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Draža Mihailović

Dragoljub "Draža" Mihailović[a] (Serbian Cyrillic: Драгољуб Дража Михаиловић; 27 April 1893 – 17 July 1946) was a Yugoslav Serb general during World War II. He was the leader of the Chetnik Detachments of the Yugoslav Army (Chetniks), a royalist and nationalist movement and guerrilla force established following the German invasion of Yugoslavia in 1941.

Draža Mihailović
Mihailović in 1943
Birth nameDragoljub Mihailović
Nickname(s)Čiča Draža (Uncle Draža)
Born(1893-04-27)27 April 1893
Ivanjica, Kingdom of Serbia
Died17 July 1946(1946-07-17) (aged 53)
Belgrade, PR Serbia, FPR Yugoslavia
Allegiance Serbia (1910–18)
 Yugoslavia (1918–41)
Yugoslav government-in-exile (1941–44)
Chetniks (1941–46)
Service/branch
Years of service1910–1945
RankArmy General[1]
Commands held Chetnik movement
Battles/wars
Awards
Signature

Born in Ivanjica and raised in Belgrade, Mihailović fought in the Balkan Wars and the First World War with distinction. After the fall of Yugoslavia in April 1941, Mihailović organized the Chetniks at Ravna Gora and engaged in guerrilla warfare alongside Josip Broz Tito's Partisans against occupying German forces. Opposing strategies, ideological differences and general distrust drove them apart, and by late 1941 the two groups were in open conflict. Many Chetnik groups collaborated or established modus vivendi with the Axis powers, which along with British frustration over Mihailović's inaction led to the Allies shifting their support to Tito in 1944. Mihailović himself collaborated with Milan Nedić and Dimitrije Ljotić at the end of the war.

Mihailović went into hiding after the war but was captured in March 1946. He was tried and convicted of high treason and war crimes by the communist authorities of the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia, and executed by firing squad in Belgrade in July. The nature and extent of his responsibility for collaboration and ethnic massacres remains controversial. In May 2015, Mihailović's verdict was overturned on appeal by the Supreme Court of Cassation of Serbia, citing his trial and conviction as politically and ideologically motivated.

Early life and military career

Dragoljub "Draža" Mihailović was born on 27 April 1893 in Ivanjica, Kingdom of Serbia to Mihailo and Smiljana Mihailović (née Petrović).[5] His father was a court clerk. Orphaned at seven years of age, Mihailović was raised by his paternal uncle in Belgrade.[6] As both of his uncles were military officers, Mihailović himself joined the Serbian Military Academy in October 1910. He fought as a cadet in the Serbian Army during the Balkan Wars of 1912–13 and was awarded the Silver Medal of Valor at the end of the First Balkan War, in May 1913.[7] At the end of the Second Balkan War, during which he mainly led operations along the Albanian border, he was given the rank of second lieutenant as the top soldier in his class, ranked sixth at the Serbian military academy.[7] He served in World War I and was involved in the Serbian Army's retreat through Albania in 1915. He later received several decorations for his achievements on the Salonika front. Following the war, he became a member of the Royal Guard of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes but had to leave his position in 1920 after taking part in a public argument between communist and nationalist sympathizers. He was subsequently stationed in Skopje. In 1921, he was admitted to the Superior Military Academy of Belgrade. In 1923, having finished his studies, he was promoted as an assistant to the military staff, along with the fifteen other best alumni of his promotion.[8] He was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel in 1930. That same year, he spent three months in Paris, following classes at the École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr. Some authors claim that he met and befriended Charles de Gaulle during his stay, although there is no known evidence of this.[9] In 1935, he became a military attaché to the Kingdom of Bulgaria and was stationed to Sofia. On 6 September 1935, he was promoted to the rank of colonel. Mihailović then came in contact with members of Zveno and considered taking part in a plot which aimed to provoke Boris III's abdication and the creation of an alliance between Yugoslavia and Bulgaria, but, being untrained as a spy, he was soon identified by Bulgarian authorities and was asked to leave the country. He was then appointed as an attaché to Czechoslovakia in Prague.[10]

His military career almost came to an abrupt end in 1939, when he submitted a report strongly criticizing the organization of the Royal Yugoslav Army (Serbo-Croatian: Vojska Kraljevine Jugoslavije, VKJ). Among his most important proposals were abandoning the defence of the northern frontier to concentrate forces in the mountainous interior; re-organizing the armed forces into Serb, Croat, and Slovene units in order to better counter subversive activities; and using mobile Chetnik units along the borders. Milan Nedić, the Minister of the Army, was incensed by Mihailović's report and ordered that he be confined to barracks for 30 days.[11] Afterwards, Mihailović became a professor at Belgrade's staff college.[12] In the summer of 1940, he attended a function put on by the British military attaché for the Association of Yugoslav Reserve NCOs. The meeting was seen as highly anti-Nazi in tone, and the German ambassador protested Mihailović's presence. Nedić once more ordered him confined to barracks for 30 days as well as demoted and placed on the retired list. These last punishments were avoided only by Nedić's retirement in November and his replacement by Petar Pešić.[11]

In the years preceding the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia, Mihailović was stationed in Celje, Drava Banovina (modern Slovenia). At the time of the invasion, Colonel Mihailović was an assistant to the chief-of-staff of the Yugoslav Second Army in northern Bosnia. He briefly served as the Second Army chief-of-staff[13] prior to taking command of a "Rapid Unit" (brzi odred) shortly before the Yugoslav High Command capitulated to the Germans on 17 April 1941.[14]

World War II

Following the invasion and occupation of Yugoslavia by Germany, Italy, Hungary, a small group of officers and soldiers led by Mihailović escaped in the hope of finding VKJ units still fighting in the mountains. After skirmishing with several Ustaše and Muslim bands and attempting to sabotage several objects, Mihailović and about 80 of his men crossed the Drina River into German-occupied Serbia[b] on 29 April.[15] Mihailović planned to establish an underground intelligence movement and establish contact with the Allies, though it is unclear if he initially envisioned to start an actual armed resistance movement.[16]

Formation of the Chetniks

 
The Chetnik flag. The flag reads: "For King and Fatherland – Liberty or Death".

For the time being, Mihailović established a small nucleus of officers with an armed guard, which he called the "Command of Chetnik Detachments of the Yugoslav Army".[16] After arriving at Ravna Gora in early May 1941, he realized that his group of seven officers and twenty-four non-commissioned officers and soldiers was the only one.[17] He began to draw up lists of conscripts and reservists for possible use. His men at Ravna Gora were joined by a group of civilians, mainly intellectuals from the Serbian Cultural Club, who took charge of the movement's propaganda sector.[16]

The Chetniks of Kosta Pećanac, which were already in existence before the invasion, did not share Mihailović's desire for resistance.[18] In order to distinguish his Chetniks from other groups calling themselves Chetniks, Mihailović and his followers identified themselves as the "Ravna Gora movement".[18] The stated goal of the Ravna Gora movement was the liberation of the country from the occupying armies of Germany, Italy and the Ustaše, and the Independent State of Croatia (Serbo-Croatian: Nezavisna Država Hrvatska, NDH).[19]

Mihailović spent most of 1941 consolidating scattered VKJ remnants and finding new recruits. In August, he set up a civilian advisory body, the Central National Committee, composed of Serb political leaders including some with strong nationalist views such as Dragiša Vasić and Stevan Moljević.[19] On 19 June, a clandestine Chetnik courier reached Istanbul, whence royalist Yugoslavs reported that Mihailović appeared to be organizing a resistance movement against Axis forces.[20] Mihailović first established radio contact with the British in September 1941, when his radio operator raised a ship in the Mediterranean. On 13 September, Mihailović's first radio message to King Peter's government-in-exile announced that he was organizing VKJ remnants to fight against the Axis powers.[20]

Mihailović also received help from officers in other areas of Yugoslavia, such as Slovene officer Rudolf Perinhek, who brought reports on the situation in Montenegro. Mihailović sent him back to Montenegro with written authorization to organize units there, with the oral approval of officers such as Đorđije Lašić, Pavle Đurišić, Dimitrije Ljotić and Kosta Mušicki. Mihailović only gave vague and contradictory orders to Perinhek, mentioning the need to put off civil strife and to "remove enemies".[21]

Mihailović's strategy was to avoid direct conflict with the Axis forces, intending to rise up after Allied forces arrived in Yugoslavia.[22] Mihailović's Chetniks had had defensive encounters with the Germans, but reprisals and the tales of the massacres in the NDH made them reluctant to engage directly in armed struggle, except against the Ustaše in Serbian border areas.[23] In the meantime, following the Axis invasion of the Soviet Union, the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (KPJ), led by Josip Broz Tito, also went into action and called for a popular insurrection against the Axis powers in July 1941. Tito subsequently set up a communist resistance movement known as the Yugoslav Partisans.[24] By the end of August, Mihailović's Chetniks and the Partisans began attacking Axis forces, sometimes jointly despite their differences, and captured numerous prisoners.[25] On 28 October 1941 Mihailović received an order from the Prime Minister of the Yugoslav Government in exile Dušan Simović who urged Mihailović to avoid premature actions and avoid reprisals.[26] 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 favoured sabotage that could not easily be traced back to the Chetniks.[27] His reluctance to engage in more active resistance meant that most sabotage carried out in the early period of the war were due to efforts by the Partisans, and Mihailović lost several commanders and a number of followers who wished to fight the Germans to the Partisan movement.[28]

Even though Mihailović initially asked for discreet support, propaganda from the British and from the Yugoslav government-in-exile quickly began to exalt his feats. The creation of a resistance movement in occupied Europe was received as a morale booster. On 15 November, the BBC announced that Mihailović was the commander of the Yugoslav Army in the Fatherland, which became the official name of Mihailović's Chetniks.[29]

Conflicts with Axis troops and Partisans

 
Nazi German wanted poster for Colonel Mihailović from 9 December 1941
 
1942 German proclamation and reward offer for Mihailović, after the Chetnik killing of four German officers
 
Draža Mihailović as a small pet in the hands of the supposedly Jewish-controlled United States, United Kingdom and Soviet Union as part of Judeo-Masonic conspiracy theory, depicted in a poster from the Grand Anti-Masonic Exhibition

Mihailović soon realized that his men did not have the means to protect Serbian civilians against German reprisals.[30][31] The prospect of reprisals also fed Chetnik concerns regarding a possible takeover of Yugoslavia by the Partisans after the war, and they did not wish to engage in actions that might ultimately result in a post-war Serb minority.[32] Mihailović's strategy was to bring together the various Serb bands and build an organization capable of seizing power after the Axis withdrew or were defeated, rather than engaging in direct confrontation with them.[33] In contrast to the reluctance of Chetnik leaders to directly engage the Axis forces, the Partisans advocated open resistance, which appealed to those Chetniks desiring to fight the occupation.[34] By September 1941, Mihailović began losing men to the Partisans, such as Vlado Zečević (a priest), Lieutenant Ratko Martinović, and the Cer Chetniks led by Captain Dragoslav Račić[34][35]

On 19 September 1941, Tito met with Mihailović to negotiate an alliance between the Partisans and Chetniks, but they failed to reach an agreement as the disparity of the aims of their respective movements was great enough to preclude any real compromise.[36] Tito was in favour of a joint full-scale offensive, while Mihailović considered a general uprising to be premature and dangerous, as he thought it would trigger reprisals.[30] For his part, Tito's goal was to prevent an assault from the rear by the Chetniks, as he was convinced that Mihailović was playing a "double game", maintaining contacts with German forces via the Nedić government. Mihailović was in contact with Nedić's government, receiving monetary aid via Colonel Popović.[37] On the other hand, Mihailović sought to prevent Tito from assuming the leadership role in the resistance,[36][38] as Tito's goals were counter to his goals of the restoration of the Karađorđević dynasty and the establishment of Greater Serbia.[39] Further talks were scheduled for 16 October.[38]

At the end of September, the Germans launched a massive offensive against both Partisans and Chetniks called Operation Užice.[30] A joint British-Yugoslav intelligence mission, quickly assembled by the Special Operations Executive (SOE) and led by Captain D. T. Hudson, arrived on the Montenegrin coast on 22 September, whence they had made their way with the help of Montenegrin Partisans to their headquarters, and then on to Tito's headquarters at Užice,[40] arriving on or around 25 October.[41] Hudson reported that earlier promises of supplies made by the British to Mihailović contributed to the poor relationship between Mihailović and Tito, as Mihailović correctly believed that no one outside of Yugoslavia knew about the Partisan movement,[42][43][44] and felt that "the time was ripe for drastic action against the communists".[42]

Tito and Mihailović met again on 27 October 1941 in the town of Brajići near Ravna Gora in an attempt to achieve an understanding, but found consensus only on secondary issues.[45] Immediately following the meeting, Mihailović began preparations for an attack on the Partisans, delaying the attack only for lack of arms.[46] Mihailović reported to the Yugoslav government-in-exile that he believed the occupation of Užice, the location of a gun factory, was required to prevent the strengthening of the Partisans.[43] On 28 October, two Chetnik liaison officers first approached Nedić and later that day German officer Josef Matl of the Armed Forces Liaison Office, and offered Mihailović's services in the struggle against the Partisans in exchange for weapons.[31][46] This offer was relayed to the German general in charge of the Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia, and a meeting was proposed by the German for 3 November. On 1 November, the Chetniks attacked the Partisan headquarters at Užice, but were beaten back.[47][48] On 3 November 1941 Mihailović postponed the proposed meeting with the German officers until 11 November, citing the "general conflict" in which the Chetniks and Partisans were engaged requiring his presence at his headquarters.[48][49] The meeting, organized through one of Mihailović's representatives in Belgrade, took place between the Chetnik leader and an Abwehr official, although it remains controversial if the initiative came from the Germans, from Mihailović himself, or from his liaison officer in Belgrade.[c] In the negotiations Mihailović assured the Germans that "it is not my intention to fight against the occupiers" and claimed that "I have never made a genuine agreement with the communists, for they do not care about the people. They are led by foreigners who are not Serbs: the Bulgarian Janković, the Jew Lindmajer, the Magyar Borota, two Muslims whose names I do not know and the Ustasha Major Boganić. That is all I know of the communist leadership."[50] It appears that Mihailović offered to cease activities in the towns and along the major communication lines, but ultimately no agreement was reached at the time due to German demands for the complete surrender of the Chetniks,[51][52][53] and the German belief that the Chetniks were likely to attack them despite Mihailović's offer.[54] After the negotiations, an attempt was made by the Germans to arrest Mihailović.[55] Mihailović carefully kept the negotiations with the Germans secret from the Yugoslav government-in-exile, as well as from the British and their representative Hudson.[51][47]

Mihailović's assault on the Partisan headquarters at Užice and Požega failed, and the Partisans mounted a rapid counterattack.[46][56] Within two weeks, the Partisans repelled Chetnik advances and surrounded Mihailović's headquarters at Ravna Gora. Having lost troops in clashes with the Germans,[57] sustained the loss of approximately 1,000 troops and considerable equipment at the hands of the Partisans,[58] received only one small delivery of arms from the British in early November,[59] and been unsuccessful in convincing the Germans to provide him with supplies,[48] Mihailović found himself in a desperate situation.[58][60]

In mid-November, the Germans launched an offensive against the Partisans, Operation Western Morava, which bypassed Chetnik forces.[56][61][62] Having been unable to quickly overcome the Chetniks, faced with reports that the British considered Mihailović as the leader of the resistance, and under pressure from the German offensive, Tito approached Mihailović with an offer to negotiate, which resulted in talks and later an armistice between the two groups on 20 or 21 November.[61][56][63] Tito and Mihailović had one last phone conversation on 28 November, in which Tito announced that he would defend his positions, while Mihailović said that he would disperse.[30][52][62] On 30 November, Mihailović's unit leaders decided to join the "legalized" Chetniks under General Nedić's command, in order to be able to continue the fight against the Partisans without the possibility of being attacked by the Germans and to avoid compromising Mihailović's relationship with the British. Evidence suggests that Mihailović did not order this, but rather only sanctioned the decision.[54][64] About 2,000–3,000 of Mihailović's men actually enlisted in this capacity within the Nedić regime. The legalization allowed his men to have a salary and an alibi provided by the collaborationist administration, while it provided the Nedić regime with more men to fight the communists, although they were under the control of the Germans.[65] Mihailović also considered that he could, using this method, infiltrate the Nedić administration, which was soon fraught with Chetnik sympathizers.[66] While this arrangement differed from the all-out collaboration of Kosta Pećanac, it caused much confusion over who and what the Chetniks were.[67] Some of Mihailović's men crossed into Bosnia to fight the Ustaše while most abandoned the struggle.[67] Throughout November, Mihailović's forces had been under pressure from German forces, and on 3 December, the Germans issued orders for Operation Mihailovic, an attack against his forces in Ravna Gora.[62] On 5 December, the day before the operation, Mihailović was warned by contacts serving under Nedić of the impending attack,[62] likely by Milan Aćimović.[68] He closed down his radio transmitter on that day to avoid giving the Germans hints of his whereabouts[69] and then dispersed his command and the remainder of his forces.[62] The remnants of his Chetniks retreated to the hills of Ravna Gora, but were under German attack throughout December.[70] Mihailović narrowly avoided capture.[71] On 10 December, a bounty was put on his head by the Germans.[55] In the meantime, on 7 December, the BBC announced his promotion to the rank of brigade general.[72]

Activities in Montenegro and the Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia

 
2nd Ravna Gora Corps under command of Captain Predrag Raković on the forced march through the Peshter Plateau rushed to aid Supreme Commande on the eve of Operation Schwarz in early spring 1943.

Mihailović did not resume radio transmissions with the Allies before January 1942. In early 1942, the Yugoslav government-in-exile reorganized and appointed Slobodan Jovanović as prime minister, and the cabinet declared the strengthening of Mihailović's position as one of its primary goals. It also unsuccessfully sought to obtain support from both the Americans and the British.[73] On 11 January, Mihailović was named "Minister of the Army, Navy and Air Forces" by the government-in-exile.[74] The British had suspended support in late 1941 following Hudson's reports of the conflict between the Chetniks and Partisans. Mihailović, infuriated by Hudson's recommendations, denied Hudson radio access and had no contact with him through the first months of 1942.[75] Although Mihailović was in hiding, by March the Nedić government located him, and a meeting sanctioned by the German occupation took place between him and Aćimović. According to historian Jozo Tomasevich, following this meeting, General Bader was informed that Mihailović was willing to put himself at the disposal of the Nedić government in the fight against the communists, but Bader refused his offer.[71] In April 1942, Mihailović, still hiding in Serbia, resumed contact with British envoy Hudson, who was also able to resume his radio transmission to Allied headquarters in Cairo, using Mihailović's transmitter. In May, the British resumed sending assistance to the Chetniks, although only to a small extent,[76] with a single airdrop on 30 March.[77] Mihailović subsequently left for Montenegro, arriving there on 1 June.[78] He established his headquarters there and on 10 June was formally appointed as Chief-of-Staff of the Supreme Command of the Yugoslav Army in the Fatherland.[79] A week later he was promoted to the rank of General of the Army.[1] The Partisans, in the meantime, insisted to the Soviets that Mihailović was a traitor and a collaborator, and should be condemned as such. The Soviets initially saw no need for it, and their propaganda kept supporting Mihailović. Eventually, on 6 July 1942, the station Radio Free Yugoslavia, located in the Comintern building in Moscow, broadcast a resolution from Yugoslav "patriots" in Montenegro and Bosnia labelling Mihailović a collaborator.[80]

 
Captain Predrag Raković, General Dragoljub Mihailovic and Academician Dragiša Vasić, after deliverance from a hostile environment during Operation Schwarz, May 1943, in the Lim Valley. Behind General, Major Miljan Janketic, Commander of the Support Battalion.
 
A 1943 German warrant after Operation Schwarz for Mihailović offering a reward of 100,000 gold marks for his capture, dead or alive. Based on the sketch, the Germans probably did not know that Mihailović was wearing a beard.

