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Commissioner Government

The Commissioner Government (Serbian: Комесарска влада, Komesarska vlada) was a short-lived Serbian collaborationist puppet government established in the German-occupied territory of Serbia within the Axis-partitioned Kingdom of Yugoslavia during World War II. It operated from 30 April to 29 August 1941, was headed by Milan Aćimović, and is also referred to as the Commissars Government or Council of Commissars. Of the ten commissioners, four had previously been ministers in various Yugoslav governments, and two had been assistant ministers. The members were pro-German, anti-semitic and anti-communist, and believed that Germany would win the war. The Aćimović government lacked any semblance of power, and was merely an instrument of the German occupation regime, carrying out its orders within the occupied territory. Under the overall control of the German Military Commander in Serbia, supervision of its day-to-day operations was the responsibility of the chief of the German administrative staff, SS-Brigadeführer and State Councillor Harald Turner. One of its early tasks was the implementation of German orders regarding the registration of Jews and Romani people living in the territory, and the placing of severe restrictions on their liberty.

Commissioner Government
Puppet government overview
Formed27 April – 1 May 1941
Dissolved29 August 1941
JurisdictionGerman occupied territory of Serbia
HeadquartersBelgrade
Minister responsible

In early July, a few days after a communist-led mass uprising commenced, Aćimović reshuffled his government, replacing three commissioners and appointing deputies for most of the portfolios. By mid-July, the Germans had decided that the Aćimović regime was incompetent and unable to deal with the uprising, and began looking for a replacement. This resulted in the resignation of the Commissioner Government at the end of August, and the appointment of the Government of National Salvation led by former Minister of the Army and Navy, Armijski đeneral[a] Milan Nedić, in which Aćimović initially retained the interior portfolio. The members of the Commissioner Government collaborated with the occupiers as a means to spare Serbs from political influences that they considered more dangerous than the Germans, such as democracy, communism and multiculturalism. They actively assisted the Germans in exploiting the population and the economy, and took an "extremely opportunistic" view of the Jewish question, regarding their own participation in the Holocaust as "unpleasant but unavoidable". There is no evidence that the collaboration of the Commissioner Government moderated German occupation policies in any way.

Background edit

 
The partition of Yugoslavia by the Axis powers

In April 1941, the Kingdom of Yugoslavia was invaded and quickly defeated by the Axis powers. Yugoslavia was partitioned, and as part of this, the Germans established a military government of occupation in an area roughly the same as the pre-1912 Kingdom of Serbia, consisting of Serbia proper, the northern part of Kosovo (around Kosovska Mitrovica), and the Banat.[2] The Germans did this to secure two strategic lines of communication – the Danube river, and the railway line that connected Belgrade with Salonika in occupied Greece, and thence by sea to North Africa. The German occupied territory of Serbia was also rich in non-ferrous metals such as lead, antimony and copper, which Germany needed to support its war effort.[3]

Even before the Yugoslav surrender on 17 April, the German Army High Command (German: Oberkommando des Heeres, or OKH) had issued a proclamation to the population under German occupation which included severe penalties for acts of violence and sabotage; the surrender of military firearms and radio transmitters; a list of acts punishable according to military law, including unauthorised public meetings; the continuation of the operation of government agencies including police, businesses and schools; prohibition of hoarding; fixing of prices and wages; and the use of occupation currency.[4] The exact boundaries of the occupied territory had been fixed in a directive issued by Adolf Hitler on 12 April 1941, which also directed the creation of the military administration.[2] This directive was followed up on 20 April 1941 by orders issued by the Chief of the OKH which established the Military Commander in Serbia as the head of the occupation regime, responsible to the Quartermaster-General of the OKH. In the interim, the staff for the military government had been assembled in Germany and the duties of the Military Commander in Serbia had been detailed. These included safeguarding the lines of communication, executing the economic orders issued by Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring, and establishing and maintaining peace and order. In the short-term, he was also responsible for guarding the huge numbers of Yugoslav prisoners of war, and safeguarding captured weapons and munitions.[5]

The military commander's staff was divided into military and administrative branches. He was allocated personnel to form four area commands and about ten district commands, which reported to the chief of the administrative staff, and the military staff allocated the troops of the four local defence battalions across the area commands. The first military commander in the occupied territory was General der Flieger[b] Helmuth Förster, a Luftwaffe officer, appointed on 20 April 1941,[7] assisted by the chief of his administrative staff, SS-Brigadeführer[c] and State Councillor Harald Turner.[8] Other than military commander's staff, there were several senior figures in Belgrade who represented key non-military arms of the German government. Prominent among these was NSFK-Obergruppenführer[d] Franz Neuhausen, who had been initially appointed by Göring as plenipotentiary general for economic affairs in the territory on 17 April.[9][10] A further key figure in the initial German administration was SS-Standartenführer[e] Wilhelm Fuchs, who commanded Einsatzgruppe Serbia, which consisted of Sicherheitsdienst (Security Service, or SD) and Sicherheitspolizei (Security Police, or SiPo), and Geheime Staatspolizei (Secret State Police, or Gestapo) detachments, and controlled the 64th Reserve Police Battalion of the Ordnungspolizei (Order Police, or Orpo). While he was formally responsible to Turner, Fuchs also reported directly to his superiors in Berlin.[11][12]

Despite these organs of military occupation, and the orders issued by OKH, regulating as they did a wide range of administrative, political, economic, cultural and social matters, the Germans still needed to establish a public administrative body that would implement their directives. It was decided to form a puppet government for that purpose.[13]

Establishment edit

 
Milan Aćimović was selected to lead the collaborationist regime.

A search began for a suitable Serb to lead a collaborationist regime.[14] From the date of the Yugoslav capitulation, pro-German politicians, including the president of the fascist Zbor movement, Dimitrije Ljotić, former Belgrade police chief and Minister of the Interior, Milan Aćimović, the current Belgrade police chief, Dragomir Jovanović, along with Đorđe Perić, Steven Klujić and Tanasije Dinić met almost daily to assist in this process.[15] The Germans would have preferred the pro-Axis former Prime Minister, Milan Stojadinović, but he had been sent into exile before the coup.[16] Several high-profile men were considered by the Germans, including former Prime Minister Dragiša Cvetković, former Foreign Minister Aleksandar Cincar-Marković, Aćimović, Ljotić, and Jovanović.[14]

Hitler preferred someone who was both flexible and had some local popularity to lead a puppet government in German-occupied Serbia.[16] The Germans passed over Ljotić as they believed that he had a "dubious reputation among Serbs".[14] Cincar-Marković did not want to be part of a collaborationist administration.[17] He was also in poor health. Cvetković was suspected of being pro-British and harbouring sympathies towards Freemasonry. He was also believed to have had Roma ancestry, which the Germans deemed unacceptable.[16] Aćimović, a virulent anti-communist, had been in close contact with the German police and security services before the war.[13] This included being appointed deputy to the German head of Interpol, Reinhard Heydrich, who was also the chief of the SD. Aćimović was also in close contact with the head of the Gestapo, Heinrich Müller.[16]

Förster decided on Aćimović, who in early 1939 had briefly been Minister of the Interior in Stojadinović's pro-Axis government. With Förster's approval, he formed his Commissioner Government between 27 April and 1 May,[f] consisting of ten commissioners.[13] Some sources refer to it as the Commissars Government,[21] or Council of Commissars.[22]

The other nine commissioners were Risto Jojić, Dušan Letica, Dušan Pantić, Momčilo Janković, Milisav Vasiljević, Lazo M. Kostić, Stevan Ivanić, Stanislav Josifović and Jevrem Protić; each commissioner ran one of the former Yugoslav ministries, except for the Ministry of Army and Navy, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which had been abolished.[13] According to the author Philip J. Cohen, Aćimović, Vasiljević and Ivanić were German agents prior to the invasion of Yugoslavia.[19] In addition to being vehemently pro-German and antisemitic, the commissioners were also strongly anti-communist, and believed that Germany would win the war.[23] They represented a wide spectrum of pre-war Serbian political parties: Vasiljević and Ivanić both had close links to Zbor; Pantić, Kostić and Protić being members of the centre-right People's Radical Party; and Josifović was a member of the Democratic Party. No representatives of the outlawed Communist Party or the British-backed Serbian Agrarian Party were included.[24]

The new administration was experienced; like Aćimović, Jojić, Letica and Pantić had all served as ministers in various cabinets, Josifović and Protić had been assistant ministers, Kostić was a university professor, and others were experts in their respective fields. Aćimović maintained the existing Yugoslav government apparatus and staff, recalling personnel to their duties, and former Yugoslav officials played important roles in the administration. Despite the fact that Serbs dominated government positions in interwar Yugoslavia,[25] there were some non-Serb officials in Belgrade, those who left the occupied territory had to be replaced, and most Serbian officials known or suspected to be anti-German either resigned or were removed. The administration manifested German intentions to make best use of those who were willing to collaborate and save the available German administrative staff for higher priority work.[26]

