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'''Dragoljub "Draža" Mihailović''' (]: Драгољуб "Дража" Михаиловић; also known as "Чича Дража" or "''Čiča Draža''", meaning "uncle Draža") (April 27, 1893 - July 17, 1946) was a ]n general now primarily remembered as the ] leader of the ]. '''Dragoljub "Draža" Mihailović''' (]: Драгољуб "Дража" Михаиловић; also known as "Чича Дража" or "''Čiča Draža''", meaning "uncle Draža") (April 27, 1893 - July 17, 1946) was a ]n general now primarily remembered as the ] leader of the ].


The organization, officially named the "Yugoslav Army in the Fatherland" (JVUO, ЈВУО), was founded as a royalist/nationalist Serbian resistance movement, but eventually transformed into a ] Axis militia<ref name="autogenerated1">David Martin, ''Ally Betrayed: The Uncensored Story of Tito and Mihailovich'', (New York: Prentice Hall, 1946), p. 34</ref>fighting against the ] in ]. His militia is accused of having committed mass ethnic cleansings of non-Serbs living in eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina. The organization, officially named the "Yugoslav Army in the Fatherland" (JVUO, ЈВУО), was founded as a royalist/nationalist Serbian resistance movement, but eventually transformed into a ] Axis militia<ref name="autogenerated1">David Martin, ''Ally Betrayed: The Uncensored Story of Tito and Mihailovich'', (New York: Prentice Hall, 1946), p. 34</ref>fighting against the ] in ]. His militia committed ethnic cleansings of non-Serbs living in the Sandzak region of Serbia and in eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina.
<ref></ref> After the war, he was tried and convicted of ] and ] by the ] authorities, and was consequently executed by ]. <ref></ref> After the war, he was tried and convicted of ] and ] by the ] authorities, and was consequently executed by ].



Revision as of 20:46, 17 July 2009

Draža Mihailović
Portrait
Nickname(s)"Čiča Draža" ("Чича Дража")
Serbian for "uncle"
Allegiance1941-1943 - Kingdom of Yugoslavia (nominally throughout the war)
1943-1945, Axis powers (de facto)
Service / branchArmy
Years of service1910-1946
RankGeneral
UnitArmy of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia
CommandsChetnik movement
Battles / warsYugoslav People's Liberation War (part of World War II)
AwardsLegion of Merit
Croix de Guerre
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Dragoljub "Draža" Mihailović (Cyrillic script: Драгољуб "Дража" Михаиловић; also known as "Чича Дража" or "Čiča Draža", meaning "uncle Draža") (April 27, 1893 - July 17, 1946) was a Serbian general now primarily remembered as the World War II leader of the Chetnik movement.

The organization, officially named the "Yugoslav Army in the Fatherland" (JVUO, ЈВУО), was founded as a royalist/nationalist Serbian resistance movement, but eventually transformed into a collaborationist Axis militiafighting against the Communist Partisans in Yugoslavia. His militia committed ethnic cleansings of non-Serbs living in the Sandzak region of Serbia and in eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina. After the war, he was tried and convicted of high treason and war crimes by the Communist Yugoslav authorities, and was consequently executed by firing squad.

Early life

Born in Ivanjica, Kingdom of Serbia, Mihailović went to the Serbian military academy in October 1910 and as a cadet fought in the Balkan Wars 1912–1913. In July 1913 he was given rank of Second Lieutenant as the top soldier in his class. He served in World War I and together with the Serbian army marched through Albania in 1915 during the long retreat of the Serbian army. He later received several decorations for his achievements on the Salonica front. Between the wars he became an elite staff officer and achieved the rank of colonel. He also served as military attaché in Sofia and Prague.

His military career almost came to an abrupt end after several incidents, the most important one being the idea of dividing the Yugoslav army along national lines into (Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes), for which he was sentenced to 30 days imprisonment. World War II found Mihailović occupying a minor position of assistant to chief of staff of the Second Army. In the last years before World War II, he was stationed in Celje, Slovenia (then Drava Banovina), where he was involved in several incidents of violent confrontation with the local ethnic Germans.

World War II

Following the Yugoslav defeat by Germany in April 1941, a small group of officers and soldiers led by Mihailović escaped in hope of finding Yugoslav army units still fighting in the mountains. After arriving at Ravna Gora, Serbia on May 8, 1941, he realized that his group of seven officers and twenty four non-commissioned officers and soldiers was the only one. At Ravna Gora, Mihailović organized the Chetnik detachment of the Yugoslav Army, which became the Military-Chetnik Detachments and finally the Yugoslav Army of the Homeland (Југословенска војска у отаџбини or Jugoslovenska vojska u otadžbini).