In Montenegro, Mihailović found a complex situation. The local Chetnik leaders, Bajo Stanišić and Pavle Đurišić, had reached arrangements with the Italians and were cooperating with them against the communist-led Partisans.[81][82] Mihailović later claimed at his trial in 1946 that he was unaware of these arrangements prior to his arrival in Montenegro, and had to accept them once he arrived,[83][84] as Stanišić and Đurišić acknowledged him as their leader in name only and would only follow Mihailović's orders if they supported their interests.[84] Mihailović believed that Italian military intelligence was better informed than he was of the activities of his commanders.[84] He tried to make the best of the situation and accepted the appointment of Blažo Đukanović as the figurehead commander of "nationalist forces" in Montenegro. While Mihailović approved the destruction of communist forces, he aimed to exploit the connections of Chetniks commanders with the Italians to get food, arms and ammunition in the expectation of an Allied landing in the Balkans. On 1 December, Đurišić organised a Chetnik "youth conference" at Šahovići. The congress, which historian Stevan K. Pavlowitch writes expressed "extremism and intolerance", nationalist claims were made on parts of Albania, Bulgaria, Romania and Italy, while its resolutions posited the restoration of a monarchy with a period of transitional Chetnik dictatorship. Mihailović and Đukanović did not attend the event, which was entirely dominated by Đurišić, but they sent representatives.[85] In the same month, Mihailović informed his subordinates that: "The units of the Partisans are filled with thugs of the most varied kinds, such as Ustašas – the worst butchers of the Serb people – Jews, Croats, Dalmatians, Bulgarians, Turks, Magyars, and all the other nations of the world."[86]

 
British Brigadier Charles Armstrong visits the 2nd Ravna Gora Corps in the fall of 1943. Beside him is the corps' commander, Captain Predrag Raković
 
The column led by General Dragoljub Mihailovc and Captain Predrag Raković, who headed from Mt. Bobija to Mt. Suvobor, in the village of Ba, where Captain Zvonko Vucković, commander of the 1st Ravna Gora Corps, made his last preparations for organizing the Ba Congress, January 1944.

In the NDH, Ilija Trifunović-Birčanin, a leader of pre-war Chetnik organizations, commanded the Chetniks in Dalmatia, Lika, Bosnia and Herzegovina. He led the "nationalist" resistance against Partisans and Ustaše and acknowledged Mihailović as the formal leader, but acted on his own, with his troops being used by the Italians as the local Anti-Communist Volunteer Militia (MVAC). Italian commander Mario Roatta aimed to spare Italian lives, but also to counter the Ustaše and Germans, to undermine Mihailović's authority among the Chetniks by playing up local leaders. Chetniks, led by Dobroslav Jevđević, came from Montenegro to help the Bosnian Serb population against the Ustaše. They murdered and pillaged in Foča until the Italians intervened in August. The Chetniks also asked the Italians for protection against Ustaše retribution. On 22 July, Mihailović met with Trifunović-Birčanin, Jevđević, and his newly appointed delegate in Herzegovina, Petar Baćović. The meeting was supposedly secret but was known to Italian intelligence. Mihailović gave no precise orders but expressed his confidence in both his subordinates, adding, according to Italian reports, that he was waiting for help from the Allies to start a real guerrilla campaign, in order to spare Serb lives. Summoned by Roatta upon their return, Trifunović-Birčanin and Jevđević assured the Italian commander that Mihailović was merely a "moral head" and that they would not attack Italians, even if he should give such an order.[87]

Having become more and more concerned with domestic enemies and concerned that he be in a position to control Yugoslavia after the Allies defeated the Axis, Mihailović concentrated from Montenegro on directing operations, in the various parts of Yugoslavia, mostly against Partisans, but also against the Ustaše and Dimitrije Ljotić's Serbian Volunteer Corps (SDK).[79] During the autumn of 1942, Mihailović's Chetniks—at the request of the British organization—sabotaged several railway lines used to supply Axis forces in the Western Desert of northern Africa.[88] In September and December, Mihailović's actions damaged the railway system seriously; the Allies gave him credit for inconveniencing Axis forces and contributing to Allied successes in Africa.[89] The credit given to Mihailović for sabotages was maybe undeserved:

But an S.O.E. 'appreciation on Jugoslavia' of mid-November said: "... So far no telegrams have been received from either of our liaison officers reporting any sabotage undertaken by General Mihajlović, nor have we received any reports of fighting against the Axis troops." In Yugoslavia, therefore, S.O.E. could claim no equivalent to the Gorgopotamos operation in Greece. From all this, it might seem that since the autumn of 1941 the British had – wittingly or unwittingly – been co-operating in a gigantic hoax.[90]
 
Captain Predrag Raković confers with his men. Captain Raković committed suicide after being surrounded by partisans on 15 December 1944.

Early in September 1942, Mihailović called for civil disobedience against the Nedić regime through leaflets and clandestine radio transmitters. This prompted fighting between the Chetniks and followers of the Nedić regime. The Germans, whom the Nedić administration had called for help against Mihailović, responded to Nedić's request and to the sabotages with mass terror, and attacked the Chetniks in late 1942 and early 1943. Roberts mentions Nedić's request for help as the main reason for German action, and does not mention the sabotage campaign.[79] Pavlowitch, on the other hand, mentions the sabotages as being conducted simultaneously with the propaganda actions. Thousands of arrests were made and it has been estimated that during December 1942, 1,600 Chetnik combatants were killed by the Germans through combat actions and executions. These actions by the Nedić regime and the Germans "brought to an abrupt conclusion much of the anti-German action Mihailović had started up again since the summer (of 1942)".[91] Adolf Hitler wrote to Benito Mussolini on 16 February 1943, demanding that in addition to the partisans be pursued the chetniks who possessed "a special danger in the long-term plans that Mihailovic's supporters were building." Hitler adds: "In any case, the liquidation of the Mihailovic movement will no longer be an easy task, given the forces at its disposal and the large number of armed Chetniks". At that time, General Mihailovic was with his Supreme Command in Montenegro, which was under Italian occupation. From the beginning of 1943, General Mihailovic prepared his units for the supports of Allied landing on the Adriatic coast. General Mihailovic hoped that the Western Alliance would open the Second Front in the Balkans.

 
2nd Ravna Gora Corps celebrates Vidovdan on 28 June 1944 at Mt. Jelica. Three months later, the Red Army will arrive in Serbia.

Mihailović had great difficulties controlling his local commanders, who often did not have radio contacts and relied on couriers to communicate. He was, however, apparently aware that many Chetnik groups were committing crimes against civilians and acts of ethnic cleansing; according to Pavlowitch, Đurišić proudly reported to Mihailović that he had destroyed Muslim villages, in retribution against acts committed by Muslim militias. While Mihailović apparently did not order such acts himself and disapproved of them, he also failed to take any action against them, being dependent on various armed groups whose policy he could neither denounce nor condone. He also hid the situation from the British and the Yugoslav government-in-exile.[92] Many terror acts were committed by Chetnik groups against their various enemies, real or perceived, reaching a peak between October 1942 and February 1943.[93] Brigadier Charles Armstrong reported to his command °that Mihailovic believed that Britain had left Yugoslavia to Soviet influence ...°. Mihailovic's units in Serbia during the arrival of the Soviet army in September 1944, do not lead any fighting against the Soviets. Some Chetnik corps commanders, such as Dragutin Keserovic, Predrag Raković, Vlastimir Vesic and Dusan Smiljanic, are trying to co-operate with the Soviet Army

Terror tactics and cleansing actions

Chetnik ideology encompassed the notion of Greater Serbia, to be achieved by forcing population shifts in order to create ethnically homogeneous areas.[94] Partly due to this ideology and partly in response to violent actions undertaken by the Ustaše and the Muslim forces attached to them,[95] Chetniks forces engaged in numerous acts of violence including massacres and destruction of property, and used terror tactics to drive out non-Serb groups.[96] In the spring of 1942, Mihailović penned in his diary: "The Muslim population has through its behaviour arrived at the situation where our people no longer wish to have them in our midst. It is necessary already now to prepare their exodus to Turkey or anywhere else outside our borders."[97]

 
"Instrukcije" ("Instructions") of 1941 attributed to Mihailović ordering the cleansing of non-Serbs from territories claimed by the Chetniks as part of a Greater Serbia

According to the historian Noel Malcolm, there is "... no definite evidence that Mihailović himself ever called for ethnic cleansing".[98] However, instructions to his Montenegrin subordinate commanders, Major Đorđije Lašić and Captain Pavle Đurišić, which prescribe cleansing actions of non-Serb elements in order to create Greater Serbia have been attributed to Mihailović by some historians,[99][100][101][102] but some historians argue that the document was a forgery made by Đurišić after he failed to reach Mihailović in December 1941 after the latter was driven out of Ravna Gora by German forces.[98][103][104] According to Malcolm, if the document was a forgery, it was forged by Chetnik commanders hoping it would be taken as a legitimate order, not by their opponents seeking to discredit the Chetniks.[98] The objectives outlined in the directive were:[105]

  1. The struggle for the liberty of our whole nation under the sceptre of His Majesty, King Peter II;
  2. the creation of a Great Yugoslavia and within it of a Great Serbia, which is to be ethnically pure and is to include Serbia [meaning also Vardar Macedonia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Srijem, the Banat, and Bačka];
  3. the struggle for the inclusion into Yugoslavia of all still unliberated Slovene territories under the Italians and Germans (Trieste, Gorizia, Istria, and Carinthia) as well as Bulgaria, and northern Albania with Scutari;
  4. the cleansing of the state territory of all national minorities and a-national elements [i.e. the Partisans and their supporters];
  5. the creation of contiguous frontiers between Serbia and Montenegro, as well as between Serbia and Slovenia by cleansing the Muslim population from Sandžak and the Muslim and Croat populations from Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Whether or not the instructions were forged, Mihailović was certainly aware of both the ideological goal of cleansing and of the violent acts taken to accomplish that goal. Stevan Moljević worked out the basics of the Chetnik program while at Ravna Gora in the summer of 1941,[106] and Mihailović sent representatives to the Conference of Young Chetnik Intellectuals of Montenegro where the basic formulations were expanded.[107] Đurišić played the dominant role at this conference. Relations between Đurišić and Mihailović were strained, and although Mihailović did not participate, neither did he take any action to counter it.[108] In 1943, Đurišić followed Chetnik Supreme Command orders to carry out "cleansing actions" against Muslims and reported the thousands of old men, women and children he massacred to Mihailović.[109] Mihailović was either "unable or unwilling to stop the massacres".[110] In 1946, Mihailović was indicted, amongst other things, of having "given orders to his commanders to destroy the Muslims (whom he called Turks) and the Croats (whom he called Ustashas)."[111] At his trial Mihailović claimed that he never ordered the destruction of Croat and Muslim villages and that some of his subordinates hid such activities from him.[112] He was later convicted of crimes that included having "incited national and religious hatred and discord among the peoples of Yugoslavia, as a consequence of which his Chetnik bands carried out mass massacres of the Croat and Muslim as well as of the Serb population that did not accept the occupation."[111]

Relations with the British

 
Winston Churchill became increasingly doubtful about Mihailović.

"General Mihaylovitch saw his contribution to the common cause in turning anti-German feeling into anti-partisan feeling. Only on the most Jesuitical grounds can his action be represented as anything but damaging to the cause of the Allies."[113]

Basil Davidson, member of the British mission

On 15 November 1942, Captain Hudson cabled to Cairo that the situation was problematic, that opportunities for large-scale sabotage were not exploited because of Mihailović's desire to avoid reprisals and that, while waiting for an Allied landing and victory, the Chetnik leader might come to "any sound understanding with either Italians or Germans which he believed might serve his purposes without compromising him", in order to defeat the communists.[114] In December, Major Peter Boughey, a member of SOE's London staff, insisted to Živan Knežević, a member of the Yugoslav cabinet, that Mihailović was a quisling, who was openly collaborating with the Italians.[115] The Foreign Office called Boughey's declarations "blundering" but the British were worried about the situation and Mihailović's inactivity.[116] A British senior officer, Colonel S. W. Bailey, was then sent to Mihailović and was parachuted into Montenegro on Christmas Day. His mission was to gather information and to see if Mihailović had carried out necessary sabotages against railroads.[114] During the following months, the British concentrated on having Mihailović stop Chetnik collaboration with Axis forces and perform the expected actions against the occupiers, but they were not successful.[117]

In January 1943, the SOE reported to Churchill that Mihailović's subordinate commanders had made local arrangements with Italian authorities, although there was no evidence that Mihailović himself had ever dealt with the Germans. The report concluded that, while aid to Mihailović was as necessary as ever, it would be advisable to extend assistance to other resistance groups and to try to reunite the Chetniks and the Partisans.[118] British liaison officers reported in February that Mihailović had "at no time" been in touch with the Germans, but that his forces had been in some instances aiding the Italians against the Partisans (the report was simultaneous with Operation Trio). Bailey reported that Mihailović was increasingly dissatisfied with the insufficient help he was receiving from the British.[119] Mihailović's movement had been so inflated by British propaganda that the liaison officers found the reality decidedly below expectations.[120]

On 3 January 1943, just before Case White, an Axis conference was held in Rome, attended by German commander Alexander Löhr, NDH representatives, and by Jevđević who, this time, collaborated openly with the Axis forces against the Partisans, and had gone to the conference without Mihailović's knowledge. Mihailović disapproved of Jevđević's presence and reportedly sent him an angry message, but his actions were limited to announcing that Jevđević's military award would be withdrawn.[121] On 3 February 1943 Charles de Gaulle awarded Mihailović with Croix de Guerre, a French military decoration to honour people who fought with the Allies against the Axis forces at any time during World War II.[122]

On 28 February 1943, in Bailey's presence, Mihailović addressed his troops in Lipovo. Bailey reported that Mihailović had expressed his bitterness over "perfidious Albion" who expected the Serbs to fight to the last drop of blood without giving them any means to do so, had said that the Serbs were completely friendless, that the British were holding King Peter II and his government as virtual prisoners, and that he would keep accepting help from the Italians as long as it would give him the means to annihilate the Partisans. Also according to Bailey's report, he added that his enemies were the Ustaše, the Partisans, the Croats and the Muslims and that only after dealing with them would he turn to the Germans and the Italians.[123][124]

While defenders of Mihailović have argued that Bailey had mistranslated the speech,[d] and may have even done so intentionally,[125] the effect on the British was disastrous and marked the beginning of the end for British-Chetnik cooperation. The British officially protested to the Yugoslav government-in-exile and demanded explanations regarding Mihailović's attitude and collaboration with the Italians. Mihailović answered to his government that he had had no meetings with Italian generals and that Jevđević had no command to do so. The British announced that they would send him more abundant supplies.[126] Also in early 1943, the tone of the BBC broadcasts became more and more favourable to the Partisans, describing them as the only resistance movement in Yugoslavia, and occasionally attributing to them resistance acts actually undertaken by the Chetniks.[127] Bailey complained to the Foreign Office that his position with Mihailović was being prejudiced by this.[128] The Foreign Office protested and the BBC apologized, but the line did not really change.[128]

Defeat in the battle of the Neretva

During Case White, the Italians heavily supported the Chetniks in the hope that they would deal a fatal blow to the Partisans. The Germans disapproved of this collaboration, about which Hitler personally wrote to Mussolini.[129] At the end of February, shortly after his speech, Mihailović himself joined his troops in Herzegovina near the Neretva in order to try to salvage the situation. The Partisans nevertheless defeated the opposing Chetniks troops, who were in a state of disarray, and managed to go across the Neretva.[130] In March, the Partisans negotiated a truce with Axis forces in order to gain some time and use it to defeat the Chetniks. While Ribbentrop and Hitler finally overruled the orders of their subordinates and forbade any such contacts, the Partisans benefited from this brief truce, during which Italian support for the Chetniks was suspended, and which allowed Tito's forces to deal a severe blow to Mihailović's troops.[131]

In May, the German intelligence service also tried to establish contact with Mihailović to see if an alliance against the Partisans was possible. In Kolašin, they met with a Chetnik officer, who did not introduce himself. They assumed they had met the general himself, but the man was possibly not Mihailović, whom Bailey reported being in another area at the same period. The German command, however, reacted strongly against any attempt at "negotiating with the enemy".[132]

The Germans then turned to their next operation, code-named Schwarz, and attacked the Montenegrin Chetniks. Đurišić appears to have suggested to Mihailović a short-term cooperation with the Germans against the Partisans, something Mihailović refused to condone. Đurišić ended up defending his headquarters at Kolašin against the Partisans. On 14 May, the Germans entered Kolašin and captured Đurišić, while Mihailović escaped.[131][133]

In late May, after regaining control of most of Montenegro, the Italians turned their efforts against the Chetniks, at least against Mihailović's forces, and put a reward of half-a-million lire for the capture of Mihailović, and one million for the capture of Tito.[134]

Allied support shifts

In April and May 1943, the British sent a mission to the Partisans and strengthened their mission to the Chetniks. Major Jasper Rootham, one of the liaison officers to the Chetniks, reported that engagements between Chetniks and Germans did occur, but were invariably started by German attacks. During the summer, the British sent supplies to both Chetniks and Partisans.[135]

Mihailović returned to Serbia and his movement rapidly recovered its dominance in the region. Receiving more weapons from the British, he undertook a series of actions and sabotages, disarmed Serbian State Guard (SDS) detachments and skirmished with Bulgarian troops, though he generally avoided the Germans, considering that his troops were not yet strong enough. In Serbia, his organization controlled the mountains where Axis forces were absent. The collaborationist Nedić administration was largely infiltrated by Mihailović's men and many SDS troops being actually sympathetic to his movement. After his defeat in Case White, Mihailović tried to improve his organization. Dragiša Vasić, the movement's ideologue who had opposed the Italian connection and clashed with Mihailović, left the supreme command. Mihailović tried to extend his contacts to Croats and traditional parties and to revitalise his contacts in Slovenia.[136] The United States sent liaison officers to join Bailey's mission with Mihailović, while also sending men to Tito.[137] The Germans, in the meantime, became worried by the growing strength of the Partisans and made local arrangements with Chetnik groups, though not with Mihailović himself. According to Walter R. Roberts, there is "little doubt" that Mihailović was aware of these arrangements and that he might have regarded them as the lesser of two evils, his primary aim being to defeat the Partisans.[138]

From the beginning of 1943, British impatience with Mihailović grew. From the decrypts of German wireless messages, Churchill and his government concluded that the Chetniks' collaboration with the Italians went beyond what was acceptable and that the Partisans were doing the most severe damage to the Axis.[139]

With Italy's withdrawal from the war in September 1943, the Chetniks in Montenegro found themselves under attack by both the Germans and the Partisans, who took control of large parts of Montenegrin territory, including the former "Chetnik capital" of Kolašin. Đurišić, having escaped from a German camp in Galicia, found his way to Yugoslavia, was captured again, and was then asked by collaborationist prime minister Milan Nedić to form a Montenegrin Volunteer Corps against the Partisans. He was pledged to Nedić, but also made a secret allegiance to Mihailović. Both Mihailović and Đurišić expected a landing by the Western Allies. In Serbia, Mihailović was considered the representative of the victorious Allies.[140] In the chaotic situation created by the Italian surrender, several Chetnik leaders overtly collaborated with the Germans against the reinforced Partisans; approached by an Abwehr agent, Jevđević offered the services of about 5,000 men. Momčilo Đujić also went to the Germans for cover against the Ustaše and Partisans, although he was distrusted.[141] In October 1943, Mihailović, at the Allies' request, agreed to undertake two sabotage operations, which had the effect of making him even more of a wanted man and forced him, according to British reports, to change his headquarters frequently.[142]

By November and December 1943, the Germans had realized that Tito was their most dangerous opponent; German representative Hermann Neubacher managed to conclude secret arrangements with four of Mihailović's commanders for the cessation of hostilities for periods of five to ten weeks. The Germans interpreted this as a sign of weakness from the Mihailović movement. The truces were kept secret but came to the knowledge of the British through decrypts. There is no evidence that Mihailović had been involved or approved, though British Military Intelligence found it possible that he was "conniving".[143] At the end of October, the local signals decrypted in Cairo had disclosed that Mihailović had ordered all Chetnik units to co-operate with Germany against the Partisans.[144] This order for cooperation was originally decrypted by Germans, and it was noted in the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht War Journal.[145][e]

The British were more and more concerned about the fact that the Chetniks were more willing to fight Partisans than Axis troops. At the third Moscow Conference in October 1943, Anthony Eden expressed impatience about Mihailović's lack of action.[146] The report of Fitzroy Maclean, liaison officer to the Partisans, convinced Churchill that Tito's forces were the most reliable resistance group. The report of Charles Armstrong, liaison officer to Mihailović, arrived too late for Anthony Eden to take it to the Tehran Conference in late November 1943, though Stevan K. Pavlowitch thinks that it would probably been insufficient to change Churchill's mind. At Tehran, Churchill argued in favour of the Partisans, while Joseph Stalin expressed limited interest but agreed that they should receive the greatest possible support.[147]

On 10 December, Churchill met King Peter II in London and told him that he possessed irrefutable proofs of Mihailović's collaboration with the enemy and that Mihailović should be eliminated from the Yugoslav cabinet. Also in early December, Mihailović was asked to undertake an important sabotage mission against railways, which was later interpreted as a "final opportunity" to redeem himself. However, possibly not realizing how Allied policy had evolved, he failed to give the go-ahead.[148] On 12 January 1944, the SOE in Cairo sent a report to the Foreign Office, saying that Mihailović's commanders had collaborated with Germans and Italians and that Mihailović himself had condoned and in certain cases approved their actions. This hastened the British's decision to withdraw their thirty liaison officers to Mihailović.[149] The mission was effectively withdrawn in the spring of 1944. In April, one month before leaving, liaison officer Brigadier Armstrong noted that Mihailović had been mostly active in propaganda against the Axis, that he had missed numerous occasions for sabotage in the last six or eight months and that the efforts of many Chetnik leaders to follow Mihailović's orders for inactivity had evolved into non-aggression pacts with Axis troops, although the mission had no evidence of collaboration with the enemy.[150]

In the meantime, Mihailović tried to improve the organization of his movement. On 25 January 1944, with the help of Živko Topalović, he organized in Ba, a village near Ravna Gora, the Ba Congress also meant to remove the shadow of the previous congress held in Montenegro. The congress was attended by 274 people, representing various parties, and aimed to be a reaction against the arbitrary behaviour of some commanders. The organization of a new, democratic, possibly federal, Yugoslavia, was mentioned, though the proposals remained vague, and an appeal was even made for the KPJ to join. The Chetnik command structure was formally reorganized. Đurišić was still in charge of Montenegro and Đujić of Dalmatia, but Jevđević was excluded. The Germans and Bulgarians reacted to the congress by conducting an operation against the Chetniks in northern Serbia in February, killing 80 and capturing 913.[151]

After May and the withdrawal of the British mission, Mihailović kept transmitting radio messages to the Allies and to his government but no longer received replies.

