[ Home ] [ Library ] [ Index ] [ Maps ] [ Links ] [ Search ] [ Email ] The two Serbian anti-fascist fighting forcesWhile Croats and Muslims enlisted en masse into Nazi units, during World War II, the Serbs participated, again en masse in anti-fascist struggle. Unluckily, the Serb anti-fascist movement (by far the strongest in the occupied Europe) was split in two - along political lines. The two antagonistic anti-fascist movements were: 1) PARTISANS. While the overwhelming majority of the fighters that joined this anti-fascist movement were Serbs, the leader of the movement was a Croat Communist (later dictator) Tito. The partisans claimed to be anti-fascist - period. They formed so called "People's Army" and invited anyone who was willing to fight Nazis - to join. At the same time, the Communist leadership (Tito - a Croat and Kardelj - a Slovene) were actively working not only toward liberating Yugoslavia from the fascist grip - they activelly worked toward establishment (and later succeded in their plan) of a Communist state. 2) CHETNIKS were the Serbian anti-fascists who fought BOTH COMMUNISTS AND FASCISTS. As usual, the basic facts are easy to check... and available to anyone. Encyclopedia Britannica, Edition
1986, Micropedia, Vol 3, Page 182 Entry: CHETNIK
Cetnik, member of the Serbian nationalist guerrilla force that formed during WW II to resist Axis invaders and Croatian collaborators but that primarily fought Tito's Communist guerrillas, the Partisans. The chetniks were first organized in Bosnia. Other bands developed in Montenegro, Herzegovina and Dalmatia, but the most important was the one based in Serbia, LED BY DRAZA MIHAILOVIC. He directed his forces to avoid large-scale fighting with the Axis occupation and wait for an Allied invasion that would liberate Yugoslavia and restore the monarchy... By 1944 the Allies, which have provided Mihailovic with the military aid... withdrew their support. At the end of war, Chetniks were... forced from their headquarters at Ravna Gora. Mihailovic and his few remaining followers were captured by Tito's Partisans (March 1946) and brought to Belgrade, where they were tried and executed.(end quote) Encyclopedia Britannica, Edition 1986, Micropedia, Vol 8, Page 119 Entry: MIHAJLOVIC, DRAGOLJUB (INTEGRAL quote:) Mihailovic' Dragoljub, byname: Draja (b. March 27, 1893, Ivanjica, Serbia - d. July 17, 1946, Belgrade), army officer and head of the royalist Yugoslav underground army, known as Chetniks, during WWII.(end of quote) THE LEGION OF MERIT IS THE HIGHEST DECORATION AMERICA GIVES TO NON-AMERICAN HEROES... This is so typical of the Western behavior toward small nations (just as we see it today). While general Mihajlovic was useful and fighting the enemy - he was praised. Then, in 1943, when the West divided the spheres of influence with Stalin, and Yugoslavia got to be assigned to the Stalin's - Communist zone, Mihajlovic (the ally) was dropped and let to his destiny. At mercy of the Communist "justice" (Hague of a sort). On May 25, 1942, the front page of TIME magazine came with drawing of Mihailovich and subtitle: "Yugoslavia's unconquered. He watches from his mountain walls". Inside, two pages are devoted to praise to general Mihailovich and his Serbian fighters. Here is a small excerpt: Time, May 25, 1942, pages 23, 24 (excerpts, quote:) ...He watches from his mountain walls, and like a thunderbolt he falls. These words, written for an eagle, today are far better fit for one of THE MOST AMAZING COMMANDERS OF WORLD WAR II. He is Yugoslavia's Draja Mihailovich. Ever since Adolf Hitler vaingloriously announced a year ago that he had conquered Yugoslavia, Draja Mihailovic and his 150,000 guerrillas in the mountains south-west of Belgrade have flung the lie in Hitler's teeth. IT HAS BEEN PROBABLY THE GREATEST GUERRILLA OPERATION IN HISTORY... (A long list of achievements follows... and then...)(End quote) (The text continues in glorification of the Serbian struggle for independence from the Turks, brave fight in Balkan wars and World War I. Then the author returns to Mihailovic's biography praising his bravery in Balkan wars, WW I. In 1914 Mihailovic receives the Order of the White Eagle and after participation on the Salonika front the highest decoration Karageorge Star with crossed swords... The text ends with - quote:) Today Draja Mihailovic seems legendary, but he is a legend with a big basis in fact: the fact that that he has kept from five to ten Nazi divisions at a time of fighting to conquer the country which they destroyed twelve long months ago.