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Invasion of Yugoslavia

Invasion of Yugoslavia
Part of the Balkans Campaign of World War II

Map illustrating the movements of the Axis forces in Yugoslavia and Greece
Date6–18 April 1941
Location
Result

Axis victory

Territorial
changes
Occupation of Yugoslavia
Partition of Yugoslavia between the Axis
Creation of pro-Axis puppet regimes
Belligerents
Axis:  Yugoslavia
Commanders and leaders
Strength
Germany:
337,096
875 tanks
990 aircraft
Italy:
300,000 in 22 divisions
666 aircraft[1]
Hungary:
9 brigades
6 air squadrons
700,000
(400,000 ill-prepared)[2]
110[3]–200 tanks[4]
(50[4]–54[3] of which were modern)
460[5]–505 aircraft
(including 103 modern bombers[4] and 107 modern fighters[6])
Casualties and losses
Germany:[7]
151 killed
392 wounded
15 missing
40 aircraft shot down
Italy:
3,324 killed or wounded
10+ aircraft shot down
22 aircraft damaged
Hungary:
120 killed
223 wounded
13 missing
7 aircraft shot down
Thousands of civilians & soldiers killed
254,000–345,000 captured
(by the Germans)
30,000 captured
(by the Italians)
49 aircraft shot down
103 pilots & aircrew killed
210–300 aircraft captured[8]
3 destroyers captured
3 submarines captured

The invasion of Yugoslavia, also known as the April War[a] or Operation 25,[b] was a German-led attack on the Kingdom of Yugoslavia by the Axis powers which began on 6 April 1941 during World War II. The order for the invasion was put forward in "Führer Directive No. 25", which Adolf Hitler issued on 27 March 1941, following a Yugoslav coup d'état that overthrew the pro-Axis government.[12]

The invasion commenced with an overwhelming air attack on Belgrade and facilities of the Royal Yugoslav Air Force (VVKJ) by the Luftwaffe (German Air Force) and attacks by German land forces from southwestern Bulgaria. These attacks were followed by German thrusts from Romania, Hungary and the Ostmark (modern-day Austria, then part of Germany). Italian forces were limited to air and artillery attacks until 11 April, when the Italian army attacked towards Ljubljana (in modern-day Slovenia) and through Istria and Lika and down the Dalmatian coast. On the same day, Hungarian forces entered Yugoslav Bačka and Baranya, but like the Italians they faced practically no resistance. A Yugoslav attack into the northern parts of the Italian protectorate of Albania met with initial success, but was inconsequential due to the collapse of the rest of the Yugoslav forces.

Scholars have proposed several theories for the Royal Yugoslav Army's sudden collapse, including poor training and equipment, generals eager to secure a quick cessation of hostilities, and Croatian, Slovenian, and ethnic German fifth column activities. The latter has been questioned by scholars who have suggested that the fifth column had little effect on the ultimate outcome. The invasion ended when an armistice was signed on 17 April 1941, based on the unconditional surrender of the Yugoslav army, which came into effect at noon on 18 April. The Kingdom of Yugoslavia was then occupied and partitioned by the Axis powers. Most of Serbia and the Banat became a German zone of occupation while other areas of Yugoslavia were annexed by neighboring Axis countries, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Albania and Bulgaria. Croatia became the Independent State of Croatia (Serbo-Croatian Latin: Nezavisna Država Hrvatska, or NDH), an Axis puppet state created during the invasion comprising the Srem, Bosnia and Herzegovina as well as the Croatian lands. Along with Italy's stalled invasion of Greece on 28 October 1940, and the German-led invasion of Greece (Operation Marita) and invasion of Crete (Operation Merkur), the invasion of Yugoslavia was part of the German Balkan Campaign (German: Balkanfeldzug).

Background

In October 1940, Fascist Italy had attacked the Kingdom of Greece only to be forced back into Albania. German dictator Adolf Hitler recognised the need to go to the aid of his ally, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini. Hitler did this not only to restore diminished Axis prestige, but also to prevent Britain from bombing the Romanian Ploiești oilfields from which Nazi Germany obtained most of its oil.[13]

In 1940 and early 1941, Hungary, Romania, and Bulgaria all agreed to adhere to the Tripartite Pact and thus join the Axis. Hitler then pressured Yugoslavia to join as well.[14] The Regent, Prince Paul, yielded to this pressure, and declared Yugoslavia's accession to the Pact on 25 March 1941.[15] This move was highly unpopular with the Serb-dominated officer corps of the military, Serbian organizations such as National Defense and the Chetniks Association, the Serbian Orthodox Church, a large part of the Serbian population as well as liberals and Communists.[16] Military officers (predominantly Serbs) executed a coup d'état on 27 March 1941, forced the Regent to resign, and declared 17-year-old King Peter II to be of age.[17]

Preparation

Upon hearing news of the coup in Yugoslavia, Hitler called his military advisers to Berlin on 27 March. On the same day as the coup he issued Führer Directive 25, which called for Yugoslavia to be treated as a hostile state.[18] Hitler took the coup as a personal insult, and was so angered that he was determined, in his words, "to destroy Yugoslavia militarily and as a state" (Jugoslawien militärisch und als Staatsgebilde zu zerschlagen)[19] and to do so "with pitiless harshness"[20] and "without waiting for possible declarations of loyalty of the new government".[21]

Hungary had joined the Tripartite Pact on 20 November 1940. On 12 December, it also concluded a treaty with Yugoslavia calling for "permanent peace and eternal friendship".[22] The Hungarian leadership was split after Germany's War Directive 25 was delivered on 27 March 1941. Regent Miklós Horthy and the military favoured taking part in the invasion of Yugoslavia and mobilized the following day. Prime Minister Pál Teleki sought to prevent German troops passing through Hungary and cited the peace treaty with Yugoslavia as an impediment to co-operation with the Germans.[23]

On 1 April, Yugoslavia redesignated its Assault Command as the Chetnik Command, named after the Serb guerrilla forces from World War I, which had resisted the Central Powers. The command was intended to lead a guerrilla war if the country was occupied.[24] Its headquarters was transferred from Novi Sad to Kraljevo in south-central Serbia on 1 April.[24]

On 2 April, the German ambassador having already been recalled for "talks", the remaining embassy staff were ordered to leave the capital and to warn the embassies of friendly nations to likewise evacuate. That sent the unmistakable message that Yugoslavia was about to be invaded.[25]

On 3 April, Hitler issued War Directive 26 detailing the plan of attack and command structure for the invasion as well as promising Hungary territorial gains.[26] The same day Teleki killed himself. Horthy, seeking a compromise, informed Hitler that evening that Hungary would abide by the treaty, though it would likely cease to apply should Croatia secede and Yugoslavia cease to exist.[27] Upon the proclamation of an Independent State of Croatia in Zagreb on 10 April, this scenario was realized and Hungary joined the invasion, its army crossing into Yugoslavia the following day.[27]

Opposing forces

Axis order of battle

The invasion was spearheaded by the German 2nd Army with elements of the 12th Army, First Panzer Group, and an independent panzer corps combined with overwhelming Luftwaffe support. The 19 German divisions included five panzer divisions, two motorised infantry divisions and two mountain divisions. The German force also included three well-equipped independent motorised infantry regiments and was supported by over 750 aircraft. The Italian 2nd Army and 9th Army committed a total of 22 divisions and 666 aircraft to the operation. The Hungarian 3rd Army also participated in the invasion, with support available from over 500 aircraft.

 
The goods station at Mönichkirchen was Hitler's headquarters, Frühlingssturm, during the invasion.

During the April War, the Führer Headquarters (FHQ) was codenamed Frühlingssturm (Spring Storm) and consisted of the Führersonderzug (Special Führer's Train) codenamed "Amerika" stationed in Mönichkirchen alongside the special train "Atlas" of the Armed Forces Operations Staff (Wehrmachtführungsstabes, WFSt). "Atlas" did not arrive at Mönichkirchen until 11 April, well after operations were underway, and "Amerika" only arrived the following day. Mönichkirchen was chosen because a nearby rail tunnel could provide shelter in the event of air attack. Both trains returned to Berlin on 26 April.[28][29]

After the Italian invasion in the northwest began, King Victor Emmanuel III moved to a villa owned by the Pirzio Biroli family at Brazzacco, near Moruzzo, in order to be close to the front.[30]

Germany attacked Yugoslavia from bases in three countries besides itself: Hungary, Romania, and Bulgaria. German troops entered each of these countries under different pretenses and at different times. The first country to receive a German military mission was Romania. Ostensibly to train the Romanian armed forces, its real purpose was to protect Romania's petroleum resources and prepare for an attack on the Soviet Union. The Wehrmacht entered Bulgaria more circumspectly, first with the intention of providing aerial defense against any force attacking Romania's oilfields and later with that of invading Greece in support of Italy. German troops did not enter Hungary until the attack on Yugoslavia was already planned and Hungary's participation had been secured.[citation needed]

Deployment in Romania

King Carol II of Romania, starting from the cession of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina to the Soviet Union, proposed in a letter to Adolf Hitler on 2 July 1940 that Germany send a military mission to Romania.[31] The Romanian government asked that a mission be sent urgently on 7 September 1940, the day after Carol's abdication.[32] The decision to aid Romania was taken on 19 September, and Hungary was asked to provide transit to German soldiers on 30 September.[33] The first troops entered Romania on 10 October.[34] They entered Bucharest two days later (12 October) to shouts of Heil![35] The official explanation for the presence of German troops was that they were there to train the Romanian army. Hitler's directive to the troops on 10 October had stated that "it is necessary to avoid even the slightest semblance of military occupation of Romania."[32] In the second half of October, the Romanian leader, Ion Antonescu, asked that the military mission be expanded. The Germans happily obliged the request, since the oil fields and refineries at Ploiești were vital to their war effort. Romania was also an important launching point for an attack on the Soviet Union, which made the presence of German troops a violation of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact of 23 August 1939.[36]

By the middle of November the 13th Motorised Infantry Division had been assembled in Romania, and reinforced by the 4th Panzer Regiment, engineers and signal troops, as well as six fighter and two reconnaissance Luftwaffe squadrons, and some antiaircraft artillery.[37] A total of seventy batteries of artillery were moved into Romania.[32] On 23 November, Romania signed the Tripartite Pact. At the time Germany informed Romania that she would not be expected to participate in an attack on Greece, but that Germany wanted to use Romanian territory to provide a base for a German attack. On 24 November, Antonescu met with Wilhelm Keitel, chief of the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht, to discuss common defense. As a result of this meeting, the 16th Panzer Division was sent to Romania in late December. The 12th Army and First Panzer Group, along with heavy bridging equipment for the planned crossing of the Danube, followed in January 1941.[37] By January 1941 the total number of German effectives in Romania was 170,639.[32] Those elements of the 12th Army that were to invade Yugoslavia from Romania assembled near Timișoara (Temeschwar).

Between November 1940 and February 1941 the Luftwaffe gradually moved 135 fighters and reconnaissance aircraft into Romania (in 22–26 squadrons). In early April 1941 they moved a further 600 aircraft from France, Africa, and Sicily into Romania and Bulgaria in a period of ten days. The fighter and reconnaissance craft were sent to fields in Arad, Deva, and Turnu Severin.[38] On 12 February Britain broke off diplomatic relations with Romania on the grounds that it was an enemy-occupied country.[39]

Deployment in Bulgaria

Two events in early November 1940 convinced Hitler of the need to station troops, especially the Luftwaffe, in Bulgaria. The first was false reports that the British were constructing an airfield on Lemnos, from which they could bomb Ploiești. The second was the beginning of British air raids originating from Greek bases against Italian shipping on 6 November. Planning for the German invasion of Greece from Bulgaria began on 12 November.[40]

Already on 13 November, the Soviets were (incorrectly) accusing the Germans of having troops in neutral Bulgaria. On 18 November, Tsar Boris III of Bulgaria met with Hitler and promised to participate in an attack on Greece, but only at the last moment.[41] Shortly thereafter a secret German team under Colonel Kurt Zeitzler entered Bulgaria to establish fuel depots, arrange for troop billeting and scout the terrain. They were soon followed by hundreds of Luftwaffe personnel to establish air observation stations. By the end of December over a thousand German troops in civilian clothing were active in Bulgaria, although the latter's government continued to deny it.[40] Bombers and dive-bombers were also gradually moved into Bulgaria, beginning in November. By the end of March 1941, the Luftwaffe had 355 aircraft in the country.[38]

On 17 February 1941, Bulgaria signed a non-aggression pact with Turkey, paving the way for its adherence to the Tripartite Pact, which was signed by Prime Minister Bogdan Filov in Vienna on 1 March.[42] When Ivan V. Petrov, member of the National Assembly from Yablanitsa, asked why the Assembly had not been consulted, Filov pointed out that the constitution only required parliamentary approval prior to ratification. The signing was ratified by a vote in the Assembly of 140 to 20.[42] The first German troops crossed the Danube from Romania on 28 February, a day before Bulgaria joined the pact.[43] The greater part of the 12th Army, augmented by VIII. Fliegerkorps, crossed the Danube on 2 March. They were welcomed by the Russophile population, who believed that Germany and the Soviet Union were allied.[44] The 12th Army was originally deployed solely for an attack on Greece. After receiving Directive No. 25, which projected an invasion of Yugoslavia in the direction of Belgrade on 8 April, the force was redeployed in three groups: one along the Turkish border, one along the Greek border and one along the Yugoslav border. Motorized transport was brought in from Romania to achieve this feat in a few days.[45]

Deployment in Hungary

Although German troops had been refused the right to transit Hungary for the invasion of Poland in 1939, they were permitted to pass through Hungary as civilians on their way to Romania in 1940. In September 1940 the Hungarian legation in Berlin had granted over 6,500 transit visas to Germans traveling to Romania.[46] On 30 September, shortly after the signing of the Tripartite Pact, Ribbentrop and General Keitel asked the Hungarian foreign minister, István Csáky, who was in Vienna, to grant the Germans use of transit facilities for German military "study groups" to pass through to Romania.[47] They were still awaiting final confirmation on 3 October.[33] The arrangement agreed was that six trains would pass through Hungary at night carrying German soldiers in sealed cars. They would not be allowed out, and they would not have any rail transportation officers (RTOs) or supply officers with them.[33]

According to György Barcza, the Hungarian ambassador in London, answering the British government's query, it was Romania that had made the request. In his notes, Barcza indicated that the British had declared that "if Hungary were to permit German troops to pass through Hungarian territory against Yugoslavia, Britain would break off diplomatic relations, indeed might declare war on us."[46] The first German troops began their passage through Hungary on 8 October. Despite some official denials, the troops movements were reported by Reuters and the American ambassador received a full report.[47] According to contemporary British intelligence, three divisions had passed through Hungary to Romania by 2 November. On 20 November, Hungarian Prime Minister Pál Teleki signed the Tripartite Pact after a meeting with Hitler in Berchtesgarden. At the meeting, Hitler spoke of his intention to aid Italy against Greece, thereby preparing the Hungarians for his future demands.[37]

On 13 December 1940—the day after the Hungaro-Yugoslav Non-Aggression Pact and the day Hitler issued Führer Directive No. 20—major German troop movements began. The Germans had initially promised to supply 180 locomotives for the transfers, but later the Hungarians were complaining that only 130 had arrived. On 24 December, István Horthy, President of Hungarian State Railways (HSR), demanded negotiations before implementing requested German increases, but Ambassador Otto von Erdmannsdorf informed him that it had all been settled in Vienna by Keitel and Csáky.[47] The German traffic was so large that on 28 December the HSR had to suspend travel on all its trains for several days on account of a shortage of coal. Hungarian officials tried to meet all German demands without going further than the governments had agreed. Even sabotage was used on occasion to prevent having to give the Germans more support than required.[48] On 18 January 1941 an agreement was reached to store German supplies in Hungarian warehouses under Hungarian guard, with only a German officer in Budapest to serve as a liaison. These supplies were to be used in the campaign against Greece.[47]

 
Hungarian chief-of-staff Werth was a leading proponent and key planner of Hungary's involvement in the invasion.