Composition of the first Commissioner Government[27]
Ministry Commissioner
Head of the Council of Commissioners
Interior
Milan Aćimović
Education
Risto Jojić
Finance
Dušan Letica
Post and Telegraph
Dušan Pantić
Ministry of Justice
Momčilo Janković
National Economy
Milosav Vasiljević
Transport
Lazo M. Kostić
Social Policy
Stevan Ivanić
Construction
Stanislav Josifović
Agriculture
Jeremija Protić

Operation edit

Initial tasks edit

 
Map showing the counties and districts of the occupied territory

During May, the earlier proclamation of the OKH was followed by orders issued by Förster, requiring the registration of printing presses and imposing restrictions on the press within the occupied territory. Orders were also issued regarding the operation of theatres and other places of entertainment, and imposing German criminal law in the occupied territory.[28] Förster also ordered the resumption of production, disestablished the National Bank of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, and established the Serbian National Bank to replace it.[29] From the outset, the Aćimović government lacked any semblance of power.[30] It was effectively a low-grade and basic instrument of the German military occupation regime, which performed administrative duties within the occupied territory on behalf of the Germans.[31] The three main tasks of the Aćimović administration were to secure the acquiescence of the population to the German occupation, help restore services, and "identify and remove undesirables from public services".[17] This included Jews, Roma and "unreliable" Serbs.[32]

The Commissioner Government was capable of handling routine administrative tasks and maintaining law and order in a peacetime situation only,[33] and was closely controlled by Turner and Neuhausen.[17] Neuhausen was effectively an economic dictator, and had complete control over the economy of the occupied territory and finances of the puppet administration, to one end – maximising the contribution they made to the German war effort.[34] This was demonstrated in the fixing of wages and prices; officially the responsibility of Letica's finance department, they were actually set by Neuhausen's staff. Also in May, Förster ordered the Aćimović administration to investigate the causes of the invasion. The inquiry concluded that the Yugoslav government had "recklessly brushed off the peaceful intentions of the Third Reich and provoked the war".[35]

One of the first tasks of the administration involved carrying out Turner's orders for the registration of all Jews and Romani people in the occupied territory and implementation of severe restrictions on their activities. These were aimed at bringing the occupied territory into line with the rest of Nazi-occupied Europe, and included the wearing of yellow armbands, the introduction of forced labour and curfews, and restricted access to food. Turner explicitly stated that "[t]he Serbian Authorities [ie the Commissioner Government] are responsible for the implementation of all measures contained in the order".[36] By this means, the Commissioner Government took part, albeit under German orders, in the "registration, marking, pauperisation, and social exclusion of the Jewish community".[36] Aćimović's Interior Ministry included a section dedicated to implementing anti-Jewish and anti-Roma laws,[37] but the primary means for the carrying out of such tasks was the 3,000-strong Serbian gendarmerie, which was based on elements of the former Yugoslav gendarmerie units remaining in the territory,[38] the Drinski and Dunavski regiments.[39] It had been formed on 17 April on Förster's orders,[32] and its acting head was Colonel Jovan Trišić.[40] The gendarmerie was also responsible for collecting taxes and overseeing the harvest, and was therefore unpopular, particularly with the rural population. German concerns about the reliability of the gendarmerie meant that it was never adequately armed or equipped for its tasks.[32]

The makeup of the puppet administration, with representation from a number of different political parties, meant that the Germans had no concerns about it developing a unified front that might hamper German efforts to pacify the territory and exploit it economically. Its very limited powers were further eroded by constant German interference in its operations, and the requirement that all laws drafted by the commissioners could only be implemented after their approval by the Germans. The overall German approach to Aćimović and his administration was uneven, as Turner and the plenipotentiary of the Foreign Office, Felix Benzler, both pushed for co-operation and accommodation with Aćimović, while Förster and Fuchs considered the puppet government to be a mere supplement to the German military administration that included a police function. When Aćimović requested the release of Serb POWs, arguing that the camps could become hotbeds of nationalist and communist agitation, and that the men were needed as labourers, Förster flatly refused and deported them to Germany.[41] In mid-May, Aćimović's administration issued a declaration to the effect that the Serbian people wanted "sincere and loyal cooperation with their great neighbour, the German people".[42] Most of the local administrators in the counties and districts remained in place,[42] and the German military administration placed its own administrators at each level to supervise the local authorities.[43] The boundaries of the occupied territory were settled on 21 May, with 51,000 square kilometres (20,000 sq mi) of land and 3.81 million inhabitants, including between 50 and 60 per cent of Yugoslav Serbs.[44]

Soon after the Aćimović government was appointed, refugees escaping persecution in the neighbouring Independent State of Croatia (NDH), and others fleeing Bulgarian-annexed Macedonia, Albanian-annexed western Macedonia and Kosovo, and Hungarian-occupied Bačka and Baranja began to flood into the territory.[30]

Occupation troops edit

Förster was subsequently transferred, and on 2 June was succeeded by General der Flakartillerie[g] Ludwig von Schröder, another Luftwaffe officer.[7] On 9 June, the commander of the German 12th Army, Generalfeldmarschall[h] Wilhelm List, was appointed as the Wehrmacht Commander-in-Chief Southeast Europe, with Schröder reporting directly to him.[45] From his headquarters in Belgrade, Schröder directly controlled four poorly-equipped local defence (German: Landesschützen) battalions, consisting of older men. These occupation forces were supplemented by a range of force elements, including the 64th Reserve Police Battalion of the Orpo, an engineer regiment consisting of a pioneer battalion, a bridging column and a construction battalion, and several military police units, comprising a Feldgendarmerie (military police) company, a Geheime Feldpolizei (secret field police) group, and a prisoner of war processing unit. The occupation force was also supported by a military hospital and ambulances, veterinary hospital and ambulances, general transport column, and logistic units. Turner was responsible for the staffing of the four area commands and nine district commands in the occupied territory.[46]

In addition to the occupation troops directly commanded by Schröder, in June the Wehrmacht deployed the headquarters of the LXV Corps zbV[i] to Belgrade to command four poorly-equipped occupation divisions, under the control of General der Artillerie[j] Paul Bader. Three divisions were deployed in the occupied territory, and the fourth was deployed in the adjacent parts of the NDH.[47] The three divisions had been transported to the occupied territory between 7 and 24 May, and were initially tasked with guarding the key railway lines to Bulgaria and Greece.[48] By late June, Bader's headquarters had been established in Belgrade, and the three divisions in the occupied territory were deployed with headquarters at Valjevo in the west, Topola roughly in the centre of the territory, and Niš in the south.[49] The status of Bader's command was that Schröder could order him to undertake operations against rebels, but he could not otherwise act as Bader's superior.[50]

The Banat edit

In late June, the Aćimović administration issued an ordinance regarding the administration of the Banat which essentially made the region a separate civil administrative unit under the control of the local Volksdeutsche led by Sepp Janko. While the Banat was formally under the jurisdiction of the Aćimović administration, in practical terms it was largely autonomous of Belgrade and under the direction of the military government through the military area command in Pančevo.[51][52]

Uprising edit

 
The village of Bela Crkva, where fighting against the occupiers and the Aćimović administration began on 7 July

During June, the Aćimović government, preoccupied as it was with dreams of expanding the occupied territory into a Greater Serbia, wrote to Schröder urging him "to give the Serbian people its centuries-old ethnographic borders".[53] In early July 1941, shortly after the launching of Operation Barbarossa against the Soviet Union, armed resistance began against both the Germans and the Aćimović authorities.[30] This was a response to appeals from both Joseph Stalin and the Communist International for communist organisations across occupied Europe to draw German troops away from the Eastern Front, and followed a meeting of the Central Committee of the Yugoslav Communist Party in Belgrade on 4 July. This meeting resolved to shift from sabotage operations to a general uprising, form Partisan detachments of fighters and commence armed resistance, and call for the populace to rise up against the occupiers throughout Yugoslavia.[54] This also coincided with the departure of the last of the German invasion force that had remained to oversee the transition to occupation. From the appearance of posters and pamphlets urging the population to undertake sabotage, it rapidly turned to attempted and actual sabotage of German propaganda facilities and railway and telephone lines.[55] The first fighting occurred at the village of Bela Crkva on 7 July when two gendarmes were killed during an attempt to disperse a public meeting.[54] At the end of the first week in July, List requested that the Luftwaffe transfer an aircraft training school to the territory, as operational units were not available.[56] Soon after, gendarmerie stations and patrols were being attacked, and German vehicles were fired upon. Armed groups first appeared in the Aranđelovac district, northwest of Topola.[55]