(end quote) The book "Current Biography, Who's News and Why" published by The H.W. Wilson Company, every year, has in its edition for 1942 three long pages on Mikhailovitch, Draja (pages 593-596) praising the Serbian anti-fascist leader. Encyclopedia Britannica Book of the year - 1943 - also praises Mikhajlovich (quote:) ... After the swift Nazi conquest of Yugoslavia in April 1941, Mikhajlovich fled to the mountains, where he rounded up scattered Yugoslav detachments and welded them into a powerful guerrilla force. This army destroyed bridges and roads, dynamited trains and troop convoys and compelled the Germans and Italians to divert at least 10 (ten) divisions to Yugoslavia...(end quote) Much later "Time-Life Books"
series on World War II in book entitled "Partisans and Guerrillas"
published in 1978, a few more details were given about Chetnik struggle
and the relation to the West. Here are a few excerpts from chapter 3 entitled:
"Chetniks and Partisans", page 75,
By late spring of 1941, Hitler had good reason to think that Yugoslavia was finished. Its generals had capitulated, its young King had fled into exile and its people seemed thoroughly cowed by the Wehrmacht. Accordingly, the Fuhrer chopped the country into weak ministates (my comment: just like modern demo-Nazi did today) then shared the chore of controlling them with three Axis partners - Italy, Bulgaria and Hungary - and handful of local puppets...
...The Germans had received orders from Hitler himself to increase to 100 (hundred) the number of Serbian civilians to be shot for every soldier killed by the guerrillas. On October 20 the Germans descended on the Serbian town of Kraljevo, recently the target of a joint Chetnik-Partisan raid that killed about 30 German troops. According to the official German reports, their troops put to death about 1,700 of the inhabitants. The Yugoslavs claimed that nearly 6,000 people were slain. On the next day, the Germans also wreaked havoc on the town of Kragujevac, near the site of a Partisan raid that killed 10 German soldiers and wounded 20. By the German reckoning 2,300 townsmen were executed. The Yugoslavs said the number was 7,000...(end quote) The Croatian Communist Commander did not care how many Serbs should perish for Moscow's orders to be fulfilled. The two leaders tried to unify their resistance but Mihailovic refused "Tito's kind of guerrilla warfare that would be suicidal for the Serbs". The Time-Life book describes the initial split and then clash between the Communist and Chetnik lead resistance... At the same time, and as always, the selfish West did not care what price would the small, occupied Serb people pay if they resist Nazi occupiers. The West did not care how suicidal would the resistance be. They prefered to see more, rather then less German troops tied down in Yugoslavia. This is how the West, during WWII, took the side of Communists over anti-Communists in their struggle for power in Yugoslavia. All of this can be read in OLD books (books written well before the current conflict have started). I recommend the following books by British authors who studied the declassified British archives: 1) David Martin: "Ally betrayed" 2) David Martin: "Patriot or Traitor: The case of General Mihailovic" 3) Michael Lees: "The Rape of Serbia - The British Role in Tito's Grab for Power 1943-1944" But who the chetniks really were can be best seen from eyewitness accounts. From the words of 500 American airmen saved by Chetniks in World War II. Short excerpts from: "Truth About World War II MIAs Still Covered Up." by Richard L. Felman The article appeared in "Tucson Citizen", Monday, November 9, 2024, (quote:) ... ... During World War II, I was one of more than 500 American airmen listed as missing in action for periods of up to 18 months after being shot down over German-occupied Yugoslavia.(end quote) Richard L. Felman is a retired Air Force major and president of the "National Committee of American Airmen Rescued by General Mihailovich." (The integral text of this article will be posted later).
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