On 27 March 1941, Hitler informed the Hungarian ambassador, Döme Sztójay, and gave an official proposal to Hungary for participation in the attack on Yugoslavia. Hitler confidentially told Miklós Horthy that Germany fully recognizes the Hungarian territorial claims in relation to Yugoslavia and that he can take Bačka and Banat, and added "take as much as you want". Horthy mostly agreed and accepted Hitler's suggestions.[49] A Hungarian response was hammered out in council and delivered the following day (28 March). On 30 March, General Friedrich Paulus arrived in Budapest and met with Henrik Werth, chief of the Hungarian general staff, and Major General László Deseő. The Hungarians proposed they mobilize five divisions for the attack on Yugoslavia. Two were to be held in reserve, while the First, Fifth and Mobile Corps were to conduct the main attack on Subotica (Szabadka), with a secondary operation east of the river Tisza.[50] Because of Romania's request that Hungarian troops not operate in the Banat, Paulus modified the Hungarian plan and kept their troops west of the Tisza. This final plan "was put down in map form", according to Paulus' account, and must have been telephoned to Berlin immediately so as to make into Operational Order No. 25, issued by Walther von Brauchitsch that same day.[50]

This final plan committed one Hungarian corps of three brigades west of the Danube from Lake Balaton to Barcs, and twelve brigades (nine on the front and three in reserve) for an offensive in Bačka (Bácska). The Danube Flotilla was to cover the flanks, and the air force was to stand by for orders. The "Carpathian Group", composed of Eighth Corps, the 1st Mountain Brigade and the 8th Border Guard (Chasseur) Brigade, was mobilized on the Soviet border, with the Mobile Corps held in reserve.[51]

These arrangements were agreed to by Werth, he later claimed, "on the basis of the authorization received" on 28 April—although this was not the government's view of what had been authorized. Werth applied for permission to mobilize on 1 April, since a mobilization order had to be approved by the cabinet and issued by the regent over the signature of the minister of defense. Werth expected the Germans to begin operations, with the use of Hungarian territory and communications, on 12 April and the Hungarians to complete mobilization by 6 April and begin their offensive on the 15th.[51] A meeting of the Supreme Defense Council was convened for 1 April to discuss Werth's request. After a long debate, it approved his mobilization plan, but refused to place Hungarian troops under German command and restricted Hungarian operations to the occupation of territory abandoned by the Yugoslavs. On 2 April Germany responded that the Paulus–Werth agreement was final, and German staff officers began arriving in Budapest that day. That same day the British informed Hungary that she would be treated as an enemy state if Germany made use of her territory or facilities in an attack on Yugoslavia.[52] On the morning of 3 April, Pál Teleki committed suicide; the regent immediately cancelled the mobilization order already given except for the Border Guard and the Mobile Corps, which prompted Werth to resign. Horthy then authorized the mobilization of the Fourth and Fifth Corps and the Mountain Brigade, and Werth withdrew his resignation.[53] This occurred so late in the day that zero hour for mobilization to begin was given as midnight of 5 April. On the morning of 3 April, German units, including tanks and aircraft, bound for Romania passed openly through Budapest.[54]

Deployment in Italy

The Italian 2nd Army and 9th Army committed a total of 22 divisions to the operation,[55] comprising around 300,000 troops.[56]

The Italian 2nd Army (Italian: 2° Armata) was commanded by Generale designato d’Armata (acting General) Vittorio Ambrosio,[57] and consisted of one fast (Italian: celere) corps (Celere Corps), one motorised corps (Motorised Corps) and three infantry corps (V Corps, VI Corps, and XI Corps), and was assembled in northeastern Italy, attacking from Istria and the Julian March along the border with Slovenia and Croatia.[58][59] The 2nd Army was supported by a motorised engineer regiment including three bridging battalions, a chemical battalion, fifteen territorial battalions, and two garrison battalions.[60]

V Corps support units included three motorised artillery regiments comprising thirteen battalions, four machine gun battalions (two motorised and two pack animal), three Blackshirt legions of battalion size, a motorised anti-aircraft battalion, a sapper assault battalion and a road construction battalion. VI Corps included four motorised artillery regiments with a total of sixteen battalions, two machine gun battalions (one motorised, one pack animal) and a motorised anti-aircraft regiment. XI Corps included one motorised artillery regiment comprising four battalions, three machine gun battalions (one motorised, one pack animal and one static), and six Blackshirt legions of battalion size. The Motorised Corps was supported by a motorised artillery regiment consisting of three battalions, and a motorised engineer battalion.[60]

In Albania, the elements of the Italian 9th Army (Italian: 9° Armata) that were involved in the campaign were commanded by Generale d’Armata (General) Alessandro Pirzio Biroli, and consisted of two infantry corps and some sector troops assembled in northern Albania.[61][62]

 
Alessandro Pirzio Biroli

XIV Corps was supported by a cavalry regiment, three Border Guard battalions, a Finance Guard battalion and two military police (Italian: Carabinieri Reali) battalions. The XVII Corps included the Diamanti Blackshirt group which incorporated six Blackshirt regiments comprising two battalions each, the Albanian-raised Skanderbeg Blackshirt regiment of two battalions, another Blackshirt regiment of two battalions, a cavalry regiment, a Bersaglieri motorcycle battalion, three Border Guard battalions, one Finance Guard battalion, a motorised artillery regiment of three battalions, a military police battalion, and a tank company equipped with Fiat M13/40 light tanks. The Librazhd Sector included a motorised artillery regiment of four battalions, a bicycle-mounted Bersaglieri regiment, a cavalry regiment, the Biscaccianti Blackshirt group which incorporated two Blackshirt regiments with a total of five battalions, the regimental-sized Agostini Blackshirt Forest Militia, and the Briscotto group, a regimental-sized formation consisting of one Alpini battalion and two Finance Guard battalions.[63]

The Zara garrison numbered about 9,000 men under the overall command of Generale di Brigata (Brigadier) Emilio Giglioli.[64] The garrison consisted of two main groupings and an assortment of supporting units. The two main groupings were the regimental-sized Fronte a Terra (Land Front), which comprised three static machine gun battalions and a bicycle-mounted Bersaglieri battalion, and the battalion-strength Fronte a Mare (Sea Front), which consisted of two machine gun companies, an anti-aircraft battery, a coastal artillery battery and a naval artillery battery. Supporting units consisted of an artillery regiment of three battalions, two independent artillery battalions, a machine gun battalion, a motorised anti-aircraft battalion (less one battery), an engineer battalion, a company of Blackshirts, and a company of L3/35 tankettes.[65]

Royal Yugoslav armed forces

The Yugoslav forces consisted of more than 33 divisions of the Royal Yugoslav Army (Serbo-Croatian Latin: Vojska Kraljevska Jugoslavije, VKJ), four air brigades of the Royal Yugoslav Air Force (Serbo-Croatian Latin: Vazduhoplovstvo Vojske Kraljevine Jugoslavije, VVKJ) with more than 400 aircraft, and the small Royal Yugoslav Navy (Serbo-Croatian Latin: Kraljevska Jugoslovenska Ratna Mornarica, KJRM) centred around four destroyers and four submarines based on the Adriatic coast and some river monitors on the Danube. The VKJ was heavily reliant on animal-powered transport, was only partly mobilised at the time of the invasion, and had only 50 tanks that could engage German tanks on an equal basis. The VVKJ was equipped with a range of aircraft of Yugoslav, German, Italian, French and British design, including less than 120 modern fighter aircraft.

Equipment and organization

Formed after World War I, the VKJ was still largely equipped with weapons and material from that era, although some modernization with Czech equipment and vehicles had begun. Of about 4,000 artillery pieces, many were aged and horse-drawn, but about 1,700 were relatively modern, including 812 Czech 37mm and 47mm anti-tank guns. There were also about 2,300 mortars, including 1600 modern 81mm pieces, as well as twenty-four 220 and 305mm pieces. Of 940 anti-aircraft guns, 360 were 15 mm and 20 mm Czech and Italian models. All of these arms were imported, from different sources; the various models often lacked proper repair and maintenance facilities.[66] The only mechanized units were six motorized infantry battalions in the three cavalry divisions, six motorized artillery regiments, two tank battalions equipped with 110 tanks, one of which had Renault FT models of First World War origin and the other 54 modern French Renault R35 tanks, plus an independent tank company with eight Czech SI-D tank destroyers. Some 1,000 trucks for military purposes had been imported from the United States of America in the months just preceding the invasion.[3]

 
Italian soldiers entering Yugoslavia

Fully mobilized, the Yugoslav Army fielded 28 infantry divisions, three cavalry divisions, and 35 independent regiments. Of the independent regiments, 16 were in frontier fortifications and 19 were organized as combined regiments, or "Odred", around the size of a reinforced brigade. Each Odred had one to three infantry regiments and one to three artillery battalions, with three organised as "alpine" units.[67] The German attack, however, caught the army still mobilizing, and only some 11 divisions were in their planned defense positions at the start of the invasion. The Yugoslavs had delayed full mobilisation until 3 April in order not to provoke Hitler.[2] The units were filled to between 70 and 90 percent of their strength as mobilization was not completed. The Yugoslav Army was about 1,200,000 in total as the German invasion commenced.[67]

The VVKJ had a strength of 1,875 officers and 29,527 other ranks,[68] including some 2,000 pilots,[5] had over 460 front-line aircraft of domestic (notably the IK-3), German, Italian, French, and British origin, of which most were modern types. Organized into 22 bomber squadrons and 19 fighter squadrons, the main aircraft types in operational use included 73 Messerschmitt Bf 109 E, 47 Hawker Hurricane Mk I (with more being built under licence in Yugoslavia), 30 Hawker Fury II, 11 Rogozarski IK-3 fighters (plus more under construction), 10 Ikarus IK-2, 2 Potez 63, one Messerschmitt Bf 110C-4 (captured in early April due to a navigational error) and one Rogozarski R 313 fighters, 69 Dornier Do 17 K (including 40 plus licence-built), 61 Bristol Blenheim Mk I (including some 40 licence-built) and 40 Savoia Marchetti SM-79 K bombers. Army reconnaissance units consisted of seven Groups with 130 obsolete Yugoslav-built Breguet 19 and Potez 25 light bombers.[69] There were also some 400 trainer and auxiliary aircraft. The Naval Aviation units comprised 75 aircraft in eight squadrons equipped with, amongst other auxiliary types, 12 German-built Dornier Do 22 K and 15 Rogozarski SIM-XIV-H locally designed and built maritime patrol float-planes.[70]

The aircraft of the Yugoslav airline Aeroput, consisting mainly of six Lockheed Model 10 Electras, three Spartan Cruisers, and one de Havilland Dragon were mobilised to provide transport services to the VVKJ.[71]

The KJRM was equipped with one elderly ex-German light cruiser (suitable only for training purposes), one large modern destroyer flotilla leader of British design, three modern destroyers of French design (two built in Yugoslavia plus another still under construction), one seaplane tender, four modern submarines (two older French-built and two British-built) and 10 modern motor torpedo boats (MTBs), of the older vessels, there were six ex-Austrian Navy medium torpedo boats, six mine-layers, four large armoured river monitors and various auxiliary craft.[72]

Deployment

The Yugoslav Army was organized into three army groups and the coastal defense troops. The 3rd Army Group was the strongest with the 3rd, 3rd Territorial, 5th and 6th Armies defending the borders with Romania, Bulgaria and Albania. The 2nd Army Group with the 1st and 2nd Armies, defended the region between the Iron Gates and the Drava River. The 1st Army Group with the 4th and 7th Armies, composed mainly of Croatian troops, was in Croatia and Slovenia defending the Italian, German (Austrian) and Hungarian frontiers.[3][73]

The strength of each "Army" amounted to little more than a corps, with the Army Groups consisting of the units deployed as follows:

  • 3rd Army Group's 3rd Army consisted of four infantry divisions and one cavalry odred; the 3rd Territorial Army with three infantry divisions and one independent motorized artillery regiment; the 5th Army with four infantry divisions, one cavalry division, two odred and one independent motorized artillery regiment and the 6th Army with three infantry divisions, the two Royal Guards brigades (odred) and three infantry odred.
  • 2nd Army Group's 1st Army had one infantry and one cavalry division, three odred and six frontier defence regiments; the 2nd Army had three infantry divisions and one frontier defence regiment.
  • 1st Army Group consisted of the 4th Army, with three infantry divisions and one odred, whilst the 7th Army had two infantry divisions, one cavalry division, three mountain odred, two infantry odred and nine frontier defence regiments.
  • The Strategic, "Supreme Command" Reserve in Bosnia comprised four infantry divisions, four independent infantry regiments, one tank battalion, two motorized engineer battalions, two motorized heavy artillery regiments, 15 independent artillery battalions and two independent anti-aircraft artillery battalions.
  • Coastal Defence Force, on the Adriatic opposite Zadar comprised one infantry division and two odred, in addition to fortress brigades and anti-aircraft units at Šibenik and Kotor.[74]

On the eve of invasion, clothing and footwear were available for only two-thirds or so of the potential front-line troops and only partially for other troops; some other essential supplies were available for only a third of the front-line troops; medical and sanitary supplies were available for only a few weeks, and supplies of food for men and feed for livestock were available for only about two months. In all cases there was little or no possibility of replenishment.[75]

Beyond the problems of inadequate equipment and incomplete mobilization, the Yugoslav Army suffered badly from the Serbo-Croat schism in Yugoslav politics. "Yugoslav" resistance to the invasion collapsed overnight. The main reason was that none of the subordinate national groups, including Slovenes and Croats, were prepared to fight in defence of a Serbian Yugoslavia. Also, so that the Slovenes did not feel abandoned, defences were built on Yugoslavia's northern border when the natural line of defence was much further south, based on the rivers Sava and Drina. The only effective opposition to the invasion was from wholly Serbian units within the borders of Serbia itself.[citation needed] The Germans, thrusting north-west from Skopje, were held up at Kacanik Pass and lost several tanks (P39, Buckley C "Greece and Crete 1941" HMSO 1977). In its worst expression, Yugoslavia's defenses were badly compromised on 10 April 1941, when some of the units in the Croatian-manned 4th and 7th Armies mutinied,[76] and a newly formed Croatian government hailed the entry of the Germans into Zagreb the same day.[77] The Serbian General Staff were united on the question of Yugoslavia as a "Greater Serbia", ruled, in one way or another, by Serbia. On the eve of the invasion, there were 165 generals on the Yugoslav active list. Of these, all but four were Serbs.[78]

Operations

 
Map of the Axis attack (See this map for unit locations and movements.)

Professor Jozo Tomasevich and others divide the invasion and resultant fighting into two phases.[79] The first phase encompasses the Luftwaffe's devastating air assault on Belgrade and airfields of the Royal Yugoslav Air Force of 6 April, and an initial thrust of the German XL Panzer Corps from Bulgaria towards Skopje that commenced the same day.[80] This was followed by the assault of the German XIV Panzer Corps from Bulgaria towards Niš on 8 April.[81] On 10 April, four more thrusts struck the Yugoslav Army; the XLI Panzer Corps from Romania towards Belgrade, the XLVI Panzer Corps from Hungary across the Drava,[82] the LI Infantry Corps from Austria towards Zagreb,[83] and the XLIX Mountain Corps from Austria towards Celje.[84] By the end of that day, the Yugoslav Army was disintegrating, and was in retreat or surrendering right across the country, with the exception of the forces on the Albanian frontier.[79] Italy and Hungary joined the ground offensive on 11 April. The Italian part in the ground offensive began when their 2nd Army attacked from northeastern Italy towards Ljubljana and down the Dalmatian coast, meeting virtually no resistance. On the same day, the Hungarian 3rd Army crossed the Yugoslav border and advanced toward Novi Sad, but like the Italians, they met no serious resistance. On 12 April, German troops captured Belgrade,[85] and Ljubljana fell to the Italians.[86] On 14 and 15 April, King Peter and the government flew out of the country,[87] and the Yugoslav Supreme Command was captured by the Germans near Sarajevo.[88] The surrender was signed on 17 April, and came into effect at noon on 18 April.[89]

Air operations

Following the Belgrade Coup on 27 March 1941, the Yugoslav armed forces were put on alert, although the army was not fully mobilised for fear of provoking Hitler. The VVKJ command decided to disperse its forces away from their main bases to a system of 50 auxiliary airfields that had previously been prepared. However, many of these airfields lacked facilities and had inadequate drainage which prevented the continued operation of all but the very lightest aircraft in the adverse weather conditions encountered in April 1941.[5]

Despite having, on paper at any rate, a substantially stronger force of relatively modern aircraft than the combined British and Greek air forces to the south, the VVKJ could simply not match the overwhelming Luftwaffe and Regia Aeronautica superiority in terms of numbers, tactical deployment and combat experience.[90]

The bomber and maritime force hit targets in Italy, Germany (Austria), Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania and Greece, as well as attacking German, Italian and Hungarian troops. Meanwhile, the fighter squadrons inflicted not insignificant losses on escorted Luftwaffe bomber raids on Belgrade and Serbia, as well as upon Regia Aeronautica raids on Dalmatia, Bosnia, Herzegovina and Montenegro. The VVKJ also provided direct air support to the hard pressed Yugoslav Army by strafing attacking troop and mechanized columns in Croatia, Bosnia and Serbia (sometimes taking off and strafing the troops attacking the very base being evacuated).[91]

After a combination of air combat losses, losses on the ground to enemy air attack on bases and the overrunning of airfields by enemy troops, after 11 days the VVKJ almost ceased to exist. However, continued domestic aircraft production during the invasion supplied the VVKJ with an additional eight Hurricane Is, six Dornier Do 17Ks, four Blenheim Is, two Ikarus IK 2s, one Rogozarski IK-3 and one Messerschmitt Bf 109 from the local aeronautical industry's aircraft factories and workshops.[92]

At the beginning of the April war, the VVKJ was armed with some 60 German designed Do 17Ks, purchased by Yugoslavia in the autumn of 1938, together with a manufacturing licence. The sole operator was 3 vazduhoplovni puk (3rd bomber regiment) composed of two bomber groups; the 63rd Bomber Group stationed at Petrovec airfield near Skopje and the 64th Bomber Group stationed at Milesevo airfield near Priština. Other auxiliary airfields had also been prepared to aid in dispersal.[93]