The first Chetnik formations led by Mihailović were formed around Ravna Gora on June 14, 1941. Most of 1941 was spent consolidating the scattered army remnants elsewhere and raising new forces. The stated goal of the Chetniks was the liberation of the country from the occupying armies including the forces of Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy and the Ustaše fascist regime of the Independent State of Croatia.

Mihailović decided against active resistance, allegedly because of Serb losses in World War I, in which the Kingdom of Serbia lost a quarter of its male population to the war. Instead, Mihailović gathered men and weapons in the easily defensible Serbian mountains, waiting for an Allied landing in the Balkans, upon which he could attack any Germans or Italians from behind. Mihailović discouraged sabotage due to German reprisals (such as more than 3,000 killed in Kraljevo and Kragujevac) unless some great gain could be accomplished; instead, he favored delayed sabotage that could not easily be traced.

Relations with the Partisans

In June 1941, prior to any Chetnik operation, Josip Broz Tito's Partisans started actively resisting the Germans, in what would become known as the Yugoslav People's Liberation War. However, while Tito favored full resistance, striking at the Germans and Italians with everything he had, Mihailović allegedly saw his strategy as wanting to "save his country with as few casualties as possible", while he believed that Tito wanted to "burn the country and the old order to the ground to better prepare it for communism". Lieutenant Colonel Živan L. Knežević, one of Mihailović's senior advisers and chief of the military cabinet for the Prime Minister of the royalist government stated that in his view "The communist Partisans wanted immediately to lead the people into an open fight against the forces of occupation although the people were completely bare-handed and the fight could not have benefited anybody ... thought that the uprising was premature and that, without any gain in prospect, it would have brought disproportionately great sacrifices. He was not able to convince the Partisans that an open fight could have only one result, namely, the annihilation of the population."

Mihailović supposedly came to view the Partisans as no better than the Nazis. A telegram sent on February 22, 1943 described an alleged incident where the Partisans brought a German/Ustaše force upon a town in the Bihać Republic (a Partisan-governed part of Yugoslav territory which they liberated); the town fled, but the Partisan force allegedly "abandoned" them to the enemy, which massacred them. Mihailović concluded that "his is the fight that the Communists wage, a fight which is directed by foreign propaganda with the aim of systematically annihilating our nation." The Partisans and Royalists descended into a brutal civil war. Whenever territory changed hands between them, anyone thought sympathetic to the other side was publicly executed.

Kosta Milovanović Pećanac, a First World War uprising leader and former Chetnik himself, considered the Partisans so grave a threat that he opted for collaboration with the Germans against them. Pećanac and Mihailović became rivals, both claiming the Chetnik heritage and with Pećanac commanding a much smaller force than Mihailović. Due to the rivalry between the two Chetnik commanders, Pećanac was shot in 1944 upon his capture by Mihailović's Chetniks, "officially" due to collaboration with the Axis. By 1944 Mihailović's Chetnik formations were openly aiding the German efforts against the Partisans and the Red Army. General Milan Nedić, the head of the Serbian collaborationist state (with whom Pećanac sided), transferred command of all of his forces to Mihailović in 1944.

Relations with the British and Americans

File:Document from William Donovan, head of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS).jpg
Document from William Donovan, head of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), stating that his intelligence unit in Yugoslavia personally observed Partizans attacking Chetniks while Chetniks were fighting Germans. It also says his men witnessed Partizans massacring civilians.

The British Special Operations Executive were being sent to aid Mihailović's forces beginning with the autumn of 1941. Mihailović rose in rank, becoming the Minister of War of the exile government in January 11, 1942 and General and Deputy Commander-in-Chief on June 17, 1942. At first, the British had a policy of aiding anyone fighting the Germans, however, as the civil war between the Partisans and the royalists intensified, the British realized that many of the precious resources being committed to Yugoslavia were being used only to further the civil war. Captain Duane Hudson of the SOE's report indicated that while Mihailović could be trusted to participate in a "rand finale against the Axis", they were taking a more passive stance. They also had dealings with Italian forces in Montenegro. By early 1943, the Royalists' support was beginning to collapse with the British. Randolph Churchill, the Prime Minister's son, was stationed at Tito's headquarters, where he reported directly to his father with reports of the Partisan's victories. Mihailović was frustrated with the British lack of aid and instructions over how to run "his" insurgency.

On February 28, 1943, Mihailović delivered an ill-advised speech to a group of his supporters saying that the Serb people were now "completely friendless" and that the "English are now fighting to the last Serb in Yugoslavia". Mihailović said, according to this source, that his enemies were now the Partisans, the Ustaše, the Moslems, and the Croats. When he had dealt with them, he would turn his attention toward the Italians and Germans. He then stated, at least according to the British liaison, that he needed no further contact with the Western democracies whose "sole aim was to win the war at the expense of others".