In July and August 1944, Mihailović ordered his forces to cooperate with the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) and 60th Troop Carrier Squadron (TCS) in the successful rescue of hundreds downed Allied airmen between August and December 1944 in what was called Operation Halyard;[152][153] for this, he was posthumously awarded the Legion of Merit by United States President Harry S. Truman.

According to historian Marko Attila Hoare, "On other occasions, however, Mihailović's Chetniks rescued German airmen and handed them over safely to the German armed forces ... The Americans, with a weaker intelligence presence in the Balkans than the British, were less in touch with the realities of the Yugoslav civil war. They were consequently less than enthusiastic about British abandonment of the anti-communist Mihailović, and more reserved toward the Partisans." Several Yugoslavs were also evacuated in Operation Halyard, along with Topalović; they tried to raise more support abroad for Mihailović's movement, but this came too late to reverse Allied policy.[154] The United States also sent an intelligence mission to Mihailović in March, but withdrew it after Churchill advised Roosevelt that all support should go to Tito and that "complete chaos" would ensue if the Americans also backed Mihailović.[152]

In July, Ivan Šubašić formed the new Yugoslav government-in-exile, which did not include Mihailović as a minister. Mihailović, however, remained the official chief-of-staff of the Yugoslav Army. On 29 August, upon the recommendation of his government, King Peter dissolved by royal decree the Supreme Command, therefore abolishing Mihailović's post. On 12 September, King Peter broadcast a message from London, announcing the gist of 29 August's decree and calling upon all Serbs, Croats and Slovenes to "join the National Liberation Army under the leadership of Marshal Tito". He also proclaimed that he strongly condemned "the misuse of the name of the King and the authority of the Crown by which an attempt has been made to justify collaboration with the enemy". Though the King did not mention Mihailović, it was clear who he meant. According to his own account, Peter had obtained after strenuous talks with the British not to say a word directly against Mihailović. The message had a devastating effect on the morale of the Chetniks. Many men left Mihailović after the broadcast; others remained out of loyalty to him. [155] Mihailović resented the fact that he was abandoned by his former allies and in August 1944 summed up his position by stating that:

"More than three years ago I took up arms to fight for democracy against dictatorship in the form of nazism and fascism. In fighting for this cause there were ten occasions on which I almost lost my life. If I must die in fighting against a new form of dictatorship, I shall die, bitter because I have been deserted by those who profess to believe in democracy, but satisfied that I myself have fought bravely and honestly and have refused to compromise my cause."[156]

Defeat in 1944–45

At the end of August 1944, the Soviet Union's Red Army arrived on the eastern borders of Yugoslavia. In early September, it invaded Bulgaria and coerced it into turning against the Axis. Mihailović's Chetniks, meanwhile, were so badly armed to resist the Partisan incursions into Serbia that some of Mihailović's officers, including Nikola Kalabić, Neško Nedić and Dragoslav Račić, met German officers on 11 August to arrange a meeting of Mihailović with Neubacher and to set forth the conditions for increased collaboration.[157] Nedić, in turn, apparently picked up the idea and suggested forming an army of united anti-communist forces; he arranged a secret meeting with Mihailović, which apparently took place around 20 August. From the existing accounts, they met in a dark room and Mihailović remained mostly silent, so much so that Nedić was not even sure afterwards that he had actually met the real Mihailović. According to British official Stephen Clissold, Mihailović was initially very reluctant to go to the meeting, but was finally convinced by Kalabić. It appears that Nedić offered to obtain arms from the Germans, and to place his Serbian State Guard under Mihailović's command, possibly as part of an attempt to switch sides as Germany was losing the war.[158] Neubacher favoured the idea, but it was vetoed by Hitler, who saw this as an attempt to establish an "English fifth column" in Serbia. According to Pavlowitch, Mihailović, who was reportedly not enthusiastic about the proposal, and Nedić might have been trying to "exploit each other's predicaments", while Nedić may have considered letting Mihailović "take over". At the end of August, Mihailović also met an OSS mission, headed by Colonel Robert H. McDowell, who stayed with him until November.[159]

As the Red Army approached, Mihailović thought that the outcome of war would depend on Turkey entering the conflict, followed at last by an Allied incursion in the Balkans. He called upon all Yugoslavs to remain faithful to the King, and claimed that Peter had sent him a message telling him not to believe what he had heard on the radio about his dismissal. His troops started to break up outside Serbia in mid-August, as he tried to reach to Muslim and Croat leaders for a national uprising. However, whatever his intentions, he proved to have little attraction for non-Serbs. Đurišić, while leading his Montenegrin Volunteer Corps, which was related on paper to Ljotić's forces, accepted once again Mihailović's command.[160] Mihailović ordered a general mobilization on 1 September; his troops were engaged against the Germans and the Bulgarians, while also under attack by the Partisans.[155] On 4 September, Mihailović issued a circular telegram ordering his commanders that no action can be undertaken without his orders, save against the communists.[161] German sources confirm the loyalty of Mihailović and forces under his direct influence in this period.[f] The Partisans then penetrated Chetnik territory, fighting a difficult battle and ultimately defeating Mihailović's main force by October. On 6 September, what was left of Nedić's troops openly joined Mihailović. In the meantime, the Red Army encountered both the Partisans and Chetniks while entering from Romania and Bulgaria. They briefly cooperated with the Chetniks against retreating Germans, before disarming them. Mihailović sent a delegation to the Soviet command, but his representatives were ignored and ultimately arrested. Mihailović's movement collapsed in Serbia under the attacks of Soviets, Partisans, Bulgarians and fighting with the retreating Germans. Still hoping for a landing by the Western Allies, he headed for Bosnia with his staff, McDowell and a force of a few hundred. He set up a few Muslim units and appointed Croat Major Matija Parac as the head of an as yet non-existent Croatian Chetnik army. Nedić himself had fled to Austria. On 25 May 1945, he wrote to General Dwight D. Eisenhower, asserting that he had always been a secret ally of Mihailović.[162]

Now hoping for support from the United States, Mihailović met a small British mission between the Neretva river and Dubrovnik, but realized that it wasn't the signal of the hoped-for landing. McDowell was evacuated on 1 November and was instructed to offer Mihailović the opportunity to leave with him. Mihailović refused, as he wanted to remain until the expected change of Western Allied policy.[163] During the next weeks, the British government also raised the possibility of evacuating Mihailović by arranging a "rescue and honorable detention", and discussed the matter with the United States. In the end, no action was taken.[164] With their main forces in eastern Bosnia, the Chetniks under Mihailović's personal command in the late months of 1944 continued to collaborate with Germans. Colonel Borota and vojvoda Jevđević maintained contacts with Germans for the whole group.[165] In January 1945, Mihailović tried to regroup his forces on the Ozren heights, planning Muslim, Croatian and Slovenian units. His troops were, however, decimated and worn out, some selling their weapons and ammunition, or pillaging the local population. Đurišić joined Mihailović, with his own depleted forces, and found out that Mihailović had no plan.[166] Đurišić went his own way, and was killed on 12 April in a battle with the Ustaše.[167]

On 17 March 1945, Mihailović was visited in Bosnia by German emissary Stärker, who requested that Mihailović transmit to the Allied headquarters in Italy a secret German offer of capitulation. Mihailović transmitted the message, which was to be his last.[168] Ljotić and several independent Chetnik leaders in Istria proposed the forming of a common anti-communist front in the north-western coast, which could be acceptable to the Western Allies. Mihailović was not in favour of such a heterogeneous gathering, but did not reject Ljotić's proposal entirely, since the littoral area would be a convenient place to meet the Western Allies, and to join Slovene anti-communists, while Germany's collapse might make an anti-communist alliance possible. He authorized the departure of all who wanted to go, but few Chetniks ultimately arrived on the coast, with many being decimated on their way by Ustaše, Partisans, sickness and hunger.[169] On 13 April, Mihailović set out for northern Bosnia, on a 280 km-long march back to Serbia, aiming to start over a resistance movement, this time against the communists. His units were decimated by clashes with the Ustaše and Partisans, as well as dissension and typhus. On 10 May, they were attacked and defeated by the Yugoslav Army, the reorganized force of the Partisans, in battle of Zelengora. Mihailović managed to escape with 1,000–2,000 men, who gradually dispersed. Mihailović himself went into hiding in the mountains with a handful of men.[170]

Capture, trial and execution

 
Mihailović's trial

The Yugoslav authorities wanted to catch Mihailović alive in order to stage a full-scale trial.[171] He was finally caught on 13 March 1946.[172] The elaborate circumstances of his capture were kept secret for sixteen years. According to one version, Mihailović was approached by men who were supposedly British agents offering him help and an evacuation by aeroplane. After hesitating, he boarded the aeroplane, only to discover that it was a trap set up by the OZNA. Another version, proposed by the Yugoslav government, is that he was betrayed by Nikola Kalabić, who revealed his place of hiding in exchange for leniency.[173]

 
Monument to General Draža Mihailović on Ravna Gora, Serbia.
 
Draža Mihailović Monument in Canada

The trial of Draža Mihailović opened on 10 June 1946. His co-defendants were other prominent figures of the Chetnik movement as well as members of the Yugoslav government-in-exile, such as Slobodan Jovanović, who were tried in absentia, but also members of ZBOR and of the Nedić regime.[174] The main prosecutor was Miloš Minić, later Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Yugoslav government. The Allied airmen he had rescued in 1944 were not allowed to testify in his favour.[175] Mihailović evaded several questions by accusing some of his subordinates of incompetence and disregard of his orders. The trial shows, according to Jozo Tomasevich, that he never had firm and full control over his local commanders.[176] A Committee for the Fair Trial of General Mihailović was set up in the United States, but to no avail. Mihailović is quoted as saying, in his final statement, "I wanted much; I began much; but the gale of the world carried away me and my work."[177]

Roberts considers that the trial was "anything but a model of justice" and that "it is clear that Mihailović was not guilty of all, or even many, of the charges brought against him" though Tito would probably not have had a fair trial either, had Mihailović prevailed. Mihailović was convicted of high treason and war crimes, and was executed on 17 July 1946.[172] He was executed together with nine other officers in Lisičiji Potok, about 200 meters from the former Royal Palace. His body was reportedly covered with lime and the position of his unmarked grave was kept secret.[178]

Rehabilitation

In March 2012, Vojislav Mihailović filed a request for his grandfather's rehabilitation in the high court.[179] The announcement caused a negative reaction in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Serbia alike.[179] Željko Komšić, presidency member of Bosnia and Herzegovina, advocated the withdrawal of the Bosnian ambassador to Serbia if rehabilitation passes.[180] Former Croatian President Ivo Josipović stated that the attempted rehabilitation is harmful for Serbia and contrary to historical facts.[181] He elaborated that Mihailović "is a war criminal and Chetnikism is a quisling criminal movement".[181] Croatian foreign minister Vesna Pusić commented that the rehabilitation will only cause suffering to Serbia.[182] In Serbia, fourteen NGOs stated in an open letter that "the attempted rehabilitation of Draža Mihailović demeans the struggle of both the Serbians and all the other peoples of the former Yugoslavia against fascism".[179] Members of the Women in Black protested in front of the higher court.[183]

The High Court rehabilitated Draža Mihailović on 14 May 2015. This ruling reverses the judgment passed in 1946, sentencing Mihailović to death for collaboration with the occupying Nazi forces and stripping him of all his rights as a citizen. According to the ruling, the Communist regime staged a politically and ideologically motivated trial.[184][185]

Family

In 1920, Mihailović married Jelica Branković; they had three children. One of his sons, Branko Mihailović, was a Communist sympathizer and later supported the Partisans.[186] His daughter, Gordana Mihailović, also sided with the Partisans. She spent most of the war in Belgrade and, after the Partisans took the city, spoke on the radio to denounce her father as a traitor.[187] While Mihailović was in prison, his children did not come to see him, and only his wife visited him.[172] In 2005, Gordana Mihailović personally came to accept her father's posthumous award in the United States. Another son, Vojislav Mihailović, fought alongside his father and was killed in battle in May 1945.[188] His grandson, Vojislav Mihailović (born 1951, named after his uncle) is a Serbian politician, member of the Serbian Renewal Movement and later of the Serbian Democratic Renewal Movement. He was the mayor of Belgrade for one year, from 1999 to 2000 and ran unsuccessfully in the 2000 Yugoslav presidential elections.[189]

Legacy

 
The Legion of Merit, awarded to Mihailović by U.S. president Harry Truman
 
Letter from U.S. president Richard Nixon about Mihailović

Historians vary in their assessments of Mihailović. Tomasevich suggests one main cause of his defeat was his failure to grow professionally, politically or ideologically as his responsibilities increased, rendering him unable to face both the exceptional circumstances of the war and the complex situation of the Chetniks.[190] Tomasevich also criticizes Mihailović's loss of the Allied support through Chetnik collaboration with the Axis, as well as his doctrine of "passive resistance" which was perceived as idleness, stating "of generalship in the general there was precious little."[191] Pavlowitch also points to Mihailović's failure to grow and evolve during the conflict and describes him as a man "generally out of his depth".[192] Roberts asserts that Mihailović's policies were "basically static", that he "gambled all in the faith of an Allied victory," and that ultimately he was unable to control the Chetniks, who, "although hostile to the Germans and the Italians ... allowed themselves to drift into a policy of accommodations with both in the face of what they considered the greatest danger."[193]

Political views of Mihailović cover a wide range. After the war, Mihailović's wartime role was viewed in the light of his movement's collaboration, particularly in Yugoslavia where he was considered a collaborator convicted of high treason. Charles de Gaulle considered Mihailović a "pure hero" and always refused to have personal meetings with Tito, whom he considered as Mihailović's "murderer".[194][195] During the war, Churchill believed intelligence reports had shown that Mihailović had engaged "... in active collaboration with the Germans".[196] He observed that, under the pressure of German reprisals in 1941, Mihailović "drifted gradually into a posture where some of his commanders made accommodations with German and Italian troops to be left alone in certain mountain areas in return for doing little or nothing against the enemy", but concluded that "those who have triumphantly withstood such strains may brand his [Mihailović's] name, but history, more discriminating, should not erase it from the scroll of Serbian patriots."[197] In the United States, due to the efforts of Major Richard L. Felman and his friends, President Truman, on the recommendation of Eisenhower, posthumously awarded Mihailović the Legion of Merit for the rescue of American airmen by the Chetniks. The award and the story of the rescue was classified secret by the State Department so as not to offend the Yugoslav government.

"The unparalleled rescue of over 500 American Airmen from capture by the Enemy Occupation Forces in Yugoslavia during World War II by General Dragoljub Mihailovich and his Chetnik Freedom Fighters for which this "Legion of Merit" medal was awarded by President Harry S. Truman, also represents a token of deep personal appreciation and respect by all those rescued American Airmen and their descendants, who will be forever grateful." (NATIONAL COMMITTEE OF AMERICAN AIRMEN RESCUED BY GENERAL MihailovićH – 1985)

Generalfeldmarschall von Weichs, German commander-in-chief south east 1943–1945, in his interrogation statement in October 1945, wrote about Mihailović and his forces in section named "Groups Aiding Germany":

"MIHAILOVIC 's troops once fought against our occupation troops out of loyalty to their King. At the same time they fought against TITO, because of anti—Communist convictions. This two front war could not last long, particularly when British support favored TITO. Consequently MIHAILOVIC showed pro-German leanings. There were engagements during which Serbian Chetniks fought TITO alongside German troops. On the other hand, hostile Chetnik groups were known to attack German supply trains in order to replenish their own stocks."
"MIHAILOVIC liked to remain in the background, and leave such affairs up to his subordinates. He hoped to bide his time with this play of power until an Anglo—American landing would provide sufficient support against TITO. Germany welcomed his support, however temporary. Chetnik reconnaissance activities were valued highly by our commanders."[198]

Almost sixty years after his death, on 29 March 2005, Mihailović's daughter, Gordana, was presented with the posthumous decoration by president George W. Bush.[199] The decision was controversial; in Croatia Zoran Pusić, head of the Civil Committee for Human Rights, protested against the decision and stated that Mihailović was directly responsible for the war crimes committed by the Chetniks.[200][201]

Amongst many Serbian emigres, Mihailović remains the Serbian hero par excellence as the American scholar Paul Hockenos wrote: "...to emigres loyal to the Mihailović movement, their larger-than-life 'Draža' was a resolute anti-fascist and Western-minded Anglophile who fought the Germans tooth-and-nail".[202] Hockenos described the Chicago headquarters of the Serbian National Defense Council of America as being almost a shrine to Mihailović with photographs of him together with newspaper articles about him covering the walls.[202] Hockenos wrote for the groups such as the National Defense Council, Mihailović is a symbol of Serbdom itself, being presented as a noble and successful guerrilla leader who was sadly betrayed by cynical Anglo-American leaders.[203] Hockenos noted that Serb-American groups have argued that Serbia is a "natural ally" of the United States and the West in general as proved by Mihailović's wartime career and that for such groups Mihailović serves as a symbol of both Serbian virtue and victimhood.[204] Hockenos noted that the historically inaccurate claim is often made by such groups that all Serbs supported the Chetniks, which serves as a way of projecting Mihailović's travails onto the entire Serb nation, which in turn is used to present the war as a collective national martyrdom at the hands of "genocidal peoples" such as the Germans, Croats and Bosnian Muslims.[204] Hockenos stated after he interviewed various Serb-American leaders that he was struck by the way such individuals denied accounts of atrocities during the Bosnian war with the claim being made that because Mihailović fought the "genocidal peoples" in the 1940s that it was impossible for Serbs to commit atrocities in the 1990s.[204]

With the breakup of Yugoslavia and the renewal of ethnic nationalism, the historical perception of Mihailović's collaboration has been challenged by parts of the public in Serbia and other ethnic Serb-populated regions of the former Yugoslavia. In the 1980s, political and economic problems within Yugoslavia undermined faith in the communist regime, and historians in Serbia began a re-evaluation of Serbian historiography and proposed the rehabilitation of Mihailović and the Chetniks.[201] In the 1990s, during the Yugoslav Wars, several Serbian nationalist groups began calling themselves "Chetniks", while Serb paramilitaries often self-identified with them and were referred to as such.[205] Vojislav Šešelj's Serbian Radical Party formed the White Eagles, a paramilitary group considered responsible for war crimes and ethnic cleansing, which identified with the Chetniks.[206][207] Vuk Drašković's Serbian Renewal Movement was closely associated with the Serbian Guard, which was also associated with Chetniks and monarchism.[208] Reunions of Chetnik survivors and nostalgics and of Mihailović admirers have been held in Serbia[209] By the late 20th and early 21st century, Serbian history textbooks and academic works characterized Mihailović and the Chetniks as "fighters for a just cause", and Chetnik massacres of civilians and commission of war crimes were ignored or barely mentioned.[201] In 2004, Mihailović was officially rehabilitated in Serbia by an act of the Serbian Parliament.[210] In a 2009 survey carried out in Serbia, 34.44 percent of respondents favored annulling the 1946 verdict against Mihailović (in which he was found to be a traitor and Axis collaborator), 15.92 percent opposed, and 49.64 percent stated they did not know what to think.[211]

The revised image of Mihailović is not shared in non-Serbian post-Yugoslav nations.[citation needed] In Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina analogies are drawn between war crimes committed during World War II and those of the Yugoslav Wars, and Mihailović is "seen as a war criminal responsible for ethnic cleansing and genocidal massacres."[201] The differences were illustrated in 2004, when Serbian basketball player Milan Gurović, who has a tattoo of Mihailović on his left arm, was banned by the Croatian Ministry of the Interior Zlatko Mehun from traveling to Croatia for refusing to cover the tattoo, as its display was deemed equivalent to "provoking hatred or violence because of racial background, national identity or religious affiliation."[201][212] Serbian press and politicians reacted to the ban with surprise and indignation, while in Croatia the decision was seen as "wise and a means of protecting the player himself against his own stupidity."[201] In 2009, a Serb group based in Chicago offered a reward of $100,000.00 for help finding Mihailović's grave.[213] A commission formed by the Serbian government began an investigation and in 2010 suggested Mihailović may have been interred at Ada Ciganlija.[210]

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.