During the course of hostilities, the State Aircraft Factory in Kraljevo managed to produce six more aircraft of this type. Of the final three, two were delivered to the VVKJ on 10 April and one was delivered on 12 April 1941.[92]

On 6 April, Luftwaffe dive-bombers and ground-attack fighters destroyed 26 of the Yugoslav Dorniers in the initial assault on their airfields, but the remaining aircraft were able to effectively hit back with numerous attacks on German mechanized columns and upon Bulgarian airfields.[94] By the end of the campaign total Yugoslav losses stood at four destroyed in aerial combat and 45 destroyed on the ground.[95] On 14 and 15 April, the seven remaining Do 17K flew to Nikšić airfield in Montenegro and took part in the evacuation of King Petar II and members of the Yugoslav government to Greece. During this operation, Yugoslav gold reserves were also airlifted to Greece by the seven Do 17s,[95] as well as by SM-79Ks and Lockheed Electra's but after completing their mission, five Do 17Ks were destroyed on the ground when Italian aircraft attacked the Greek-held Paramitia airfield. Only two Do 17Ks escaped destruction in Greece and later joined the British Royal Air Force (RAF) in the Kingdom of Egypt.[71]

At 16:00 on 15 April the C-in-C of Luftflotte 4, Generaloberst Alexander Löhr received orders from Hermann Göring to wind down the air-offensive and transfer the bulk of the dive-bomber force to support the campaign in Greece.[96]

A total of 18 bomber, transport and maritime patrol aircraft (two Dornier Do 17Ks, four Savoia Marchetti SM-79Ks, three Lockheed Electra's, eight Dornier Do-22Ks and one Rogozarski SIM-XIV-H) succeeded in escaping to the Allied base in Egypt at the end of the campaign.[71]

Bombing of Belgrade

Luftflotte 4 of the Luftwaffe, with a strength of seven Combat Formations (Kampfgruppen) had been committed to the campaign in the Balkans.[97] At 07:00 on 6 April the Luftwaffe opened the assault on Yugoslavia by conducting a saturation-type bombing raid on the capital, "Operation Retribution" (Unternehmen Strafgericht).[98] Flying in relays from airfields in Austria and Romania, 300 aircraft, of which a quarter were Junkers Ju 87 Stukas, protected by a heavy fighter escort began the attack.[99] The dive-bombers were to silence the Yugoslav anti-aircraft defences while the medium bombers consisting mainly Dornier Do 17s and Junkers Ju 88 attacked the city. The initial raid was carried out at 15-minute intervals in three distinct waves, each lasting for approximately 20 minutes. Thus, the city was subjected to a rain of bombs for almost one and a half hours. The German bombers directed their main effort against the center of the city, where the principal government buildings were located. The medium bomber Kampfgruppen continued their attack on the city for several days while the Stuka dive bomber wings (Stukageschwader) were soon diverted to Yugoslav airfields.[99]

When the attack was over, some 4,000 inhabitants lay dead under the debris. This blow virtually destroyed all means of communication between the Yugoslav high command and the forces in the field, although most of the elements of the general staff managed to escape to one of the suburbs.[100]

Having thus delivered the knockout blow to the Yugoslavian nerve center, the Luftwaffe was able to devote its maximum effort to military targets such as Yugoslav airfields, routes of communication, and troop concentrations, and to the close support of German ground operations.[101]

The VVKJ put up its Belgrade defence interceptors from the six squadrons of the 32nd and 51st Fighter Groups to attack each wave of bombers, although as the day wore on the four squadrons from the 31st and 52nd Fighter Groups, based in central Serbia, also took part. The Messerschmitt 109E, Hurricane Is and Rogozarski IK-3 fighters scored at least twenty "kills" amongst the attacking bombers and their escorting fighters on 6 April and a further dozen shot down on 7 April. The desperate defence by the VVKJ over Belgrade cost it some 20 fighters shot down and 15 damaged.[102]

Ground operations

 
Captured Yugoslavian officers before their deportation to Germany
 
Destroyed Yugoslavian Renault NC tank

Three-pronged drive on Belgrade

 
German Panzer IV of the 11th Panzer Division advancing into Yugoslavia from Bulgaria as part of the Twelfth Army

The British, Greek and Yugoslav high commands intended to use Niš as the lynch-pin in their attempts to wear down German forces in the Balkans and it is for this reason that the locality was important. When the Germans broke through in this sector – a sector which was essential if stability was to be maintained on the front – The Yugoslav Supreme Command committed numerous forces from its strategic reserves, including the 2nd Cavalry Division, but these were harassed by the Luftwaffe during transit to the front and did not get through in any real quantities.[103]

Having reached Niš from its initial attacks from Bulgaria and broken the Yugoslav defences, the German 14th Motorised Corps headed north in the direction of Belgrade. The German 46th Panzer Corps had advanced across the Slavonian plain from Austria to attack Belgrade from the west, whilst the 41st Panzer Corps threatened the city from the north after launching its offensive drive from Romania and Hungary. By 11 April, Yugoslavia was criss-crossed by German armoured columns and the only resistance that remained was a large nucleus of the Yugoslav Army around the capital. On 11 April, a German Officer, Fritz Klingenberg with few men, moved into Belgrade to reconnoitre the city. However, after some scattered combat with Yugoslav troops, they entered the centre of the city, whereupon they bluffed about their size and incoming threats of bombardment. The city, represented by the Mayor, surrendered to them at 18:45 hours on 12 April.[104][105][106] Later more forces moved to consolidate the position.[104][106]

Italian offensive

In the opening days of the invasion, Italian forces on the Slovene border carried out minor actions in the Sava valley and in the Kastav area, capturing some Yugoslav positions on Mount Peč on 7 April, Kranjska Gora, Zavratec and Godz on 8 April, Kastav, the source of the Rječina river, Kalce and Logatec on 9 April, and repelling on 8 April a Yugoslav attack in the Cerkno Hills.[107] On 11 April, the 2nd Army launched its offensive, capturing Ljubljana, Sušak and Kraljevica on the same day.[108] On 12 April the 133rd Armoured Division Littorio and the 52nd Infantry Division Torino took Senj, on 13 April they occupied Otočac and Gradac, while Italian naval forces occupied several Dalmatian islands.[108] A scheduled Yugoslav attack against the Italian enclave of Zara did not materialize, and the city garrison's troops started to advance until they met the "Torino" Division near Knin, which was taken on the same day.[108] Split and Šibenik were taken on 15 and 16 April, respectively, and on 17 April the Motorized Corps took Dubrovnik, after covering 750 kilometers in six days.[109]

After repelling the Yugoslav offensive in Albania, the 18th Infantry Division Messina took Cetinje, Dubrovnik and Kotor on 17 April, meeting with the Italian units of the Motorized Corps.[109]

Hungarian offensive

On 12 April the Hungarian Third Army crossed the border with one cavalry, two motorized and six infantry brigades. The Third Army faced the Yugoslavian First Army. By the time the Hungarians crossed the border, the Germans had been attacking Yugoslavia for over a week. As a result, the Yugoslavian forces confronting them put up little resistance, except for the units in the frontier fortifications, who had held up the Hungarian advance for some time.[110] and inflicted some 350 casualties.[111] Units of the Hungarian Third Army advanced into southern Baranja, located between the rivers Danube and Drava, and occupied the Bačka region in Vojvodina with Hungarian relative majority. The Hungarian forces occupied only those territories which were part of Hungary before the Treaty of Trianon.

Yugoslav Albanian offensive

 
Yugoslav infantry surrendering

In accordance with the Yugoslav Army's war plan, R-41, a strategy was formulated that, in the face of a massive Axis attack, a retreat on all fronts except in the south be performed. Here the 3rd Yugoslav Army, in cooperation with the Greek Army, was to launch an offensive against the Italian forces in Albania. This was in order to secure space to enable the withdrawal of the main Yugoslav Army to the south. This would be via Albanian territory in order to reach Greece and the Allied forces to be based there. The strategy was based on the premise that the Yugoslav Army would, together with the Greek and British Armies, form a new version of the Salonika front of World War I.[112]

On 8 April the hard-pressed VVKJ sent a squadron of fourteen Breguet 19 light bombers to the city of Florina in northern Greece to provide assistance to both the Yugoslav and Greek Armies on the Macedonian front.[113] The squadron performed numerous bombing and strafing missions during the course of the campaign.[114]

The 3rd Yugoslav Army of the 3rd Army Group was tasked with conducting offensive operations against the Italian army in northern Albania. For this purpose the 3rd Army had concentrated four infantry divisions and one combined regiment (Odred) in the Montenegro and Kosovo regions:

The strategic reserve of the 3rd Army Group, the 22nd Infantry Division "Ibarska", was situated around Uroševac in the Kosovo region.

In addition, offensive operations against the Italian enclave of Zara (Zadar) on the Dalmatian coast were to be undertaken by the 12th Infantry Division "Jadranska".[113]

The first elements of the 3rd Army launched their offensive operations in North Albania on 7 April 1941, with the Komski Odred covering the Gusinje-Prokletije mountains area advancing towards the village of Raja-Puka. The Kosovska Division crossed the border in the Prizren area of Kosovo and was advancing through the Drin River valley. The Vardarska Division gained some local success at Debar, while the rest of the army's units were still assembling.[115]

The next day, the 8th, found the Zetska Division steadily advancing along the PodgoricaShkodër road. The Komski cavalry Odred successfully crossed the dangerous Prokletije mountains and reached the village of Koljegcava in the Valjbone River Valley. South of them the Kosovska Division broke through the Italian defences in the Drin River Valley, but due to the fall of Skopje to the attacks by the German Army, the Vardarska Division was forced to stop its operations in Albania.[115]

There was little further progress for the Yugoslavs on 9 April 1941, because although the Zetska Division continued advancing towards Shkodër and the Komski Odred reached the Drin River, the Kosovska Division had to halt all combat activities on the Albanian Front due to the appearance of German troops in Prizren.[citation needed]

 
Italian Bersaglieri during the invasion

On 10 April 1941 the Zetska Division was still steadily fighting its way towards Shkodër and had advanced 50 km in some places. These advances had been supported by aircraft of the VVKJ's 66th and 81st Bomber Groups, who attacked airfields and Italian troop concentrations around Shkodër, as well as the port of Durrës.[116]

The Komski Odred and the right column of the Kosovska Division advanced along the right bank of the Drin River towards Shkodër in order to link with Zetska Division, but the central and left column of the Kosovska Division were forced to take a defensive perimeter to hold off the increasing pressure by German troops.[110] The Servizio Informazioni Militare contributed to the eventual failure of the Yugoslav offensive in Albania; Italian code breakers had "broken" Yugoslav codes and penetrated Yugoslav radio traffic, transmitting false orders with the correct code key and thus causing confusion and disruption in the movements of the Yugoslav troops.[109]

Between 11–13 April 1941, with German and Italian troops advancing on its rear areas, the Zetska Division was forced to retreat back to the Pronisat River by the Italian 131st Armored Division "Centauro", where it remained until the end of the campaign on 16 April. The Centauro then advanced to the Yugoslav fleet base of Kotor in Montenegro, also occupying Cetinje and Podgorica.[103]

Local uprisings

At the local level infighting by Yugoslav citizens started even prior to the arrival of Axis troops. Croats in the 108th Infantry Regiment of the 40th Infantry Division "Slavonska"[103] rebelled on the evening of 7–8 April near Grubišno Polje, taking command of the regiment from its Serb officers.[117] They were subsequently joined by the 40th Auxiliary Regiment and elements of the 42nd Infantry Regiment (also from the "Slavonska" Division).[117] With the deteriorating situation in the area, the Yugoslav 4th Army's headquarters was moved from Bjelovar to Popovača.[118] The rebellious regiments then entered Bjelovar, with the city's mayor Julije Makanec proclaiming an Independent State of Croatia on 8 April. Vladko Maček and ban Ivan Šubašić sent messages to the city urging the regiments to maintain their positions, but this was disobeyed by the rebel military and civil officials who waited for the arrival of the German army.[119][120]

On 10 April there were clashes between Ustaša supporters and Yugoslav troops in Mostar, the former taking control of the city.[121] Several VVKJ aircraft were damaged and disabled on Jasenica airfield near Mostar, including several Dornier Do 17Ks and Savoia Marchetti SM-79 K bombers.[122]

On 11 April domestic Ustaša agents took power in Čapljina. They intercepted Yugoslav troops headed by rail from Mostar to Trebinje and disarmed them.[123] A backup Yugoslav force from Bileća was sent in which retook the town on 14 April, before the arrival of the Germans in the coming days.[123]

Naval operations

 
Yugoslav Navy ships captured by the Italian Regia Marina in April 1941. They are, from left, a Malinska-class mine-layer, the light cruiser Dalmacija and the submarine depot ship Hvar.

When Germany and Italy attacked Yugoslavia on 6 April 1941, The Yugoslav Royal Navy had available three destroyers, two submarines and 10 MTBs as the most effective units of the fleet. One other destroyer, Ljubljana was in dry-dock at the time of the invasion and she and her anti-aircraft guns were used in defence of the fleet base at Kotor. The remainder of the fleet was useful only for coastal defence and local escort and patrol work.[124]

Kotor was close to the Albanian border and the Italo-Greek front there, but Zara (Zadar), an Italian enclave, was to the north-west of the coast and to prevent a bridgehead being established, the destroyer Beograd, four of the old torpedo boats and 6 MTBs were despatched to Šibenik, 80 km to the south of Zara, in preparation for an attack. The attack was to be co-ordinated with the 12th "Jadranska" Infantry Division and two "Odred" (combined regiments) of the Yugoslav Army attacking from the Benkovac area, supported by air attacks by the 81st Bomber Group of the VVKJ. The Yugoslav forces launched their attack on 9 April but by 13 April the Italian forces had counter-attacked and were in Benkovac by 14 April.[125] The naval prong to this attack faltered when the destroyer Beograd was damaged by near misses from Italian aircraft off Šibenik when her starboard engine was put out of action, after which she limped to Kotor, escorted by the remainder of the force, for repair.[126] Italian air raids on Kotor badly damaged the minelayer Kobac, which was beached to prevent sinking.[127]

The maritime patrol float-planes of the Royal Yugoslav Air Force flew reconnaissance and attack missions during the campaign, as well as providing air cover for mine-laying operations off Zara. Their operations included attacks on the Albanian port of Durrës, as well as strikes against Italian re-supply convoys to Albania. On 9 April, one Dornier Do 22K floatplane notably took on an Italian convoy of 12 steamers with an escort of eight destroyers crossing the Adriatic during the day, attacking single-handed in the face of intense AA fire.[128] No Italian ships, however, were sunk by Yugoslav forces;[127] an Italian tanker was claimed to have been damaged by a near miss off the Italian coast near Bari.

The Royal Yugoslav Navy also had at its disposal four large, heavily armed and armoured river monitors in its riverine flotilla. They were used to patrol the Danube, Drava and Sava rivers in the northern parts of Yugoslavia and its border with Hungary. These monitors, Drava, Sava, Morava and Vardar, had been inherited from the Austrian Navy at the end of World War I. All were of around 400-500t with a main armament of two 120 mm guns, two or three 66 mm guns, 120 mm mortars, 40 mm AA guns and machine guns. At the start of the campaign they had carried out offensive operations by shelling the airfield at Mohács in Hungary on 6 April and again two days later, but had to begin withdrawing towards Novi Sad by 11 April after coming under repeated attack by German dive-bombers.[129]

Early in the morning of 12 April, a squadron of German Ju 87 dive-bombers attacked the Yugoslav monitors on the Danube. Drava, commanded by Aleksandar Berić,[130] was hit by several of them but they were unable to penetrate Drava's 300 mm thick deck armour, until, by chance, one put a bomb straight down the funnel, killing 54 of the 67-man crew. During the attack anti-aircraft gunners on the monitors claimed three dive-bombers shot down. The remaining three monitors were scuttled by their crews later on 12 April as German and Hungarian forces had occupied the bases and the river systems upon which they operated.[131]

Romanian involvement

While Romania did not take part in the actual invasion of Yugoslavia, it did provide artillery support for the German forces invading from its territory. Operating on orders from the 3rd Section of the Romanian General Staff, Romanian artillery opened fire against Yugoslav barges on the Danube on 6 April. Romanian and German units from the Romanian bank of the Danube repeatedly exchanged fire with Yugoslav forces between 6 and 11 April. The main Romanian force was at Liubcova, consisting in a battery of 120 mm/L10 naval howitzers in a fortified position. Nearby, there was also a section (2 pieces) of 120 mm/L35 naval howitzers as well as a section of 47 mm light naval guns.[132] The Yugoslavs retaliated with their Air Force. Two Bristol Blenheims raided Arad, badly damaging one of the German fighters stationed there before both were shot down.[133] For its contribution, Romania was rewarded with six ex-Yugoslav aircraft captured by the Germans. These machines, delivered free of charge, were however inoperative. The Romanians cannibalized three of them in order to make the other three operational. The three operational aircraft were all Hawker Hurricanes.[134]

Losses

German propaganda footage of the invasion of Yugoslavia and Greece

The losses sustained by the German attack forces were unexpectedly light. During the twelve days of combat the total casualty figures came to 558 men: 151 were listed as killed, 392 as wounded, and 15 as missing in action. During the XLI Panzer Corps drive on Belgrade, for example, the only officer killed in action fell victim to a civilian sniper's bullet. The Luftwaffe lost approximately 60 aircraft shot down over Yugoslavia, costing the lives of at least 70 aircrew. The Italian Army took heavier casualties in northern Albania from the Yugoslav offensive there (Italian casualties on all fronts during the invasion amounted to some 800 killed and 2,500 wounded[135]),[67] whilst the Italian Air Force lost approximately 10 aircraft shot down, with a further 22 damaged. The Hungarian Army suffered some 350 casualties (120 killed, 223 wounded and 13 missing in action) from the shelling by Yugoslav riverine forces of its frontier installations and in its attacks upon the Yugoslav frontier forces in Vojvodina,[111] with one quarter of a Hungarian parachute 'battalion' becoming casualties when a transport aircraft filled with 30 troops went down during an abortive drop on 12 April.[136] The Hungarians also lost five Fiat fighters and one Weiss WM-21 Sólyom reconnaissance aircraft during the fighting.[citation needed]

The Germans took between 254,000 and 345,000 Yugoslav prisoners (excluding a considerable number of ethnic Germans and Hungarians who had been conscripted into the Yugoslav Army and who were quickly released after screening) and the Italians took 30,000 more.[137][138]

Approximately 1,000 army and several hundred VVKJ personnel (including one mobile-workshop unit of six vehicles) escaped via Greece to Egypt.[139]

In their brief fight, the VVKJ suffered the loss of 49 aircraft to Axis fighters and anti-aircraft fire, with many more damaged beyond repair. These losses cost the lives of 27 fighter pilots and 76 bomber aircrew. 85 more aircraft were destroyed on the ground by air attack, while many others were destroyed or disabled by their own crews or crashed during operations or in evacuation flights.

