Operation Uzice: Difference between revisions

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{{Short description|1941 German Wehrmacht operation in Yugoslavia, World War II}}
{{Disputed|Scope of article|date=June 2015}}
{{Infobox military conflict
| conflict = Operation ''Uzice''
| partof = [[World War II in Yugoslavia]]
| image = [[File:Operacija Užice.jpg|300px]]
| captionimage_size = 365
| caption =
| date = September 27 – November 29, 1941
| place = Occupied [[Yugoslavia]] {{coord|43.51|N|19.51|E|display=inline,title|type:event}} (today’s [[Bosnia and Herzegovina|Bosnian]]/[[Serbia]]n border, including the [[Yugoslav Partisans|Partisan]] "[[Republic of Užice]]")
| result = German victory
*[[Yugoslav Partisans|Partisan]] and [[Chetniks|Chetnik]] retreat and heavy losses; breakup and conflict between the two movements
| combatant1 = = '''September 27:'''<br>
{{flagflagcountry|Nazi Germany|name=Germany}}<br>
*{{flagicon imageflag|S Flag.svg}} [[Government of National Salvation]]<br>}}
{{flag|Independent State of Croatia}}
| combatant1a = '''November 1 on:'''<br>
{{flagcountry|Nazi Germany}}<br>
{{flag|Nazi Germany|name=Germany}}<br>{{flagicon image|S Flag.svg}} [[Government of National Salvation]]<br>{{flag|Independent State of Croatia}}
*{{flag|Government of National Salvation}}
| combatant3 = '''September 27:'''<br>
{{flagicon image|Yugoslav Partisans flag (1942-1945).svg}} [[Yugoslav Partisans|Partisans]]<br>[[File:Chetniks Flag.svg|22px|border|Chetniks]] [[Chetniks]]
{{flag|Yugoslav Partisans}}<br>{{flag|Chetniks}}
| combatant2a = '''November 1 on:'''<br>
[[File:Chetniks Flag.svg|22px|border|Chetniks]] [[Chetniks]]
{{flag|Chetniks}}
| combatant3a = '''November 1 on:'''<br>
{{flagicon image|Yugoslav Partisans flag (1942-1945).svg}} [[Yugoslav Partisans|Partisans]]
{{flag|Yugoslav Partisans}}
| commander1 = {{flagicon|Nazi Germany}} [[Franz Böhme]]
| commander2 = [[File:Chetniks Flag.svg|22px|border|Chetniks]] [[Draža Mihailović]]
| commander3commander2 = {{flagicon image|Yugoslav Partisans flag (1942-1945).svgChetniks}} [[Josip BrozDraža TitoMihailović]]
| commander3 = {{flagicon|Yugoslav Partisans}} [[Josip Broz Tito]]
| strength1 = [[{{flagicon image|113th Infanterie Division Logo.svg|22px|113th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)|}} [[113th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)]]<br>{{flagicon [[image|342. Inf Div.png|22px|342nd Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)|}} [[342nd Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)]]<br>''Elements of:''<br>{{flagicon image|704th Infantry Division Logo.svg|22px|link=104th Jäger Division (Wehrmacht)}} [[104th Jäger Division (Wehrmacht)|704th Infantry Division]]<br>{{flagicon image|114. Jaeger Div.png|22px|link=114th Jäger Division (Wehrmacht)}} [[114th Jäger Division (Wehrmacht)|714th Infantry Division]]<br>{{flagicon image |717 Infantry Division Logo.svg|22px|link=117th Jäger Division (Wehrmacht)}} [[117th Jäger Division (Wehrmacht)|717th Infantry Division]]<br>{{flagicon image|118. Jaeger Div.png|22px|border|link=118th Jäger Division (Wehrmacht)}} [[118th Jäger Division (Wehrmacht)|718th Infantry Division]]<br>[[100th Panzer Brigade]] (one battalion)<br>{{flagicon image ||22px}} [[Serbian Volunteer Corps (World War II)|Serbian Volunteer Corps]]; total around 80,000<ref name=Beckett>Beckett, I.F.W. (ed., 1988) ''The Roots of Counter-Insurgency'', Blandford Press, London. {{ISBN |0-7137-1922-2}}</ref>
| strength2 = {{flagicon|Chetniks}} Around 3,000 (a proportion of which did not participate)<ref name="Tomasevich 1975">[[#Tomasevich_1975Tomasevich 1975|Tomasevich (1975)]]</ref>
| strength3 = {{flagicon|Yugoslav Partisans}} Around 20,000<ref name=Beckett/>
| casualties1 = Unknown
| casualties2casualties1 = Unknown
| casualties2 = Unknown
| casualties3 = 4,180 killed, <br>c. 3,800 missing, <br>c. 6,700 wounded<ref name=Beckett/>
| campaignbox = {{Campaignbox Yugoslavia}}
}}
 