— Harry S. Truman, 29 March 1948

The ultimate tragedy of Draza Mihailovic cannot erase the memory of his heroic and often lonely struggle against the twin tyrannies that afflicted his people, Nazism and Communism. He knew that totalitarianism, whatever name it might take, is the death of freedom. He thus became a symbol of resistance to all those across the world who have had to fight a similar heroic and lonely struggle against totalitarianism. Mihailovic belonged to Yugoslavia; his spirit now belongs to all those who are willing to fight for freedom.

— Ronald Reagan, 8 September 1979[214]

Monuments to Draža Mihailović exist on Ravna Gora (1992), Ivanjica, Lapovo, Subjel, Udrulje near Višegrad, Petrovo and within cemeteries in North America. In Republika Srpska, streets and squares named after him are very common (East Sarajevo, Bijeljina, Ugljevik, Šekovići, etc.)[215] As of 2019, a street in Kragujevac is named after him.[216] Several memorial plaques were placed on Ravna Gora, on one of them writes: "We'll never forget ČiČa Draža - your children, your young Chetniks of Serbia"[217]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Referred to by his supporters as Uncle Draža (Чича Дража, Čiča Draža).
  2. ^ Official name of the occupied territory. Hehn 1971, pp. 344–373; Pavlowitch 2002, p. 141.
  3. ^ Pavlowitch asserts that it cannot be determined who initiated the meeting, but Roberts attributes it to Matl. Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 65; Roberts 1973, p. 36.
  4. ^ Roberts quotes Konstantin Fotić, though he adds that even the latter, a Mihailović supporter, admits that the speech was "unfortunate". Roberts 1973, p. 94.
  5. ^ The text in Kriegstagebuch des Oberkommando der Wehrmacht for 23 November 1943: Mihailovic hat nach sicherer Quelle seinen Unterführern den Befehl gegeben, mit den Deutschen zusammenzuarbeiten; er selbst können mit Rücksicht auf die Stimmung der Bevölkerung nicht in diesem Sinne hervortreten. Schramm 1963, p. 1304
  6. ^ Army Group F HQ Chief Intelligence Officer notice for the 2 October Conference in Belgrade: Chetnik attitude remains uneven. Serbian Chetniks fight together with German troops against communist bands. DM himself even asked for German help to ensure the intended relocation of his HQ from NW Serbia to SW-Belgrade area but this intention was not carried out. In contrast, hostile attitude of the Chetniks in E-Bosnia, Herzegovina and S-Montenegro and movement of these forces to the coast in the area of Dubrovnik with the aim at to secure connenction with expected Engl. landing and to seek the protection from Red. From reliable source is known that DM expressly disapproves the anti-German attitude of these Chetniks. (German: Cetnik-Haltung weiterhin uneinheitlich. Serbische Cetniks kämpfen zusammen mit deutscher Truppe gegen komun. Banden. DM. selbst bat sogar um deutsche Hilfe zur Sicherung beabsichtigter Verlegung seines Hauptstabes von NW-Serbien in Raum SW Belgrad. Diese Absicht jedoch nicht durchgeführt. Demgegenüber feindselige Haltung der Cetniks in O-Bosnien, Herzegovina und S-Montenegro und Bewegung dieser Kräfte zur Küste in den Raum Dubrovnik mit dem Ziel, bei erwarteter engl. Landung Verbindung mit Alliierten aufzunehmen und Schutz gegen Rote zu suchen. Nach S.Qu. bekannt, dass DM. die deutschfeindliche Haltung dieser Cetniks ausdrücklich missbilligt). ()

Citations

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Tomasevich 1975, p. 271.
  2. ^ Miloslav Samardžić: General Draža Mihailović i OPŠTA istoriia četničkog pokreta/General Draža Mihailović and the general history of the Chetnik movement. 2 vols 4 Ed Novi pogledi, Kragujevac, 2005
  3. ^ Draža Mihailović – Na krstu sudbine – Pero Simić: Laguna 2013
  4. ^ Draža Mihailović – Na krstu sudbine – Pero Simić: Laguna 2013
  5. ^ Mihailović 1946, p. 13.
  6. ^ Buisson 1999, p. 13.
  7. ^ a b Buisson 1999, pp. 26–27.
  8. ^ Buisson 1999, pp. 45–49.
  9. ^ Buisson 1999, pp. 55–56.
  10. ^ Buisson 1999, pp. 63–65.
  11. ^ a b Trew 1998, pp. 5–6.
  12. ^ Buisson 1999, pp. 66–68.
  13. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 53.
  14. ^ Milazzo 1975, pp. 12–13.
  15. ^ Milazzo 1975, p. 13.
  16. ^ a b c Pavlowitch 2007, p. 54.
  17. ^ Freeman 2007, p. 123.
  18. ^ a b Roberts 1973, p. 21.
  19. ^ a b Roberts 1973, pp. 21–22.
  20. ^ a b Roberts 1973, p. 22.
  21. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 79.
  22. ^ Roberts 1973, p. 26.
  23. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 59.
  24. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 56.
  25. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 60.
  26. ^ (Karchmar 1973, p. 241)
  27. ^ Freeman 2007, pp. 124–126.
  28. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 26–27.
  29. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 64.
  30. ^ a b c d Pavlowitch 2007, p. 63.
  31. ^ a b Tomasevich 1975, p. 148.
  32. ^ Roberts 1973, p. 48.
  33. ^ Milazzo 1975, pp. 15–16.
  34. ^ a b Milazzo 1975, p. 21.
  35. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 141.
  36. ^ a b Tomasevich 1975, p. 140.
  37. ^ Ramet 2006, p. 133.
  38. ^ a b Milazzo 1975, p. 26.
  39. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 178.
  40. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 143.
  41. ^ Milazzo 1975, p. 33.
  42. ^ a b Milazzo 1975, p. 34.
  43. ^ a b Roberts 1973, p. 34.
  44. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 152.
  45. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 62–64.
  46. ^ a b c Milazzo 1975, p. 35.
  47. ^ a b Roberts 1973, pp. 34–35.
  48. ^ a b c Tomasevich 1975, p. 149.
  49. ^ Milazzo 1975, pp. 36–37.
  50. ^ Hoare 2006, p. 156.
  51. ^ a b Milazzo 1975, p. 38.
  52. ^ a b Tomasevich 1975, p. 150.
  53. ^ Miljuš 1982, p. 119.
  54. ^ a b Tomasevich 1975, p. 155.
  55. ^ a b Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 65–66.
  56. ^ a b c Tomasevich 1975, p. 151.
  57. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 65.
  58. ^ a b Milazzo 1975, p. 37.
  59. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 196.
  60. ^ Karchmar 1987, p. 256.
  61. ^ a b Milazzo 1975, p. 39.
  62. ^ a b c d e Karchmar 1987, p. 272.
  63. ^ Trew 1998, pp. 86–88.
  64. ^ Milazzo 1975, p. 40.
  65. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 200.
  66. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 66–67, 96.
  67. ^ a b Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 66–67.
  68. ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 214–216.
  69. ^ Roberts 1973, p. 38.
  70. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 37–38.
  71. ^ a b Tomasevich 1975, p. 199.
  72. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 66.
  73. ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 269–271.
  74. ^ Roberts 1973, p. 53.
  75. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 53–54.
  76. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 184.
  77. ^ Roberts 1973, p. 56.
  78. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 57–58.
  79. ^ a b c Roberts 1973, p. 67.
  80. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 58–62.
  81. ^ Roberts 1973, p. 40–41.
  82. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 210.
  83. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 219.
  84. ^ a b c Pavlowitch 2007, p. 110.
  85. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 110–112.
  86. ^ Hoare 2006, p. 161.
  87. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 122–126.
  88. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 98.
  89. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 98–100.
  90. ^ Barker 1976, p. 162.
  91. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 100.
  92. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 127–128.
  93. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 256.
  94. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 169.
  95. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 259.
  96. ^ Hoare 2006, p. 148.
  97. ^ Hoare 2006, p. 143.
  98. ^ a b c Malcolm 1994, p. 179.
  99. ^ Lerner 1994, p. 105.
  100. ^ Mulaj 2008, p. 42.
  101. ^ Milazzo 1975, p. 64.
  102. ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 256–261.
  103. ^ Karchmar 1987, p. 397.
  104. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 79–80.
  105. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 170.
  106. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 179.
  107. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 171.
  108. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 112.
  109. ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 258–259.
  110. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 158.
  111. ^ a b Hoare 2010, p. 1198.
  112. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 127.
  113. ^ Basil Davidson: PARTISAN PICTURE
  114. ^ a b Roberts 1973, pp. 70–71.
  115. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 290.
  116. ^ Roberts 1973, p. 72.
  117. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 231.
  118. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 90–91.
  119. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 91–92.
  120. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 167.
  121. ^ Buisson 1999, p. 164.
  122. ^ Miljus, Branko (1982). La Revolution yougoslave. - [Paris]: L'Age d'homme (1982). 247 S. 8°. L'AGE D'HOMME. p. 127. GGKEY:3ETA934ZGPG.
  123. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 92–93.
  124. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 166–167.
  125. ^ Buisson 1999, pp. 162–163.
  126. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 93–96.
  127. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 361.
  128. ^ a b Roberts 1973, p. 86.
  129. ^ Roberts 1973, p. 103–106.
  130. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 159–160.
  131. ^ a b Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 161–165.
  132. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 123–124.
  133. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 106–112.
  134. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 171.
  135. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 117–120.
  136. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 182–186.
  137. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 138–144.
  138. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 156–157.
  139. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 189–190.
  140. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 192–195.
  141. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 204–205.
  142. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 153–154.
  143. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 197–199.
  144. ^ Hinsley 1993, p. 358.
  145. ^ Schramm 1963, pp. 1304.
  146. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 157–160.
  147. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 191–192.
  148. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 178–180.
  149. ^ Roberts 1973, p. 197.
  150. ^ Roberts 1973, p. 225.
  151. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 223–226.
  152. ^ a b Roberts 1973, pp. 245–257.
  153. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 378.
  154. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 253–254.
  155. ^ a b Roberts 1973, pp. 258–260.
  156. ^ Martin 1946, p. 292.
  157. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 342.
  158. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 257–258.
  159. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 228–230.
  160. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 230–235.
  161. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 380.
  162. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 231–238.
  163. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 254.
  164. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 280–282.
  165. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 433.
  166. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 440.
  167. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 254–256.
  168. ^ Roberts 1973, pp. 306–307.
  169. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 256–258.
  170. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, pp. 266–267.
  171. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 267.
  172. ^ a b c Roberts 1973, p. 307.
  173. ^ Buisson 1999, p. 250–251.
  174. ^ Buisson 1999, p. 262.
  175. ^ Buisson 1999, p. 260–262.
  176. ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 462–463.
  177. ^ Time & 7 October 1957.
  178. ^ Buisson 1999, p. 272.
  179. ^ a b c Ristic 2012.
  180. ^ Gušić & 30 March 2012.
  181. ^ a b B92, Josipović & 23 March 2012.
  182. ^ B92, Pusić & 23 March 2012.
  183. ^ Blic & 23 March 2012.
  184. ^ B92 & Rehabilitation.
  185. ^ "Draza Mihailovic rehabilitated". InSerbia. 14 May 2015.
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  187. ^ Buisson 1999, p. 227.
  188. ^ Buisson 1999, p. 242.
  189. ^ BBC & 7 August 2000.
  190. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. [page needed].
  191. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 470.
  192. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 279.
  193. ^ Roberts 1973, p. 322.
  194. ^ Peyrefitte 1997, pp. 209–210.
  195. ^ Lutard-Tavard 2005, p. 78.
  196. ^ Churchill 1953, pp. 409–415.
  197. ^ Churchill 1953, pp. 408–409.
  198. ^ von Weichs 1945, p. 22.
  199. ^ Hoare 2005.
  200. ^ Balkan News 2005.
  201. ^ a b c d e f Sindbæk 2009.
  202. ^ a b Hockenos 2018, p. 115.
  203. ^ Hockenos 2018, p. 116.
  204. ^ a b c Hockenos 2018, p. 116-117.
  205. ^ Cathcart 1994.
  206. ^ Allen 1996, p. [page needed].
  207. ^ Bassiouni 1994.
  208. ^ Glas javnosti 1999.
  209. ^ Buisson 1999, pp. 9–10.
  210. ^ a b Cvijić 2010.
  211. ^ Ramet 2011, p. 2.
  212. ^ MSNBC 2004.
  213. ^ Meyer 2009.
  214. ^ https://philosophymr.com/pdf/publications/10-Nixon_Reagan_on_General_Draza_Mihailovic.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  215. ^ Momir Samardžić, Milivoj Bešlin, Srdan Milošević (editors); (2013) Politička upotreba prošlosti: istorijski revizionizam na postjugoslovenskom prostoru(in Serbian) p. 328; Alternativna kulturna organizacija – AKO, Novi Sad, Serbia, ISBN 978-86-913171-6-4 [1]
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  • Hockenos, Paul (2018). Homeland Calling Exile Patriotism and the Balkan Wars. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. ISBN 9781501725654.
  • Karchmar, Lucien (1973). Draz̆a Mihailović and the Rise of the C̆etnik Movement, 1941-1942. Department of History, Stanford University.
  • Karchmar, Lucien (1987). Draža Mihailović and the Rise of the Četnik Movement, 1941–1945. New York: Garland Publishing. ISBN 978-0-8240-8027-3.
  • Lampe, John R. (2000). Yugoslavia as History: Twice There Was a Country (2 ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-77401-7.
  • Lerner, Natan (1994). Dinstein, Yoram (ed.). Ethnic Cleansing. Israel Yearbook on Human Rights. Vol. 24. ISBN 978-90-411-0026-9. ISSN 0333-5925.
  • Lutard-Tavard, Catherine (2005). La Yougoslavie de Tito écartelée: 1945–1991. Paris: L'Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-7475-8643-6.
  • Malcolm, Noel (1994). Bosnia: A Short History. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-5520-4.
  • Martin, David (1946). Ally betrayed, the uncensored story of Tito and Mihailovich. New York: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 978-1-2585-0874-6.
  • Meyer, Bill (27 April 2009). "Serbia seeks grave of WWII guerrilla leader Dragoljub Draza Mihailović, slain by communists". The Plain Dealer. Cleveland, OH.
  • Mihailović, Draža (1946). The Trial of Dragoljub–Draža Mihailović. Belgrade: Documentary Publications.
  • Milazzo, Matteo J. (1975). The Chetnik Movement & the Yugoslav Resistance. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-1589-8.
  • Miljuš, Branko (1982). La Révolution yougoslave. L'Âge d'homme.
  • Mulaj, Klejda (2008). Politics of ethnic cleansing: nation-state building and provision of in/security in twentieth-century balkans. Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0-7391-1782-8.
  • Pavlowitch, Stevan K. (2002). Serbia: The History of an Idea. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-6708-5.
  • Pavlowitch, Stevan K. (2007). Hitler's New Disorder: The Second World War in Yugoslavia. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-1-85065-895-5.
  • Peyrefitte, Alain (1997). C'était de Gaulle. Vol. 2. Paris: Editions de Fallois.
  • Ramet, Sabrina P. (2006). The Three Yugoslavias: State-Building and Legitimation, 1918–2005. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-34656-8.
  • Ramet, Sabrina P. (2011). Serbia and the Serbs in World War Two. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-27830-1.
  • Ristic, Marija (23 March 2012). "Protests Over Chetnik Hero's Rehabilitation". Balkan Insight.
  • Roberts, Walter R. (1973). Tito, Mihailović and the Allies: 1941–1945. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-0773-0.
  • Sindbæk, Tea (April 2009). "The Fall and Rise of a National Hero: Interpretations of Draža Mihailović and the Chetniks in Yugoslavia and Serbia since 1945". Journal of Contemporary European Studies. 17 (1): 47–59. doi:10.1080/14782800902844693. S2CID 145143037.
  • Tomasevich, Jozo (1975). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: The Chetniks. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0857-9.
  • Trew, Simon (1998). Britain, Mihailović and the Chetniks, 1941–42. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-17757-7.
  • von Weichs (1945). Interrogation Reports, Record Group 238, M1270, Roll 28, Annex to interrogation of Maximilian von Weichs (12 October 1945). Washington: National Archive and record Administration.
  • "Pusic Protests U.S. Plan to Decorate WWII Chetnik Movement Leader". Balkan News. 7 May 2005.
  • . Time. 7 October 1957. Archived from the original on 5 November 2012.
  • Gušić, M. (30 March 2012). . Dnevni Avaz. Archived from the original on 1 April 2012.
  • "Court rehabilitates WW2-era Chetnik leader Draza Mihailovic". B92. 14 May 2015.

Further reading

  • Juce, Sinoc. Pjetlovi nad Tigrovima, Sanski Most, BiH: Begovic-Bosanska Krajina Press 2007
  • Marcia Christoff Kurapovna (2010). Shadows on the mountain: the Allies, the Resistance, and the rivalries that doomed WWII Yugoslavia. John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 978-0-470-08456-4.
  • 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.
  • Pero Simić. Draža Mihailović – Na krstu sudbine – SRB Laguna 2013
  • Seitz, Albert Blazier (1953). Mihailovic, Hoax Or Hero?. Leigh House.
  • Tucaković, Semso. Srpski zlocini nad Bosnjacima Muslimanima, 1941–1945. Sarajevo: El Kalem, 1995.