Despite these losses, more than 70 Yugoslav aircraft escaped to Allied territory, mostly to Greece, but eight Dornier and Savoia Marchetti bombers set course for the USSR, with four making it safely. Several dozen of the escapee aircraft were destroyed in a devastating strafing attack by the Italian air force on Paramitia airfield in Greece, with nine bombers and transports making it to Egypt. More than 300 operational, auxiliary and training aircraft were captured and passed on to the newly created Air Force of the Independent State of Croatia,[8] Finland, Romania and Bulgaria.

According to the provisions of the surrender document, the Italians took possession of most of the Yugoslav Navy (one of its four destroyers, the Ljubljana, had spent the campaign in dry dock).[126] However, in defiance of the said provisions, one destroyer, the Zagreb, was blown up at Kotor by two of its junior officers and one of the British-built submarines and two MTBs escaped to Alexandria in Egypt to continue to serve with the Allied cause.[140] A fourth destroyer was captured while under construction in the Kotor shipyard, the Split, but the Regia Marina was not able to finish her before the armistice in 1943. Eventually, she was recovered after the war by the Yugoslavs and completed under the original name.[141] Ten Yugoslav Navy maritime patrol float-planes escaped to Greece, with nine making it to Egypt, where they formed a squadron under RAF command.[142]

Armistice and surrender

 
Occupation and partition of Yugoslavia 1941

The Axis victory was swift. As early as 14 April the Yugoslav high command had decided to seek an armistice and authorised the army and army group commanders to negotiate local ceasefires. That day the commanders of the 2nd and 5th Armies asked the Germans for terms, but were rejected. Only unconditional surrender could form the basis for negotiations they were told. That evening, the high command sent an emissary to the headquarters of the 1st Panzer Group to ask for armistice, and in response General von Kleist sent the commander of the 2nd Army, von Weichs, to Belgrade to negotiate terms. He arrived on the afternoon of 15 April and drew up an armistice based on unconditional surrender.[143]

On 16 April, a Yugoslav delegate arrived in Belgrade, but as he did not have authority to sign the document, he was given a draft of the agreement and an aircraft was placed at his disposal to bring in authorised representatives of the government. Finally, on 17 April, after only eleven days of fighting, the pre-coup Foreign Minister Aleksandar Cincar-Marković and General Radivoje Janković signed the armistice and unconditionally surrendered all Yugoslav troops.[144] It came into effect the following day (18 April) at noon.[143] At the signing, the Hungarians and Bulgarians were represented by liaison officers, but they did not sign the document because their countries were not officially at war with Yugoslavia.[143] The Italian representative, Colonel Luigi Buonofati, signed the document after noting that "the same terms are valid for the Italian army".[145]

Some scholars have proposed a number of theories for the Royal Yugoslav Army's sudden collapse, including poor training and equipment, generals eager to secure a quick cessation of hostilities, and a sizeable Croatian, Slovenian and German fifth column. Others state that the fifth column had little effect on the ultimate outcome of the invasion. [146][147][148][149] According to Tomasevich, the insistence of the Yugoslav Army on defending all the borders assured its failure from the start. After the surrender, Yugoslavia was subsequently divided amongst Germany, Hungary, Italy and Bulgaria. Germany took control of most of Serbia. While Ante Pavelić, leader of the fascist Ustaše, declared an Independent State of Croatia before the invasion was even over, Croatia was actually under the joint control of Germany and Italy.[150] Historian Aleksa Djilas states that Croatian desertion is overplayed, as many Croatian units actively fought the Germans and most Croatian officers "remained loyal until 10 April when the NDH was proclaimed" which brought an end to Yugoslavia and in turn, their loyalty to the government. He adds that the army simply reflected the weak Yugoslav political system and the main reasons for the defeat were the lack of leadership, the army's subpar equipment and outdated tactical and strategical techniques.[151]

Many Serbian nationalists blamed the loss on "fifth columnist" Croats who stood to gain from Italian and German rule, ignoring the primary failure of the Yugoslav Army and its almost entirely Serbian leadership.[152][153] Many Croatian nationalists blamed Belgrade politicians and the inadequacy of the Serbian-dominated army.[152]

Aftermath

When the Yugoslav Army officially surrendered to the Axis forces on 18 April 1941, Royal Yugoslav Army Colonel Draža Mihailović immediately began to organize a resistance to the occupying force in the mountains of Serbia and Eastern Bosnia. Mihailović was made General of this new guerrilla version of the army and Minister for War by King Peter II and his Yugoslavian government in exile in Britain. Though Mihailović tried to insist that the guerrilla forces under his command, and numbering up to 100,000 active soldiers, continue to be referred to as the "Royal Yugoslav Army", American and British intelligence and media reportage consistently referred to them as "Chetniks". This led to confusion, since both quisling Yugoslav guerrilla forces under General Milan Nedić and Royalist guerrilla forces not under Mihailović's command were also referred to as "Chetniks". Once the Soviets fully entered the war on the side of the Allies on 22 June of 1941, the Yugoslav Partisans under Josip Tito also began to fight the Axis powers, and from then on there was continuous resistance to the occupying armies in Yugoslavia until the end of the war. While in the beginning both Yugoslav Partisans and the Chetniks engaged in resistance, the Partisans became the main resistance force after, following Churchill's lead, at the Tehran Conference in 28 November—1 December 1943, British and American governments withdrew all allegiance and support from Mihailović's Royal Yugoslav Army Chetniks, and gave all further assistance to the Communist Partisans who waged a continuous civil war against Mihailović's forces. In the end, devoid of all outside assistance, Mihailović's Royal Yugoslav Army was overcome in Serbia by a combination of well-armed, -supported, and -supplied Partisans and the invading Soviets.[154]

Notes

  1. ^ Slovene: Aprilska vojna, Serbian: Априлски рат, Aprilski rat,[9] Croatian: Travanjski rat
  2. ^ German: Unternehmen 25[10] or Projekt 25[11]

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Zajac 1993, p. 50.
  2. ^ a b Tomasevich 1975, p. 64.
  3. ^ a b c d Tomasevich 1975, p. 59.
  4. ^ a b c Zajac 1993, p. 47.
  5. ^ a b c Shores, Cull & Malizia 1987, p. 174.
  6. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1987, p. 173.
  7. ^ "THE YUGOSLAV CAMPAIGN, PART TWO". history.army.mil.
  8. ^ a b Shores, Cull & Malizia 1987, p. 310.
  9. ^ Redžić 2005, p. 9.
  10. ^ Vogel 2006, p. 526, n. 158.
  11. ^ Chant 1986, p. 196.
  12. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 55.
  13. ^ Tomasevich 1969, p. 64.
  14. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 34.
  15. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 39.
  16. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 41.
  17. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 43–47.
  18. ^ Trevor-Roper 1964, p. 108.
  19. ^ Dedijer 1956, p. 3.
  20. ^ International Military Tribunal, The Trial of German Major War Criminals, Judgement: The Aggression Against Yugoslavia And Greece 24 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine, p. 32.
  21. ^ Shirer 2002, p. 824.
  22. ^ Klajn 2007, p. 104.
  23. ^ Klajn 2007, p. 105.
  24. ^ a b Životić 2011, p. 41.
  25. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 51.
  26. ^ Trevor-Roper 1964, p. 109.
  27. ^ a b Klajn 2007, p. 106.
  28. ^ Short 2010, pp. 46–47.
  29. ^ Hoffmann 2000, p. 146.
  30. ^ Cervi 1972, p. 279.
  31. ^ Giurescu 2000, p. 36.
  32. ^ a b c d Giurescu 2000, p. 79.
  33. ^ a b c Macartney 1956, pp. 440–41.
  34. ^ Giurescu 2000, p. 71.
  35. ^ Schreiber 2006, pp. 408–09.
  36. ^ Vogel 2006, pp. 452–53.
  37. ^ a b c US Army 1986, pp. 10–11.
  38. ^ a b US Army 1986, p. 39.
  39. ^ Macartney 1956, p. 470.
  40. ^ a b Miller 1975, pp. 36–37.
  41. ^ Miller 1975, pp. 12–16.
  42. ^ a b Miller 1975, pp. 44–45.
  43. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1987, p. 171.
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  47. ^ a b c d Macartney 1956, pp. 462–64.
  48. ^ Macartney 1956, p. 463 n. 2, citing a group of documents, N.G. 2546, detailing acts of disruption.
  49. ^ Terzić 1982b, p. 39 - 41.
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  53. ^ Macartney 1957, p. 4.
  54. ^ Macartney 1956, p. 490.
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  65. ^ Niehorster 2013d.
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  94. ^ Ciglić & Savić 2007, p. 32–38.
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  97. ^ Goss 2005, p. 89.
  98. ^ Vogel 2006, p. 497.
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  101. ^ Weal 1998, p. 27.
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  104. ^ a b Edwards 2015, pp. 173–174.
  105. ^ Plowman 2013, p. 24.
  106. ^ a b Heaton 2006.
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  110. ^ a b Fatutta & Covelli, 1975, p. 50.
  111. ^ a b Niehorster 1998, p. 66.
  112. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 57.
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  114. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1987, p. 228.
  115. ^ a b Fatutta & Covelli, 1975, p. 49.
  116. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1987, p. 213.
  117. ^ a b Dizdar 2007, p. 607.
  118. ^ Dizdar 2007, p. 592.
  119. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 51.
  120. ^ Dizdar 2007, p. 600.
  121. ^ Ciglić & Savić 2007, p. 39.
  122. ^ Ciglić & Savić 2007, p. 46.
  123. ^ a b Mirošević 2011, p. 254.
  124. ^ Whitely 2001, p. 311.
  125. ^ Fatutta & Covelli, 1975, p. 51.
  126. ^ a b Whitely 2001, p. 312.
  127. ^ a b Enrico Cernuschi, Le operazioni navali contro la Jugoslavia, 6–18 aprile 1941, on "Storia Militare" n. 242, pp. 20 to 39.
  128. ^ Shores et al. 1987, p. 218.
  129. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1987, p. 223.
  130. ^ Krleža, Brajković & Mardešić 1972, p. 240.
  131. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1987, p. 224.
  132. ^ Maior 2002, pp. 65–66.
  133. ^ Weal 2012, p. 39.
  134. ^ Statiev 2002, p. 1111.
  135. ^ Enrico Cernuschi, Le operazioni aeronavali contro la Jugoslavia, 6–8 aprile 1941, in Storia Militare no. 242, p. 32.
  136. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1987, p. 222.
  137. ^ US Army 1986, p. 64.
  138. ^ Geschichte, p. 325
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  140. ^ Chesneau 1980, p. 356.
  141. ^ Whitely 2001, p. 313.
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  143. ^ a b c US Army 1986, pp. 63–64.
  144. ^ Cohen 1996, pp. 29–30.
  145. ^ Dedijer 1956, p. 9.
  146. ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 63–68.
  147. ^ Terzić 1982, pp. 383–388.
  148. ^ Cohen 1996, p. 28.
  149. ^ Tomasevich 2001, pp. 204–207.
  150. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 52–53.
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  152. ^ a b Donia & Fine 1994, p. 156.
  153. ^ Cohen 1996, p. 29.
  154. ^ Patriot or Traitor: The Case of General Mihailovich. Proceedings and Report of the Commission of Inquiry of the Committee for a Fair Trial for Draja Mihailovich. 1978. Stanford, California: Hoover Institution Press.

Books

  • Bán, András D. (2004). Hungarian–British Diplomacy, 1938–1941: The Attempt to Maintain Relations. Translated by Tim Wilkinson. London: Frank Cass. ISBN 0714656607.
  • Cervi, Mario (1972). The Hollow Legions. Mussolini's Blunder in Greece, 1940–1941 [Storia della guerra di Grecia: ottobre 1940 – aprile 1941]. trans. Eric Mosbacher. London: Chatto and Windus. ISBN 0-70111-351-0.
  • Chant, Christopher (1986). The Encyclopedia of Codenames of World War II. Routledge.
  • Chesneau, Roger, ed. (1980). Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1922–1946. London, England: Conway Maritime Press. ISBN 978-0-85177-146-5.
  • Ciglić, Boris; Savić, Dragan (2007). Dornier Do 17, The Yugoslav Story: Operational Record 1937–1947. Belgrade: Jeroplan. ISBN 978-86-909727-0-8.
  • Cohen, Philip J. (1996). Serbia's Secret War: Propaganda and the Deceit of History. Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 9780890967607.
  • Giurescu, Dinu C. (2000). Romania in the Second World War (1939–1945). Boulder, CO: East European Monographs.
  • Hoffmann, Peter (2000) [1979]. Hitler's Personal Security: Protecting the Führer, 1921–1945 (2nd ed.). Da Capo Press.
  • Goss, Chris (2005). Dornier 17: In Focus. Surrey, UK: Red Kite/Air Research. ISBN 0-9546201-4-3.
  • Gretschko, A. A., ed. (1977). Geschichte des Zweiten Weltkrieges. Vol. 3. East Berlin: Militärverlag der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik.
  • Klajn, Lajco (2007). The Past in Present Times: The Yugoslav Saga. University Press of America. ISBN 978-0-7618-3647-6.
  • Loi, Salvatore (1978). Le operazioni delle unità italiane in Jugoslavia (1941–1943): narrazione, documenti [The operations of Italian units in Yugoslavia (1941–1943): narrative, documents] (in Italian). Rome, Italy: Ministero della difesa (Ministry of Defence). OCLC 9194926.
  • Macartney, C. A. (1956). October Fifteenth: A History of Modern Hungary, 1929–1945. vol. 1. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
  • Macartney, C. A. (1957). October Fifteenth: A History of Modern Hungary, 1929–1945. vol. 2. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
  • Miller, Marshall Lee (1975). Bulgaria during the Second World War. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Niehorster, Leo W. G. (1998). The Royal Hungarian Army, 1920–1945. Bayside, New York: Europa Books. ISBN 978-1-891227-19-6.
  • Novak, Emilian E. (1969). Limitations of Hungarian National Power in World War Two (MA thesis). University of North Texas.
  • 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.
  • Redžić, Enver (2005). Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Second World War. Abingdon: Frank Cass. ISBN 0-7146-5625-9.
  • Savić, Dragan; Ciglić, Boris (2002). Croatian Aces of World War 2. London: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-84176-435-3.
  • Schreiber, Gerhard (2006). "Germany, Italy, and South-east Europe: From Political and Economic Hegemony to Military Aggression". Germany and the Second World War, Volume III: The Mediterranean, South-East Europe, and North Africa, 1939–1941. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 303–448.
  • Shirer, William L. (2002). The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany. London: Random House. ISBN 978-0-09-942176-4.
  • Shores, Christopher F.; Cull, Brian; Malizia, Nicola (1987). Air War for Yugoslavia, Greece, and Crete, 1940–41. London: Grub Street. ISBN 978-0-948817-07-6.
  • Short, Neil (2010). The Fuhrer's Headquarters: Hitler's Command Bunkers, 1939–45. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84603-582-1.
  • Terzić, Velimir (1982a). Slom Kraljevine Jugoslavije 1941 : uzroci i posledice poraza [The Collapse of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1941: Causes and Consequences of Defeat] (in Serbo-Croatian). Vol. 1. Belgrade, Yugoslavia: Narodna knjiga. OCLC 10276738.
  • Terzić, Velimir (1982b). Slom Kraljevine Jugoslavije 1941 : uzroci i posledice poraza [The Collapse of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1941: Causes and Consequences of Defeat] (in Serbo-Croatian). Vol. 2. Belgrade, Yugoslavia: Narodna knjiga. OCLC 10276738.
  • Keegan, John, ed. (1989). The Times Atlas of the Second World War. New York: Harpercollins. ISBN 978-0060161781.
  • Thomas, Nigel; Mikulan, Krunoslav (1995). Axis Forces in Yugoslavia 1941–45. New York: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-85532-473-3.
  • Thomas, Nigel; Szabo, Laszlo (2008). The Royal Hungarian Army in World War II. Oxford, United Kingdom: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84603-324-7.
  • Tomasevich, Jozo (1969), "Yugoslavia during the Second World War", in Vucinich, Wayne S. (ed.), Contemporary Yugoslavia: Twenty Years of Socialist Experiment, Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 59–118, ISBN 978-05-200153-6-4
  • Tomasevich, Jozo (1975). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: The Chetniks. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0857-9.
  • Tomasevich, Jozo (2001). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration. Vol. 2. San Francisco: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-3615-4.
  • Trevor-Roper, Hugh (1964). Hitler's War Directives: 1939–1945. Viborg: Norhaven Paperback. ISBN 1-84341-014-1.
  • US Army (1986) [1953]. . Department of the Army Pamphlet No. 20–260. Washington, D.C.: United States Army Center of Military History. OCLC 16940402. CMH Pub 104-4. Archived from the original on 19 June 2009. Retrieved 1 November 2010.
  • Vogel, Detlef (2006). "German Intervention in the Balkans". Germany and the Second World War, Volume III: The Mediterranean, South-East Europe, and North Africa, 1939–1941. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 449–556.
  • Weal, John A. (1998). Junkers Ju 87: Stukageschwader of North Africa and the Mediterranean. London: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-85532-722-1.
  • Whitely, M. J. (2001). Destroyers of World War Two: An International Encyclopedia. US Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-0-87021-326-7.
  • Benson, Leslie (2001). Yugoslavia: A Concise History. United Kingdom: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 1403913838.
  • Edwards, Robert J. (2015). Tip of the Spear: German Armored Reconnaissance in Action in World War II. Stackpole Books. ISBN 9780811763301.
  • Plowman, Jeffrey (2013). War in the Balkans: The Battle for Greece and Crete 1940–1941. Pen and Sword. ISBN 9781781592489.
  • Jowett, Philip (2000). Italian Army, 1940-1945. Vol. 1. Osprey. ISBN 9781855328648.
  • Donia, Robert J.; Fine, John V.A. (1994). Bosnia and Hercegovina: A Tradition Betrayed. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. ISBN 9781850652113.
  • Krleža, Miroslav; Brajković, Vladislav; Mardešić, Petar (1972). Pomorska enciklopedija (in Serbo-Croatian). Vol. 2. Jugoslavenski leksikografski zavod.
  • Maior, George Cristian (2002). The Danube, European security and cooperation at the beginning of the 21st century. Enciclopedica Pub. House. ISBN 9789734503971.
  • Weal, John (2012). The Danube, European security and cooperation at the beginning of the 21st century. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1841762869.