'''Operation ''Uzice''''' was the first major counter-insurgency operation by the [[Nazi Germany|German]] [[Wehrmacht]] on the occupied territory of the [[Kingdom of Yugoslavia]] during [[World War II]]. The operation was directed against the [[Užice Republic]], the first of several "free territories" liberated by the [[Yugoslav Partisans]]. It was named after the town of [[Užice]], and is associated with the '''First Enemy Offensive''' ({{lang-sh-Latn|Prva neprijateljska ofenziva/ofanziva}}) in [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|Yugoslavia]]n historiography. The security forces of the German-installed [[Government of National Salvation|puppet regime]] of [[Milan Nedić]] also participated in the offensive.
 
After the offensive commenced on 20 September 1941, the Partisans initially received assistance from local [[Chetnik]] formations in opposing the Germans, but after weeks of disagreement and low-level conflict between the two insurgent factions about how the resistance should proceed, the Chetniks launched an attack on the Partisans in the towns of [[Užice]] and [[Požega, Serbia|Požega]] on November 1 which resulted in the Chetniks being repulsed. The Partisans then counter-attacked decisively, but by early December had been driven from liberated area by the German and Serb collaborationist offensive.<ref>[[#Tomasevich_1975|Tomasevich (1975)]], pp.145–155</ref>
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===German reaction===
In the meantime, on 16 September 1941 Field Marshal [[Wilhelm Keitel]] issued an order applying to all Europe to kill 50–100 hostages for every German soldier killed.<ref name=Beckett/> German commander [[Franz Böhme]] ordered Keitel’sKeitel's directive to be carried out in Serbia in the most drastic manner and that with no exception one hundred hostages would be executed for every German killed.<ref>[[#Roberts_1973|Roberts (1973)]], pp.31–32</ref> Invested by Hitler with total authority and told to "restore order for the longer term in the entire area by the most radical means", Böhme made it clear from the beginning that he intended if necessary to wage war against the whole Serbian population by considering all civilians as enemies.<ref>[[Hannes Heer,]] Heerand [[Klaus Naumann, (historian)|Klaus Naumann]], [httphttps://books.google.frcom/books?id=Sh77amvItIMC&pg=PA42&dq=%22franz+bohme%22%22one+hundred%22%22serbia%22&cdpg=2#v=onepage&q=%22franz%20bohme%22%22one%20hundred%22%22serbia%22&f=falsePA42 ''War Of Extermination: The German Military In World War II''], Berghahn Books, 2004, pp.43–45</ref> He was also instructed to apply the order directive concerning the taking of hostages not just to attacks concerning German military personnel, but also ethnic Germans, Bulgarian military personnel, individuals in the service of the occupation authority, and eventually to members of the Serbian administration. Each act of insurgency was to be considered of "communist" origin. The German military declared Serbia a war zone, and villages began to be torched.<ref>[[#Pavlowitch_2008|Pavlowitch (2008)]], p.60</ref> Ten German soldiers having been killed in a joint Partisan-Chetnik attack on [[Kraljevo]], 1,700 hostages were shot on 20 October. Several other thousand hostages were executed during the following weeks in reprisals against the insurgents’ attacks.
 
===Initial operations===
To clear this territory, the German Army employed its [[113th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)|113th Infantry Division]] and [[342nd Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)|342nd Infantry Division]], and parts of 704, 714, 717 and 718 Infantry Divisions. They were assisted by [[Dimitrije Ljotić]]’s [[Serbian Volunteer Corps (World War II)|Serbian Volunteer Corps]] and [[Kosta Pećanac]]’s [[Pećanac Chetniks of Kosta Pećanac|personal Chetnik faction]]. As German forces entered the territory they faced significant resistance, especially on Rudnik Mountain and in [[Kraljevo]]. As retribution for a lost manmen and the way their bodies were mutilated by the partisans, Germans executed 72,000-2,700 people in Kragujevac between September 21 and September 23.<ref name="OE_JLZ" /> On September 29, the offensive officially started when the 342nd Infantry Division attacked Partisans on the road between [[Šabac]] and [[Loznica]]. Concurrently, an offensive known as ''Operation Višegrad'' was launched in [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]], then annexed as part of the [[Independent State of Croatia]], as the [[Army of the Independent State of Croatia]] set to destroy the Partisan and Chetnik holdouts in and around [[Rogatica]] and [[Višegrad]]. Attacks by NDH troops went on for several weeks, without any side making substantial gains.
 