External links

Political offices
Preceded by Minister of the Army, Navy and Air Force of the Yugoslav government-in-exile
1942–1944
Succeeded by

draža, mihailović, dragoljub, draža, mihailović, serbian, cyrillic, Драгољуб, Дража, Михаиловић, april, 1893, july, 1946, yugoslav, serb, general, during, world, leader, chetnik, detachments, yugoslav, army, chetniks, royalist, nationalist, movement, guerrilla. Dragoljub Draza Mihailovic a Serbian Cyrillic Dragoљub Drazha Mihailoviћ 27 April 1893 17 July 1946 was a Yugoslav Serb general during World War II He was the leader of the Chetnik Detachments of the Yugoslav Army Chetniks a royalist and nationalist movement and guerrilla force established following the German invasion of Yugoslavia in 1941 Draza MihailovicMihailovic in 1943Birth nameDragoljub MihailovicNickname s Cica Draza Uncle Draza Born 1893 04 27 27 April 1893Ivanjica Kingdom of SerbiaDied17 July 1946 1946 07 17 aged 53 Belgrade PR Serbia FPR YugoslaviaAllegiance Serbia 1910 18 Yugoslavia 1918 41 Yugoslav government in exile 1941 44 Chetniks 1941 46 Service wbr branchRoyal Serbian Army Royal Yugoslav Army Chetnik movementYears of service1910 1945RankArmy General 1 Commands heldChetnik movementBattles warsBalkan Wars World War I World War II in YugoslaviaAwardsOrder of the White Eagle Military Cross Croix de guerre Order of the White Lion 2 Order of St Alexander 3 Albanian Commemorative Medal 4 Legion of Merit posthumous SignatureBorn in Ivanjica and raised in Belgrade Mihailovic fought in the Balkan Wars and the First World War with distinction After the fall of Yugoslavia in April 1941 Mihailovic organized the Chetniks at Ravna Gora and engaged in guerrilla warfare alongside Josip Broz Tito s Partisans against occupying German forces Opposing strategies ideological differences and general distrust drove them apart and by late 1941 the two groups were in open conflict Many Chetnik groups collaborated or established modus vivendi with the Axis powers which along with British frustration over Mihailovic s inaction led to the Allies shifting their support to Tito in 1944 Mihailovic himself collaborated with Milan Nedic and Dimitrije Ljotic at the end of the war Mihailovic went into hiding after the war but was captured in March 1946 He was tried and convicted of high treason and war crimes by the communist authorities of the Federal People s Republic of Yugoslavia and executed by firing squad in Belgrade in July The nature and extent of his responsibility for collaboration and ethnic massacres remains controversial In May 2015 Mihailovic s verdict was overturned on appeal by the Supreme Court of Cassation of Serbia citing his trial and conviction as politically and ideologically motivated Contents 1 Early life and military career 2 World War II 2 1 Formation of the Chetniks 2 2 Conflicts with Axis troops and Partisans 2 3 Activities in Montenegro and the Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia 2 4 Terror tactics and cleansing actions 3 Relations with the British 4 Defeat in the battle of the Neretva 5 Allied support shifts 6 Defeat in 1944 45 7 Capture trial and execution 8 Rehabilitation 9 Family 10 Legacy 11 See also 12 Notes 13 Citations 13 1 Footnotes 13 2 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarly life and military careerDragoljub Draza Mihailovic was born on 27 April 1893 in Ivanjica Kingdom of Serbia to Mihailo and Smiljana Mihailovic nee Petrovic 5 His father was a court clerk Orphaned at seven years of age Mihailovic was raised by his paternal uncle in Belgrade 6 As both of his uncles were military officers Mihailovic himself joined the Serbian Military Academy in October 1910 He fought as a cadet in the Serbian Army during the Balkan Wars of 1912 13 and was awarded the Silver Medal of Valor at the end of the First Balkan War in May 1913 7 At the end of the Second Balkan War during which he mainly led operations along the Albanian border he was given the rank of second lieutenant as the top soldier in his class ranked sixth at the Serbian military academy 7 He served in World War I and was involved in the Serbian Army s retreat through Albania in 1915 He later received several decorations for his achievements on the Salonika front Following the war he became a member of the Royal Guard of the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes but had to leave his position in 1920 after taking part in a public argument between communist and nationalist sympathizers He was subsequently stationed in Skopje In 1921 he was admitted to the Superior Military Academy of Belgrade In 1923 having finished his studies he was promoted as an assistant to the military staff along with the fifteen other best alumni of his promotion 8 He was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel in 1930 That same year he spent three months in Paris following classes at the Ecole speciale militaire de Saint Cyr Some authors claim that he met and befriended Charles de Gaulle during his stay although there is no known evidence of this 9 In 1935 he became a military attache to the Kingdom of Bulgaria and was stationed to Sofia On 6 September 1935 he was promoted to the rank of colonel Mihailovic then came in contact with members of Zveno and considered taking part in a plot which aimed to provoke Boris III s abdication and the creation of an alliance between Yugoslavia and Bulgaria but being untrained as a spy he was soon identified by Bulgarian authorities and was asked to leave the country He was then appointed as an attache to Czechoslovakia in Prague 10 His military career almost came to an abrupt end in 1939 when he submitted a report strongly criticizing the organization of the Royal Yugoslav Army Serbo Croatian Vojska Kraljevine Jugoslavije VKJ Among his most important proposals were abandoning the defence of the northern frontier to concentrate forces in the mountainous interior re organizing the armed forces into Serb Croat and Slovene units in order to better counter subversive activities and using mobile Chetnik units along the borders Milan Nedic the Minister of the Army was incensed by Mihailovic s report and ordered that he be confined to barracks for 30 days 11 Afterwards Mihailovic became a professor at Belgrade s staff college 12 In the summer of 1940 he attended a function put on by the British military attache for the Association of Yugoslav Reserve NCOs The meeting was seen as highly anti Nazi in tone and the German ambassador protested Mihailovic s presence Nedic once more ordered him confined to barracks for 30 days as well as demoted and placed on the retired list These last punishments were avoided only by Nedic s retirement in November and his replacement by Petar Pesic 11 In the years preceding the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia Mihailovic was stationed in Celje Drava Banovina modern Slovenia At the time of the invasion Colonel Mihailovic was an assistant to the chief of staff of the Yugoslav Second Army in northern Bosnia He briefly served as the Second Army chief of staff 13 prior to taking command of a Rapid Unit brzi odred shortly before the Yugoslav High Command capitulated to the Germans on 17 April 1941 14 World War IIFollowing the invasion and occupation of Yugoslavia by Germany Italy Hungary a small group of officers and soldiers led by Mihailovic escaped in the hope of finding VKJ units still fighting in the mountains After skirmishing with several Ustase and Muslim bands and attempting to sabotage several objects Mihailovic and about 80 of his men crossed the Drina River into German occupied Serbia b on 29 April 15 Mihailovic planned to establish an underground intelligence movement and establish contact with the Allies though it is unclear if he initially envisioned to start an actual armed resistance movement 16 Formation of the Chetniks See also Uprising in Serbia 1941 The Chetnik flag The flag reads For King and Fatherland Liberty or Death For the time being Mihailovic established a small nucleus of officers with an armed guard which he called the Command of Chetnik Detachments of the Yugoslav Army 16 After arriving at Ravna Gora in early May 1941 he realized that his group of seven officers and twenty four non commissioned officers and soldiers was the only one 17 He began to draw up lists of conscripts and reservists for possible use His men at Ravna Gora were joined by a group of civilians mainly intellectuals from the Serbian Cultural Club who took charge of the movement s propaganda sector 16 The Chetniks of Kosta Pecanac which were already in existence before the invasion did not share Mihailovic s desire for resistance 18 In order to distinguish his Chetniks from other groups calling themselves Chetniks Mihailovic and his followers identified themselves as the Ravna Gora movement 18 The stated goal of the Ravna Gora movement was the liberation of the country from the occupying armies of Germany Italy and the Ustase and the Independent State of Croatia Serbo Croatian Nezavisna Drzava Hrvatska NDH 19 Mihailovic spent most of 1941 consolidating scattered VKJ remnants and finding new recruits In August he set up a civilian advisory body the Central National Committee composed of Serb political leaders including some with strong nationalist views such as Dragisa Vasic and Stevan Moljevic 19 On 19 June a clandestine Chetnik courier reached Istanbul whence royalist Yugoslavs reported that Mihailovic appeared to be organizing a resistance movement against Axis forces 20 Mihailovic first established radio contact with the British in September 1941 when his radio operator raised a ship in the Mediterranean On 13 September Mihailovic s first radio message to King Peter s government in exile announced that he was organizing VKJ remnants to fight against the Axis powers 20 Mihailovic also received help from officers in other areas of Yugoslavia such as Slovene officer Rudolf Perinhek who brought reports on the situation in Montenegro Mihailovic sent him back to Montenegro with written authorization to organize units there with the oral approval of officers such as Đorđije Lasic Pavle Đurisic Dimitrije Ljotic and Kosta Musicki Mihailovic only gave vague and contradictory orders to Perinhek mentioning the need to put off civil strife and to remove enemies 21 Mihailovic s strategy was to avoid direct conflict with the Axis forces intending to rise up after Allied forces arrived in Yugoslavia 22 Mihailovic s Chetniks had had defensive encounters with the Germans but reprisals and the tales of the massacres in the NDH made them reluctant to engage directly in armed struggle except against the Ustase in Serbian border areas 23 In the meantime following the Axis invasion of the Soviet Union the Communist Party of Yugoslavia KPJ led by Josip Broz Tito also went into action and called for a popular insurrection against the Axis powers in July 1941 Tito subsequently set up a communist resistance movement known as the Yugoslav Partisans 24 By the end of August Mihailovic s Chetniks and the Partisans began attacking Axis forces sometimes jointly despite their differences and captured numerous prisoners 25 On 28 October 1941 Mihailovic received an order from the Prime Minister of the Yugoslav Government in exile Dusan Simovic who urged Mihailovic to avoid premature actions and avoid reprisals 26 Mihailovic 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 favoured sabotage that could not easily be traced back to the Chetniks 27 His reluctance to engage in more active resistance meant that most sabotage carried out in the early period of the war were due to efforts by the Partisans and Mihailovic lost several commanders and a number of followers who wished to fight the Germans to the Partisan movement 28 Even though Mihailovic initially asked for discreet support propaganda from the British and from the Yugoslav government in exile quickly began to exalt his feats The creation of a resistance movement in occupied Europe was received as a morale booster On 15 November the BBC announced that Mihailovic was the commander of the Yugoslav Army in the Fatherland which became the official name of Mihailovic s Chetniks 29 Conflicts with Axis troops and Partisans Nazi German wanted poster for Colonel Mihailovic from 9 December 1941 1942 German proclamation and reward offer for Mihailovic after the Chetnik killing of four German officers Draza Mihailovic as a small pet in the hands of the supposedly Jewish controlled United States United Kingdom and Soviet Union as part of Judeo Masonic conspiracy theory depicted in a poster from the Grand Anti Masonic Exhibition Mihailovic soon realized that his men did not have the means to protect Serbian civilians against German reprisals 30 31 The prospect of reprisals also fed Chetnik concerns regarding a possible takeover of Yugoslavia by the Partisans after the war and they did not wish to engage in actions that might ultimately result in a post war Serb minority 32 Mihailovic s strategy was to bring together the various Serb bands and build an organization capable of seizing power after the Axis withdrew or were defeated rather than engaging in direct confrontation with them 33 In contrast to the reluctance of Chetnik leaders to directly engage the Axis forces the Partisans advocated open resistance which appealed to those Chetniks desiring to fight the occupation 34 By September 1941 Mihailovic began losing men to the Partisans such as Vlado Zecevic a priest Lieutenant Ratko Martinovic and the Cer Chetniks led by Captain Dragoslav Racic 34 35 On 19 September 1941 Tito met with Mihailovic to negotiate an alliance between the Partisans and Chetniks but they failed to reach an agreement as the disparity of the aims of their respective movements was great enough to preclude any real compromise 36 Tito was in favour of a joint full scale offensive while Mihailovic considered a general uprising to be premature and dangerous as he thought it would trigger reprisals 30 For his part Tito s goal was to prevent an assault from the rear by the Chetniks as he was convinced that Mihailovic was playing a double game maintaining contacts with German forces via the Nedic government Mihailovic was in contact with Nedic s government receiving monetary aid via Colonel Popovic 37 On the other hand Mihailovic sought to prevent Tito from assuming the leadership role in the resistance 36 38 as Tito s goals were counter to his goals of the restoration of the Karađorđevic dynasty and the establishment of Greater Serbia 39 Further talks were scheduled for 16 October 38 At the end of September the Germans launched a massive offensive against both Partisans and Chetniks called Operation Uzice 30 A joint British Yugoslav intelligence mission quickly assembled by the Special Operations Executive SOE and led by Captain D T Hudson arrived on the Montenegrin coast on 22 September whence they had made their way with the help of Montenegrin Partisans to their headquarters and then on to Tito s headquarters at Uzice 40 arriving on or around 25 October 41 Hudson reported that earlier promises of supplies made by the British to Mihailovic contributed to the poor relationship between Mihailovic and Tito as Mihailovic correctly believed that no one outside of Yugoslavia knew about the Partisan movement 42 43 44 and felt that the time was ripe for drastic action against the communists 42 Tito and Mihailovic met again on 27 October 1941 in the town of Brajici near Ravna Gora in an attempt to achieve an understanding but found consensus only on secondary issues 45 Immediately following the meeting Mihailovic began preparations for an attack on the Partisans delaying the attack only for lack of arms 46 Mihailovic reported to the Yugoslav government in exile that he believed the occupation of Uzice the location of a gun factory was required to prevent the strengthening of the Partisans 43 On 28 October two Chetnik liaison officers first approached Nedic and later that day German officer Josef Matl of the Armed Forces Liaison Office and offered Mihailovic s services in the struggle against the Partisans in exchange for weapons 31 46 This offer was relayed to the German general in charge of the Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia and a meeting was proposed by the German for 3 November On 1 November the Chetniks attacked the Partisan headquarters at Uzice but were beaten back 47 48 On 3 November 1941 Mihailovic postponed the proposed meeting with the German officers until 11 November citing the general conflict in which the Chetniks and Partisans were engaged requiring his presence at his headquarters 48 49 The meeting organized through one of Mihailovic s representatives in Belgrade took place between the Chetnik leader and an Abwehr official although it remains controversial if the initiative came from the Germans from Mihailovic himself or from his liaison officer in Belgrade c In the negotiations Mihailovic assured the Germans that it is not my intention to fight against the occupiers and claimed that I have never made a genuine agreement with the communists for they do not care about the people They are led by foreigners who are not Serbs the Bulgarian Jankovic the Jew Lindmajer the Magyar Borota two Muslims whose names I do not know and the Ustasha Major Boganic That is all I know of the communist leadership 50 It appears that Mihailovic offered to cease activities in the towns and along the major communication lines but ultimately no agreement was reached at the time due to German demands for the complete surrender of the Chetniks 51 52 53 and the German belief that the Chetniks were likely to attack them despite Mihailovic s offer 54 After the negotiations an attempt was made by the Germans to arrest Mihailovic 55 Mihailovic carefully kept the negotiations with the Germans secret from the Yugoslav government in exile as well as from the British and their representative Hudson 51 47 Mihailovic s assault on the Partisan headquarters at Uzice and Pozega failed and the Partisans mounted a rapid counterattack 46 56 Within two weeks the Partisans repelled Chetnik advances and surrounded Mihailovic s headquarters at Ravna Gora Having lost troops in clashes with the Germans 57 sustained the loss of approximately 1 000 troops and considerable equipment at the hands of the Partisans 58 received only one small delivery of arms from the British in early November 59 and been unsuccessful in convincing the Germans to provide him with supplies 48 Mihailovic found himself in a desperate situation 58 60 In mid November the Germans launched an offensive against the Partisans Operation Western Morava which bypassed Chetnik forces 56 61 62 Having been unable to quickly overcome the Chetniks faced with reports that the British considered Mihailovic as the leader of the resistance and under pressure from the German offensive Tito approached Mihailovic with an offer to negotiate which resulted in talks and later an armistice between the two groups on 20 or 21 November 61 56 63 Tito and Mihailovic had one last phone conversation on 28 November in which Tito announced that he would defend his positions while Mihailovic said that he would disperse 30 52 62 On 30 November Mihailovic s unit leaders decided to join the legalized Chetniks under General Nedic s command in order to be able to continue the fight against the Partisans without the possibility of being attacked by the Germans and to avoid compromising Mihailovic s relationship with the British Evidence suggests that Mihailovic did not order this but rather only sanctioned the decision 54 64 About 2 000 3 000 of Mihailovic s men actually enlisted in this capacity within the Nedic regime The legalization allowed his men to have a salary and an alibi provided by the collaborationist administration while it provided the Nedic regime with more men to fight the communists although they were under the control of the Germans 65 Mihailovic also considered that he could using this method infiltrate the Nedic administration which was soon fraught with Chetnik sympathizers 66 While this arrangement differed from the all out collaboration of Kosta Pecanac it caused much confusion over who and what the Chetniks were 67 Some of Mihailovic s men crossed into Bosnia to fight the Ustase while most abandoned the struggle 67 Throughout November Mihailovic s forces had been under pressure from German forces and on 3 December the Germans issued orders for Operation Mihailovic an attack against his forces in Ravna Gora 62 On 5 December the day before the operation Mihailovic was warned by contacts serving under Nedic of the impending attack 62 likely by Milan Acimovic 68 He closed down his radio transmitter on that day to avoid giving the Germans hints of his whereabouts 69 and then dispersed his command and the remainder of his forces 62 The remnants of his Chetniks retreated to the hills of Ravna Gora but were under German attack throughout December 70 Mihailovic narrowly avoided capture 71 On 10 December a bounty was put on his head by the Germans 55 In the meantime on 7 December the BBC announced his promotion to the rank of brigade general 72 Activities in Montenegro and the Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia 2nd Ravna Gora Corps under command of Captain Predrag Rakovic on the forced march through the Peshter Plateau rushed to aid Supreme Commande on the eve of Operation Schwarz in early spring 1943 Mihailovic did not resume radio transmissions with the Allies before January 1942 In early 1942 the Yugoslav government in exile reorganized and appointed Slobodan Jovanovic as prime minister and the cabinet declared the strengthening of Mihailovic s position as one of its primary goals It also unsuccessfully sought to obtain support from both the Americans and the British 73 On 11 January Mihailovic was named Minister of the Army Navy and Air Forces by the government in exile 74 The British had suspended support in late 1941 following Hudson s reports of the conflict between the Chetniks and Partisans Mihailovic infuriated by Hudson s recommendations denied Hudson radio access and had no contact with him through the first months of 1942 75 Although Mihailovic was in hiding by March the Nedic government located him and a meeting sanctioned by the German occupation took place between him and Acimovic According to historian Jozo Tomasevich following this meeting General Bader was informed that Mihailovic was willing to put himself at the disposal of the Nedic government in the fight against the communists but Bader refused his offer 71 In April 1942 Mihailovic still hiding in Serbia resumed contact with British envoy Hudson who was also able to resume his radio transmission to Allied headquarters in Cairo using Mihailovic s transmitter In May the British resumed sending assistance to the Chetniks although only to a small extent 76 with a single airdrop on 30 March 77 Mihailovic subsequently left for Montenegro arriving there on 1 June 78 He established his headquarters there and on 10 June was formally appointed as Chief of Staff of the Supreme Command of the Yugoslav Army in the Fatherland 79 A week later he was promoted to