Articles

  • Barefield, Michael R. (May 1993). . Fort Leavenworth, Kansas: School of Advanced Military Studies, United States Army Command and General Staff College. Archived from the original on 8 April 2013.
  • Dizdar, Zdravko (2007). "Bjelovarski ustanak od 7. do 10. travnja 1941". Časopis Za Suvremenu Povijest (in Croatian). Vol. 3. Hrvatski institut za povijest. pp. 581–609.
  • Dedijer, Vladimir (1956). "Sur l'armistice "germano-yougoslave" (7 avril 1941) (Peut-on dire qu'il y eut réellement un armistice?)". Revue d'histoire de la Deuxième Guerre mondiale. 6 (23): 1–10.
  • Fatutta, F.; Covelli, L. (1975). "1941: Attack on Yugoslavia". The International Magazine of Armies and Weapons. Vol. 4, no. 15–17. Lugano, Switzerland.
  • Hadži-Jovančić, Perica. "Losing the Periphery: The British Foreign Office and Policy Towards Yugoslavia, 1935–1938." Diplomacy & Statecraft 31.1 (2020): 65–90.
  • Jovanovich, Leo M. (1994). "The War in the Balkans in 1941". East European Quarterly. 28 (1): 105–29.
  • Krzak, Andrzej (2006). "Operation "Marita": The Attack Against Yugoslavia in 1941". The Journal of Slavic Military Studies. 19 (3): 543–600. doi:10.1080/13518040600868123. S2CID 219625930.
  • Lennox, Dyer T. (May 1997). . Newport, Rhode Island: Joint Military Operations Department, Naval War College. Archived from the original on 8 April 2013.
  • Mirošević, Franko (2011). "Dubrovnik i dubrovački kotar od Banovine Hrvatske do talijanske reokupacije (od rujna 1939. do rujna 1941.)". Radovi Zavoda Za Povijesne Znanosti HAZU U Zadru (in Croatian). Vol. 53. pp. 243–279.
  • Pavlowitch, Stevan K. (1982). "How Many Non-Serbian Generals in 1941?". East European Quarterly. 16 (4): 447–52.
  • Zajac, Daniel L. (May 1993). . Fort Leavenworth, Kansas: School of Advanced Military Studies, United States Army Command and General Staff College. Archived from the original on 8 April 2013.
  • Životić, Aleksandar (2011). "Četničke jedinice Vojske Kraljevine Jugoslavije u Aprilskom ratu" [The Chetnik units of the Yugoslav Army in April War 1941]. Istorija 20. Veka (in Serbian). 29: 39–47. doi:10.29362/ist20veka.2011.1.ziv.39-47.
  • Statiev, Alexander (October 2002). "Antonescu's Eagles against Stalin's Falcons: The Romanian Air Force, 1920–1941". The Journal of Military History. 66 (4): 1085–1113. doi:10.2307/3093265. JSTOR 3093265.

Web

  • Heaton, Colin D. (12 June 2006). "Invasion of Yugoslavia: Waffen SS Captain Fritz Klingenberg and the Capture of Belgrade During World War II". HistoryNet. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  • Niehorster, Leo (2013a). "Balkan Operations Italian Order of Battle Italian Army 5th April 1941". Leo Niehorster. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  • Niehorster, Leo (2013b). "Balkan Operations Italian Order of Battle Italian Second Army 5th April 1941". Leo Niehorster. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  • Niehorster, Leo (2013c). "Balkan Operations Italian Order of Battle Italian Albanian High Command 5th April 1941". Leo Niehorster. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  • Niehorster, Leo (2013d). "Balkan Operations Italian Order of Battle Italian Commander of Troops in Zara 5th April 1941". Leo Niehorster. Retrieved 5 April 2021.

Further reading

  • Burgwyn, H. James. (2005). Empire on the Adriatic: Mussolini's Conquest of Yugoslavia 1941–1943. Enigma.
  • Williams, Heather (2003). Parachutes, Patriots and Partisans: The Special Operations Executive and Yugoslavia, 1941–1945. C. Hurst & Co. ISBN 1-85065-592-8.