===Chetnik attack===
By the beginning of October, several small towns in Serbia were in the hands of Partisan or Chetnik groups. While distrustful of each other, Partisans and Chetniks started taking joint actions and besieging larger towns. Their respective commands were set in [[Užice]] and [[Požega, Serbia|Požega]], 15&nbsp;km apart.<ref>[[#Pavlowitch_2008|Pavlowitch (2008)]], pp. 61–62</ref> During October, all hopes of a continued cooperation were drained away in sporadic bickering and outright violations of agreements. During these weeks it also became obvious that, while the Partisan command had no doubts about continuing the struggle, the Chetniks were wavering and looking for a way of giving up the fight against the Germans and directing all their power against the Partisans. A process of polarization took place, taking several weeks and producing shifts in loyalties. The Chetnik detachments of Rev. Vlada ZećevićZečević and Lieutenant Ratko Martinović switched to the Partisans during this time.<ref>[[#Tomasevich_1975|Tomasevich (1975)]], p. 141</ref>
 
Tito and Mihailović met again on October 26 or 27, 1941 in the town of Brajići near [[Ravna Gora, Serbia(highland)|Ravna Gora]] in a final attempt to achieve an understanding, but found consensus only on secondary issues.<ref>[[#Pavlowitch_2008|Pavlowitch (2008)]], p. 62</ref> Mihailović rejected principal points of Tito's proposal including the establishment of common headquarters, joint military actions against the Germans and quisling formations, establishment of a combined staff for the supply of troops, and the formation of national liberation committees.<ref name="Ramet 143">[[#Ramet_2006|Ramet (2006)]], p. 143</ref> Mihailović did not arrive at the meeting in good faith. The Chetnik command had already dispatched to Belgrade Colonel Branislav Pantić and Captain Nenad Mitrović, two of Mihailović's aides, where they contacted German intelligence officer Captain Josef Matl on October 28. They informed the [[Abwehr]] that they have been empowered by Colonel Mihailović to establish contact with Prime Minister [[Milan Nedić]] and the appropriate [[Wehrmacht]] command posts to inform them that the Colonel was willing to "place himself and his men at their disposal for fighting communism". The two representatives further gave the Germans their commander's guarantee for the "definitive clearing of communist bands in Serbian territory" and requested aid from the occupation forces in the form of "about 5,000 rifles, 350 machine guns, and 20 heavy machine guns".<ref>[[#Tomasevich_1975|Tomasevich (1975)]], p. 148</ref>
 
After more than a month of disagreements and minor collisions, the events culminated on November 1 in a massed Chetnik attack in and around the town of Užice where the Partisans had their headquarters. Apparently underestimating the Partisans' numbers, the Chetnik forces were quickly beaten back. Captain [[Duane Hudson]], British liaison officer in Yugoslavia, then advised the Allied command in Cairo to stop supplying the [[Chetniks]] so the British arms would not be used for civil warfare. The Chetniks, who had already received one shipment of weapons sent by parachute, then waited in vain for a second one, even though the British later resumed helping them.<ref>[[#Roberts_1973|Roberts (1973)]], pp. 34–35</ref> Both Tito and Mihailović, however, were still willing to reach a truce, although both were pressed by some of their officers to attack the other as soon as possible; ceasefires alternated with ultimatums, as bloody reprisals between the two resistance movements affected both sides' morals and alienated civilians.<ref name="Stevan K. Pawlowitch, p. 63">[[#Pavlowitch_2008|Pavlowitch (2008)]], p. 63</ref> At one point, Mihailović's forces, after mounting a surprise attack on the Partisans, found themselves surrounded. The Partisans allowed them to go free, which political observers have attributed to military foresight, as the Chetniks would continue to attack German forces.<ref name="ndu">Eds. (1995) ''Tito's Victory: Theory into reality'' (Washington DC : National Defense University)</ref>
 
==Aftermath==
Mihailović eventually realized that his force was unable to protect civilians against German reprisals.<ref name="Stevan K. Pawlowitch, p. 63"/> The attitude of some of his officers had accelerated the breakup with the Partisans. Faced with indiscipline and a lack of ammunition, he soon found his troops decimated by the conflict with both Germans and Partisans.<ref name="Stevan K. Pawlowitch, p. 65">[[#Pavlowitch_2008|Pavlowitch (2008)]], p. 65</ref> A meeting was subsequently arranged as an initiative by German Captain Josef Matl and Chetnik Colonel Branislav
 