the rank of General of the Army 1 The Partisans in the meantime insisted to the Soviets that Mihailovic was a traitor and a collaborator and should be condemned as such The Soviets initially saw no need for it and their propaganda kept supporting Mihailovic Eventually on 6 July 1942 the station Radio Free Yugoslavia located in the Comintern building in Moscow broadcast a resolution from Yugoslav patriots in Montenegro and Bosnia labelling Mihailovic a collaborator 80 Captain Predrag Rakovic General Dragoljub Mihailovic and Academician Dragisa Vasic after deliverance from a hostile environment during Operation Schwarz May 1943 in the Lim Valley Behind General Major Miljan Janketic Commander of the Support Battalion A 1943 German warrant after Operation Schwarz for Mihailovic offering a reward of 100 000 gold marks for his capture dead or alive Based on the sketch the Germans probably did not know that Mihailovic was wearing a beard In Montenegro Mihailovic found a complex situation The local Chetnik leaders Bajo Stanisic and Pavle Đurisic had reached arrangements with the Italians and were cooperating with them against the communist led Partisans 81 82 Mihailovic later claimed at his trial in 1946 that he was unaware of these arrangements prior to his arrival in Montenegro and had to accept them once he arrived 83 84 as Stanisic and Đurisic acknowledged him as their leader in name only and would only follow Mihailovic s orders if they supported their interests 84 Mihailovic believed that Italian military intelligence was better informed than he was of the activities of his commanders 84 He tried to make the best of the situation and accepted the appointment of Blazo Đukanovic as the figurehead commander of nationalist forces in Montenegro While Mihailovic approved the destruction of communist forces he aimed to exploit the connections of Chetniks commanders with the Italians to get food arms and ammunition in the expectation of an Allied landing in the Balkans On 1 December Đurisic organised a Chetnik youth conference at Sahovici The congress which historian Stevan K Pavlowitch writes expressed extremism and intolerance nationalist claims were made on parts of Albania Bulgaria Romania and Italy while its resolutions posited the restoration of a monarchy with a period of transitional Chetnik dictatorship Mihailovic and Đukanovic did not attend the event which was entirely dominated by Đurisic but they sent representatives 85 In the same month Mihailovic informed his subordinates that The units of the Partisans are filled with thugs of the most varied kinds such as Ustasas the worst butchers of the Serb people Jews Croats Dalmatians Bulgarians Turks Magyars and all the other nations of the world 86 British Brigadier Charles Armstrong visits the 2nd Ravna Gora Corps in the fall of 1943 Beside him is the corps commander Captain Predrag Rakovic The column led by General Dragoljub Mihailovc and Captain Predrag Rakovic who headed from Mt Bobija to Mt Suvobor in the village of Ba where Captain Zvonko Vuckovic commander of the 1st Ravna Gora Corps made his last preparations for organizing the Ba Congress January 1944 In the NDH Ilija Trifunovic Bircanin a leader of pre war Chetnik organizations commanded the Chetniks in Dalmatia Lika Bosnia and Herzegovina He led the nationalist resistance against Partisans and Ustase and acknowledged Mihailovic as the formal leader but acted on his own with his troops being used by the Italians as the local Anti Communist Volunteer Militia MVAC Italian commander Mario Roatta aimed to spare Italian lives but also to counter the Ustase and Germans to undermine Mihailovic s authority among the Chetniks by playing up local leaders Chetniks led by Dobroslav Jevđevic came from Montenegro to help the Bosnian Serb population against the Ustase They murdered and pillaged in Foca until the Italians intervened in August The Chetniks also asked the Italians for protection against Ustase retribution On 22 July Mihailovic met with Trifunovic Bircanin Jevđevic and his newly appointed delegate in Herzegovina Petar Bacovic The meeting was supposedly secret but was known to Italian intelligence Mihailovic gave no precise orders but expressed his confidence in both his subordinates adding according to Italian reports that he was waiting for help from the Allies to start a real guerrilla campaign in order to spare Serb lives Summoned by Roatta upon their return Trifunovic Bircanin and Jevđevic assured the Italian commander that Mihailovic was merely a moral head and that they would not attack Italians even if he should give such an order 87 Having become more and more concerned with domestic enemies and concerned that he be in a position to control Yugoslavia after the Allies defeated the Axis Mihailovic concentrated from Montenegro on directing operations in the various parts of Yugoslavia mostly against Partisans but also against the Ustase and Dimitrije Ljotic s Serbian Volunteer Corps SDK 79 During the autumn of 1942 Mihailovic s Chetniks at the request of the British organization sabotaged several railway lines used to supply Axis forces in the Western Desert of northern Africa 88 In September and December Mihailovic s actions damaged the railway system seriously the Allies gave him credit for inconveniencing Axis forces and contributing to Allied successes in Africa 89 The credit given to Mihailovic for sabotages was maybe undeserved But an S O E appreciation on Jugoslavia of mid November said So far no telegrams have been received from either of our liaison officers reporting any sabotage undertaken by General Mihajlovic nor have we received any reports of fighting against the Axis troops In Yugoslavia therefore S O E could claim no equivalent to the Gorgopotamos operation in Greece From all this it might seem that since the autumn of 1941 the British had wittingly or unwittingly been co operating in a gigantic hoax 90 Captain Predrag Rakovic confers with his men Captain Rakovic committed suicide after being surrounded by partisans on 15 December 1944 Early in September 1942 Mihailovic called for civil disobedience against the Nedic regime through leaflets and clandestine radio transmitters This prompted fighting between the Chetniks and followers of the Nedic regime The Germans whom the Nedic administration had called for help against Mihailovic responded to Nedic s request and to the sabotages with mass terror and attacked the Chetniks in late 1942 and early 1943 Roberts mentions Nedic s request for help as the main reason for German action and does not mention the sabotage campaign 79 Pavlowitch on the other hand mentions the sabotages as being conducted simultaneously with the propaganda actions Thousands of arrests were made and it has been estimated that during December 1942 1 600 Chetnik combatants were killed by the Germans through combat actions and executions These actions by the Nedic regime and the Germans brought to an abrupt conclusion much of the anti German action Mihailovic had started up again since the summer of 1942 91 Adolf Hitler wrote to Benito Mussolini on 16 February 1943 demanding that in addition to the partisans be pursued the chetniks who possessed a special danger in the long term plans that Mihailovic s supporters were building Hitler adds In any case the liquidation of the Mihailovic movement will no longer be an easy task given the forces at its disposal and the large number of armed Chetniks At that time General Mihailovic was with his Supreme Command in Montenegro which was under Italian occupation From the beginning of 1943 General Mihailovic prepared his units for the supports of Allied landing on the Adriatic coast General Mihailovic hoped that the Western Alliance would open the Second Front in the Balkans 2nd Ravna Gora Corps celebrates Vidovdan on 28 June 1944 at Mt Jelica Three months later the Red Army will arrive in Serbia Mihailovic had great difficulties controlling his local commanders who often did not have radio contacts and relied on couriers to communicate He was however apparently aware that many Chetnik groups were committing crimes against civilians and acts of ethnic cleansing according to Pavlowitch Đurisic proudly reported to Mihailovic that he had destroyed Muslim villages in retribution against acts committed by Muslim militias While Mihailovic apparently did not order such acts himself and disapproved of them he also failed to take any action against them being dependent on various armed groups whose policy he could neither denounce nor condone He also hid the situation from the British and the Yugoslav government in exile 92 Many terror acts were committed by Chetnik groups against their various enemies real or perceived reaching a peak between October 1942 and February 1943 93 Brigadier Charles Armstrong reported to his command that Mihailovic believed that Britain had left Yugoslavia to Soviet influence Mihailovic s units in Serbia during the arrival of the Soviet army in September 1944 do not lead any fighting against the Soviets Some Chetnik corps commanders such as Dragutin Keserovic Predrag Rakovic Vlastimir Vesic and Dusan Smiljanic are trying to co operate with the Soviet Army Terror tactics and cleansing actions See also Chetniks Terror tactics and cleansing actions and Chetnik war crimes in World War II Chetnik ideology encompassed the notion of Greater Serbia to be achieved by forcing population shifts in order to create ethnically homogeneous areas 94 Partly due to this ideology and partly in response to violent actions undertaken by the Ustase and the Muslim forces attached to them 95 Chetniks forces engaged in numerous acts of violence including massacres and destruction of property and used terror tactics to drive out non Serb groups 96 In the spring of 1942 Mihailovic penned in his diary The Muslim population has through its behaviour arrived at the situation where our people no longer wish to have them in our midst It is necessary already now to prepare their exodus to Turkey or anywhere else outside our borders 97 Instrukcije Instructions of 1941 attributed to Mihailovic ordering the cleansing of non Serbs from territories claimed by the Chetniks as part of a Greater Serbia Serbian Wikisource has original text related to this article Instrukcija D Mihailovica Pavlu Đurisicu od 20 12 1941 According to the historian Noel Malcolm there is no definite evidence that Mihailovic himself ever called for ethnic cleansing 98 However instructions to his Montenegrin subordinate commanders Major Đorđije Lasic and Captain Pavle Đurisic which prescribe cleansing actions of non Serb elements in order to create Greater Serbia have been attributed to Mihailovic by some historians 99 100 101 102 but some historians argue that the document was a forgery made by Đurisic after he failed to reach Mihailovic in December 1941 after the latter was driven out of Ravna Gora by German forces 98 103 104 According to Malcolm if the document was a forgery it was forged by Chetnik commanders hoping it would be taken as a legitimate order not by their opponents seeking to discredit the Chetniks 98 The objectives outlined in the directive were 105 The struggle for the liberty of our whole nation under the sceptre of His Majesty King Peter II the creation of a Great Yugoslavia and within it of a Great Serbia which is to be ethnically pure and is to include Serbia meaning also Vardar Macedonia Montenegro Bosnia and Herzegovina Srijem the Banat and Backa the struggle for the inclusion into Yugoslavia of all still unliberated Slovene territories under the Italians and Germans Trieste Gorizia Istria and Carinthia as well as Bulgaria and northern Albania with Scutari the cleansing of the state territory of all national minorities and a national elements i e the Partisans and their supporters the creation of contiguous frontiers between Serbia and Montenegro as well as between Serbia and Slovenia by cleansing the Muslim population from Sandzak and the Muslim and Croat populations from Bosnia and Herzegovina Whether or not the instructions were forged Mihailovic was certainly aware of both the ideological goal of cleansing and of the violent acts taken to accomplish that goal Stevan Moljevic worked out the basics of the Chetnik program while at Ravna Gora in the summer of 1941 106 and Mihailovic sent representatives to the Conference of Young Chetnik Intellectuals of Montenegro where the basic formulations were expanded 107 Đurisic played the dominant role at this conference Relations between Đurisic and Mihailovic were strained and although Mihailovic did not participate neither did he take any action to counter it 108 In 1943 Đurisic followed Chetnik Supreme Command orders to carry out cleansing actions against Muslims and reported the thousands of old men women and children he massacred to Mihailovic 109 Mihailovic was either unable or unwilling to stop the massacres 110 In 1946 Mihailovic was indicted amongst other things of having given orders to his commanders to destroy the Muslims whom he called Turks and the Croats whom he called Ustashas 111 At his trial Mihailovic claimed that he never ordered the destruction of Croat and Muslim villages and that some of his subordinates hid such activities from him 112 He was later convicted of crimes that included having incited national and religious hatred and discord among the peoples of Yugoslavia as a consequence of which his Chetnik bands carried out mass massacres of the Croat and Muslim as well as of the Serb population that did not accept the occupation 111 Relations with the British Winston Churchill became increasingly doubtful about Mihailovic General Mihaylovitch saw his contribution to the common cause in turning anti German feeling into anti partisan feeling Only on the most Jesuitical grounds can his action be represented as anything but damaging to the cause of the Allies 113 Basil Davidson member of the British mission On 15 November 1942 Captain Hudson cabled to Cairo that the situation was problematic that opportunities for large scale sabotage were not exploited because of Mihailovic s desire to avoid reprisals and that while waiting for an Allied landing and victory the Chetnik leader might come to any sound understanding with either Italians or Germans which he believed might serve his purposes without compromising him in order to defeat the communists 114 In December Major Peter Boughey a member of SOE s London staff insisted to Zivan Knezevic a member of the Yugoslav cabinet that Mihailovic was a quisling who was openly collaborating with the Italians 115 The Foreign Office called Boughey s declarations blundering but the British were worried about the situation and Mihailovic s inactivity 116 A British senior officer Colonel S W Bailey was then sent to Mihailovic and was parachuted into Montenegro on Christmas Day His mission was to gather information and to see if Mihailovic had carried out necessary sabotages against railroads 114 During the following months the British concentrated on having Mihailovic stop Chetnik collaboration with Axis forces and perform the expected actions against the occupiers but they were not successful 117 In January 1943 the SOE reported to Churchill that Mihailovic s subordinate commanders had made local arrangements with Italian authorities although there was no evidence that Mihailovic himself had ever dealt with the Germans The report concluded that while aid to Mihailovic was as necessary as ever it would be advisable to extend assistance to other resistance groups and to try to reunite the Chetniks and the Partisans 118 British liaison officers reported in February that Mihailovic had at no time been in touch with the Germans but that his forces had been in some instances aiding the Italians against the Partisans the report was simultaneous with Operation Trio Bailey reported that Mihailovic was increasingly dissatisfied with the insufficient help he was receiving from the British 119 Mihailovic s movement had been so inflated by British propaganda that the liaison officers found the reality decidedly below expectations 120 On 3 January 1943 just before Case White an Axis conference was held in Rome attended by German commander Alexander Lohr NDH representatives and by Jevđevic who this time collaborated openly with the Axis forces against the Partisans and had gone to the conference without Mihailovic s knowledge Mihailovic disapproved of Jevđevic s presence and reportedly sent him an angry message but his actions were limited to announcing that Jevđevic s military award would be withdrawn 121 On 3 February 1943 Charles de Gaulle awarded Mihailovic with Croix de Guerre a French military decoration to honour people who fought with the Allies against the Axis forces at any time during World War II 122 On 28 February 1943 in Bailey s presence Mihailovic addressed his troops in Lipovo Bailey reported that Mihailovic had expressed his bitterness over perfidious Albion who expected the Serbs to fight to the last drop of blood without giving them any means to do so had said that the Serbs were completely friendless that the British were holding King Peter II and his government as virtual prisoners and that he would keep accepting help from the Italians as long as it would give him the means to annihilate the Partisans Also according to Bailey s report he added that his enemies were the Ustase the Partisans the Croats and the Muslims and that only after dealing with them would he turn to the Germans and the Italians 123 124 While defenders of Mihailovic have argued that Bailey had mistranslated the speech d and may have even done so intentionally 125 the effect on the British was disastrous and marked the beginning of the end for British Chetnik cooperation The British officially protested to the Yugoslav government in exile and demanded explanations regarding Mihailovic s attitude and collaboration with the Italians Mihailovic answered to his government that he had had no meetings with Italian generals and that Jevđevic had no command to do so The British announced that they would send him more abundant supplies 126 Also in early 1943 the tone of the BBC broadcasts became more and more favourable to the Partisans describing them as the only resistance movement in Yugoslavia and occasionally attributing to them resistance acts actually undertaken by the Chetniks 127 Bailey complained to the Foreign Office that his position with Mihailovic was being prejudiced by this 128 The Foreign Office protested and the BBC apologized but the line did not really change 128 Defeat in the battle of the NeretvaDuring Case White the Italians heavily supported the Chetniks in the hope that they would deal a fatal blow to the Partisans The Germans disapproved of this collaboration about which Hitler personally wrote to Mussolini 129 At the end of February shortly after his speech Mihailovic himself joined his troops in Herzegovina near the Neretva in order to try to salvage the situation The Partisans nevertheless defeated the opposing Chetniks troops who were in a state of disarray and managed to go across the Neretva 130 In March the Partisans negotiated a truce with Axis forces in order to gain some time and use it to defeat the Chetniks While Ribbentrop and Hitler finally overruled the orders of their subordinates and forbade any such contacts the Partisans benefited from this brief truce during which Italian support for the Chetniks was suspended and which allowed Tito s forces to deal a severe blow to Mihailovic s troops 131 In May the German intelligence service also tried to establish contact with Mihailovic to see if an alliance against the Partisans was possible In Kolasin they met with a Chetnik officer who did not introduce himself They assumed they had met the general himself but the man was possibly not Mihailovic whom Bailey reported being in another area at the same period The German command however reacted strongly against any attempt at negotiating with the enemy 132 The Germans then turned to their next operation code named Schwarz and attacked the Montenegrin Chetniks Đurisic appears to have suggested to Mihailovic a short term cooperation with the Germans against the Partisans something Mihailovic refused to condone Đurisic ended up defending his headquarters at Kolasin against the Partisans On 14 May the Germans entered Kolasin and captured Đurisic while Mihailovic escaped 131 133 In late May after regaining control of most of Montenegro the Italians turned their efforts against the Chetniks at least against Mihailovic s forces and put a reward of half a million lire for the capture of Mihailovic and one million for the capture of Tito 134 Allied support shiftsIn April and May 1943 the British sent a mission to the Partisans and strengthened their mission to the Chetniks Major Jasper Rootham one of the liaison officers to the Chetniks reported that engagements between Chetniks and Germans did occur but were invariably started by German attacks During the summer the British sent supplies to both Chetniks and Partisans 135 Mihailovic returned to Serbia and his movement rapidly recovered its dominance in the region Receiving more weapons from the British he undertook a series of actions and sabotages disarmed Serbian State Guard SDS detachments and skirmished with Bulgarian troops though he generally avoided the Germans considering that his troops were not yet strong enough In Serbia his organization controlled the mountains where Axis forces were absent The collaborationist Nedic administration was largely infiltrated by Mihailovic s men and many SDS troops being actually sympathetic to his movement After his defeat in Case White Mihailovic tried to improve his organization Dragisa Vasic the movement s ideologue who had opposed the Italian connection and clashed with Mihailovic left the supreme command Mihailovic tried to extend his contacts to Croats and traditional parties and to revitalise his contacts in Slovenia 136 The United States sent liaison officers to join Bailey s mission with Mihailovic while also sending men to Tito 137 The Germans in the meantime became worried by the growing strength of the Partisans and made local arrangements with Chetnik groups though not with Mihailovic himself According to Walter R Roberts there is little doubt that Mihailovic was aware of these arrangements and that he might have regarded them as the lesser of two evils his primary aim being to defeat the Partisans 138 From the beginning of 1943 British impatience with Mihailovic grew From the decrypts of German wireless messages Churchill and his government concluded that the Chetniks collaboration with the Italians went beyond what was acceptable and that the Partisans were doing the most severe damage to the Axis 139 With Italy s withdrawal from the war in September 1943 the Chetniks in Montenegro found themselves under attack by both the Germans and the Partisans who took control of large parts of Montenegrin territory including the former Chetnik capital of Kolasin Đurisic having escaped from a German camp in Galicia found his way to Yugoslavia was captured again and was then asked by