Reshuffle edit

Three days after the outbreak of the rebellion, Aćimović reshuffled his council. Jojić, Kostić and Protić were replaced, and deputy commissioners were appointed for all portfolios except construction and agriculture.[19] Among the new members was Perić, another Zbor member.[32]

Composition of the second Commissioner Government[19]
Ministry Commissioner Deputy
Head of the Council of Commissioners
Ministry of the Interior
Milan Aćimović
Tanasije Dinić

Đorđe Perić
Education
Finance
Dušan Letica
Milan Horvatski
Post and Telegraph
Dušan Pantić
Justice
Momčilo Janković
Đura Kotur
National Economy
Milosav Vasiljević
Dr. Mihajlović
Transport
Ranisav Avramović
Nikola Đurić
Social Policy
Stevan Ivanić
Darko Petrović
Construction
Stanislav Josifović
Agriculture
Budimir Cvijanović

Resistance increases edit

Within a few weeks of its outbreak, the uprising in the occupied territory had reached mass proportions.[54] Between 1 July and 15 August, the rebels carried out 246 attacks against government representatives and facilities, killing 26 functionaries, wounding 11 and capturing 10. In the same period, the Serbian gendarmerie reported killing 82 rebels, wounding 14 and capturing 47.[30] To bolster its reputation with the Germans, the Aćimović government arranged public meetings and conferences to encourage collaboration by the populace, with the purported aim of saving the occupied territory from civil war. Such a conference was addressed by Vasiljević and Avramović in mid-July, but ongoing German reprisal killings undermined their message.[57] In late July, Schröder died after being injured in an aircraft accident.[47] The new German Military Commander in Serbia, Luftwaffe General der Flieger Heinrich Danckelmann, was unable to obtain more German troops or police to suppress the revolt due to the needs of the Eastern Front. In this context, Turner suggested that Danckelmann strengthen the Aćimović administration so that it might subdue the rebellion on its own.[58]

On 29 July, in reprisal for an arson attack on German transport in Belgrade by a 16-year-old Jewish boy, Einsatzgruppe Serbia executed 100 Jews and 22 communists.[59] On 1 August, Benzler wrote that despite the goodwill of the Aćimović administration towards the German occupiers, the puppet government was "weak and unstable".[35] By August, around 100,000 Serbs had crossed into the occupied territory from the NDH, fleeing Ustaše persecution.[60] They were joined by more than 37,000 refugees from Hungarian-annexed Bačka and Baranja, and 20,000 from Bulgarian-annexed Macedonia.[61] On 13 August, Bader reneged on Danckelmann's pledge to allow the Commissioner Government to maintain control of the Serbian gendarmerie, and ordered that it be re-organised into units of 50–100 men under the direction of local German commanders.[62] He also directed the three divisional commanders to have their battalions form Jagdkommandos, lightly armed and mobile "hunter teams", incorporating elements of Einsatzgruppe Serbia and the gendarmerie.[63]

In response to the revolt, the Aćimović administration encouraged 545 or 546 prominent and influential Serbs to sign the Appeal to the Serbian Nation, which was published in the German-authorised Belgrade daily newspaper Novo vreme on 13 and 14 August.[64][k] Signatories included three Serbian Orthodox bishops, four archpriests, and at least 81 professors from the University of Belgrade.[67] According to the historian Stevan K. Pavlowitch, many of the signatories were placed under pressure to sign.[68] Professor Jozo Tomasevich notes that many were known for their leftist views.[8] The appeal called upon the Serbian population to help the authorities in every way in their struggle against the communist rebels, and called for loyalty to the Germans, condemning the Partisan-led resistance as unpatriotic. The Serbian Bar Association unanimously supported the Appeal, but some notable personalities, such as the writers Isidora Sekulić and Ivo Andrić and university professor Miloš N. Đurić,[69] refused to sign. The Aćimović administration also appealed for rebels to return to their homes and announced bounties for the killing of rebels and their leaders.[57][58] In addition, Aćimović gave orders that the wives of communists and their sons older than 16 years of age be arrested and held, and the Germans burned their houses and imposed curfews.[42]

Replacement edit

The German occupation authorities considered Aćimović and his administration incompetent due to their failure to suppress the uprising, and had been considering sacking Aćimović since mid-July.[70][71] To strengthen the puppet government, Danckelmann wanted to find a Serb who was both well-known and highly regarded by the population who could raise some sort of Serbian armed force and who would be willing to use it ruthlessly against the rebels whilst remaining under full German control.[58] In response to a request from Benzler, the Foreign Office sent SS-Standartenführer Edmund Veesenmayer to provide assistance in establishing a new puppet government that would meet German requirements.[72] Five months earlier, Veesenmayer had engineered the proclamation of the NDH.[73] Veesenmayer engaged in a series of consultations with German commanders and officials in Belgrade, interviewed a number of possible candidates to lead the new puppet government, then selected former Yugoslav Minister of the Army and Navy Armijski đeneral[l] Milan Nedić as the best available. The Germans had to apply significant pressure to Nedić to encourage him to accept the position, including threats to bring Bulgarian and Hungarian troops into the occupied territory and to send him to Germany as a prisoner of war.[74] Unlike most Yugoslav generals, Nedić had not been interned in Germany after the capitulation, but instead had been placed under house arrest in Belgrade.[67]

On 27 August 1941, about 75 prominent Serbs convened a meeting in Belgrade where they resolved that Nedić should form a Government of National Salvation to replace the Commissioner Government.[75] The same day, Nedić wrote to Danckelmann agreeing to become the Prime Minister of the new government on the basis of five conditions and some additional concessions. Two days later, the German authorities appointed Nedić and his government.[75] Real power continued to reside with the occupiers.[76] Aćimović initially retained his position as Minister of the Interior, but was replaced in November 1942.[77] In March 1945, he joined a Chetnik group in the NDH, and was killed battling the Partisans.[78]

Analysis edit

Apart from the Zbor activists, some members of the Commissioner Government may appear on face value to have been compliant bureaucrats with few ideological convictions. The historian Alexander Prusin asserts that on closer examination, they accepted collaboration with the occupiers as a means to spare Serbs from political influences that they considered more dangerous than the Germans: democracy, communism, and multiculturalism. He observes that despite their extremely limited powers, they actively assisted the Germans in exploiting the population and the economy, and also took an "extremely opportunistic" view of the Jewish question, regarding their own participation in the Holocaust as "unpleasant but unavoidable". Despite the claims of post-war apologists, Prusin concludes that there is no evidence that the collaboration of bodies like the Commissioner Government moderated German policies in any way, as the Germans carried out reprisal killings, exploitation of the economy and other harsh actions without regard for the views of the puppet administration.[79]