invasion, yugoslavia, april, redirects, here, other, uses, april, disambiguation, part, balkans, campaign, world, iimap, illustrating, movements, axis, forces, yugoslavia, greecedate6, april, 1941locationyugoslaviaresultaxis, victory, continued, anti, axis, re. April War redirects here For other uses see April War disambiguation Invasion of YugoslaviaPart of the Balkans Campaign of World War IIMap illustrating the movements of the Axis forces in Yugoslavia and GreeceDate6 18 April 1941LocationYugoslaviaResultAxis victory Continued anti Axis resistance and beginning of Yugoslav civil warTerritorialchangesOccupation of YugoslaviaPartition of Yugoslavia between the AxisCreation of pro Axis puppet regimesBelligerentsAxis Germany Italy Hungary YugoslaviaCommanders and leadersWalther von Brauchitsch Maximilian von Weichs Wilhelm List Ewald von Kleist Alexander Lohr W F von Richthofen Vittorio Ambrosio Alessandro Pirzio Biroli Elemer Gorondy NovakDusan Simovic Danilo Kalafatovic Milorad Petrovic Milutin Nedic Milan Nedic Vladimir Cukavac Dimitrije Zivkovic Borivoje Mirkovic Bogoljub IlicStrengthGermany 337 096875 tanks990 aircraftItaly 300 000 in 22 divisions666 aircraft 1 Hungary 9 brigades6 air squadrons700 000 400 000 ill prepared 2 110 3 200 tanks 4 50 4 54 3 of which were modern 460 5 505 aircraft including 103 modern bombers 4 and 107 modern fighters 6 Casualties and lossesGermany 7 151 killed392 wounded15 missing40 aircraft shot downItaly 3 324 killed or wounded10 aircraft shot down22 aircraft damagedHungary 120 killed223 wounded13 missing7 aircraft shot downThousands of civilians amp soldiers killed254 000 345 000 captured by the Germans 30 000 captured by the Italians 49 aircraft shot down103 pilots amp aircrew killed210 300 aircraft captured 8 3 destroyers captured3 submarines captured The invasion of Yugoslavia also known as the April War a or Operation 25 b was a German led attack on the Kingdom of Yugoslavia by the Axis powers which began on 6 April 1941 during World War II The order for the invasion was put forward in Fuhrer Directive No 25 which Adolf Hitler issued on 27 March 1941 following a Yugoslav coup d etat that overthrew the pro Axis government 12 The invasion commenced with an overwhelming air attack on Belgrade and facilities of the Royal Yugoslav Air Force VVKJ by the Luftwaffe German Air Force and attacks by German land forces from southwestern Bulgaria These attacks were followed by German thrusts from Romania Hungary and the Ostmark modern day Austria then part of Germany Italian forces were limited to air and artillery attacks until 11 April when the Italian army attacked towards Ljubljana in modern day Slovenia and through Istria and Lika and down the Dalmatian coast On the same day Hungarian forces entered Yugoslav Backa and Baranya but like the Italians they faced practically no resistance A Yugoslav attack into the northern parts of the Italian protectorate of Albania met with initial success but was inconsequential due to the collapse of the rest of the Yugoslav forces Scholars have proposed several theories for the Royal Yugoslav Army s sudden collapse including poor training and equipment generals eager to secure a quick cessation of hostilities and Croatian Slovenian and ethnic German fifth column activities The latter has been questioned by scholars who have suggested that the fifth column had little effect on the ultimate outcome The invasion ended when an armistice was signed on 17 April 1941 based on the unconditional surrender of the Yugoslav army which came into effect at noon on 18 April The Kingdom of Yugoslavia was then occupied and partitioned by the Axis powers Most of Serbia and the Banat became a German zone of occupation while other areas of Yugoslavia were annexed by neighboring Axis countries Germany Hungary Italy Albania and Bulgaria Croatia became the Independent State of Croatia Serbo Croatian Latin Nezavisna Drzava Hrvatska or NDH an Axis puppet state created during the invasion comprising the Srem Bosnia and Herzegovina as well as the Croatian lands Along with Italy s stalled invasion of Greece on 28 October 1940 and the German led invasion of Greece Operation Marita and invasion of Crete Operation Merkur the invasion of Yugoslavia was part of the German Balkan Campaign German Balkanfeldzug Contents 1 Background 2 Preparation 3 Opposing forces 3 1 Axis order of battle 3 1 1 Deployment in Romania 3 1 2 Deployment in Bulgaria 3 1 3 Deployment in Hungary 3 1 4 Deployment in Italy 3 2 Royal Yugoslav armed forces 3 2 1 Equipment and organization 3 2 2 Deployment 4 Operations 4 1 Air operations 4 1 1 Bombing of Belgrade 4 2 Ground operations 4 2 1 Three pronged drive on Belgrade 4 2 2 Italian offensive 4 2 3 Hungarian offensive 4 2 4 Yugoslav Albanian offensive 4 2 5 Local uprisings 4 3 Naval operations 4 4 Romanian involvement 5 Losses 6 Armistice and surrender 7 Aftermath 8 Notes 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Footnotes 10 2 Books 10 3 Articles 10 4 Web 11 Further readingBackground EditSee also Greco Italian War and Yugoslav coup d etat In October 1940 Fascist Italy had attacked the Kingdom of Greece only to be forced back into Albania German dictator Adolf Hitler recognised the need to go to the aid of his ally Italian dictator Benito Mussolini Hitler did this not only to restore diminished Axis prestige but also to prevent Britain from bombing the Romanian Ploiești oilfields from which Nazi Germany obtained most of its oil 13 In 1940 and early 1941 Hungary Romania and Bulgaria all agreed to adhere to the Tripartite Pact and thus join the Axis Hitler then pressured Yugoslavia to join as well 14 The Regent Prince Paul yielded to this pressure and declared Yugoslavia s accession to the Pact on 25 March 1941 15 This move was highly unpopular with the Serb dominated officer corps of the military Serbian organizations such as National Defense and the Chetniks Association the Serbian Orthodox Church a large part of the Serbian population as well as liberals and Communists 16 Military officers predominantly Serbs executed a coup d etat on 27 March 1941 forced the Regent to resign and declared 17 year old King Peter II to be of age 17 Preparation EditUpon hearing news of the coup in Yugoslavia Hitler called his military advisers to Berlin on 27 March On the same day as the coup he issued Fuhrer Directive 25 which called for Yugoslavia to be treated as a hostile state 18 Hitler took the coup as a personal insult and was so angered that he was determined in his words to destroy Yugoslavia militarily and as a state Jugoslawien militarisch und als Staatsgebilde zu zerschlagen 19 and to do so with pitiless harshness 20 and without waiting for possible declarations of loyalty of the new government 21 Hungary had joined the Tripartite Pact on 20 November 1940 On 12 December it also concluded a treaty with Yugoslavia calling for permanent peace and eternal friendship 22 The Hungarian leadership was split after Germany s War Directive 25 was delivered on 27 March 1941 Regent Miklos Horthy and the military favoured taking part in the invasion of Yugoslavia and mobilized the following day Prime Minister Pal Teleki sought to prevent German troops passing through Hungary and cited the peace treaty with Yugoslavia as an impediment to co operation with the Germans 23 On 1 April Yugoslavia redesignated its Assault Command as the Chetnik Command named after the Serb guerrilla forces from World War I which had resisted the Central Powers The command was intended to lead a guerrilla war if the country was occupied 24 Its headquarters was transferred from Novi Sad to Kraljevo in south central Serbia on 1 April 24 On 2 April the German ambassador having already been recalled for talks the remaining embassy staff were ordered to leave the capital and to warn the embassies of friendly nations to likewise evacuate That sent the unmistakable message that Yugoslavia was about to be invaded 25 On 3 April Hitler issued War Directive 26 detailing the plan of attack and command structure for the invasion as well as promising Hungary territorial gains 26 The same day Teleki killed himself Horthy seeking a compromise informed Hitler that evening that Hungary would abide by the treaty though it would likely cease to apply should Croatia secede and Yugoslavia cease to exist 27 Upon the proclamation of an Independent State of Croatia in Zagreb on 10 April this scenario was realized and Hungary joined the invasion its army crossing into Yugoslavia the following day 27 Opposing forces EditAxis order of battle Edit Main article Axis order of battle for the invasion of Yugoslavia The invasion was spearheaded by the German 2nd Army with elements of the 12th Army First Panzer Group and an independent panzer corps combined with overwhelming Luftwaffe support The 19 German divisions included five panzer divisions two motorised infantry divisions and two mountain divisions The German force also included three well equipped independent motorised infantry regiments and was supported by over 750 aircraft The Italian 2nd Army and 9th Army committed a total of 22 divisions and 666 aircraft to the operation The Hungarian 3rd Army also participated in the invasion with support available from over 500 aircraft The goods station at Monichkirchen was Hitler s headquarters Fruhlingssturm during the invasion During the April War the Fuhrer Headquarters FHQ was codenamed Fruhlingssturm Spring Storm and consisted of the Fuhrersonderzug Special Fuhrer s Train codenamed Amerika stationed in Monichkirchen alongside the special train Atlas of the Armed Forces Operations Staff Wehrmachtfuhrungsstabes WFSt Atlas did not arrive at Monichkirchen until 11 April well after operations were underway and Amerika only arrived the following day Monichkirchen was chosen because a nearby rail tunnel could provide shelter in the event of air attack Both trains returned to Berlin on 26 April 28 29 After the Italian invasion in the northwest began King Victor Emmanuel III moved to a villa owned by the Pirzio Biroli family at Brazzacco near Moruzzo in order to be close to the front 30 Germany attacked Yugoslavia from bases in three countries besides itself Hungary Romania and Bulgaria German troops entered each of these countries under different pretenses and at different times The first country to receive a German military mission was Romania Ostensibly to train the Romanian armed forces its real purpose was to protect Romania s petroleum resources and prepare for an attack on the Soviet Union The Wehrmacht entered Bulgaria more circumspectly first with the intention of providing aerial defense against any force attacking Romania s oilfields and later with that of invading Greece in support of Italy German troops did not enter Hungary until the attack on Yugoslavia was already planned and Hungary s participation had been secured citation needed Deployment in Romania Edit King Carol II of Romania starting from the cession of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina to the Soviet Union proposed in a letter to Adolf Hitler on 2 July 1940 that Germany send a military mission to Romania 31 The Romanian government asked that a mission be sent urgently on 7 September 1940 the day after Carol s abdication 32 The decision to aid Romania was taken on 19 September and Hungary was asked to provide transit to German soldiers on 30 September 33 The first troops entered Romania on 10 October 34 They entered Bucharest two days later 12 October to shouts of Heil 35 The official explanation for the presence of German troops was that they were there to train the Romanian army Hitler s directive to the troops on 10 October had stated that it is necessary to avoid even the slightest semblance of military occupation of Romania 32 In the second half of October the Romanian leader Ion Antonescu asked that the military mission be expanded The Germans happily obliged the request since the oil fields and refineries at Ploiești were vital to their war effort Romania was also an important launching point for an attack on the Soviet Union which made the presence of German troops a violation of the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact of 23 August 1939 36 By the middle of November the 13th Motorised Infantry Division had been assembled in Romania and reinforced by the 4th Panzer Regiment engineers and signal troops as well as six fighter and two reconnaissance Luftwaffe squadrons and some antiaircraft artillery 37 A total of seventy batteries of artillery were moved into Romania 32 On 23 November Romania signed the Tripartite Pact At the time Germany informed Romania that she would not be expected to participate in an attack on Greece but that Germany wanted to use Romanian territory to provide a base for a German attack On 24 November Antonescu met with Wilhelm Keitel chief of the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht to discuss common defense As a result of this meeting the 16th Panzer Division was sent to Romania in late December The 12th Army and First Panzer Group along with heavy bridging equipment for the planned crossing of the Danube followed in January 1941 37 By January 1941 the total number of German effectives in Romania was 170 639 32 Those elements of the 12th Army that were to invade Yugoslavia from Romania assembled near Timișoara Temeschwar Between November 1940 and February 1941 the Luftwaffe gradually moved 135 fighters and reconnaissance aircraft into Romania in 22 26 squadrons In early April 1941 they moved a further 600 aircraft from France Africa and Sicily into Romania and Bulgaria in a period of ten days The fighter and reconnaissance craft were sent to fields in Arad Deva and Turnu Severin 38 On 12 February Britain broke off diplomatic relations with Romania on the grounds that it was an enemy occupied country 39 Deployment in Bulgaria Edit Two events in early November 1940 convinced Hitler of the need to station troops especially the Luftwaffe in Bulgaria The first was false reports that the British were constructing an airfield on Lemnos from which they could bomb Ploiești The second was the beginning of British air raids originating from Greek bases against Italian shipping on 6 November Planning for the German invasion of Greece from Bulgaria began on 12 November 40 Already on 13 November the Soviets were incorrectly accusing the Germans of having troops in neutral Bulgaria On 18 November Tsar Boris III of Bulgaria met with Hitler and promised to participate in an attack on Greece but only at the last moment 41 Shortly thereafter a secret German team under Colonel Kurt Zeitzler entered Bulgaria to establish fuel depots arrange for troop billeting and scout the terrain They were soon followed by hundreds of Luftwaffe personnel to establish air observation stations By the end of December over a thousand German troops in civilian clothing were active in Bulgaria although the latter s government continued to deny it 40 Bombers and dive bombers were also gradually moved into Bulgaria beginning in November By the end of March 1941 the Luftwaffe had 355 aircraft in the country 38 On 17 February 1941 Bulgaria signed a non aggression pact with Turkey paving the way for its adherence to the Tripartite Pact which was signed by Prime Minister Bogdan Filov in Vienna on 1 March 42 When Ivan V Petrov member of the National Assembly from Yablanitsa asked why the Assembly had not been consulted Filov pointed out that the constitution only required parliamentary approval prior to ratification The signing was ratified by a vote in the Assembly of 140 to 20 42 The first German troops crossed the Danube from Romania on 28 February a day before Bulgaria joined the pact 43 The greater part of the 12th Army augmented by VIII Fliegerkorps crossed the Danube on 2 March They were welcomed by the Russophile population who believed that Germany and the Soviet Union were allied 44 The 12th Army was originally deployed solely for an attack on Greece After receiving Directive No 25 which projected an invasion of Yugoslavia in the direction of Belgrade on 8 April the force was redeployed in three groups one along the Turkish border one along the Greek border and one along the Yugoslav border Motorized transport was brought in from Romania to achieve this feat in a few days 45 Deployment in Hungary Edit Although German troops had been refused the right to transit Hungary for the invasion of Poland in 1939 they were permitted to pass through Hungary as civilians on their way to Romania in 1940 In September 1940 the Hungarian legation in Berlin had granted over 6 500 transit visas to Germans traveling to Romania 46 On 30 September shortly after the signing of the Tripartite Pact Ribbentrop and General Keitel asked the Hungarian foreign minister Istvan Csaky who was in Vienna to grant the Germans use of transit facilities for German military study groups to pass through to Romania 47 They were still awaiting final confirmation on 3 October 33 The arrangement agreed was that six trains would pass through Hungary at night carrying German soldiers in sealed cars They would not be allowed out and they would not have any rail transportation officers RTOs or supply officers with them 33 According to Gyorgy Barcza the Hungarian ambassador in London answering the British government s query it was Romania that had made the request In his notes Barcza indicated that the British had declared that if Hungary were to permit German troops to pass through Hungarian territory against Yugoslavia Britain would break off diplomatic relations indeed might declare war on us 46 The first German troops began their passage through Hungary on 8 October Despite some official denials the troops movements were reported by Reuters and the American ambassador received a full report 47 According to contemporary British intelligence three divisions had passed through Hungary to Romania by 2 November On 20 November Hungarian Prime Minister Pal Teleki signed the Tripartite Pact after a meeting with Hitler in Berchtesgarden At the meeting Hitler spoke of his intention to aid Italy against Greece thereby preparing the Hungarians for his future demands 37 On 13 December 1940 the day after the Hungaro Yugoslav Non Aggression Pact and the day Hitler issued Fuhrer Directive No 20 major German troop movements began The Germans had initially promised to supply 180 locomotives for the transfers but later the Hungarians were complaining that only 130 had arrived On 24 December Istvan Horthy President of Hungarian State Railways HSR demanded negotiations before implementing requested German increases but Ambassador Otto von Erdmannsdorf informed him that it had all been settled in Vienna by Keitel and Csaky 47 The German traffic was so large that on 28 December the HSR had to suspend travel on all its trains for several days on account of a shortage of coal Hungarian officials tried to meet all German demands without going further than the governments had agreed Even sabotage was used on occasion to prevent having to give the Germans more support than required 48 On 18 January 1941 an agreement was reached to store German supplies in Hungarian warehouses under Hungarian guard with only a German officer in Budapest to serve as a liaison These supplies were to be used in the campaign against Greece 47 Hungarian chief of staff Werth was a leading proponent and key planner of Hungary s involvement in the invasion On 27 March 1941 Hitler informed the Hungarian ambassador Dome Sztojay and gave an official proposal to Hungary for participation in the attack on Yugoslavia Hitler confidentially told Miklos Horthy that Germany fully recognizes the Hungarian territorial claims in relation to Yugoslavia and that he can take Backa and Banat and added take as much as you want Horthy mostly agreed and accepted Hitler s suggestions 49 A Hungarian response was hammered out in council and delivered the following day 28 March On 30 March General Friedrich Paulus arrived in Budapest and met with Henrik Werth chief of the Hungarian general staff and Major General Laszlo Deseo The Hungarians proposed they mobilize five divisions for the attack on Yugoslavia Two were to be held in reserve while the First Fifth and Mobile Corps were to conduct the main attack on Subotica Szabadka with a secondary operation east of the river Tisza 50 Because of Romania s request that Hungarian troops not operate in the Banat Paulus modified the Hungarian plan and kept their troops west of the Tisza This final plan was put down in map form according to Paulus account and must have been telephoned to Berlin immediately so as to make into Operational Order No 25 issued by Walther von Brauchitsch that same day 50 This final plan committed one Hungarian corps of three brigades west of the Danube from Lake Balaton to Barcs and twelve brigades nine on the front and three in reserve for an offensive in Backa Bacska The Danube Flotilla was to cover the flanks and the air force was to stand by for orders The Carpathian Group composed of Eighth Corps the 1st Mountain Brigade and the 8th Border Guard Chasseur Brigade was mobilized on the Soviet border with the Mobile Corps held in reserve 51 These arrangements were agreed to by Werth he later claimed on the basis of the authorization received on 28 April although this was not the government s view of what had been authorized Werth applied for permission to mobilize on 1 April since a mobilization order had to be approved by the cabinet and issued by the regent over the signature of the minister of defense Werth expected the Germans to begin operations with the use of Hungarian territory and communications on 12 April and the Hungarians to complete mobilization by 6 April and begin their offensive on the 15th 51 A meeting of the Supreme Defense Council was convened for 1 April to discuss Werth s request After a long debate it approved his mobilization plan but refused to place Hungarian troops under German command and restricted Hungarian operations to the occupation of territory abandoned by the Yugoslavs On 2 April Germany responded that the Paulus Werth agreement was final and German staff officers began arriving in Budapest that day That same day the British informed Hungary that she would be treated as an enemy state if Germany made use of her territory or facilities in an attack on Yugoslavia 52 On the morning of 3 April Pal Teleki committed suicide the regent immediately cancelled the mobilization order already given except for the Border Guard and the Mobile Corps which prompted Werth to resign Horthy then authorized the mobilization of the Fourth and Fifth Corps and the Mountain Brigade and Werth withdrew his resignation 53 This occurred so late in the day that zero hour for mobilization to begin was given as midnight of 5 April On the morning of 3 April German units including tanks and aircraft bound for Romania passed openly through Budapest 54 Deployment in Italy Edit The Italian 2nd Army and 9th Army committed a total of 22 divisions to the operation 55 comprising around 300 000 troops 56 The Italian 2nd Army Italian 2 Armata was commanded by Generale designato d Armata acting General Vittorio Ambrosio 57 and consisted of one fast Italian celere corps Celere