collaborationist prime minister Milan Nedic to form a Montenegrin Volunteer Corps against the Partisans He was pledged to Nedic but also made a secret allegiance to Mihailovic Both Mihailovic and Đurisic expected a landing by the Western Allies In Serbia Mihailovic was considered the representative of the victorious Allies 140 In the chaotic situation created by the Italian surrender several Chetnik leaders overtly collaborated with the Germans against the reinforced Partisans approached by an Abwehr agent Jevđevic offered the services of about 5 000 men Momcilo Đujic also went to the Germans for cover against the Ustase and Partisans although he was distrusted 141 In October 1943 Mihailovic at the Allies request agreed to undertake two sabotage operations which had the effect of making him even more of a wanted man and forced him according to British reports to change his headquarters frequently 142 By November and December 1943 the Germans had realized that Tito was their most dangerous opponent German representative Hermann Neubacher managed to conclude secret arrangements with four of Mihailovic s commanders for the cessation of hostilities for periods of five to ten weeks The Germans interpreted this as a sign of weakness from the Mihailovic movement The truces were kept secret but came to the knowledge of the British through decrypts There is no evidence that Mihailovic had been involved or approved though British Military Intelligence found it possible that he was conniving 143 At the end of October the local signals decrypted in Cairo had disclosed that Mihailovic had ordered all Chetnik units to co operate with Germany against the Partisans 144 This order for cooperation was originally decrypted by Germans and it was noted in the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht War Journal 145 e The British were more and more concerned about the fact that the Chetniks were more willing to fight Partisans than Axis troops At the third Moscow Conference in October 1943 Anthony Eden expressed impatience about Mihailovic s lack of action 146 The report of Fitzroy Maclean liaison officer to the Partisans convinced Churchill that Tito s forces were the most reliable resistance group The report of Charles Armstrong liaison officer to Mihailovic arrived too late for Anthony Eden to take it to the Tehran Conference in late November 1943 though Stevan K Pavlowitch thinks that it would probably been insufficient to change Churchill s mind At Tehran Churchill argued in favour of the Partisans while Joseph Stalin expressed limited interest but agreed that they should receive the greatest possible support 147 On 10 December Churchill met King Peter II in London and told him that he possessed irrefutable proofs of Mihailovic s collaboration with the enemy and that Mihailovic should be eliminated from the Yugoslav cabinet Also in early December Mihailovic was asked to undertake an important sabotage mission against railways which was later interpreted as a final opportunity to redeem himself However possibly not realizing how Allied policy had evolved he failed to give the go ahead 148 On 12 January 1944 the SOE in Cairo sent a report to the Foreign Office saying that Mihailovic s commanders had collaborated with Germans and Italians and that Mihailovic himself had condoned and in certain cases approved their actions This hastened the British s decision to withdraw their thirty liaison officers to Mihailovic 149 The mission was effectively withdrawn in the spring of 1944 In April one month before leaving liaison officer Brigadier Armstrong noted that Mihailovic had been mostly active in propaganda against the Axis that he had missed numerous occasions for sabotage in the last six or eight months and that the efforts of many Chetnik leaders to follow Mihailovic s orders for inactivity had evolved into non aggression pacts with Axis troops although the mission had no evidence of collaboration with the enemy 150 In the meantime Mihailovic tried to improve the organization of his movement On 25 January 1944 with the help of Zivko Topalovic he organized in Ba a village near Ravna Gora the Ba Congress also meant to remove the shadow of the previous congress held in Montenegro The congress was attended by 274 people representing various parties and aimed to be a reaction against the arbitrary behaviour of some commanders The organization of a new democratic possibly federal Yugoslavia was mentioned though the proposals remained vague and an appeal was even made for the KPJ to join The Chetnik command structure was formally reorganized Đurisic was still in charge of Montenegro and Đujic of Dalmatia but Jevđevic was excluded The Germans and Bulgarians reacted to the congress by conducting an operation against the Chetniks in northern Serbia in February killing 80 and capturing 913 151 After May and the withdrawal of the British mission Mihailovic kept transmitting radio messages to the Allies and to his government but no longer received replies In July and August 1944 Mihailovic ordered his forces to cooperate with the Office of Strategic Services OSS and 60th Troop Carrier Squadron TCS in the successful rescue of hundreds downed Allied airmen between August and December 1944 in what was called Operation Halyard 152 153 for this he was posthumously awarded the Legion of Merit by United States President Harry S Truman According to historian Marko Attila Hoare On other occasions however Mihailovic s Chetniks rescued German airmen and handed them over safely to the German armed forces The Americans with a weaker intelligence presence in the Balkans than the British were less in touch with the realities of the Yugoslav civil war They were consequently less than enthusiastic about British abandonment of the anti communist Mihailovic and more reserved toward the Partisans Several Yugoslavs were also evacuated in Operation Halyard along with Topalovic they tried to raise more support abroad for Mihailovic s movement but this came too late to reverse Allied policy 154 The United States also sent an intelligence mission to Mihailovic in March but withdrew it after Churchill advised Roosevelt that all support should go to Tito and that complete chaos would ensue if the Americans also backed Mihailovic 152 In July Ivan Subasic formed the new Yugoslav government in exile which did not include Mihailovic as a minister Mihailovic however remained the official chief of staff of the Yugoslav Army On 29 August upon the recommendation of his government King Peter dissolved by royal decree the Supreme Command therefore abolishing Mihailovic s post On 12 September King Peter broadcast a message from London announcing the gist of 29 August s decree and calling upon all Serbs Croats and Slovenes to join the National Liberation Army under the leadership of Marshal Tito He also proclaimed that he strongly condemned the misuse of the name of the King and the authority of the Crown by which an attempt has been made to justify collaboration with the enemy Though the King did not mention Mihailovic it was clear who he meant According to his own account Peter had obtained after strenuous talks with the British not to say a word directly against Mihailovic The message had a devastating effect on the morale of the Chetniks Many men left Mihailovic after the broadcast others remained out of loyalty to him 155 Mihailovic resented the fact that he was abandoned by his former allies and in August 1944 summed up his position by stating that More than three years ago I took up arms to fight for democracy against dictatorship in the form of nazism and fascism In fighting for this cause there were ten occasions on which I almost lost my life If I must die in fighting against a new form of dictatorship I shall die bitter because I have been deserted by those who profess to believe in democracy but satisfied that I myself have fought bravely and honestly and have refused to compromise my cause 156 Defeat in 1944 45At the end of August 1944 the Soviet Union s Red Army arrived on the eastern borders of Yugoslavia In early September it invaded Bulgaria and coerced it into turning against the Axis Mihailovic s Chetniks meanwhile were so badly armed to resist the Partisan incursions into Serbia that some of Mihailovic s officers including Nikola Kalabic Nesko Nedic and Dragoslav Racic met German officers on 11 August to arrange a meeting of Mihailovic with Neubacher and to set forth the conditions for increased collaboration 157 Nedic in turn apparently picked up the idea and suggested forming an army of united anti communist forces he arranged a secret meeting with Mihailovic which apparently took place around 20 August From the existing accounts they met in a dark room and Mihailovic remained mostly silent so much so that Nedic was not even sure afterwards that he had actually met the real Mihailovic According to British official Stephen Clissold Mihailovic was initially very reluctant to go to the meeting but was finally convinced by Kalabic It appears that Nedic offered to obtain arms from the Germans and to place his Serbian State Guard under Mihailovic s command possibly as part of an attempt to switch sides as Germany was losing the war 158 Neubacher favoured the idea but it was vetoed by Hitler who saw this as an attempt to establish an English fifth column in Serbia According to Pavlowitch Mihailovic who was reportedly not enthusiastic about the proposal and Nedic might have been trying to exploit each other s predicaments while Nedic may have considered letting Mihailovic take over At the end of August Mihailovic also met an OSS mission headed by Colonel Robert H McDowell who stayed with him until November 159 As the Red Army approached Mihailovic thought that the outcome of war would depend on Turkey entering the conflict followed at last by an Allied incursion in the Balkans He called upon all Yugoslavs to remain faithful to the King and claimed that Peter had sent him a message telling him not to believe what he had heard on the radio about his dismissal His troops started to break up outside Serbia in mid August as he tried to reach to Muslim and Croat leaders for a national uprising However whatever his intentions he proved to have little attraction for non Serbs Đurisic while leading his Montenegrin Volunteer Corps which was related on paper to Ljotic s forces accepted once again Mihailovic s command 160 Mihailovic ordered a general mobilization on 1 September his troops were engaged against the Germans and the Bulgarians while also under attack by the Partisans 155 On 4 September Mihailovic issued a circular telegram ordering his commanders that no action can be undertaken without his orders save against the communists 161 German sources confirm the loyalty of Mihailovic and forces under his direct influence in this period f The Partisans then penetrated Chetnik territory fighting a difficult battle and ultimately defeating Mihailovic s main force by October On 6 September what was left of Nedic s troops openly joined Mihailovic In the meantime the Red Army encountered both the Partisans and Chetniks while entering from Romania and Bulgaria They briefly cooperated with the Chetniks against retreating Germans before disarming them Mihailovic sent a delegation to the Soviet command but his representatives were ignored and ultimately arrested Mihailovic s movement collapsed in Serbia under the attacks of Soviets Partisans Bulgarians and fighting with the retreating Germans Still hoping for a landing by the Western Allies he headed for Bosnia with his staff McDowell and a force of a few hundred He set up a few Muslim units and appointed Croat Major Matija Parac as the head of an as yet non existent Croatian Chetnik army Nedic himself had fled to Austria On 25 May 1945 he wrote to General Dwight D Eisenhower asserting that he had always been a secret ally of Mihailovic 162 Now hoping for support from the United States Mihailovic met a small British mission between the Neretva river and Dubrovnik but realized that it wasn t the signal of the hoped for landing McDowell was evacuated on 1 November and was instructed to offer Mihailovic the opportunity to leave with him Mihailovic refused as he wanted to remain until the expected change of Western Allied policy 163 During the next weeks the British government also raised the possibility of evacuating Mihailovic by arranging a rescue and honorable detention and discussed the matter with the United States In the end no action was taken 164 With their main forces in eastern Bosnia the Chetniks under Mihailovic s personal command in the late months of 1944 continued to collaborate with Germans Colonel Borota and vojvoda Jevđevic maintained contacts with Germans for the whole group 165 In January 1945 Mihailovic tried to regroup his forces on the Ozren heights planning Muslim Croatian and Slovenian units His troops were however decimated and worn out some selling their weapons and ammunition or pillaging the local population Đurisic joined Mihailovic with his own depleted forces and found out that Mihailovic had no plan 166 Đurisic went his own way and was killed on 12 April in a battle with the Ustase 167 On 17 March 1945 Mihailovic was visited in Bosnia by German emissary Starker who requested that Mihailovic transmit to the Allied headquarters in Italy a secret German offer of capitulation Mihailovic transmitted the message which was to be his last 168 Ljotic and several independent Chetnik leaders in Istria proposed the forming of a common anti communist front in the north western coast which could be acceptable to the Western Allies Mihailovic was not in favour of such a heterogeneous gathering but did not reject Ljotic s proposal entirely since the littoral area would be a convenient place to meet the Western Allies and to join Slovene anti communists while Germany s collapse might make an anti communist alliance possible He authorized the departure of all who wanted to go but few Chetniks ultimately arrived on the coast with many being decimated on their way by Ustase Partisans sickness and hunger 169 On 13 April Mihailovic set out for northern Bosnia on a 280 km long march back to Serbia aiming to start over a resistance movement this time against the communists His units were decimated by clashes with the Ustase and Partisans as well as dissension and typhus On 10 May they were attacked and defeated by the Yugoslav Army the reorganized force of the Partisans in battle of Zelengora Mihailovic managed to escape with 1 000 2 000 men who gradually dispersed Mihailovic himself went into hiding in the mountains with a handful of men 170 Capture trial and executionMain article Trial of Draza Mihailovic Mihailovic s trial The Yugoslav authorities wanted to catch Mihailovic alive in order to stage a full scale trial 171 He was finally caught on 13 March 1946 172 The elaborate circumstances of his capture were kept secret for sixteen years According to one version Mihailovic was approached by men who were supposedly British agents offering him help and an evacuation by aeroplane After hesitating he boarded the aeroplane only to discover that it was a trap set up by the OZNA Another version proposed by the Yugoslav government is that he was betrayed by Nikola Kalabic who revealed his place of hiding in exchange for leniency 173 Monument to General Draza Mihailovic on Ravna Gora Serbia Draza Mihailovic Monument in Canada The trial of Draza Mihailovic opened on 10 June 1946 His co defendants were other prominent figures of the Chetnik movement as well as members of the Yugoslav government in exile such as Slobodan Jovanovic who were tried in absentia but also members of ZBOR and of the Nedic regime 174 The main prosecutor was Milos Minic later Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Yugoslav government The Allied airmen he had rescued in 1944 were not allowed to testify in his favour 175 Mihailovic evaded several questions by accusing some of his subordinates of incompetence and disregard of his orders The trial shows according to Jozo Tomasevich that he never had firm and full control over his local commanders 176 A Committee for the Fair Trial of General Mihailovic was set up in the United States but to no avail Mihailovic is quoted as saying in his final statement I wanted much I began much but the gale of the world carried away me and my work 177 Roberts considers that the trial was anything but a model of justice and that it is clear that Mihailovic was not guilty of all or even many of the charges brought against him though Tito would probably not have had a fair trial either had Mihailovic prevailed Mihailovic was convicted of high treason and war crimes and was executed on 17 July 1946 172 He was executed together with nine other officers in Lisiciji Potok about 200 meters from the former Royal Palace His body was reportedly covered with lime and the position of his unmarked grave was kept secret 178 RehabilitationIn March 2012 Vojislav Mihailovic filed a request for his grandfather s rehabilitation in the high court 179 The announcement caused a negative reaction in Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia and Serbia alike 179 Zeljko Komsic presidency member of Bosnia and Herzegovina advocated the withdrawal of the Bosnian ambassador to Serbia if rehabilitation passes 180 Former Croatian President Ivo Josipovic stated that the attempted rehabilitation is harmful for Serbia and contrary to historical facts 181 He elaborated that Mihailovic is a war criminal and Chetnikism is a quisling criminal movement 181 Croatian foreign minister Vesna Pusic commented that the rehabilitation will only cause suffering to Serbia 182 In Serbia fourteen NGOs stated in an open letter that the attempted rehabilitation of Draza Mihailovic demeans the struggle of both the Serbians and all the other peoples of the former Yugoslavia against fascism 179 Members of the Women in Black protested in front of the higher court 183 The High Court rehabilitated Draza Mihailovic on 14 May 2015 This ruling reverses the judgment passed in 1946 sentencing Mihailovic to death for collaboration with the occupying Nazi forces and stripping him of all his rights as a citizen According to the ruling the Communist regime staged a politically and ideologically motivated trial 184 185 FamilyIn 1920 Mihailovic married Jelica Brankovic they had three children One of his sons Branko Mihailovic was a Communist sympathizer and later supported the Partisans 186 His daughter Gordana Mihailovic also sided with the Partisans She spent most of the war in Belgrade and after the Partisans took the city spoke on the radio to denounce her father as a traitor 187 While Mihailovic was in prison his children did not come to see him and only his wife visited him 172 In 2005 Gordana Mihailovic personally came to accept her father s posthumous award in the United States Another son Vojislav Mihailovic fought alongside his father and was killed in battle in May 1945 188 His grandson Vojislav Mihailovic born 1951 named after his uncle is a Serbian politician member of the Serbian Renewal Movement and later of the Serbian Democratic Renewal Movement He was the mayor of Belgrade for one year from 1999 to 2000 and ran unsuccessfully in the 2000 Yugoslav presidential elections 189 Legacy The Legion of Merit awarded to Mihailovic by U S president Harry Truman Letter from U S president Richard Nixon about Mihailovic Historians vary in their assessments of Mihailovic Tomasevich suggests one main cause of his defeat was his failure to grow professionally politically or ideologically as his responsibilities increased rendering him unable to face both the exceptional circumstances of the war and the complex situation of the Chetniks 190 Tomasevich also criticizes Mihailovic s loss of the Allied support through Chetnik collaboration with the Axis as well as his doctrine of passive resistance which was perceived as idleness stating of generalship in the general there was precious little 191 Pavlowitch also points to Mihailovic s failure to grow and evolve during the conflict and describes him as a man generally out of his depth 192 Roberts asserts that Mihailovic s policies were basically static that he gambled all in the faith of an Allied victory and that ultimately he was unable to control the Chetniks who although hostile to the Germans and the Italians allowed themselves to drift into a policy of accommodations with both in the face of what they considered the greatest danger 193 Political views of Mihailovic cover a wide range After the war Mihailovic s wartime role was viewed in the light of his movement s collaboration particularly in Yugoslavia where he was considered a collaborator convicted of high treason Charles de Gaulle considered Mihailovic a pure hero and always refused to have personal meetings with Tito whom he considered as Mihailovic s murderer 194 195 During the war Churchill believed intelligence reports had shown that Mihailovic had engaged in active collaboration with the Germans 196 He observed that under the pressure of German reprisals in 1941 Mihailovic drifted gradually into a posture where some of his commanders made accommodations with German and Italian troops to be left alone in certain mountain areas in return for doing little or nothing against the enemy but concluded that those who have triumphantly withstood such strains may brand his Mihailovic s name but history more discriminating should not erase it from the scroll of Serbian patriots 197 In the United States due to the efforts of Major Richard L Felman and his friends President Truman on the recommendation of Eisenhower posthumously awarded Mihailovic the Legion of Merit for the rescue of American airmen by the Chetniks The award and the story of the rescue was classified secret by the State Department so as not to offend the Yugoslav government The unparalleled rescue of over 500 American Airmen from capture by the Enemy Occupation Forces in Yugoslavia during World War II by General Dragoljub Mihailovich and his Chetnik Freedom Fighters for which this Legion of Merit medal was awarded by President Harry S Truman also represents a token of deep personal appreciation and respect by all those rescued American Airmen and their descendants who will be forever grateful NATIONAL COMMITTEE OF AMERICAN AIRMEN RESCUED BY GENERAL MihailovicH 1985 Generalfeldmarschall von Weichs German commander in chief south east 1943 1945 in his interrogation statement in October 1945 wrote about Mihailovic and his forces in section named Groups Aiding Germany MIHAILOVIC s troops once fought against our occupation troops out of loyalty to their King At the same time they fought against TITO because of anti Communist convictions This two front war could not last long particularly when British support favored TITO Consequently MIHAILOVIC showed pro German leanings There were engagements during which Serbian Chetniks fought TITO alongside German troops On the other hand hostile Chetnik groups were known to attack German supply trains in order to replenish their own stocks MIHAILOVIC liked to remain in the background and leave