In post-war communist Yugoslavia, Aćimović was referred to as a traitor,[80] but since the fall of Slobodan Milošević in the late 1990s there have been gradual moves to rehabilitate members of the Serbian collaborationist puppet governments on the basis of their anti-communism.[81]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Equivalent to a U.S. Army lieutenant general.[1]
  2. ^ Equivalent to a U.S. Army lieutenant general[6]
  3. ^ Equivalent to a U.S. Army brigadier general[6]
  4. ^ Equivalent to a U.S. Army general[6]
  5. ^ Equivalent to a U.S. Army colonel[6]
  6. ^ According to Tomasevich, the government was formed on 30 May.[18] This is contradicted by Prusin, who states that it was formed on 27 April,[16] Cohen and Milosavljević who state it was 30 April,[19][20] and Pavlowitch who states it was 1 May.[17]
  7. ^ Equivalent to a U.S. Army lieutenant general[6]
  8. ^ Equivalent to a U.S. Army general[6]
  9. ^ zbV is an abbreviation for the German language term zur besonderen Verwendung, generally translated as "for special employment"
  10. ^ Equivalent to a U.S. Army lieutenant general[6]
  11. ^ Cohen lists the names of 546 signatories, drawn from a book published by the former editor of Novo vreme in 1963 (Krakov 1963, pp. 105–113), which included the entire Appeal and list of signatories.[65] Professor Jovan Byford also writes that there were 546 signatories,[66] while Ramet mentions 545,[67] and Prusin states "about five hundred".[57] Tomasevich and Pavlowitch mention a much lower figure of 307 signatories.[30][68]
  12. ^ Equivalent to a U.S. Army lieutenant general.[1]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b Niehorster 2020.
  2. ^ a b Umbreit 2000, p. 94.
  3. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 175.
  4. ^ Lemkin 2008, pp. 591–592, 597–598.
  5. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 95.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Stein 1984, p. 295.
  7. ^ a b Tomasevich 2001, pp. 65–66.
  8. ^ a b Tomasevich 2001, p. 179.
  9. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 76.
  10. ^ Umbreit 2003, p. 38.
  11. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 78.
  12. ^ Browning 2014, p. 334.
  13. ^ a b c d Tomasevich 2001, p. 177.
  14. ^ a b c Ramet & Lazić 2011, pp. 19–20.
  15. ^ Cohen 1996, p. 30.
  16. ^ a b c d e Prusin 2017, p. 45.
  17. ^ a b c d Pavlowitch 2008, p. 51.
  18. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 108; Tomasevich 2001, p. 177.
  19. ^ a b c d Cohen 1996, p. 153.
  20. ^ Milosavljević 2006, p. 64.
  21. ^ Bank & Gevers 2016, p. 64.
  22. ^ Cohen 1996, p. 31.
  23. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 108; Tomasevich 2001, pp. 177–178; Byford 2011, pp. 116–117.
  24. ^ Cohen 1996, p. 31; Prusin 2017, pp. 45–46.
  25. ^ Vucinich 1969, pp. 10–11.
  26. ^ Cohen 1996, p. 153; Tomasevich 2001, pp. 177–178; Prusin 2017, p. 46.
  27. ^ Cohen 1996, p. 153; Tomasevich 2001, p. 177; Milosavljević 2006, p. 64.
  28. ^ Lemkin 2008, pp. 592–598.
  29. ^ Lemkin 2008, pp. 599–601.
  30. ^ a b c d e Tomasevich 2001, p. 178.
  31. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 178; Pavlowitch 2008, p. 51.
  32. ^ a b c d Prusin 2017, p. 46.
  33. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 108.
  34. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 619.
  35. ^ a b Prusin 2017, p. 47.
  36. ^ a b Byford 2011, p. 116.
  37. ^ Byford 2011, pp. 116–117.
  38. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 197; Prusin 2017, p. 46.
  39. ^ Thomas & Mikulan 1995, p. 21.
  40. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 197.
  41. ^ Prusin 2017, pp. 46–47.
  42. ^ a b c Ramet & Lazić 2011, p. 20.
  43. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 75.
  44. ^ Ramet & Lazić 2011, pp. 20–21.
  45. ^ Hehn 1979, p. 17.
  46. ^ Niehorster 2015a.
  47. ^ a b Tomasevich 1975, p. 96.
  48. ^ Shepherd 2012, p. 81.
  49. ^ Niehorster 2015b.
  50. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 66.
  51. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 205.
  52. ^ Lemkin 2008, pp. 251, 602–606.
  53. ^ Cohen 1996, p. 53.
  54. ^ a b c Tomasevich 1975, p. 134.
  55. ^ a b Hehn 1979, p. 21.
  56. ^ Hehn 1979, p. 23.
  57. ^ a b c Prusin 2017, p. 48.
  58. ^ a b c Tomasevich 2001, pp. 178–179.
  59. ^ Shepherd 2012, p. 100.
  60. ^ Milazzo 1975, p. 11.
  61. ^ Hehn 1979, p. 29.
  62. ^ Shepherd 2012, p. 106.
  63. ^ Shepherd 2012, p. 102.
  64. ^ Cohen 1996, p. 137.
  65. ^ Cohen 1996, p. 169.
  66. ^ Byford 2013, p. 302.
  67. ^ a b c Ramet 2006, p. 129.
  68. ^ a b Pavlowitch 2008, p. 57.
  69. ^ (Apostolski 1984, p. 111)
  70. ^ Milosavljević 2006, p. 16.
  71. ^ Ramet & Lazić 2011, p. 21.
  72. ^ Tomasevich 2001, pp. 68, 179.
  73. ^ Tomasevich 2001, pp. 52–55.
  74. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 180.
  75. ^ a b Cohen 1996, p. 33.
  76. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 182.
  77. ^ Cohen 1996, pp. 154–155.
  78. ^ Odić & Komarica 1977, pp. 82–85.
  79. ^ Prusin 2017, pp. 181–183.
  80. ^ Balcanica 1970, p. 389.
  81. ^ Lazić 2011, pp. 265–266.

References edit

Primary print sources edit

  • Krakov, Stanislav (1963). Генерал Милан Недић [General Milan Nedić] (in Serbian). Munich, West Germany: Iskra. OCLC 7336721.

Secondary print sources edit

  • Apostolski, Mihailo (1984). Култура и наука у народноослободилачком рату и револуцији: радови са научног скупа, Струга, 7–9 октобар 1981 [Culture and Science in the National Liberation War and Revolution: Papers from the Scientific Conference, Struga, 7–9 October 1981]. Skopje, Yugoslavia: Savet akademija nauka i umetnosti SFRJ [Council of the Academy of Sciences and Arts of the SFRY]. OCLC 13034889.
  • "Balcanica". Balcanica (Beograd). Belgrade, Yugoslavia: Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Institute for Balkan Studies. 1–2. 1970. ISSN 0350-7653.
  • Bank, Jan; Gevers, Lieve (2016). Churches and Religion in the Second World War. London, UK: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4725-0480-7.
  • Browning, Christopher (2014). The Origins of the Final Solution. London, England: Cornerstone Digital. ISBN 978-1-4481-6586-5.
  • Byford, Jovan (2011). "The Collaborationist Administration and the Treatment of the Jews in Nazi-occupied Serbia". In Ramet, Sabrina P.; Listhaug, Ola (eds.). Serbia and the Serbs in World War Two. London, England: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 109–127. ISBN 978-0-230-34781-6.
  • Byford, Jovan (2013). "Willing Bystanders: Dimitrije Ljotić, "Shield Collaboration" and the Destruction of Serbia's Jews". In Haynes, Rebecca; Rady, Martyn (eds.). In the Shadow of Hitler: Personalities of the Right in Central and Eastern Europe. London, England: I.B. Tauris. pp. 295–312. ISBN 978-1-78076-808-3.
  • Cohen, Philip J. (1996). Serbia's Secret War: Propaganda and the Deceit of History. College Station, Texas: Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-0-89096-760-7.
  • Hehn, Paul N. (1979). The German Struggle Against Yugoslav Guerillas in World War II. New York, New York: Columbia University Press. OCLC 884667320.
  • Lazić, Sladjana (2011). "The Re-evaluation of Milan Nedić and Draža Mihailović in Serbia". In Ramet, Sabrina P.; Listhaug, Ola (eds.). Serbia and the Serbs in World War Two. London, England: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 265–282. ISBN 978-0-23034-781-6.
  • Lemkin, Raphael (2008). Axis Rule in Occupied Europe. London: Lawbook Exchange. ISBN 978-1-58477-901-8.
  • Milazzo, Matteo J. (1975). The Chetnik Movement & the Yugoslav Resistance. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-1589-8.
  • Milosavljević, Olivera (2006). Potisnuta istina – Kolaboracija u Srbiji 1941–1944 [Suppressed Truth – Collaboration in Serbia 1941–1944]. Belgrade, Serbia: Ogledi (Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia). OCLC 609332278.
  • Odić, Slavko; Komarica, Slavko (1977). Noć i magla: Gestapo u Jugoslaviji [Night and Fog: The Gestapo in Yugoslavia] (in Serbo-Croatian). Zagreb, Yugoslavia: Centar za informacije i publicitet. OCLC 440780197.
  • Pavlowitch, Stevan K. (2008). Hitler's New Disorder: The Second World War in Yugoslavia. New York, New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-70050-4.
  • Prusin, Alexander (2017). Serbia Under the Swastika: A World War II Occupation. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-09961-8.
  • Ramet, Sabrina P. (2006). The Three Yugoslavias: State-Building and Legitimation, 1918–2005. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-34656-8.
  • Ramet, Sabrina P.; Lazić, Sladjana (2011). "The Collaborationist Regime of Milan Nedić". In Ramet, Sabrina P.; Listhaug, Ola (eds.). Serbia and the Serbs in World War Two. London, England: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 17–43. ISBN 978-0-23034-781-6.
  • Shepherd, Ben (2012). Terror in the Balkans: German Armies and Partisan Warfare. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-04891-1.
  • Stein, George H. (1984). The Waffen SS: Hitler's Elite Guard at War, 1939–45. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-9275-4.
  • Thomas, Nigel; Mikulan, Krunoslav (1995). Axis Forces in Yugoslavia 1941–45. New York, New York: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-85532-473-2.
  • Tomasevich, Jozo (1975). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: The Chetniks. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0857-9.
  • Tomasevich, Jozo (2001). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-3615-2.
  • Umbreit, Hans (2000). "Stages in the Territorial 'New Order' in Europe". In Kroener, Bernard R.; Müller, Rolf-Dieter; Umbreit, Hans (eds.). Organization and Mobilization of the German Sphere of Power, Part I: Wartime Administration, Economy, and Manpower Resources 1939–1941. Germany and the Second World War. Vol. 5. Translated by John Brownjohn. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. pp. 11–167. ISBN 978-0-19-822887-5.
  • Umbreit, Hans (2003). "German Rule in the Occupied Territories 1942–1945". In Kroener, Bernard R.; Müller, Rolf-Dieter; Umbreit, Hans (eds.). Organization and Mobilization of the German Sphere of Power, Part II: Wartime Administration, Economy, and Manpower Resources 1942–1944/5. Germany and the Second World War. Vol. 5. Translated by Derry Cook-Radmoret. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. pp. 7–293. ISBN 978-0-19-820873-0.
  • Vucinich, Wayne S. (1969). "Interwar Yugoslavia". In Vucinich, Wayne S. (ed.). Contemporary Yugoslavia: Twenty Years of Socialist Experiment. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. pp. 3–58. OCLC 652337606.