These comments doomed hopes of continued British support. By the middle of 1943, the Partisan movement had survived an intense period of Axis pressure. But before the Tehran Conference in November 1943, the British had decided to cease support of the Chetniks, and switch to supporting only Tito's Partisans, see Yugoslavia and the Allies. In 1943, Chetniks! The Fighting Guerrillas, a major Hollywood war film, was produced by Twentieth Century Fox documenting the role of Draža Mihailović and his guerrillas. The film starred Philip Dorn, Anna Sten, and Martin Kosleck and was directed by Louis King, based on a story by Jack Andrews, who co-wrote the screenplay.

Bosnia

The Royalists advanced into eastern Bosnia in 1943 where they engaged in combat with the Ustaše, resulting in several incidents of ethnic cleansing on both sides. For instance, historian Vladimir Žerjavić claims that roughly 40,000 lost their lives to forces affiliated with the Chetniks. Towards the end of the war, Mihailović went into hiding in East Bosnia.

Ethnic cleansing

Draža Mihajlović's infamous "Instrukcije" ("Instructions") of 1941, ordering the ethnic cleansing of Bosniaks, Croats, and others.
File:Report Djurisic.jpg
Chetnik Commander Đurišić reporting to Mihailović on the execution of his "Instrukcije" ("Instructions") in 1943.
See also: Ethnic cleansing

As part of his opportunist policies in support of the creation of Greater Serbia, Mihailović issued the following Instructions (Template:Lang-sr) to his commanders on December 20, 1941:

The mission of our units is:

  1. The struggle for the freedom of all of our people under the scepter of His Majesty, the King Peter II;
  2. The creation of Greater Yugoslavia, and within it Greater Serbia, ethnically clean within the borders of Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Srem, Banat, and Bačka;
  3. The struggle for the incorporation into our social structure of those non-liberated Slovenian territories under Italy and Germany (Trieste, Gorizia, Istria, and Kaernten), as well as Bulgaria and Northern Albania with Shkodra;
  4. The cleansing of all national minorities and anti-state elements from state territory;
  5. The creation of direct common borders between Serbia and Montenegro, as well as Serbia and Slovenia by cleansing the Muslim population from Sandžak, and the Muslim and Croat populations from Bosnia and Herzegovina;
  6. The punishment of all Ustashas and Muslims who have mercilessly destroyed our people in these tragic days;
  7. The settlement of the areas cleansed of national minorities and anti-state elements by Montenegrins (to be considered are poor, nationally patriotic, and honest families).

There may be no collaboration with the communists , as they are fighting against the Dynasty and in favor of socialist revolution. Albanians, Muslims, and Ustashas are to be treated in accordance with their merit for the horrendous crimes against our population, i.e., they are to be turned over to the People's Court. The Croats living on the territory under Italian occupation are to be treated based on their disposition at the given moment.

The exact number of Bosniak, Croat and other civilians who died at the hands of the Chetniks has never been officially established, although it pales in proportion to the almost one million people who died at the hands of the Ustaše. In Crimes Against Bosnian Muslims 1941-1945, historian Šemso Tucaković estimated that out of 150,000 Bosniaks who lost their lives in World War II, some 100,000 were murdered by Chetniks. He also listed at least 50,000 Bosnian Muslim names directly known to have been killed by Chetniks. According to World War II historian Vladimir Žerjavić, approximately 29,000 Muslims and 18,000 Croats were killed by Chetniks during World War II.Žerjavić's figures have been cited as too conservative by some sources and figures of up to 300,000 non-Serbs have been suggested, but these cannot be confirmed unanimously.

Some of the major World War II Chetnik massacres against ethnic Croats and Bosniaks include:

  • July 1941, Herzegovina (Bileca, Stolac) - approximately 1,150 civilians killed;
  • December 1941/January 1942, eastern Bosnia (Foča, Goražde) - approximately 2,050 civilians killed;
  • August 1942, eastern Bosnia and Sandžak (Foča, Bukovica) - approximately 1,000 civilians killed;
  • August 1942, eastern Bosnia (Ustikolina, Jahorina) - approximately 2,500 civilians killed;
  • October 1942, central Bosnia (Prozor) - approximately 1,250 civilians killed;
  • January 1943, Sandžak (Bijelo Polje) - approximately 1,500 civilians killed;
  • February 1943, eastern Bosnia and Sandžak (Foča, Čajniče, Pljevlja) - approximately +9,200 civilians killed.

