec

    overing territory

    lost to

    the

     G

    reeks

    in

    the

    Second Balk

    an War of 1 9 1 3, the po

    licy of the

    Bulgarians w as arbi

    trary a

    nd

    sev

    ere from the

    outset of

    t

    he

    occupation.

    Th

    e

    Hun

    garians

    occupied severa

    l

    sm

    all areas of Yugoslav

    ia to

    t

    he

    west

    and

    south

    of

    Hungary,

    and im mediately

    incorporated

    them,

    into

    their

     

    nati

    onal

    state.

    Inhab

    ited

    by large Hungarian

    minorities

    ,

    these

    territo

    ries

    had

    formed part of the Austro-

    Hungarian Emp

    ire

    until

    1 9 18 , henc

    e

    the

    Hungarian at

    titude towa

    rd

    the popul

    ation

    was far

    m

    ore lenient than th

    at of the other

    occupation

    forces

    in their

     respective

    zone

    s.

    V The P u p pe t

    Gove rn

    m e n ts

    Puppet

    regimes

    w

    ere installed to lighten

    the adm

    inistrative burden

    of

    the

    occupied

    areas

    and exploit

    the

    differences betw een

    the

    various

    reek and

    Yugoslav national an

    d political fa

    ctions. Native police,

    security f

    orces,

    and n

    ational ar

    mies were

     

    also

    organized to reduce

     

    the

    number of occupat

    ion

    tro

    ops required to

    keep

     

    order and

    protect

    the

     

    various

    new governmen

    ts .

    The collaborationist

    regim

    e

    in G reece

    was

    organized

    u

    nder  the

    premiers

    hip

    o

    f eneral

    Tsolakogl

    ou, w ho

    had

    surrendered the Arm

    y

    of

    Epiru

    s t

    the

    G ermans on 20 A

    pril 1941. Although this

    govern

    ment formed

    po

    lice

    and

    security units and

    actively assisted the

    G erman

    and

    Italian

    occupiers,

    it

    did

    not

    organize

    armed

    forces

    on a

    national 

    sc a

    le .

     n

    Croatia

    a

    ki

    ngdom was organi

    zed

    under the

    nom

    inal

    rule

    of the 

    absentee Italian

    Duke

    o

    f Spoleto, w

    ith actual

    authorit

    y

    vested in Ante

    Pavelit

    ch,

    the Po

    glavnik (Prime Ministe

    r),

    who began his

    adminis

    tration with a ruthless

    persecution

    of

    the

    Serbian minority

    within the

    borde

    rs of

    th

    e new

    Croatian sta t

    e.

    Paveli

    tch,

    living

    in exile

    under Italian

    sponsorship,

    had

    been

    indi

    rectly

    involved

    in

     

    t

    he

    assassination

    of King A

    lexander of Y

    ugoslavia

    at

    M a

    rseilles

    in

     1 934.

     

    Arr

    iving

    in

     Croatia in the

    w ak e

     of

    the

    G ermans

    in

    1 9 4 1 with

    fewer than

    hundred

    of his

    U

    stascha

    a politico-military

    group sim

    ilar to the Italian Bl

    ackshirts, Pavelitch

    quickly  o

    rganized

    a

    po

    litical army of

    1 5

    b

    attalions, and

    a

    Ustasc

    ha Guard

    of infantry

    regiment

     

    and

    a

    ca

    valry squ

    adron. Under the a

    egis of

    t

    he

    Italian

    authorit

    ies, he also bega

    n

    the

    conscription

     

    of

    a

    national mil

    itary

    force,

    which did n

    ot

    p

    rogress beyond

     eight mountain

      and light infantr

    y

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    28/94

    GE

    R M A N   AN TIG

    UERRILLA   O P E R A T I

    O N S IN THE

    B A L K A N S 1941

    -1944)  19

    briga

    des an

    d a   railroad se

    curity

    brigade u

    ntil late 

    i

    n the

    war, 

    when

    these

    bri

    gades

    we

    re

    joined

    with the ex

    panded Ustas

    cha force

    s

    to

    form

    div

    is ions.