Online sources edit

  • Niehorster, Leo (2015a). "Armed Forces Commander South East Commanding General in Serbia 22 June 1941". Leo Niehorster. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
  • Niehorster, Leo (2015b). "12th Army LXVth Special Corps Command 22 June 1941". Leo Niehorster. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
  • Niehorster, Leo (2020). "Royal Yugoslav Armed Forces Ranks". Leo Niehorster. Retrieved 20 June 2020.


commissioner, government, serbian, Комесарска, влада, komesarska, vlada, short, lived, serbian, collaborationist, puppet, government, established, german, occupied, territory, serbia, within, axis, partitioned, kingdom, yugoslavia, during, world, operated, fro. The Commissioner Government Serbian Komesarska vlada Komesarska vlada was a short lived Serbian collaborationist puppet government established in the German occupied territory of Serbia within the Axis partitioned Kingdom of Yugoslavia during World War II It operated from 30 April to 29 August 1941 was headed by Milan Acimovic and is also referred to as the Commissars Government or Council of Commissars Of the ten commissioners four had previously been ministers in various Yugoslav governments and two had been assistant ministers The members were pro German anti semitic and anti communist and believed that Germany would win the war The Acimovic government lacked any semblance of power and was merely an instrument of the German occupation regime carrying out its orders within the occupied territory Under the overall control of the German Military Commander in Serbia supervision of its day to day operations was the responsibility of the chief of the German administrative staff SS Brigadefuhrer and State Councillor Harald Turner One of its early tasks was the implementation of German orders regarding the registration of Jews and Romani people living in the territory and the placing of severe restrictions on their liberty Commissioner GovernmentPuppet government overviewFormed27 April 1 May 1941Dissolved29 August 1941JurisdictionGerman occupied territory of SerbiaHeadquartersBelgradeMinister responsibleMilan AcimovicIn early July a few days after a communist led mass uprising commenced Acimovic reshuffled his government replacing three commissioners and appointing deputies for most of the portfolios By mid July the Germans had decided that the Acimovic regime was incompetent and unable to deal with the uprising and began looking for a replacement This resulted in the resignation of the Commissioner Government at the end of August and the appointment of the Government of National Salvation led by former Minister of the Army and Navy Armijski đeneral a Milan Nedic in which Acimovic initially retained the interior portfolio The members of the Commissioner Government collaborated with the occupiers as a means to spare Serbs from political influences that they considered more dangerous than the Germans such as democracy communism and multiculturalism They actively assisted the Germans in exploiting the population and the economy and took an extremely opportunistic view of the Jewish question regarding their own participation in the Holocaust as unpleasant but unavoidable There is no evidence that the collaboration of the Commissioner Government moderated German occupation policies in any way Contents 1 Background 2 Establishment 3 Operation 3 1 Initial tasks 3 2 Occupation troops 3 3 The Banat 3 4 Uprising 3 5 Reshuffle 3 6 Resistance increases 4 Replacement 5 Analysis 6 Notes 7 Footnotes 8 References 8 1 Primary print sources 8 2 Secondary print sources 8 3 Online sourcesBackground editSee also Invasion of Yugoslavia nbsp The partition of Yugoslavia by the Axis powersIn April 1941 the Kingdom of Yugoslavia was invaded and quickly defeated by the Axis powers Yugoslavia was partitioned and as part of this the Germans established a military government of occupation in an area roughly the same as the pre 1912 Kingdom of Serbia consisting of Serbia proper the northern part of Kosovo around Kosovska Mitrovica and the Banat 2 The Germans did this to secure two strategic lines of communication the Danube river and the railway line that connected Belgrade with Salonika in occupied Greece and thence by sea to North Africa The German occupied territory of Serbia was also rich in non ferrous metals such as lead antimony and copper which Germany needed to support its war effort 3 Even before the Yugoslav surrender on 17 April the German Army High Command German Oberkommando des Heeres or OKH had issued a proclamation to the population under German occupation which included severe penalties for acts of violence and sabotage the surrender of military firearms and radio transmitters a list of acts punishable according to military law including unauthorised public meetings the continuation of the operation of government agencies including police businesses and schools prohibition of hoarding fixing of prices and wages and the use of occupation currency 4 The exact boundaries of the occupied territory had been fixed in a directive issued by Adolf Hitler on 12 April 1941 which also directed the creation of the military administration 2 This directive was followed up on 20 April 1941 by orders issued by the Chief of the OKH which established the Military Commander in Serbia as the head of the occupation regime responsible to the Quartermaster General of the OKH In the interim the staff for the military government had been assembled in Germany and the duties of the Military Commander in Serbia had been detailed These included safeguarding the lines of communication executing the economic orders issued by Reichsmarschall Hermann Goring and establishing and maintaining peace and order In the short term he was also responsible for guarding the huge numbers of Yugoslav prisoners of war and safeguarding captured weapons and munitions 5 The military commander s staff was divided into military and administrative branches He was allocated personnel to form four area commands and about ten district commands which reported to the chief of the administrative staff and the military staff allocated the troops of the four local defence battalions across the area commands The first military commander in the occupied territory was General der Flieger b Helmuth Forster a Luftwaffe officer appointed on 20 April 1941 7 assisted by the chief of his administrative staff SS Brigadefuhrer c and State Councillor Harald Turner 8 Other than military commander s staff there were several senior figures in Belgrade who represented key non military arms of the German government Prominent among these was NSFK Obergruppenfuhrer d Franz Neuhausen who had been initially appointed by Goring as plenipotentiary general for economic affairs in the territory on 17 April 9 10 A further key figure in the initial German administration was SS Standartenfuhrer e Wilhelm Fuchs who commanded Einsatzgruppe Serbia which consisted of Sicherheitsdienst Security Service or SD and Sicherheitspolizei Security Police or SiPo and Geheime Staatspolizei Secret State Police or Gestapo detachments and controlled the 64th Reserve Police Battalion of the Ordnungspolizei Order Police or Orpo While he was formally responsible to Turner Fuchs also reported directly to his superiors in Berlin 11 12 Despite these organs of military occupation and the orders issued by OKH regulating as they did a wide range of administrative political economic cultural and social matters the Germans still needed to establish a public administrative body that would implement their directives It was decided to form a puppet government for that purpose 13 Establishment edit nbsp Milan Acimovic was selected to lead the collaborationist regime A search began for a suitable Serb to lead a collaborationist regime 14 From the date of the Yugoslav capitulation pro German politicians including the president of the fascist Zbor movement Dimitrije Ljotic former Belgrade police chief and Minister of the Interior Milan Acimovic the current Belgrade police chief Dragomir Jovanovic along with Đorđe Peric Steven Klujic and Tanasije Dinic met almost daily to assist in this process 15 The Germans would have preferred the pro Axis former Prime Minister Milan Stojadinovic but he had been sent into exile before the coup 16 Several high profile men were considered by the Germans including former Prime Minister Dragisa Cvetkovic former Foreign Minister Aleksandar Cincar Markovic Acimovic Ljotic and Jovanovic 14 Hitler preferred someone who was both flexible and had some local popularity to lead a puppet government in German occupied Serbia 16 The Germans passed over Ljotic as they believed that he had a dubious reputation among Serbs 14 Cincar Markovic did not want to be part of a collaborationist administration 17 He was also in poor health Cvetkovic was suspected of being pro British and harbouring sympathies towards Freemasonry He was also believed to have had Roma ancestry which the Germans deemed unacceptable 16 Acimovic a virulent anti communist had been in close contact with the German police and security services before the war 13 This included being appointed deputy to the German head of Interpol Reinhard Heydrich who was also the chief of the SD Acimovic was also in close contact with the head of the Gestapo Heinrich Muller 16 Forster decided on Acimovic who in early 1939 had briefly been Minister of the Interior in Stojadinovic s pro Axis government With Forster s approval he formed his Commissioner Government between 27 April and 1 May f consisting of ten commissioners 13 Some sources refer to it as the Commissars Government 21 