Corps one motorised corps Motorised Corps and three infantry corps V Corps VI Corps and XI Corps and was assembled in northeastern Italy attacking from Istria and the Julian March along the border with Slovenia and Croatia 58 59 The 2nd Army was supported by a motorised engineer regiment including three bridging battalions a chemical battalion fifteen territorial battalions and two garrison battalions 60 V Corps support units included three motorised artillery regiments comprising thirteen battalions four machine gun battalions two motorised and two pack animal three Blackshirt legions of battalion size a motorised anti aircraft battalion a sapper assault battalion and a road construction battalion VI Corps included four motorised artillery regiments with a total of sixteen battalions two machine gun battalions one motorised one pack animal and a motorised anti aircraft regiment XI Corps included one motorised artillery regiment comprising four battalions three machine gun battalions one motorised one pack animal and one static and six Blackshirt legions of battalion size The Motorised Corps was supported by a motorised artillery regiment consisting of three battalions and a motorised engineer battalion 60 In Albania the elements of the Italian 9th Army Italian 9 Armata that were involved in the campaign were commanded by Generale d Armata General Alessandro Pirzio Biroli and consisted of two infantry corps and some sector troops assembled in northern Albania 61 62 Alessandro Pirzio Biroli XIV Corps was supported by a cavalry regiment three Border Guard battalions a Finance Guard battalion and two military police Italian Carabinieri Reali battalions The XVII Corps included the Diamanti Blackshirt group which incorporated six Blackshirt regiments comprising two battalions each the Albanian raised Skanderbeg Blackshirt regiment of two battalions another Blackshirt regiment of two battalions a cavalry regiment a Bersaglieri motorcycle battalion three Border Guard battalions one Finance Guard battalion a motorised artillery regiment of three battalions a military police battalion and a tank company equipped with Fiat M13 40 light tanks The Librazhd Sector included a motorised artillery regiment of four battalions a bicycle mounted Bersaglieri regiment a cavalry regiment the Biscaccianti Blackshirt group which incorporated two Blackshirt regiments with a total of five battalions the regimental sized Agostini Blackshirt Forest Militia and the Briscotto group a regimental sized formation consisting of one Alpini battalion and two Finance Guard battalions 63 The Zara garrison numbered about 9 000 men under the overall command of Generale di Brigata Brigadier Emilio Giglioli 64 The garrison consisted of two main groupings and an assortment of supporting units The two main groupings were the regimental sized Fronte a Terra Land Front which comprised three static machine gun battalions and a bicycle mounted Bersaglieri battalion and the battalion strength Fronte a Mare Sea Front which consisted of two machine gun companies an anti aircraft battery a coastal artillery battery and a naval artillery battery Supporting units consisted of an artillery regiment of three battalions two independent artillery battalions a machine gun battalion a motorised anti aircraft battalion less one battery an engineer battalion a company of Blackshirts and a company of L3 35 tankettes 65 Royal Yugoslav armed forces Edit Main article Yugoslav order of battle for the invasion of Yugoslavia This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Yugoslav forces consisted of more than 33 divisions of the Royal Yugoslav Army Serbo Croatian Latin Vojska Kraljevska Jugoslavije VKJ four air brigades of the Royal Yugoslav Air Force Serbo Croatian Latin Vazduhoplovstvo Vojske Kraljevine Jugoslavije VVKJ with more than 400 aircraft and the small Royal Yugoslav Navy Serbo Croatian Latin Kraljevska Jugoslovenska Ratna Mornarica KJRM centred around four destroyers and four submarines based on the Adriatic coast and some river monitors on the Danube The VKJ was heavily reliant on animal powered transport was only partly mobilised at the time of the invasion and had only 50 tanks that could engage German tanks on an equal basis The VVKJ was equipped with a range of aircraft of Yugoslav German Italian French and British design including less than 120 modern fighter aircraft Equipment and organization Edit Formed after World War I the VKJ was still largely equipped with weapons and material from that era although some modernization with Czech equipment and vehicles had begun Of about 4 000 artillery pieces many were aged and horse drawn but about 1 700 were relatively modern including 812 Czech 37mm and 47mm anti tank guns There were also about 2 300 mortars including 1600 modern 81mm pieces as well as twenty four 220 and 305mm pieces Of 940 anti aircraft guns 360 were 15 mm and 20 mm Czech and Italian models All of these arms were imported from different sources the various models often lacked proper repair and maintenance facilities 66 The only mechanized units were six motorized infantry battalions in the three cavalry divisions six motorized artillery regiments two tank battalions equipped with 110 tanks one of which had Renault FT models of First World War origin and the other 54 modern French Renault R35 tanks plus an independent tank company with eight Czech SI D tank destroyers Some 1 000 trucks for military purposes had been imported from the United States of America in the months just preceding the invasion 3 Italian soldiers entering Yugoslavia Fully mobilized the Yugoslav Army fielded 28 infantry divisions three cavalry divisions and 35 independent regiments Of the independent regiments 16 were in frontier fortifications and 19 were organized as combined regiments or Odred around the size of a reinforced brigade Each Odred had one to three infantry regiments and one to three artillery battalions with three organised as alpine units 67 The German attack however caught the army still mobilizing and only some 11 divisions were in their planned defense positions at the start of the invasion The Yugoslavs had delayed full mobilisation until 3 April in order not to provoke Hitler 2 The units were filled to between 70 and 90 percent of their strength as mobilization was not completed The Yugoslav Army was about 1 200 000 in total as the German invasion commenced 67 The VVKJ had a strength of 1 875 officers and 29 527 other ranks 68 including some 2 000 pilots 5 had over 460 front line aircraft of domestic notably the IK 3 German Italian French and British origin of which most were modern types Organized into 22 bomber squadrons and 19 fighter squadrons the main aircraft types in operational use included 73 Messerschmitt Bf 109 E 47 Hawker Hurricane Mk I with more being built under licence in Yugoslavia 30 Hawker Fury II 11 Rogozarski IK 3 fighters plus more under construction 10 Ikarus IK 2 2 Potez 63 one Messerschmitt Bf 110C 4 captured in early April due to a navigational error and one Rogozarski R 313 fighters 69 Dornier Do 17 K including 40 plus licence built 61 Bristol Blenheim Mk I including some 40 licence built and 40 Savoia Marchetti SM 79 K bombers Army reconnaissance units consisted of seven Groups with 130 obsolete Yugoslav built Breguet 19 and Potez 25 light bombers 69 There were also some 400 trainer and auxiliary aircraft The Naval Aviation units comprised 75 aircraft in eight squadrons equipped with amongst other auxiliary types 12 German built Dornier Do 22 K and 15 Rogozarski SIM XIV H locally designed and built maritime patrol float planes 70 The aircraft of the Yugoslav airline Aeroput consisting mainly of six Lockheed Model 10 Electras three Spartan Cruisers and one de Havilland Dragon were mobilised to provide transport services to the VVKJ 71 The KJRM was equipped with one elderly ex German light cruiser suitable only for training purposes one large modern destroyer flotilla leader of British design three modern destroyers of French design two built in Yugoslavia plus another still under construction one seaplane tender four modern submarines two older French built and two British built and 10 modern motor torpedo boats MTBs of the older vessels there were six ex Austrian Navy medium torpedo boats six mine layers four large armoured river monitors and various auxiliary craft 72 Deployment Edit The Yugoslav Army was organized into three army groups and the coastal defense troops The 3rd Army Group was the strongest with the 3rd 3rd Territorial 5th and 6th Armies defending the borders with Romania Bulgaria and Albania The 2nd Army Group with the 1st and 2nd Armies defended the region between the Iron Gates and the Drava River The 1st Army Group with the 4th and 7th Armies composed mainly of Croatian troops was in Croatia and Slovenia defending the Italian German Austrian and Hungarian frontiers 3 73 The strength of each Army amounted to little more than a corps with the Army Groups consisting of the units deployed as follows 3rd Army Group s 3rd Army consisted of four infantry divisions and one cavalry odred the 3rd Territorial Army with three infantry divisions and one independent motorized artillery regiment the 5th Army with four infantry divisions one cavalry division two odred and one independent motorized artillery regiment and the 6th Army with three infantry divisions the two Royal Guards brigades odred and three infantry odred 2nd Army Group s 1st Army had one infantry and one cavalry division three odred and six frontier defence regiments the 2nd Army had three infantry divisions and one frontier defence regiment 1st Army Group consisted of the 4th Army with three infantry divisions and one odred whilst the 7th Army had two infantry divisions one cavalry division three mountain odred two infantry odred and nine frontier defence regiments The Strategic Supreme Command Reserve in Bosnia comprised four infantry divisions four independent infantry regiments one tank battalion two motorized engineer battalions two motorized heavy artillery regiments 15 independent artillery battalions and two independent anti aircraft artillery battalions Coastal Defence Force on the Adriatic opposite Zadar comprised one infantry division and two odred in addition to fortress brigades and anti aircraft units at Sibenik and Kotor 74 On the eve of invasion clothing and footwear were available for only two thirds or so of the potential front line troops and only partially for other troops some other essential supplies were available for only a third of the front line troops medical and sanitary supplies were available for only a few weeks and supplies of food for men and feed for livestock were available for only about two months In all cases there was little or no possibility of replenishment 75 Beyond the problems of inadequate equipment and incomplete mobilization the Yugoslav Army suffered badly from the Serbo Croat schism in Yugoslav politics Yugoslav resistance to the invasion collapsed overnight The main reason was that none of the subordinate national groups including Slovenes and Croats were prepared to fight in defence of a Serbian Yugoslavia Also so that the Slovenes did not feel abandoned defences were built on Yugoslavia s northern border when the natural line of defence was much further south based on the rivers Sava and Drina The only effective opposition to the invasion was from wholly Serbian units within the borders of Serbia itself citation needed The Germans thrusting north west from Skopje were held up at Kacanik Pass and lost several tanks P39 Buckley C Greece and Crete 1941 HMSO 1977 In its worst expression Yugoslavia s defenses were badly compromised on 10 April 1941 when some of the units in the Croatian manned 4th and 7th Armies mutinied 76 and a newly formed Croatian government hailed the entry of the Germans into Zagreb the same day 77 The Serbian General Staff were united on the question of Yugoslavia as a Greater Serbia ruled in one way or another by Serbia On the eve of the invasion there were 165 generals on the Yugoslav active list Of these all but four were Serbs 78 Operations Edit Map of the Axis attack See this map for unit locations and movements Professor Jozo Tomasevich and others divide the invasion and resultant fighting into two phases 79 The first phase encompasses the Luftwaffe s devastating air assault on Belgrade and airfields of the Royal Yugoslav Air Force of 6 April and an initial thrust of the German XL Panzer Corps from Bulgaria towards Skopje that commenced the same day 80 This was followed by the assault of the German XIV Panzer Corps from Bulgaria towards Nis on 8 April 81 On 10 April four more thrusts struck the Yugoslav Army the XLI Panzer Corps from Romania towards Belgrade the XLVI Panzer Corps from Hungary across the Drava 82 the LI Infantry Corps from Austria towards Zagreb 83 and the XLIX Mountain Corps from Austria towards Celje 84 By the end of that day the Yugoslav Army was disintegrating and was in retreat or surrendering right across the country with the exception of the forces on the Albanian frontier 79 Italy and Hungary joined the ground offensive on 11 April The Italian part in the ground offensive began when their 2nd Army attacked from northeastern Italy towards Ljubljana and down the Dalmatian coast meeting virtually no resistance On the same day the Hungarian 3rd Army crossed the Yugoslav border and advanced toward Novi Sad but like the Italians they met no serious resistance On 12 April German troops captured Belgrade 85 and Ljubljana fell to the Italians 86 On 14 and 15 April King Peter and the government flew out of the country 87 and the Yugoslav Supreme Command was captured by the Germans near Sarajevo 88 The surrender was signed on 17 April and came into effect at noon on 18 April 89 Air operations Edit Following the Belgrade Coup on 27 March 1941 the Yugoslav armed forces were put on alert although the army was not fully mobilised for fear of provoking Hitler The VVKJ command decided to disperse its forces away from their main bases to a system of 50 auxiliary airfields that had previously been prepared However many of these airfields lacked facilities and had inadequate drainage which prevented the continued operation of all but the very lightest aircraft in the adverse weather conditions encountered in April 1941 5 Despite having on paper at any rate a substantially stronger force of relatively modern aircraft than the combined British and Greek air forces to the south the VVKJ could simply not match the overwhelming Luftwaffe and Regia Aeronautica superiority in terms of numbers tactical deployment and combat experience 90 The bomber and maritime force hit targets in Italy Germany Austria Hungary Romania Bulgaria Albania and Greece as well as attacking German Italian and Hungarian troops Meanwhile the fighter squadrons inflicted not insignificant losses on escorted Luftwaffe bomber raids on Belgrade and Serbia as well as upon Regia Aeronautica raids on Dalmatia Bosnia Herzegovina and Montenegro The VVKJ also provided direct air support to the hard pressed Yugoslav Army by strafing attacking troop and mechanized columns in Croatia Bosnia and Serbia sometimes taking off and strafing the troops attacking the very base being evacuated 91 After a combination of air combat losses losses on the ground to enemy air attack on bases and the overrunning of airfields by enemy troops after 11 days the VVKJ almost ceased to exist However continued domestic aircraft production during the invasion supplied the VVKJ with an additional eight Hurricane Is six Dornier Do 17Ks four Blenheim Is two Ikarus IK 2s one Rogozarski IK 3 and one Messerschmitt Bf 109 from the local aeronautical industry s aircraft factories and workshops 92 At the beginning of the April war the VVKJ was armed with some 60 German designed Do 17Ks purchased by Yugoslavia in the autumn of 1938 together with a manufacturing licence The sole operator was 3 vazduhoplovni puk 3rd bomber regiment composed of two bomber groups the 63rd Bomber Group stationed at Petrovec airfield near Skopje and the 64th Bomber Group stationed at Milesevo airfield near Pristina Other auxiliary airfields had also been prepared to aid in dispersal 93 During the course of hostilities the State Aircraft Factory in Kraljevo managed to produce six more aircraft of this type Of the final three two were delivered to the VVKJ on 10 April and one was delivered on 12 April 1941 92 On 6 April Luftwaffe dive bombers and ground attack fighters destroyed 26 of the Yugoslav Dorniers in the initial assault on their airfields but the remaining aircraft were able to effectively hit back with numerous attacks on German mechanized columns and upon Bulgarian airfields 94 By the end of the campaign total Yugoslav losses stood at four destroyed in aerial combat and 45 destroyed on the ground 95 On 14 and 15 April the seven remaining Do 17K flew to Niksic airfield in Montenegro and took part in the evacuation of King Petar II and members of the Yugoslav government to Greece During this operation Yugoslav gold reserves were also airlifted to Greece by the seven Do 17s 95 as well as by SM 79Ks and Lockheed Electra s but after completing their mission five Do 17Ks were destroyed on the ground when Italian aircraft attacked the Greek held Paramitia airfield Only two Do 17Ks escaped destruction in Greece and later joined the British Royal Air Force RAF in the Kingdom of Egypt 71 At 16 00 on 15 April the C in C of Luftflotte 4 Generaloberst Alexander Lohr received orders from Hermann Goring to wind down the air offensive and transfer the bulk of the dive bomber force to support the campaign in Greece 96 A total of 18 bomber transport and maritime patrol aircraft two Dornier Do 17Ks four Savoia Marchetti SM 79Ks three Lockheed Electra s eight Dornier Do 22Ks and one Rogozarski SIM XIV H succeeded in escaping to the Allied base in Egypt at the end of the campaign 71 Bombing of Belgrade Edit Main article Operation Retribution 1941 Luftflotte 4 of the Luftwaffe with a strength of seven Combat Formations Kampfgruppen had been committed to the campaign in the Balkans 97 At 07 00 on 6 April the Luftwaffe opened the assault on Yugoslavia by conducting a saturation type bombing raid on the capital Operation Retribution Unternehmen Strafgericht 98 Flying in relays from airfields in Austria and Romania 300 aircraft of which a quarter were Junkers Ju 87 Stukas protected by a heavy fighter escort began the attack 99 The dive bombers were to silence the Yugoslav anti aircraft defences while the medium bombers consisting mainly Dornier Do 17s and Junkers Ju 88 attacked the city The initial raid was carried out at 15 minute intervals in three distinct waves each lasting for approximately 20 minutes Thus the city was subjected to a rain of bombs for almost one and a half hours The German bombers directed their main effort against the center of the city where the principal government buildings were located The medium bomber Kampfgruppen continued their attack on the city for several days while the Stuka dive bomber wings Stukageschwader were soon diverted to Yugoslav airfields 99 When the attack was over some 4 000 inhabitants lay dead under the debris This blow virtually destroyed all means of communication between the Yugoslav high command and the forces in the field although most of the elements of the general staff managed to escape to one of the suburbs 100 Having thus delivered the knockout blow to the Yugoslavian nerve center the Luftwaffe was able to devote its maximum effort to military targets such as Yugoslav airfields routes of communication and troop concentrations and to the close support of German ground operations 101 The VVKJ put up its Belgrade defence interceptors from the six squadrons of the 32nd and 51st Fighter Groups to attack each wave of bombers although as the day wore on the four squadrons from the 31st and 52nd Fighter Groups based in central Serbia also took part The Messerschmitt 109E Hurricane Is and Rogozarski IK 3 fighters scored at least twenty kills amongst the attacking bombers and their escorting fighters on 6 April and a further dozen shot down on 7 April The desperate defence by the VVKJ over Belgrade cost it some 20 fighters shot down and 15 damaged 102 Ground operations Edit Captured Yugoslavian officers before their deportation to Germany Destroyed Yugoslavian Renault NC tank Three pronged drive on Belgrade Edit German Panzer IV of the 11th Panzer Division advancing into Yugoslavia from Bulgaria as part of the Twelfth Army The British Greek and Yugoslav high commands intended to use Nis as the lynch pin in their attempts to wear down German forces in the Balkans and it is for this reason that the locality was important When the Germans broke through in this sector a sector which was essential if stability was to be maintained on the front The Yugoslav Supreme Command committed numerous forces from its strategic reserves including the 2nd Cavalry Division but these were harassed by the Luftwaffe during transit to the front and did not get through in any real quantities 103 Having reached Nis from its initial attacks from Bulgaria and broken the Yugoslav defences the German 14th Motorised Corps headed north in the direction of Belgrade The German 46th Panzer Corps had advanced across the Slavonian plain from Austria to attack Belgrade from the west whilst the 41st Panzer Corps threatened the city from the north after launching its offensive drive from Romania and Hungary By 11 April Yugoslavia was criss crossed by German armoured columns and the only resistance that remained was a large nucleus of the Yugoslav Army around the capital On 11 April a German Officer Fritz Klingenberg with few men moved into Belgrade to reconnoitre the city However after some scattered combat with Yugoslav troops they entered the centre of the city whereupon they bluffed about their size and incoming threats of bombardment The city represented by the Mayor surrendered to them at 18 45 hours on 12 April 104 105 106 Later more forces moved to consolidate the position 104 106 Italian offensive Edit In the opening days of the invasion Italian forces on the Slovene border carried out minor actions in the Sava valley and in the Kastav area capturing some Yugoslav positions on Mount Pec on 7 April Kranjska Gora Zavratec and Godz on 8 April Kastav the source of the Rjecina river Kalce and Logatec on 9 April and repelling on 8 April a Yugoslav attack in the Cerkno Hills 107 On 11 April the 2nd Army launched its offensive capturing Ljubljana Susak and Kraljevica on the same day 108 On 12 April the 133rd Armoured Division Littorio and the 52nd Infantry Division Torino took Senj on 13 April they occupied Otocac and Gradac while Italian naval forces occupied several Dalmatian islands 108 A scheduled Yugoslav attack against the Italian enclave of Zara did not materialize and the city garrison s troops started to advance until they met the Torino Division near Knin which was taken on the same day 108 Split and Sibenik were taken on 15 and 16 April respectively and on 17 April the Motorized Corps took Dubrovnik after covering 750 kilometers in six days 109 After repelling the Yugoslav offensive