Trial

Main article: The Trial of Draža Mihailović

Mihailović was captured on March 13, 1946 by agents of the Yugoslav security agency OZNA. He was charged on 47 counts. In the end the court found him guilty on 8 counts, including crimes against humanity and high treason. The trial lasted from June 10 to July 15, he was found guilty and sentenced to death by firing squad on July 15. The Presidium of the National Assembly rejected the clemency appeal on July 16. He was executed together with nine other officers in the early hours of July 18, 1946, in Lisičiji Potok, about 200 meters from the former Royal Palace, and buried in an unmarked grave on the same spot. His main prosecutor was Miloš Minić, later Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Yugoslav government.

After the war

Due to the efforts of Major Richard L. Felman and his friends, President Harry S. Truman, on the recommendation of General Dwight D. Eisenhower, posthumously awarded Mihailović the Legion of Merit, for the rescue of American airmen by the Chetniks. For the first time in history, this high award and the story of the rescue was classified secret by the State Department so as not to offend the communist government of Yugoslavia.

"General Dragoljub Mihailovich distinguished himself in an outstanding manner as Commander-in-Chief of the Yugoslavian Army Forces and later as Minister of War by organizing and leading important resistance forces against the enemy which occupied Yugoslavia, from December 1941 to December 1944. Through the undaunted efforts of his troops, many United States airmen were rescued and returned safely to friendly control. General Mihailovich and his forces, although lacking adequate supplies, and fighting under extreme hardships, contributed materially to the Allied cause, and were instrumental in obtaining a final Allied victory." (March 29, 1948, Harry S. Truman)

Almost sixty years after his death, on May 9, 2005, Draža Mihailović's daughter, Gordana, was presented with a decoration bestowed posthumously on her father by United States President Harry S. Truman in 1948, for the assistance provided to the crews of US bombers that were gunned down on the territory under Chetnik control in World War II. , July 2009 {{citation}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

References

  1. David Martin, Ally Betrayed: The Uncensored Story of Tito and Mihailovich, (New York: Prentice Hall, 1946), p. 34
  2. Britannica Online Encyclopedia
  3. Freeman, p. 123
  4. Freeman, p. 124
  5. Freeman, pp.125-26
  6. Freeman, p. 126
  7. Freeman, p. 128
  8. Freeman, p. 130
  9. Freeman, p. 134
  10. Vladimir Zerjavic, Response to Dr Bulajić on his writing on Internet of April 8, 1998
  11. Vladimir Žerjavić's response to Dr Bulajić on his writing on Internet of April 8, 1998
  12. Zdravko Dizdar, Chetnik Genocidal Crimes against Croatians and Muslims during World War II (1941-1945)
  13. Noel Malcolm, Bosnia: a Short History (1994) - page 188 details the Foca-Cajnice massacres
  14. Lampe, Yugoslavia as History, pp. 206, 209-10
  15. Glenny, The Balkans, pp. 494-95

Bibliography

  • Freeman, Gregory A. (2007). The Forgotten 500. 80 Strand, London: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-451-22212-1. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)CS1 maint: location (link)
  • Juce, Sinoc. Pjetlovi nad Tigrovima, Sanski Most, BiH: Begovic-Bosanska Krajina Press 2007
  • Martin, David. Ally Betrayed: The Uncensored Story of Tito and Mihailović. New York: Prentice-Hall, 1946.
  • Martin, David. Patriot or Traitor: The Case of General Mihailović: Proceedings and Report of the Commission of Inquiry of the Committee for a Fair Trial for Draja Mihailović. Hoover Archival Documentaries. Hoover Institution Publication, volume 191. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, Stanford University, 1978.
  • Roberts, Walter R. Tito, Mihailović, and the Allies, 1941–1945. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 1973.
  • Trew, Simon. Britain, Mihailović, and the Chetniks, 1941–42. Basingstoke, UK: Macmillan; New York: St. Martin's Press in association with King's College, London, 1998.
  • Tucaković, Semso. Srpski zlocini nad Bosnjacima Muslimanima, 1941 - 1945. Sarajevo: El Kalem, 1995.

See also

External links

Photos

Collaboration in Yugoslavia during World War II
Puppet regimes
Political
organizations
People
Croatian &
Bosniak
Serbian
Slovene
Montenegrin
Albanian
Bulgarian
Military
organizations
Chetnik movement (broad term)
Croatian Armed Forces
Government of National Salvation
Slovene military organizations
Italian governorate of Montenegro /
German occupied territory of Montenegro
Italian protectorate of Albania (1939–1943) and
German occupation of Albania
Bulgarian occupation /
Independent State of Macedonia
See also
Invasion of Yugoslavia
World War II in Yugoslavia
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