or Council of Commissars 22 The other nine commissioners were Risto Jojic Dusan Letica Dusan Pantic Momcilo Jankovic Milisav Vasiljevic Lazo M Kostic Stevan Ivanic Stanislav Josifovic and Jevrem Protic each commissioner ran one of the former Yugoslav ministries except for the Ministry of Army and Navy and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs which had been abolished 13 According to the author Philip J Cohen Acimovic Vasiljevic and Ivanic were German agents prior to the invasion of Yugoslavia 19 In addition to being vehemently pro German and antisemitic the commissioners were also strongly anti communist and believed that Germany would win the war 23 They represented a wide spectrum of pre war Serbian political parties Vasiljevic and Ivanic both had close links to Zbor Pantic Kostic and Protic being members of the centre right People s Radical Party and Josifovic was a member of the Democratic Party No representatives of the outlawed Communist Party or the British backed Serbian Agrarian Party were included 24 The new administration was experienced like Acimovic Jojic Letica and Pantic had all served as ministers in various cabinets Josifovic and Protic had been assistant ministers Kostic was a university professor and others were experts in their respective fields Acimovic maintained the existing Yugoslav government apparatus and staff recalling personnel to their duties and former Yugoslav officials played important roles in the administration Despite the fact that Serbs dominated government positions in interwar Yugoslavia 25 there were some non Serb officials in Belgrade those who left the occupied territory had to be replaced and most Serbian officials known or suspected to be anti German either resigned or were removed The administration manifested German intentions to make best use of those who were willing to collaborate and save the available German administrative staff for higher priority work 26 Composition of the first Commissioner Government 27 Ministry CommissionerHead of the Council of CommissionersInterior Milan AcimovicEducation Risto JojicFinance Dusan LeticaPost and Telegraph Dusan PanticMinistry of Justice Momcilo JankovicNational Economy Milosav VasiljevicTransport Lazo M KosticSocial Policy Stevan IvanicConstruction Stanislav JosifovicAgriculture Jeremija ProticOperation editInitial tasks edit nbsp Map showing the counties and districts of the occupied territoryDuring May the earlier proclamation of the OKH was followed by orders issued by Forster requiring the registration of printing presses and imposing restrictions on the press within the occupied territory Orders were also issued regarding the operation of theatres and other places of entertainment and imposing German criminal law in the occupied territory 28 Forster also ordered the resumption of production disestablished the National Bank of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and established the Serbian National Bank to replace it 29 From the outset the Acimovic government lacked any semblance of power 30 It was effectively a low grade and basic instrument of the German military occupation regime which performed administrative duties within the occupied territory on behalf of the Germans 31 The three main tasks of the Acimovic administration were to secure the acquiescence of the population to the German occupation help restore services and identify and remove undesirables from public services 17 This included Jews Roma and unreliable Serbs 32 The Commissioner Government was capable of handling routine administrative tasks and maintaining law and order in a peacetime situation only 33 and was closely controlled by Turner and Neuhausen 17 Neuhausen was effectively an economic dictator and had complete control over the economy of the occupied territory and finances of the puppet administration to one end maximising the contribution they made to the German war effort 34 This was demonstrated in the fixing of wages and prices officially the responsibility of Letica s finance department they were actually set by Neuhausen s staff Also in May Forster ordered the Acimovic administration to investigate the causes of the invasion The inquiry concluded that the Yugoslav government had recklessly brushed off the peaceful intentions of the Third Reich and provoked the war 35 One of the first tasks of the administration involved carrying out Turner s orders for the registration of all Jews and Romani people in the occupied territory and implementation of severe restrictions on their activities These were aimed at bringing the occupied territory into line with the rest of Nazi occupied Europe and included the wearing of yellow armbands the introduction of forced labour and curfews and restricted access to food Turner explicitly stated that t he Serbian Authorities ie the Commissioner Government are responsible for the implementation of all measures contained in the order 36 By this means the Commissioner Government took part albeit under German orders in the registration marking pauperisation and social exclusion of the Jewish community 36 Acimovic s Interior Ministry included a section dedicated to implementing anti Jewish and anti Roma laws 37 but the primary means for the carrying out of such tasks was the 3 000 strong Serbian gendarmerie which was based on elements of the former Yugoslav gendarmerie units remaining in the territory 38 the Drinski and Dunavski regiments 39 It had been formed on 17 April on Forster s orders 32 and its acting head was Colonel Jovan Trisic 40 The gendarmerie was also responsible for collecting taxes and overseeing the harvest and was therefore unpopular particularly with the rural population German concerns about the reliability of the gendarmerie meant that it was never adequately armed or equipped for its tasks 32 The makeup of the puppet administration with representation from a number of different political parties meant that the Germans had no concerns about it developing a unified front that might hamper German efforts to pacify the territory and exploit it economically Its very limited powers were further eroded by constant German interference in its operations and the requirement that all laws drafted by the commissioners could only be implemented after their approval by the Germans The overall German approach to Acimovic and his administration was uneven as Turner and the plenipotentiary of the Foreign Office Felix Benzler both pushed for co operation and accommodation with Acimovic while Forster and Fuchs considered the puppet government to be a mere supplement to the German military administration that included a police function When Acimovic requested the release of Serb POWs arguing that the camps could become hotbeds of nationalist and communist agitation and that the men were needed as labourers Forster flatly refused and deported them to Germany 41 In mid May Acimovic s administration issued a declaration to the effect that the Serbian people wanted sincere and loyal cooperation with their great neighbour the German people 42 Most of the local administrators in the counties and districts remained in place 42 and the German military administration placed its own administrators at each level to supervise the local authorities 43 The boundaries of the occupied territory were settled on 21 May with 51 000 square kilometres 20 000 sq mi of land and 3 81 million inhabitants including between 50 and 60 per cent of Yugoslav Serbs 44 Soon after the Acimovic government was appointed refugees escaping persecution in the neighbouring Independent State of Croatia NDH and others fleeing Bulgarian annexed Macedonia Albanian annexed western Macedonia and Kosovo and Hungarian occupied Backa and Baranja began to flood into the territory 30 Occupation troops edit Forster was subsequently transferred and on 2 June was succeeded by General der Flakartillerie g Ludwig von Schroder another Luftwaffe officer 7 On 9 June the commander of the German 12th Army Generalfeldmarschall h Wilhelm List was appointed as the Wehrmacht Commander in Chief Southeast Europe with Schroder reporting directly to him 45 From his headquarters in Belgrade Schroder directly controlled four poorly equipped local defence German Landesschutzen battalions consisting of older men These occupation forces were supplemented by a range of force elements including the 64th Reserve Police Battalion of the Orpo an engineer regiment consisting of a pioneer battalion a bridging column and a construction battalion and several military police units comprising a Feldgendarmerie military police company a Geheime Feldpolizei secret field police group and a prisoner of war processing unit The occupation force was also supported by a military hospital and ambulances veterinary hospital and ambulances general transport column and logistic units Turner was responsible for the staffing of the four area commands and nine district commands in the occupied territory 46 In addition to the occupation troops directly commanded by Schroder in June the Wehrmacht deployed the headquarters of the LXV Corps zbV i to Belgrade to command four poorly equipped occupation divisions under the control of General der Artillerie j Paul Bader Three divisions were deployed in the occupied territory and the fourth was deployed in the adjacent parts of the NDH 47 The three divisions had been transported to the occupied territory between 7 and 24 May and were initially tasked with guarding the key railway lines to Bulgaria and Greece 48 By late June Bader s headquarters had been established in Belgrade and the three divisions in the occupied territory were