    Croatian-

    German 

    Legion

    units, su

    ch as  the 369th, 3 7 3

    d,

    and 392d

    Infantr

    y

    Divi

    sions;

    two SS div

    isions, the 1 3

    th and 23d

    Mountain; and

    addition

    al

    m

    ountain

    brigades and 

    separat

    e battalions

    were recruited in Cro

    atia

    by the Germans

    draining

    of

    f m uc

    h of the 

    manpowe

    r that might 

    have

    g

    one to

     

    the Croati

    an forc

    es. M

    ore

    poten

    tial 

    Cr

    oatian t

    roops w e

    re sip honed

    off

    in 

    labo

    r

    dr

    afts or

    by

    t

    he poli

    ce,

    or

    fl

    ed t

    o

    join

    one

     

    or another

     of the

    guerrilla groups.

    A Peta

    in-like figu

    re wa

    s

    fo

    und

    in 

    Serbia

    in the person

    of General

     

    Nedit

    ch, a former chief

    of staff

    of the Eoya

    l

    Yug

    oslav Army.

    Within

     

    Serbia,

    in addition

    to

    the 

    civil

    police,

    several

    militarized

    security

    fo

    rces

    w er

    e

    fo

    rmed to

    keep   order an

    d lighten the

    German

    occupation

    ta

    sk. The first

    of

    these was the Borde

    r Guard,

    5,600  

    stro

    ng, includin

    g

    a

    Ger

    man cadre

     of

    600; the prima

    ry m is

    sion

    of

     

    thi

    s force wa

    s to con

    t

    rol traffic acr

    oss

    t

    he Ser

    bian fron

    tier. In addition,

     

    to

    su

    pport

    the

    city

    and rural

    police should the 

    need arise, the State

    Guar

    d was organized,

    comprisin

    five

      bat

    talions with

    an 

    au

    thorized

    tot

    al

    s

    trength of 3 ,

    560

    m en.

    The Serbi

    an

    V

    olunteer

    Battal

    ions, la

    ter

    amalgam

    ated into 

    the Ser

    bian Volunteer

    Corp s, most

    closely

    approximated a

    national 

    military 

    force. Four and 

    l

    ater

    five in 

    num

    ber, the

    se

    batt

    alions, under

     

    the com

    mand

     ofGeneral Ljotit

    ch, were

     

    scatter

    ed about

    the

    German-occ

    upied

    area

    of Serbia

    .

    T

    heir

    a

    pproximate

     tota

    l strength

     

    w

    as 2,000.

    Anot

    her for

    ce

    fo

    rmed in 1941  

    within

    Serbia but n

    ot respon

    sible

    to 

    the

    Neditch G

    overnment

    was the Russi

    an Guard

    Corps

    , under com

    man

    d

    o

    f General

    Steif

     

    on

    .

    It had

    thre

    e regime

    nts and

    a total

     

    streng

    th

    of

    4,000. Inc

    orporated into th

    e

    Wehrm

    acht, th

    e corps w

    as co

    mposed

    largely

    of anti-S

    oviet emig

    res

    who

      had

    served  in the arm

    ies of the

    Czar;

    many

    of

    the

    personnel

    were

    incapable  

    of

    extended

    field

    service,

    and the Germ

    ans generally 

    restr

    icted them to

    such  security du

    ties as

    the protection

    of the

    vital Belgrade

    -Nish railr

    oad lin

    e.

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    CH APT

    ER 5

    THE EARLY M O V E M E NT

    AND AXIS

    COUNTERMEASU

    RES

    The

    political allegiances of the 

    r

    esistance movement

    had

    little

    in 

    fluence on the

    military

     operations

     

    cond

    ucted

    b

    y the

    occupying

    powers.

    Rather,

     

    everyon

    e fighting against the occupation forces was

    considered 

    a

    threat

    to

    their

    hold

    on

    the

    Balkans.

    True, the

    methods

    used

    and the

    ultimate objectives differed fro

    m one group to the other. However, as

    far

    as

    the

    Italians,

    Germ

    ans, and Bulgarians

    were

     concerned, all

    in

    ar

    msagainst them were ene

    mies, whether they 

    wore

    the royal crest of

    a

    so

    vereign in

    exile,

    the hamme

    r and sickle, or n