such affairs up to his subordinates He hoped to bide his time with this play of power until an Anglo American landing would provide sufficient support against TITO Germany welcomed his support however temporary Chetnik reconnaissance activities were valued highly by our commanders 198 Almost sixty years after his death on 29 March 2005 Mihailovic s daughter Gordana was presented with the posthumous decoration by president George W Bush 199 The decision was controversial in Croatia Zoran Pusic head of the Civil Committee for Human Rights protested against the decision and stated that Mihailovic was directly responsible for the war crimes committed by the Chetniks 200 201 Amongst many Serbian emigres Mihailovic remains the Serbian hero par excellence as the American scholar Paul Hockenos wrote to emigres loyal to the Mihailovic movement their larger than life Draza was a resolute anti fascist and Western minded Anglophile who fought the Germans tooth and nail 202 Hockenos described the Chicago headquarters of the Serbian National Defense Council of America as being almost a shrine to Mihailovic with photographs of him together with newspaper articles about him covering the walls 202 Hockenos wrote for the groups such as the National Defense Council Mihailovic is a symbol of Serbdom itself being presented as a noble and successful guerrilla leader who was sadly betrayed by cynical Anglo American leaders 203 Hockenos noted that Serb American groups have argued that Serbia is a natural ally of the United States and the West in general as proved by Mihailovic s wartime career and that for such groups Mihailovic serves as a symbol of both Serbian virtue and victimhood 204 Hockenos noted that the historically inaccurate claim is often made by such groups that all Serbs supported the Chetniks which serves as a way of projecting Mihailovic s travails onto the entire Serb nation which in turn is used to present the war as a collective national martyrdom at the hands of genocidal peoples such as the Germans Croats and Bosnian Muslims 204 Hockenos stated after he interviewed various Serb American leaders that he was struck by the way such individuals denied accounts of atrocities during the Bosnian war with the claim being made that because Mihailovic fought the genocidal peoples in the 1940s that it was impossible for Serbs to commit atrocities in the 1990s 204 With the breakup of Yugoslavia and the renewal of ethnic nationalism the historical perception of Mihailovic s collaboration has been challenged by parts of the public in Serbia and other ethnic Serb populated regions of the former Yugoslavia In the 1980s political and economic problems within Yugoslavia undermined faith in the communist regime and historians in Serbia began a re evaluation of Serbian historiography and proposed the rehabilitation of Mihailovic and the Chetniks 201 In the 1990s during the Yugoslav Wars several Serbian nationalist groups began calling themselves Chetniks while Serb paramilitaries often self identified with them and were referred to as such 205 Vojislav Seselj s Serbian Radical Party formed the White Eagles a paramilitary group considered responsible for war crimes and ethnic cleansing which identified with the Chetniks 206 207 Vuk Draskovic s Serbian Renewal Movement was closely associated with the Serbian Guard which was also associated with Chetniks and monarchism 208 Reunions of Chetnik survivors and nostalgics and of Mihailovic admirers have been held in Serbia 209 By the late 20th and early 21st century Serbian history textbooks and academic works characterized Mihailovic and the Chetniks as fighters for a just cause and Chetnik massacres of civilians and commission of war crimes were ignored or barely mentioned 201 In 2004 Mihailovic was officially rehabilitated in Serbia by an act of the Serbian Parliament 210 In a 2009 survey carried out in Serbia 34 44 percent of respondents favored annulling the 1946 verdict against Mihailovic in which he was found to be a traitor and Axis collaborator 15 92 percent opposed and 49 64 percent stated they did not know what to think 211 The revised image of Mihailovic is not shared in non Serbian post Yugoslav nations citation needed In Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina analogies are drawn between war crimes committed during World War II and those of the Yugoslav Wars and Mihailovic is seen as a war criminal responsible for ethnic cleansing and genocidal massacres 201 The differences were illustrated in 2004 when Serbian basketball player Milan Gurovic who has a tattoo of Mihailovic on his left arm was banned by the Croatian Ministry of the Interior Zlatko Mehun from traveling to Croatia for refusing to cover the tattoo as its display was deemed equivalent to provoking hatred or violence because of racial background national identity or religious affiliation 201 212 Serbian press and politicians reacted to the ban with surprise and indignation while in Croatia the decision was seen as wise and a means of protecting the player himself against his own stupidity 201 In 2009 a Serb group based in Chicago offered a reward of 100 000 00 for help finding Mihailovic s grave 213 A commission formed by the Serbian government began an investigation and in 2010 suggested Mihailovic may have been interred at Ada Ciganlija 210 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 Harry S Truman 29 March 1948 The ultimate tragedy of Draza Mihailovic cannot erase the memory of his heroic and often lonely struggle against the twin tyrannies that afflicted his people Nazism and Communism He knew that totalitarianism whatever name it might take is the death of freedom He thus became a symbol of resistance to all those across the world who have had to fight a similar heroic and lonely struggle against totalitarianism Mihailovic belonged to Yugoslavia his spirit now belongs to all those who are willing to fight for freedom Ronald Reagan 8 September 1979 214 Monuments to Draza Mihailovic exist on Ravna Gora 1992 Ivanjica Lapovo Subjel Udrulje near Visegrad Petrovo and within cemeteries in North America In Republika Srpska streets and squares named after him are very common East Sarajevo Bijeljina Ugljevik Sekovici etc 215 As of 2019 a street in Kragujevac is named after him 216 Several memorial plaques were placed on Ravna Gora on one of them writes We ll never forget CiCa Draza your children your young Chetniks of Serbia 217 See also Biography portal World War II portal Serbia portalOperation Halyard George Musulin Operation Hydra Yugoslavia Yugoslavia and the AlliesNotes Referred to by his supporters as Uncle Draza Chicha Drazha Cica Draza Official name of the occupied territory Hehn 1971 pp 344 373 Pavlowitch 2002 p 141 Pavlowitch asserts that it cannot be determined who initiated the meeting but Roberts attributes it to Matl Pavlowitch 2007 pp 65 Roberts 1973 p 36 Roberts quotes Konstantin Fotic though he adds that even the latter a Mihailovic supporter admits that the speech was unfortunate Roberts 1973 p 94 The text in Kriegstagebuch des Oberkommando der Wehrmacht for 23 November 1943 Mihailovic hat nach sicherer Quelle seinen Unterfuhrern den Befehl gegeben mit den Deutschen zusammenzuarbeiten er selbst konnen mit Rucksicht auf die Stimmung der Bevolkerung nicht in diesem Sinne hervortreten Schramm 1963 p 1304harvnb error no target CITEREFSchramm1963 help Army Group F HQ Chief Intelligence Officer notice for the 2 October Conference in Belgrade Chetnik attitude remains uneven Serbian Chetniks fight together with German troops against communist bands DM himself even asked for German help to ensure the intended relocation of his HQ from NW Serbia to SW Belgrade area but this intention was not carried out In contrast hostile attitude of the Chetniks in E Bosnia Herzegovina and S Montenegro and movement of these forces to the coast in the area of Dubrovnik with the aim at to secure connenction with expected Engl landing and to seek the protection from Red From reliable source is known that DM expressly disapproves the anti German attitude of these Chetniks German Cetnik Haltung weiterhin uneinheitlich Serbische Cetniks kampfen zusammen mit deutscher Truppe gegen komun Banden DM selbst bat sogar um deutsche Hilfe zur Sicherung beabsichtigter Verlegung seines Hauptstabes von NW Serbien in Raum SW Belgrad Diese Absicht jedoch nicht durchgefuhrt Demgegenuber feindselige Haltung der Cetniks in O Bosnien Herzegovina und S Montenegro und Bewegung dieser Krafte zur Kuste in den Raum Dubrovnik mit dem Ziel bei erwarteter engl Landung Verbindung mit Alliierten aufzunehmen und Schutz gegen Rote zu suchen Nach S Qu bekannt dass DM die deutschfeindliche Haltung dieser Cetniks ausdrucklich missbilligt National Archive and Research Administration Washington T311 Roll 194 000105 6 CitationsFootnotes a b Tomasevich 1975 p 271 Miloslav Samardzic General Draza Mihailovic i OPSTA istoriia cetnickog pokreta General Draza Mihailovic and the general history of the Chetnik movement 2 vols 4 Ed Novi pogledi Kragujevac 2005 Draza Mihailovic Na krstu sudbine Pero Simic Laguna 2013 Draza Mihailovic Na krstu sudbine Pero Simic Laguna 2013 Mihailovic 1946 p 13 Buisson 1999 p 13 a b Buisson 1999 pp 26 27 Buisson 1999 pp 45 49 Buisson 1999 pp 55 56 Buisson 1999 pp 63 65 a b Trew 1998 pp 5 6 Buisson 1999 pp 66 68 Pavlowitch 2007 p 53 Milazzo 1975 pp 12 13 Milazzo 1975 p 13 a b c Pavlowitch 2007 p 54 Freeman 2007 p 123 a b Roberts 1973 p 21 a b Roberts 1973 pp 21 22 a b Roberts 1973 p 22 Pavlowitch 2007 p 79 Roberts 1973 p 26 Pavlowitch 2007 p 59 Pavlowitch 2007 p 56 Pavlowitch 2007 p 60 Karchmar 1973 p 241 Freeman 2007 pp 124 126 Roberts 1973 pp 26 27 Pavlowitch 2007 p 64 a b c d Pavlowitch 2007 p 63 a b Tomasevich 1975 p 148 Roberts 1973 p 48 Milazzo 1975 pp 15 16 a b Milazzo 1975 p 21 Tomasevich 1975 p 141 a b Tomasevich 1975 p 140 Ramet 2006 p 133 a b Milazzo 1975 p 26 Tomasevich 1975 p 178 Tomasevich 1975 p 143 Milazzo 1975 p 33 a b Milazzo 1975 p 34 a b Roberts 1973 p 34 Tomasevich 1975 p 152 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 62 64 a b c Milazzo 1975 p 35 a b Roberts 1973 pp 34 35 a b c Tomasevich 1975 p 149 Milazzo 1975 pp 36 37 Hoare 2006 p 156 a b Milazzo 1975 p 38 a b Tomasevich 1975 p 150 Miljus 1982 p 119 a b Tomasevich 1975 p 155 a b Pavlowitch 2007 pp 65 66 a b c Tomasevich 1975 p 151 Pavlowitch 2007 p 65 a b Milazzo 1975 p 37 Tomasevich 1975 p 196 Karchmar 1987 p 256 a b Milazzo 1975 p 39 a b c d e Karchmar 1987 p 272 Trew 1998 pp 86 88 Milazzo 1975 p 40 Tomasevich 1975 p 200 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 66 67 96 a b Pavlowitch 2007 pp 66 67 Tomasevich 1975 pp 214 216 Roberts 1973 p 38 Roberts 1973 pp 37 38 a b Tomasevich 1975 p 199 Pavlowitch 2007 p 66 Tomasevich 1975 pp 269 271 Roberts 1973 p 53 Roberts 1973 pp 53 54 Tomasevich 1975 p 184 Roberts 1973 p 56 Roberts 1973 pp 57 58 a b c Roberts 1973 p 67 Roberts 1973 pp 58 62 Roberts 1973 p 40 41 Tomasevich 1975 p 210 Tomasevich 1975 p 219 a b c Pavlowitch 2007 p 110 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 110 112 Hoare 2006 p 161 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 122 126 Pavlowitch 2007 p 98 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 98 100 Barker 1976 p 162 Pavlowitch 2007 p 100 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 127 128 Tomasevich 1975 p 256 Tomasevich 1975 p 169 Tomasevich 1975 p 259 Hoare 2006 p 148 Hoare 2006 p 143 a b c Malcolm 1994 p 179 Lerner 1994 p 105 Mulaj 2008 p 42 Milazzo 1975 p 64 Tomasevich 1975 pp 256 261 Karchmar 1987 p 397 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 79 80 Tomasevich 1975 p 170 Tomasevich 1975 p 179 Tomasevich 1975 p 171 Pavlowitch 2007 p 112 Tomasevich 1975 pp 258 259 Pavlowitch 2007 p 158 a b Hoare 2010 p 1198 Pavlowitch 2007 p 127 Basil Davidson PARTISAN PICTURE a b Roberts 1973 pp 70 71 Tomasevich 1975 p 290 Roberts 1973 p 72 Tomasevich 1975 p 231 Roberts 1973 pp 90 91 Roberts 1973 pp 91 92 Pavlowitch 2007 p 167 Buisson 1999 p 164 Miljus Branko 1982 La Revolution yougoslave Paris L Age d homme 1982 247 S 8 L AGE D HOMME p 127 GGKEY 3ETA934ZGPG Roberts 1973 pp 92 93 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 166 167 Buisson 1999 pp 162 163 Roberts 1973 pp 93 96 Tomasevich 1975 p 361 a b Roberts 1973 p 86 Roberts 1973 p 103 106 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 159 160 a b Pavlowitch 2007 pp 161 165 Roberts 1973 pp 123 124 Roberts 1973 pp 106 112 Pavlowitch 2007 p 171 Roberts 1973 pp 117 120 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 182 186 Roberts 1973 pp 138 144 Roberts 1973 pp 156 157 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 189 190 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 192 195 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 204 205 Roberts 1973 pp 153 154 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 197 199 Hinsley 1993 p 358 sfn error no target CITEREFHinsley1993 help Schramm 1963 pp 1304 sfn error no target CITEREFSchramm1963 help Roberts 1973 pp 157 160 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 191 192 Roberts 1973 pp 178 180 Roberts 1973 p 197 Roberts 1973 p 225 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 223 226 a b Roberts 1973 pp 245 257 Tomasevich 1975 p 378 Roberts 1973 pp 253 254 a b Roberts 1973 pp 258 260 Martin 1946 p 292 Tomasevich 1975 p 342 Roberts 1973 pp 257 258 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 228 230 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 230 235 Tomasevich 1975 p 380 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 231 238 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 254 Roberts 1973 pp 280 282 Tomasevich 1975 p 433 Tomasevich 1975 p 440 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 254 256 Roberts 1973 pp 306 307 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 256 258 Pavlowitch 2007 pp 266 267 Pavlowitch 2007 p 267 a b c Roberts 1973 p 307 Buisson 1999 p 250 251 Buisson 1999 p 262 Buisson 1999 p 260 262 Tomasevich 1975 pp 462 463 Time amp 7 October 1957 Buisson 1999 p 272 a b c Ristic 2012 Gusic amp 30 March 2012 a b B92 Josipovic amp 23 March 2012 B92 Pusic amp 23 March 2012 Blic amp 23 March 2012 B92 amp Rehabilitation Draza Mihailovic rehabilitated InSerbia 14 May 2015 Buisson 1999 p 97 Buisson 1999 p 227 Buisson 1999 p 242 BBC amp 7 August 2000 Tomasevich 1975 p page needed Tomasevich 1975 p 470 Pavlowitch 2007 p 279 Roberts 1973 p 322 Peyrefitte 1997 pp 209 210 Lutard Tavard 2005 p 78 Churchill 1953 pp 409 415 Churchill 1953 pp 408 409 von Weichs 1945 p 22 Hoare 2005 Balkan News 2005 a b c d e f Sindbaek 2009 a b Hockenos 2018 p 115 Hockenos 2018 p 116 a b c Hockenos 2018 p 116 117 Cathcart 1994 Allen 1996 p page needed Bassiouni 1994 Glas javnosti 1999 Buisson 1999 pp 9 10 a b Cvijic 2010 Ramet 2011 p 2 MSNBC 2004 Meyer 2009 https philosophymr com pdf publications 10 Nixon Reagan on General Draza Mihailovic pdf bare URL PDF Momir Samardzic Milivoj Beslin Srdan Milosevic editors 2013 Politicka upotreba proslosti istorijski revizionizam na postjugoslovenskom prostoru in Serbian p 328 Alternativna kulturna organizacija AKO Novi Sad Serbia ISBN 978 86 913171 6 4 1 POKS Ulica u Kraguјevcu dobila naziv Ђeneral Drazha Mihailoviћ ziginfo rs in Serbian Retrieved 4 November 2019 Danas newspaper 11 april 2012 Spomenici rehabilitovali Drazu Monuments rehabilitated Draza 2 References Allen Beverly 1996 Rape Warfare The Hidden Genocide in Bosnia Herzegovina and Croatia 2 ed Minneapolis Minnesota University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 2818 6 Serbian banned from entering Croatia for game MSNBC Associated Press 14 November 2010 Archived from the original on 11 October 2012 Retrieved 26 June 2011 Barker Elisabeth 1976 British Policy in South East europe in the Second World War New York Barnes amp Noble Books ISBN 978 0 06 490301 1 Bassiouni Cherif 28 December 1994 Final report of the United Nations Commission of Experts established pursuant to security council resolution 780 United Nations Archived from the original on 4 May 2012 Retrieved 13 May 2010 European press review BBC 7 August 2000 Protest zbog rehabilitacije Draze Mihailovic Mladic Genocid Blic 23 March 2012 Archived from the original on 25 March 2012 Buisson Jean Christophe 1999 Le General Mihailovic heros trahi par les Allies 1893 1946 Paris Perrin Josipovic Draza je ratni zlocinac B92 23 March 2012 Pusic Srbija ce stradati zbog Draze B92 23 March 2012 Cathcart Brian 17 April 1994 Harrier pilot safe The Independent London Retrieved 28 April 2010 Churchill Winston 1953 The Second World War Closing the Ring Vol 5 Boston Mariner Books ISBN 978 0 395 41059 2 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 Cvijic Vuk Z 3 January 2010 Excavation of Draza Mihajlovic s grave Blic online Archived from the original on 10 August 2011 Retrieved 30 July 2010 Freeman Gregory A 2007 The Forgotten 500 The Untold Story of the Men Who Risked All for the Greatest Rescue Mission of World War II New York New American Library ISBN 978 0 451 22495 8 Giska and guards died for nothing Glas javnosti 1 August 1999 Schramm Percy Ernst Greiner Helmuth Hubatsch Walther 1963 Kriegstagebuch des Oberkommandos der Wehrmacht Band III 1943 Zweiter Halbband Vol III 2 Frankfurt am Main Bernard amp Graefe Verlag fur Wehrwesen Hart Stephen A 5 November 2009 Partisans War in the Balkans 1941 1945 BBC Retrieved 23 May 2010 Hehn Paul N 1971 Serbia Croatia and Germany 1941 1945 Civil War and Revolution in the Balkans Canadian Slavonic Papers 13 4 344 373 doi 10 1080 00085006 1971 11091249 Retrieved 8 April 2012 Hinsley F H Francis Harry 1993 British Intelligence in the Second World War Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 44304 3 Hoare Marko Attila September November 2005 Adding insult to injury Washington decorates a Nazi collaborationist leader Bosnia Report 47 48 Archived from the original on 3 March 2012 Retrieved 26 June 2011 Hoare Marko Attila 2006 Genocide and Resistance in Hitler s Bosnia The Partisans and the Chetniks 1941 1943 New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 726380 8 Hoare Marko Attila September 2010 Genocide in the Former Yugoslavia Before and After Communism Europe Asia Studies 62 7 1193 1214 doi 10 1080 09668136 2010 497029 S2CID 153394582 Hockenos Paul 2018 Homeland Calling Exile Patriotism and the Balkan Wars Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 9781501725654 Karchmar Lucien 1973 Draz a Mihailovic and the Rise of the C etnik Movement 1941 1942 Department of History Stanford University Karchmar Lucien 1987 Draza Mihailovic and the Rise of the Cetnik Movement 1941 1945 New York Garland Publishing ISBN 978 0 8240 8027 3 Lampe John R 2000 Yugoslavia as History Twice There Was a Country 2 ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 77401 7 Lerner Natan 1994 Dinstein Yoram ed Ethnic Cleansing Israel Yearbook on Human Rights Vol 24 ISBN 978 90 411 0026 9 ISSN 0333 5925 Lutard Tavard Catherine 2005 La Yougoslavie de Tito ecartelee 1945 1991 Paris L Harmattan ISBN 978 2 7475 8643 6 Malcolm Noel 1994 Bosnia A Short History New York New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 5520 4 Martin David 1946 Ally betrayed the uncensored story of Tito and Mihailovich New York Prentice Hall ISBN 978 1 2585 0874 6 Meyer Bill 27 April 2009 Serbia seeks grave of WWII guerrilla leader Dragoljub Draza Mihailovic slain by communists The Plain Dealer Cleveland OH Mihailovic Draza 1946 The Trial of Dragoljub Draza Mihailovic Belgrade Documentary Publications Milazzo Matteo J 1975 The Chetnik Movement amp the Yugoslav Resistance Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 1589 8 Miljus Branko 1982 La Revolution yougoslave L Age d homme Mulaj Klejda 2008 Politics of ethnic cleansing nation state building and provision of in security in twentieth century balkans Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 1782 8 Pavlowitch Stevan K 2002 Serbia The History of an Idea New York New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 6708 5 Pavlowitch Stevan K 2007 Hitler s New Disorder The Second World War in Yugoslavia New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 1 85065 895 5 Peyrefitte Alain 1997 C etait de Gaulle Vol 2 Paris Editions de Fallois Ramet Sabrina P 2006 The Three Yugoslavias State Building and Legitimation 1918 2005 Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 34656 8 Ramet Sabrina P 2011 Serbia and the Serbs in World War Two Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 27830 1 Ristic Marija 23 March 2012 Protests Over Chetnik Hero s Rehabilitation Balkan Insight Roberts Walter R 1973 Tito Mihailovic and the Allies 1941 1945 New Brunswick New Jersey Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 0773 0 Sindbaek Tea April 2009 The Fall and Rise of a National Hero Interpretations of Draza Mihailovic and the Chetniks in Yugoslavia and Serbia since 1945 Journal of Contemporary European Studies 17 1 47 59 doi 10 1080 14782800902844693 S2CID 145143037 Tomasevich Jozo 1975 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 The Chetniks Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0857 9 Trew Simon 1998 Britain Mihailovic and the Chetniks 1941 42 St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 17757 7 von Weichs 1945 Interrogation Reports Record Group 238 M1270 Roll 28 Annex to interrogation of Maximilian von Weichs 12 October 1945 Washington National Archive and record Administration Pusic Protests U S Plan to Decorate WWII Chetnik Movement Leader Balkan News 7 May 2005 One Who Survived Time 7 October 1957 Archived from the original on 5 November 2012 Gusic M 30 March 2012 Rehabilitacija Draze Mihailovica BiH razmatra povlacenje ambasadora iz Srbije Dnevni Avaz Archived from the original on 1 April 2012 Court rehabilitates WW2 era Chetnik leader Draza Mihailovic B92 14 May 2015 Further readingJuce Sinoc Pjetlovi nad Tigrovima Sanski Most BiH Begovic Bosanska Krajina Press 2007 Marcia Christoff Kurapovna 2010 Shadows on the mountain the Allies the Resistance and the rivalries that doomed WWII Yugoslavia John Wiley and Sons ISBN 978 0 470 08456 4 Martin David Ally Betrayed The Uncensored Story of Tito and Mihailovic New York Prentice Hall 1946 Martin David Patriot or Traitor The Case of General Mihailovic Proceedings and Report of the Commission of Inquiry of the Committee for a Fair Trial for Draja Mihailovic Hoover Archival Documentaries Hoover Institution Publication volume 191 Stanford CA Hoover Institution Press Stanford University 1978 Pero Simic Draza Mihailovic Na krstu sudbine SRB Laguna 2013 Seitz Albert Blazier 1953 Mihailovic Hoax Or Hero Leigh House Tucakovic Semso Srpski zlocini nad Bosnjacima Muslimanima 1941 1945 Sarajevo El Kalem 1995 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Draza Mihailovic Political officesPreceded byBogoljub Ilic Minister of the Army Navy and Air Force of the Yugoslav government in exile1942 1944 Succeeded byBorisav Ristic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Draza Mihailovic amp oldid 1131859484, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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