deployed with headquarters at Valjevo in the west Topola roughly in the centre of the territory and Nis in the south 49 The status of Bader s command was that Schroder could order him to undertake operations against rebels but he could not otherwise act as Bader s superior 50 The Banat edit In late June the Acimovic administration issued an ordinance regarding the administration of the Banat which essentially made the region a separate civil administrative unit under the control of the local Volksdeutsche led by Sepp Janko While the Banat was formally under the jurisdiction of the Acimovic administration in practical terms it was largely autonomous of Belgrade and under the direction of the military government through the military area command in Pancevo 51 52 Uprising edit See also Uprising in Serbia 1941 nbsp The village of Bela Crkva where fighting against the occupiers and the Acimovic administration began on 7 JulyDuring June the Acimovic government preoccupied as it was with dreams of expanding the occupied territory into a Greater Serbia wrote to Schroder urging him to give the Serbian people its centuries old ethnographic borders 53 In early July 1941 shortly after the launching of Operation Barbarossa against the Soviet Union armed resistance began against both the Germans and the Acimovic authorities 30 This was a response to appeals from both Joseph Stalin and the Communist International for communist organisations across occupied Europe to draw German troops away from the Eastern Front and followed a meeting of the Central Committee of the Yugoslav Communist Party in Belgrade on 4 July This meeting resolved to shift from sabotage operations to a general uprising form Partisan detachments of fighters and commence armed resistance and call for the populace to rise up against the occupiers throughout Yugoslavia 54 This also coincided with the departure of the last of the German invasion force that had remained to oversee the transition to occupation From the appearance of posters and pamphlets urging the population to undertake sabotage it rapidly turned to attempted and actual sabotage of German propaganda facilities and railway and telephone lines 55 The first fighting occurred at the village of Bela Crkva on 7 July when two gendarmes were killed during an attempt to disperse a public meeting 54 At the end of the first week in July List requested that the Luftwaffe transfer an aircraft training school to the territory as operational units were not available 56 Soon after gendarmerie stations and patrols were being attacked and German vehicles were fired upon Armed groups first appeared in the Aranđelovac district northwest of Topola 55 Reshuffle edit Three days after the outbreak of the rebellion Acimovic reshuffled his council Jojic Kostic and Protic were replaced and deputy commissioners were appointed for all portfolios except construction and agriculture 19 Among the new members was Peric another Zbor member 32 Composition of the second Commissioner Government 19 Ministry Commissioner DeputyHead of the Council of CommissionersMinistry of the Interior Milan Acimovic Tanasije DinicĐorđe PericEducation Velibor Jonic Vladimir Velmar JankovicFinance Dusan Letica Milan HorvatskiPost and Telegraph Dusan Pantic Milorad DimitrijevicJustice Momcilo Jankovic Đura KoturNational Economy Milosav Vasiljevic Dr MihajlovicTransport Ranisav Avramovic Nikola ĐuricSocial Policy Stevan Ivanic Darko PetrovicConstruction Stanislav Josifovic Agriculture Budimir Cvijanovic Resistance increases edit Within a few weeks of its outbreak the uprising in the occupied territory had reached mass proportions 54 Between 1 July and 15 August the rebels carried out 246 attacks against government representatives and facilities killing 26 functionaries wounding 11 and capturing 10 In the same period the Serbian gendarmerie reported killing 82 rebels wounding 14 and capturing 47 30 To bolster its reputation with the Germans the Acimovic government arranged public meetings and conferences to encourage collaboration by the populace with the purported aim of saving the occupied territory from civil war Such a conference was addressed by Vasiljevic and Avramovic in mid July but ongoing German reprisal killings undermined their message 57 In late July Schroder died after being injured in an aircraft accident 47 The new German Military Commander in Serbia Luftwaffe General der Flieger Heinrich Danckelmann was unable to obtain more German troops or police to suppress the revolt due to the needs of the Eastern Front In this context Turner suggested that Danckelmann strengthen the Acimovic administration so that it might subdue the rebellion on its own 58 On 29 July in reprisal for an arson attack on German transport in Belgrade by a 16 year old Jewish boy Einsatzgruppe Serbia executed 100 Jews and 22 communists 59 On 1 August Benzler wrote that despite the goodwill of the Acimovic administration towards the German occupiers the puppet government was weak and unstable 35 By August around 100 000 Serbs had crossed into the occupied territory from the NDH fleeing Ustase persecution 60 They were joined by more than 37 000 refugees from Hungarian annexed Backa and Baranja and 20 000 from Bulgarian annexed Macedonia 61 On 13 August Bader reneged on Danckelmann s pledge to allow the Commissioner Government to maintain control of the Serbian gendarmerie and ordered that it be re organised into units of 50 100 men under the direction of local German commanders 62 He also directed the three divisional commanders to have their battalions form Jagdkommandos lightly armed and mobile hunter teams incorporating elements of Einsatzgruppe Serbia and the gendarmerie 63 In response to the revolt the Acimovic administration encouraged 545 or 546 prominent and influential Serbs to sign the Appeal to the Serbian Nation which was published in the German authorised Belgrade daily newspaper Novo vreme on 13 and 14 August 64 k Signatories included three Serbian Orthodox bishops four archpriests and at least 81 professors from the University of Belgrade 67 According to the historian Stevan K Pavlowitch many of the signatories were placed under pressure to sign 68 Professor Jozo Tomasevich notes that many were known for their leftist views 8 The appeal called upon the Serbian population to help the authorities in every way in their struggle against the communist rebels and called for loyalty to the Germans condemning the Partisan led resistance as unpatriotic The Serbian Bar Association unanimously supported the Appeal but some notable personalities such as the writers Isidora Sekulic and Ivo Andric and university professor Milos N Đuric 69 refused to sign The Acimovic administration also appealed for rebels to return to their homes and announced bounties for the killing of rebels and their leaders 57 58 In addition Acimovic gave orders that the wives of communists and their sons older than 16 years of age be arrested and held and the Germans burned their houses and imposed curfews 42 Replacement editThe German occupation authorities considered Acimovic and his administration incompetent due to their failure to suppress the uprising and had been considering sacking Acimovic since mid July 70 71 To strengthen the puppet government Danckelmann wanted to find a Serb who was both well known and highly regarded by the population who could raise some sort of Serbian armed force and who would be willing to use it ruthlessly against the rebels whilst remaining under full German control 58 In response to a request from Benzler the Foreign Office sent SS Standartenfuhrer Edmund Veesenmayer to provide assistance in establishing a new puppet government that would meet German requirements 72 Five months earlier Veesenmayer had engineered the proclamation of the NDH 73 Veesenmayer engaged in a series of consultations with German commanders and officials in Belgrade interviewed a number of possible candidates to lead the new puppet government then selected former Yugoslav Minister of the Army and Navy Armijski đeneral l Milan Nedic as the best available The Germans had to apply significant pressure to Nedic to encourage him to accept the position including threats to bring Bulgarian and Hungarian troops into the occupied territory and to send him to Germany as a prisoner of war 74 Unlike most Yugoslav generals Nedic had not been interned in Germany after the capitulation but instead had been placed under house arrest in Belgrade 67 On 27 August 1941 about 75 prominent Serbs convened a meeting in Belgrade where they resolved that Nedic should form a Government of National Salvation to replace the Commissioner Government 75 The same day Nedic wrote to Danckelmann agreeing to become the Prime Minister of the new government on the basis of five conditions and some additional concessions Two days later the German authorities appointed Nedic and his government 75 Real power continued to reside with the occupiers 76 Acimovic initially retained his position as Minister of the Interior but was replaced in November 1942 77 In March 1945 he joined a Chetnik group in the NDH and was killed battling the Partisans 78 Analysis editApart from the Zbor activists some members of the Commissioner Government may appear on face value to have been compliant bureaucrats with few ideological convictions The historian Alexander Prusin asserts that on closer examination they accepted collaboration with the occupiers as a means to spare Serbs from political influences that they considered more dangerous than the Germans democracy communism and multiculturalism He observes that despite their extremely limited powers