Following the defeat, Mihailović was left with greatly reduced troops. German Captain Josef Matl and Chetnik Colonel Branislav Pantić (one of two Chetnik delegates to the occupation authorities in Belgrade) arranged a meeting between Mihailović and German military intelligence ([[Abwehr]]) representatives. The meeting took place in the village of Divci on November 11, while the exact circumstances of the meeting remain controversial. There are indications that Mihailović offered to cease activities in the towns and along the major communication lines, but ultimately no agreement was reached at the time due to German demands for the complete surrender of the Chetniks.<ref>Branko Miljuš, [httphttps://books.google.frcom/books?id=OSZjgQ55smgC&pg=PA120&dq=mihailovic+les+for%C3%AAts&cdpg=4#v=onepage&q=mihailovic%20les%20for%C3%AAts&f=falsePA120 La Révolution yougoslave], L'Âge d'homme, 1982, p. 119</ref> After the negotiations, an attempt was made by the Germans to arrest Mihailović.<ref name="Stevan K. Pawlowitch, p. 65"/> Mihailović's negotiations with the enemy were carefully kept secret from both the Partisans, the Yugoslav government-in-exile, and from the British and their representative Captain Hudson.
 
German forces and their allies advanced from the north and east towards Užice, and by the 2nd half of November the Partisan forces were in full retreat. On November 25, the final phase of the German offensive against both rebel groups began. Tito and Mihailović had one last phone conversation : Tito announced that he would defend his positions, while Mihailović said that he would disperse. Ultimately, on November 29, the Partisans, including their headquarters which were stationed there, left Užice.<ref name="Stevan K. Pawlowitch, p. 63"/>
 
On 10 December 10, a bounty was put on Mihailović's head, while he himself narrowly escaped capture.<ref>[[#Pavlowitch_2008|Pavlowitch (2008)]], pp. 65–66</ref> Faced with the impact of the German offensive, Mihailović decided to temporarily disband most of his forces and keep only a small staff. The remnants of his Chetniks retreated to the hills of [[Ravna Gora, Serbia(highland)|Ravna Gora]], but were under German attack throughout December.<ref>[[#Roberts_1973|Roberts (1973)]], pp. 37–38</ref>
 
Both Tito and Mihailović had suffered a heavy setback. Tito had been surprised by the scale of the uprising, and had found himself managing inexperienced peasant fighters who were reluctant to move away from their towns, or to accept authority and indoctrination. Mihailović had also been unable to impose discipline on his officers, and had not received sufficient help from the British.<ref name="Stevan K. Pawlowitch, p. 65"/>
 
After leaving Užice, the Partisans headed for [[Sandžak]], into Italian-occupied territory. Some detachments failed to retreat on time and were dispersed or destroyed. After the main Partisan forces left for Sandžak, only parts of 5five Partisan detachments were present in Serbia.<ref name="OE_JLZ" />
 
==See also==
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==References==
* Beckett I.F.W. (ed., 1988) ''The Roots of Counter-Insurgency'', Blandford Press, London. {{ISBN |0-7137-1922-2}}
*{{cite book
|last1=Cohen
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|year=1996
|isbn=0-89096-760-1
|url=https://archive.org/details/serbiassecretwar0000cohe
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=Fz1PW_wnHYMC
|url-access=registration
|ref=Cohen_1996
}}
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|year=2006
|isbn=0-19726-380-1
|url=
|ref=Hoare_2006
}}
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|location=New York
|year=2008
|isbn=978-1-85065-895-15
|url=httphttps://books.google.com/books?id=R8d2409V9tEC&printsec=frontcover
|ref=Pavlowitch_2008
}}
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|publisher=Indiana University Press
|isbn=0271016299
|url=httphttps://books.google.com/books?id=FTw3lEqi2-oC&printsec=frontcover
|ref=Ramet_2006
}}
* {{cite book|last=Shepherd|first=Ben|title=Terror in the Balkans: German Armies and Partisan Warfare|year=2012|publisher=Harvard University Press|isbn=978-0-674-04891-1|url=|ref=Shepherd_2012}}
*{{cite book
|first=Walter R.
|last=Roberts
|title=Tito, Mihailović and the Allies 1941–1945
|url=https://archive.org/details/titomihailovict00walt
|url-access=registration
|publisher=Rutgers University Press
|year=1973
|isbn=9780813507408
|ref=Roberts_1973
}}
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|location=San Francisco
|isbn=0-8047-0857-6
|url=httphttps://books.google.com/books?id=yoCaAAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover
|ref=Tomasevich_1975
}}
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{{Campaignbox Yugofront}}
{{World War II}}
{{Wars and battles involving Serbs}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Uzice, Operation}}
[[Category:Seven Enemy Offensives]]
[[Category:Military operations of World War II involving Germany|Uzice]]
[[Category:Conflicts in 1941]]
[[Category:Anti-partisan operations of World War II|Uzice]]
[[Category:1941 in Yugoslavia]]
[[Category:Yugoslavia in World War II]]
[[Category:Battles of World War II involving Chetniks]]
[[Category:Battles involving the Yugoslav Partisans]]
[[Category:September 1941 events]]
[[Category:October 1941 events]]
[[Category:November 1941 events]]