they actively assisted the Germans in exploiting the population and the economy and also took an extremely opportunistic view of the Jewish question regarding their own participation in the Holocaust as unpleasant but unavoidable Despite the claims of post war apologists Prusin concludes that there is no evidence that the collaboration of bodies like the Commissioner Government moderated German policies in any way as the Germans carried out reprisal killings exploitation of the economy and other harsh actions without regard for the views of the puppet administration 79 In post war communist Yugoslavia Acimovic was referred to as a traitor 80 but since the fall of Slobodan Milosevic in the late 1990s there have been gradual moves to rehabilitate members of the Serbian collaborationist puppet governments on the basis of their anti communism 81 Notes edit Equivalent to a U S Army lieutenant general 1 Equivalent to a U S Army lieutenant general 6 Equivalent to a U S Army brigadier general 6 Equivalent to a U S Army general 6 Equivalent to a U S Army colonel 6 According to Tomasevich the government was formed on 30 May 18 This is contradicted by Prusin who states that it was formed on 27 April 16 Cohen and Milosavljevic who state it was 30 April 19 20 and Pavlowitch who states it was 1 May 17 Equivalent to a U S Army lieutenant general 6 Equivalent to a U S Army general 6 zbV is an abbreviation for the German language term zur besonderen Verwendung generally translated as for special employment Equivalent to a U S Army lieutenant general 6 Cohen lists the names of 546 signatories drawn from a book published by the former editor of Novo vreme in 1963 Krakov 1963 pp 105 113 which included the entire Appeal and list of signatories 65 Professor Jovan Byford also writes that there were 546 signatories 66 while Ramet mentions 545 67 and Prusin states about five hundred 57 Tomasevich and Pavlowitch mention a much lower figure of 307 signatories 30 68 Equivalent to a U S Army lieutenant general 1 Footnotes edit a b Niehorster 2020 a b Umbreit 2000 p 94 Tomasevich 2001 p 175 Lemkin 2008 pp 591 592 597 598 Tomasevich 1975 p 95 a b c d e f g Stein 1984 p 295 a b Tomasevich 2001 pp 65 66 a b Tomasevich 2001 p 179 Tomasevich 2001 p 76 Umbreit 2003 p 38 Tomasevich 2001 p 78 Browning 2014 p 334 a b c d Tomasevich 2001 p 177 a b c Ramet amp Lazic 2011 pp 19 20 Cohen 1996 p 30 a b c d e Prusin 2017 p 45 a b c d Pavlowitch 2008 p 51 Tomasevich 1975 p 108 Tomasevich 2001 p 177 a b c d Cohen 1996 p 153 Milosavljevic 2006 p 64 Bank amp Gevers 2016 p 64 Cohen 1996 p 31 Tomasevich 1975 p 108 Tomasevich 2001 pp 177 178 Byford 2011 pp 116 117 Cohen 1996 p 31 Prusin 2017 pp 45 46 Vucinich 1969 pp 10 11 Cohen 1996 p 153 Tomasevich 2001 pp 177 178 Prusin 2017 p 46 Cohen 1996 p 153 Tomasevich 2001 p 177 Milosavljevic 2006 p 64 Lemkin 2008 pp 592 598 Lemkin 2008 pp 599 601 a b c d e Tomasevich 2001 p 178 Tomasevich 2001 p 178 Pavlowitch 2008 p 51 a b c d Prusin 2017 p 46 Tomasevich 1975 p 108 Tomasevich 2001 p 619 a b Prusin 2017 p 47 a b Byford 2011 p 116 Byford 2011 pp 116 117 Tomasevich 1975 p 197 Prusin 2017 p 46 Thomas amp Mikulan 1995 p 21 Tomasevich 1975 p 197 Prusin 2017 pp 46 47 a b c Ramet amp Lazic 2011 p 20 Tomasevich 2001 p 75 Ramet amp Lazic 2011 pp 20 21 Hehn 1979 p 17 Niehorster 2015a a b Tomasevich 1975 p 96 Shepherd 2012 p 81 Niehorster 2015b Tomasevich 2001 p 66 Tomasevich 2001 p 205 Lemkin 2008 pp 251 602 606 Cohen 1996 p 53 a b c Tomasevich 1975 p 134 a b Hehn 1979 p 21 Hehn 1979 p 23 a b c Prusin 2017 p 48 a b c Tomasevich 2001 pp 178 179 Shepherd 2012 p 100 Milazzo 1975 p 11 Hehn 1979 p 29 Shepherd 2012 p 106 Shepherd 2012 p 102 Cohen 1996 p 137 Cohen 1996 p 169 Byford 2013 p 302 a b c Ramet 2006 p 129 a b Pavlowitch 2008 p 57 Apostolski 1984 p 111 Milosavljevic 2006 p 16 Ramet amp Lazic 2011 p 21 Tomasevich 2001 pp 68 179 Tomasevich 2001 pp 52 55 Tomasevich 2001 p 180 a b Cohen 1996 p 33 Tomasevich 2001 p 182 Cohen 1996 pp 154 155 Odic amp Komarica 1977 pp 82 85 Prusin 2017 pp 181 183 Balcanica 1970 p 389 Lazic 2011 pp 265 266 References editPrimary print sources edit Krakov Stanislav 1963 General Milan Nediћ General Milan Nedic in Serbian Munich West Germany Iskra OCLC 7336721 Secondary print sources edit Apostolski Mihailo 1984 Kultura i nauka u narodnooslobodilachkom ratu i revoluciјi radovi sa nauchnog skupa Struga 7 9 oktobar 1981 Culture and Science in the National Liberation War and Revolution Papers from the Scientific Conference Struga 7 9 October 1981 Skopje Yugoslavia Savet akademija nauka i umetnosti SFRJ Council of the Academy of Sciences and Arts of the SFRY OCLC 13034889 Balcanica Balcanica Beograd Belgrade Yugoslavia Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts Institute for Balkan Studies 1 2 1970 ISSN 0350 7653 Bank Jan Gevers Lieve 2016 Churches and Religion in the Second World War London UK Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4725 0480 7 Browning Christopher 2014 The Origins of the Final Solution London England Cornerstone Digital ISBN 978 1 4481 6586 5 Byford Jovan 2011 The Collaborationist Administration and the Treatment of the Jews in Nazi occupied Serbia In Ramet Sabrina P Listhaug Ola eds Serbia and the Serbs in World War Two London England Palgrave Macmillan pp 109 127 ISBN 978 0 230 34781 6 Byford Jovan 2013 Willing Bystanders Dimitrije Ljotic Shield Collaboration and the Destruction of Serbia s Jews In Haynes Rebecca Rady Martyn eds In the Shadow of Hitler Personalities of the Right in Central and Eastern Europe London England I B Tauris pp 295 312 ISBN 978 1 78076 808 3 Cohen Philip J 1996 Serbia s Secret War Propaganda and the Deceit of History College Station Texas Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 0 89096 760 7 Hehn Paul N 1979 The German Struggle Against Yugoslav Guerillas in World War II New York New York Columbia University Press OCLC 884667320 Lazic Sladjana 2011 The Re evaluation of Milan Nedic and Draza Mihailovic in Serbia In Ramet Sabrina P Listhaug Ola eds Serbia and the Serbs in World War Two London England Palgrave Macmillan pp 265 282 ISBN 978 0 23034 781 6 Lemkin Raphael 2008 Axis Rule in Occupied Europe London Lawbook Exchange ISBN 978 1 58477 901 8 Milazzo Matteo J 1975 The Chetnik Movement amp the Yugoslav Resistance Baltimore Maryland Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 1589 8 Milosavljevic Olivera 2006 Potisnuta istina Kolaboracija u Srbiji 1941 1944 Suppressed Truth Collaboration in Serbia 1941 1944 Belgrade Serbia Ogledi Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia OCLC 609332278 Odic Slavko Komarica Slavko 1977 Noc i magla Gestapo u Jugoslaviji Night and Fog The Gestapo in Yugoslavia in Serbo Croatian Zagreb Yugoslavia Centar za informacije i publicitet OCLC 440780197 Pavlowitch Stevan K 2008 Hitler s New Disorder The Second World War in Yugoslavia New York New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 70050 4 Prusin Alexander 2017 Serbia Under the Swastika A World War II Occupation Urbana Illinois University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 09961 8 Ramet Sabrina P 2006 The Three Yugoslavias State Building and Legitimation 1918 2005 Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 34656 8 Ramet Sabrina P Lazic Sladjana 2011 The Collaborationist Regime of Milan Nedic In Ramet Sabrina P Listhaug Ola eds Serbia and the Serbs in World War Two London England Palgrave Macmillan pp 17 43 ISBN 978 0 23034 781 6 Shepherd Ben 2012 Terror in the Balkans German Armies and Partisan Warfare Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 04891 1 Stein George H 1984 The Waffen SS Hitler s Elite Guard at War 1939 45 Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 9275 4 Thomas Nigel Mikulan Krunoslav 1995 Axis Forces in Yugoslavia 1941 45 New York New York Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 85532 473 2 Tomasevich Jozo 1975 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 The Chetniks Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0857 9 Tomasevich Jozo 2001 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Occupation and Collaboration Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 3615 2 Umbreit Hans 2000 Stages in the Territorial New Order in Europe In Kroener Bernard R Muller Rolf Dieter Umbreit Hans eds Organization and Mobilization of the German Sphere of Power Part I Wartime Administration Economy and Manpower Resources 1939 1941 Germany and the Second World War Vol 5 Translated by John Brownjohn Oxford England Oxford University Press pp 11 167 ISBN 978 0 19 822887 5 Umbreit Hans 2003 German Rule in the Occupied Territories 1942 1945 In Kroener Bernard R Muller Rolf Dieter Umbreit Hans eds Organization and Mobilization of the German Sphere of Power Part II Wartime Administration Economy and Manpower Resources 1942 1944 5 Germany and the Second World War Vol 5 Translated by Derry Cook Radmoret Oxford England Oxford University Press pp 7 293 ISBN 978 0 19 820873 0 Vucinich Wayne S 1969 Interwar Yugoslavia In Vucinich Wayne S ed Contemporary Yugoslavia Twenty Years of Socialist Experiment Berkeley California University of California Press pp 3 58 OCLC 652337606 Online sources edit Niehorster Leo 2015a Armed Forces Commander South East Commanding General in Serbia 22 June 1941 Leo Niehorster Retrieved 31 May 2015 Niehorster Leo 2015b 12th Army LXVth Special Corps Command 22 June 1941 Leo Niehorster Retrieved 31 May 2015 Niehorster Leo 2020 Royal Yugoslav Armed Forces Ranks Leo Niehorster Retrieved 20 June 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Commissioner Government 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