in Albania the 18th Infantry Division Messina took Cetinje Dubrovnik and Kotor on 17 April meeting with the Italian units of the Motorized Corps 109 Hungarian offensive Edit Main article Hungarian occupation of Yugoslav territories On 12 April the Hungarian Third Army crossed the border with one cavalry two motorized and six infantry brigades The Third Army faced the Yugoslavian First Army By the time the Hungarians crossed the border the Germans had been attacking Yugoslavia for over a week As a result the Yugoslavian forces confronting them put up little resistance except for the units in the frontier fortifications who had held up the Hungarian advance for some time 110 and inflicted some 350 casualties 111 Units of the Hungarian Third Army advanced into southern Baranja located between the rivers Danube and Drava and occupied the Backa region in Vojvodina with Hungarian relative majority The Hungarian forces occupied only those territories which were part of Hungary before the Treaty of Trianon Yugoslav Albanian offensive Edit Yugoslav infantry surrendering In accordance with the Yugoslav Army s war plan R 41 a strategy was formulated that in the face of a massive Axis attack a retreat on all fronts except in the south be performed Here the 3rd Yugoslav Army in cooperation with the Greek Army was to launch an offensive against the Italian forces in Albania This was in order to secure space to enable the withdrawal of the main Yugoslav Army to the south This would be via Albanian territory in order to reach Greece and the Allied forces to be based there The strategy was based on the premise that the Yugoslav Army would together with the Greek and British Armies form a new version of the Salonika front of World War I 112 On 8 April the hard pressed VVKJ sent a squadron of fourteen Breguet 19 light bombers to the city of Florina in northern Greece to provide assistance to both the Yugoslav and Greek Armies on the Macedonian front 113 The squadron performed numerous bombing and strafing missions during the course of the campaign 114 The 3rd Yugoslav Army of the 3rd Army Group was tasked with conducting offensive operations against the Italian army in northern Albania For this purpose the 3rd Army had concentrated four infantry divisions and one combined regiment Odred in the Montenegro and Kosovo regions 15th Infantry Division Zetska 13th Infantry Division Hercegovacka 31st Infantry Division Kosovska 25th Infantry Division Vardarska Komski cavalry Odred The strategic reserve of the 3rd Army Group the 22nd Infantry Division Ibarska was situated around Urosevac in the Kosovo region In addition offensive operations against the Italian enclave of Zara Zadar on the Dalmatian coast were to be undertaken by the 12th Infantry Division Jadranska 113 The first elements of the 3rd Army launched their offensive operations in North Albania on 7 April 1941 with the Komski Odred covering the Gusinje Prokletije mountains area advancing towards the village of Raja Puka The Kosovska Division crossed the border in the Prizren area of Kosovo and was advancing through the Drin River valley The Vardarska Division gained some local success at Debar while the rest of the army s units were still assembling 115 The next day the 8th found the Zetska Division steadily advancing along the Podgorica Shkoder road The Komski cavalry Odred successfully crossed the dangerous Prokletije mountains and reached the village of Koljegcava in the Valjbone River Valley South of them the Kosovska Division broke through the Italian defences in the Drin River Valley but due to the fall of Skopje to the attacks by the German Army the Vardarska Division was forced to stop its operations in Albania 115 There was little further progress for the Yugoslavs on 9 April 1941 because although the Zetska Division continued advancing towards Shkoder and the Komski Odred reached the Drin River the Kosovska Division had to halt all combat activities on the Albanian Front due to the appearance of German troops in Prizren citation needed Italian Bersaglieri during the invasion On 10 April 1941 the Zetska Division was still steadily fighting its way towards Shkoder and had advanced 50 km in some places These advances had been supported by aircraft of the VVKJ s 66th and 81st Bomber Groups who attacked airfields and Italian troop concentrations around Shkoder as well as the port of Durres 116 The Komski Odred and the right column of the Kosovska Division advanced along the right bank of the Drin River towards Shkoder in order to link with Zetska Division but the central and left column of the Kosovska Division were forced to take a defensive perimeter to hold off the increasing pressure by German troops 110 The Servizio Informazioni Militare contributed to the eventual failure of the Yugoslav offensive in Albania Italian code breakers had broken Yugoslav codes and penetrated Yugoslav radio traffic transmitting false orders with the correct code key and thus causing confusion and disruption in the movements of the Yugoslav troops 109 Between 11 13 April 1941 with German and Italian troops advancing on its rear areas the Zetska Division was forced to retreat back to the Pronisat River by the Italian 131st Armored Division Centauro where it remained until the end of the campaign on 16 April The Centauro then advanced to the Yugoslav fleet base of Kotor in Montenegro also occupying Cetinje and Podgorica 103 Local uprisings Edit At the local level infighting by Yugoslav citizens started even prior to the arrival of Axis troops Croats in the 108th Infantry Regiment of the 40th Infantry Division Slavonska 103 rebelled on the evening of 7 8 April near Grubisno Polje taking command of the regiment from its Serb officers 117 They were subsequently joined by the 40th Auxiliary Regiment and elements of the 42nd Infantry Regiment also from the Slavonska Division 117 With the deteriorating situation in the area the Yugoslav 4th Army s headquarters was moved from Bjelovar to Popovaca 118 The rebellious regiments then entered Bjelovar with the city s mayor Julije Makanec proclaiming an Independent State of Croatia on 8 April Vladko Macek and ban Ivan Subasic sent messages to the city urging the regiments to maintain their positions but this was disobeyed by the rebel military and civil officials who waited for the arrival of the German army 119 120 On 10 April there were clashes between Ustasa supporters and Yugoslav troops in Mostar the former taking control of the city 121 Several VVKJ aircraft were damaged and disabled on Jasenica airfield near Mostar including several Dornier Do 17Ks and Savoia Marchetti SM 79 K bombers 122 On 11 April domestic Ustasa agents took power in Capljina They intercepted Yugoslav troops headed by rail from Mostar to Trebinje and disarmed them 123 A backup Yugoslav force from Bileca was sent in which retook the town on 14 April before the arrival of the Germans in the coming days 123 Naval operations Edit Yugoslav Navy ships captured by the Italian Regia Marina in April 1941 They are from left a Malinska class mine layer the light cruiser Dalmacija and the submarine depot ship Hvar When Germany and Italy attacked Yugoslavia on 6 April 1941 The Yugoslav Royal Navy had available three destroyers two submarines and 10 MTBs as the most effective units of the fleet One other destroyer Ljubljana was in dry dock at the time of the invasion and she and her anti aircraft guns were used in defence of the fleet base at Kotor The remainder of the fleet was useful only for coastal defence and local escort and patrol work 124 Kotor was close to the Albanian border and the Italo Greek front there but Zara Zadar an Italian enclave was to the north west of the coast and to prevent a bridgehead being established the destroyer Beograd four of the old torpedo boats and 6 MTBs were despatched to Sibenik 80 km to the south of Zara in preparation for an attack The attack was to be co ordinated with the 12th Jadranska Infantry Division and two Odred combined regiments of the Yugoslav Army attacking from the Benkovac area supported by air attacks by the 81st Bomber Group of the VVKJ The Yugoslav forces launched their attack on 9 April but by 13 April the Italian forces had counter attacked and were in Benkovac by 14 April 125 The naval prong to this attack faltered when the destroyer Beograd was damaged by near misses from Italian aircraft off Sibenik when her starboard engine was put out of action after which she limped to Kotor escorted by the remainder of the force for repair 126 Italian air raids on Kotor badly damaged the minelayer Kobac which was beached to prevent sinking 127 The maritime patrol float planes of the Royal Yugoslav Air Force flew reconnaissance and attack missions during the campaign as well as providing air cover for mine laying operations off Zara Their operations included attacks on the Albanian port of Durres as well as strikes against Italian re supply convoys to Albania On 9 April one Dornier Do 22K floatplane notably took on an Italian convoy of 12 steamers with an escort of eight destroyers crossing the Adriatic during the day attacking single handed in the face of intense AA fire 128 No Italian ships however were sunk by Yugoslav forces 127 an Italian tanker was claimed to have been damaged by a near miss off the Italian coast near Bari The Royal Yugoslav Navy also had at its disposal four large heavily armed and armoured river monitors in its riverine flotilla They were used to patrol the Danube Drava and Sava rivers in the northern parts of Yugoslavia and its border with Hungary These monitors Drava Sava Morava and Vardar had been inherited from the Austrian Navy at the end of World War I All were of around 400 500t with a main armament of two 120 mm guns two or three 66 mm guns 120 mm mortars 40 mm AA guns and machine guns At the start of the campaign they had carried out offensive operations by shelling the airfield at Mohacs in Hungary on 6 April and again two days later but had to begin withdrawing towards Novi Sad by 11 April after coming under repeated attack by German dive bombers 129 Early in the morning of 12 April a squadron of German Ju 87 dive bombers attacked the Yugoslav monitors on the Danube Drava commanded by Aleksandar Beric 130 was hit by several of them but they were unable to penetrate Drava s 300 mm thick deck armour until by chance one put a bomb straight down the funnel killing 54 of the 67 man crew During the attack anti aircraft gunners on the monitors claimed three dive bombers shot down The remaining three monitors were scuttled by their crews later on 12 April as German and Hungarian forces had occupied the bases and the river systems upon which they operated 131 Romanian involvement Edit While Romania did not take part in the actual invasion of Yugoslavia it did provide artillery support for the German forces invading from its territory Operating on orders from the 3rd Section of the Romanian General Staff Romanian artillery opened fire against Yugoslav barges on the Danube on 6 April Romanian and German units from the Romanian bank of the Danube repeatedly exchanged fire with Yugoslav forces between 6 and 11 April The main Romanian force was at Liubcova consisting in a battery of 120 mm L10 naval howitzers in a fortified position Nearby there was also a section 2 pieces of 120 mm L35 naval howitzers as well as a section of 47 mm light naval guns 132 The Yugoslavs retaliated with their Air Force Two Bristol Blenheims raided Arad badly damaging one of the German fighters stationed there before both were shot down 133 For its contribution Romania was rewarded with six ex Yugoslav aircraft captured by the Germans These machines delivered free of charge were however inoperative The Romanians cannibalized three of them in order to make the other three operational The three operational aircraft were all Hawker Hurricanes 134 Losses Edit source source source source source source German propaganda footage of the invasion of Yugoslavia and Greece The losses sustained by the German attack forces were unexpectedly light During the twelve days of combat the total casualty figures came to 558 men 151 were listed as killed 392 as wounded and 15 as missing in action During the XLI Panzer Corps drive on Belgrade for example the only officer killed in action fell victim to a civilian sniper s bullet The Luftwaffe lost approximately 60 aircraft shot down over Yugoslavia costing the lives of at least 70 aircrew The Italian Army took heavier casualties in northern Albania from the Yugoslav offensive there Italian casualties on all fronts during the invasion amounted to some 800 killed and 2 500 wounded 135 67 whilst the Italian Air Force lost approximately 10 aircraft shot down with a further 22 damaged The Hungarian Army suffered some 350 casualties 120 killed 223 wounded and 13 missing in action from the shelling by Yugoslav riverine forces of its frontier installations and in its attacks upon the Yugoslav frontier forces in Vojvodina 111 with one quarter of a Hungarian parachute battalion becoming casualties when a transport aircraft filled with 30 troops went down during an abortive drop on 12 April 136 The Hungarians also lost five Fiat fighters and one Weiss WM 21 Solyom reconnaissance aircraft during the fighting citation needed The Germans took between 254 000 and 345 000 Yugoslav prisoners excluding a considerable number of ethnic Germans and Hungarians who had been conscripted into the Yugoslav Army and who were quickly released after screening and the Italians took 30 000 more 137 138 Approximately 1 000 army and several hundred VVKJ personnel including one mobile workshop unit of six vehicles escaped via Greece to Egypt 139 In their brief fight the VVKJ suffered the loss of 49 aircraft to Axis fighters and anti aircraft fire with many more damaged beyond repair These losses cost the lives of 27 fighter pilots and 76 bomber aircrew 85 more aircraft were destroyed on the ground by air attack while many others were destroyed or disabled by their own crews or crashed during operations or in evacuation flights Despite these losses more than 70 Yugoslav aircraft escaped to Allied territory mostly to Greece but eight Dornier and Savoia Marchetti bombers set course for the USSR with four making it safely Several dozen of the escapee aircraft were destroyed in a devastating strafing attack by the Italian air force on Paramitia airfield in Greece with nine bombers and transports making it to Egypt More than 300 operational auxiliary and training aircraft were captured and passed on to the newly created Air Force of the Independent State of Croatia 8 Finland Romania and Bulgaria According to the provisions of the surrender document the Italians took possession of most of the Yugoslav Navy one of its four destroyers the Ljubljana had spent the campaign in dry dock 126 However in defiance of the said provisions one destroyer the Zagreb was blown up at Kotor by two of its junior officers and one of the British built submarines and two MTBs escaped to Alexandria in Egypt to continue to serve with the Allied cause 140 A fourth destroyer was captured while under construction in the Kotor shipyard the Split but the Regia Marina was not able to finish her before the armistice in 1943 Eventually she was recovered after the war by the Yugoslavs and completed under the original name 141 Ten Yugoslav Navy maritime patrol float planes escaped to Greece with nine making it to Egypt where they formed a squadron under RAF command 142 Armistice and surrender Edit Occupation and partition of Yugoslavia 1941 The Axis victory was swift As early as 14 April the Yugoslav high command had decided to seek an armistice and authorised the army and army group commanders to negotiate local ceasefires That day the commanders of the 2nd and 5th Armies asked the Germans for terms but were rejected Only unconditional surrender could form the basis for negotiations they were told That evening the high command sent an emissary to the headquarters of the 1st Panzer Group to ask for armistice and in response General von Kleist sent the commander of the 2nd Army von Weichs to Belgrade to negotiate terms He arrived on the afternoon of 15 April and drew up an armistice based on unconditional surrender 143 On 16 April a Yugoslav delegate arrived in Belgrade but as he did not have authority to sign the document he was given a draft of the agreement and an aircraft was placed at his disposal to bring in authorised representatives of the government Finally on 17 April after only eleven days of fighting the pre coup Foreign Minister Aleksandar Cincar Markovic and General Radivoje Jankovic signed the armistice and unconditionally surrendered all Yugoslav troops 144 It came into effect the following day 18 April at noon 143 At the signing the Hungarians and Bulgarians were represented by liaison officers but they did not sign the document because their countries were not officially at war with Yugoslavia 143 The Italian representative Colonel Luigi Buonofati signed the document after noting that the same terms are valid for the Italian army 145 Some scholars have proposed a number of theories for the Royal Yugoslav Army s sudden collapse including poor training and equipment generals eager to secure a quick cessation of hostilities and a sizeable Croatian Slovenian and German fifth column Others state that the fifth column had little effect on the ultimate outcome of the invasion 146 147 148 149 According to Tomasevich the insistence of the Yugoslav Army on defending all the borders assured its failure from the start After the surrender Yugoslavia was subsequently divided amongst Germany Hungary Italy and Bulgaria Germany took control of most of Serbia While Ante Pavelic leader of the fascist Ustase declared an Independent State of Croatia before the invasion was even over Croatia was actually under the joint control of Germany and Italy 150 Historian Aleksa Djilas states that Croatian desertion is overplayed as many Croatian units actively fought the Germans and most Croatian officers remained loyal until 10 April when the NDH was proclaimed which brought an end to Yugoslavia and in turn their loyalty to the government He adds that the army simply reflected the weak Yugoslav political system and the main reasons for the defeat were the lack of leadership the army s subpar equipment and outdated tactical and strategical techniques 151 Many Serbian nationalists blamed the loss on fifth columnist Croats who stood to gain from Italian and German rule ignoring the primary failure of the Yugoslav Army and its almost entirely Serbian leadership 152 153 Many Croatian nationalists blamed Belgrade politicians and the inadequacy of the Serbian dominated army 152 Aftermath EditMain article World War II in Yugoslavia This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message When the Yugoslav Army officially surrendered to the Axis forces on 18 April 1941 Royal Yugoslav Army Colonel Draza Mihailovic immediately began to organize a resistance to the occupying force in the mountains of Serbia and Eastern Bosnia Mihailovic was made General of this new guerrilla version of the army and Minister for War by King Peter II and his Yugoslavian government in exile in Britain Though Mihailovic tried to insist that the guerrilla forces under his command and numbering up to 100 000 active soldiers continue to be referred to as the Royal Yugoslav Army American and British intelligence and media reportage consistently referred to them as Chetniks This led to confusion since both quisling Yugoslav guerrilla forces under General Milan Nedic and Royalist guerrilla forces not under Mihailovic s command were also referred to as Chetniks Once the Soviets fully entered the war on the side of the Allies on 22 June of 1941 the Yugoslav Partisans under Josip Tito also began to fight the Axis powers and from then on there was continuous resistance to the occupying armies in Yugoslavia until the end of the war While in the beginning both Yugoslav Partisans and the Chetniks engaged in resistance the Partisans became the main resistance force after following Churchill s lead at the Tehran Conference in 28 November 1 December 1943 British and American governments withdrew all allegiance and support from Mihailovic s Royal Yugoslav Army Chetniks and gave all further assistance to the Communist Partisans who waged a continuous civil war against Mihailovic s forces In the end devoid of all outside assistance Mihailovic s Royal Yugoslav Army was overcome in Serbia by a combination of well armed supported and supplied Partisans and the invading Soviets 154 Notes Edit Slovene Aprilska vojna Serbian Aprilski rat Aprilski rat 9 Croatian Travanjski rat German Unternehmen 25 10 or Projekt 25 11 See also EditYugoslavia and the Allies 1st Army Group Kingdom of Yugoslavia List of Yugoslav military equipment of World War II List of German military equipment of World War II List of Italian Army equipment in World War II List of Hungarian military equipment of World War IIReferences EditFootnotes Edit Zajac 1993 p 50 a b Tomasevich 1975 p 64 a b c d Tomasevich 1975 p 59 a b c Zajac 1993 p 47 a b c Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 174 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 173 THE YUGOSLAV CAMPAIGN PART TWO history army mil a b Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 310 Redzic 2005 p 9 Vogel 2006 p 526 n 158 Chant 1986 p 196 Tomasevich 1975 p 55 Tomasevich 1969 p 64 Tomasevich 1975 p 34 Tomasevich 1975 p 39 Tomasevich 1975 p 41 Tomasevich 1975 p 43 47 Trevor Roper 1964 p 108 Dedijer 1956 p 3 International Military Tribunal The Trial of German Major War Criminals Judgement The Aggression Against Yugoslavia And Greece Archived 24 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine p 32 Shirer 2002 p 824 Klajn 2007 p 104 Klajn 2007 p 105 a b Zivotic 2011 p 41 Tomasevich 1975 p 51 Trevor Roper 1964 p 109 a b Klajn 2007 p 106 Short 2010 pp 46 47 Hoffmann 2000 p 146 Cervi 1972 p 279 Giurescu 2000 p 36 a b c d Giurescu 2000 p 79 a b c Macartney 1956 pp 440 41 Giurescu 2000 p 71 Schreiber 2006 pp 408 09 Vogel 2006 pp 452 53 a b c US Army 1986 pp 10 11 a b US Army 1986 p 39 Macartney 1956 p 470 a b Miller 1975 pp 36 37 Miller 1975 pp 12 16 a b Miller 1975 pp 44 45 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 171 Miller 1975 pp 46 US Army 1986 p 32 a b Ban 2004 pp 100 01 a b c d Macartney 1956 pp 462 64 Macartney 1956 p 463 n 2 citing a group of documents N G 2546 detailing acts of disruption Terzic 1982b p 39 41 a b Macartney 1956 p 481 a b Macartney 1956 pp 481 82 Macartney 1956 p 487 Macartney 1957 p 4 Macartney 1956 p 490 Niehorster 2013a Krzak 2006 p 573 Loi 1978 p 32 Jowett 2000 p 9 Loi 1978 pp 51 54 amp 186 a b Niehorster 2013b Jowett 2000 p 10 Loi 1978 p 76 Niehorster 2013c Loi 1978 p 67 Niehorster 2013d Tomasevich 1975 p 58 a b c Fatutta amp Covelli 1975 p 47 Ciglic amp Savic 2007 p 22 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 pp 187 192 Ciglic amp Savic 2007 p 8 a b c Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 260 Conways 1980 pp 356 359 Geschichte pp 317 318 Fatutta amp Covelli 1975 p 52 Tomasevich 1975 p 61 Tomasevich 1975 p 78 79 Times Atlas 1989 p 54 Benson 2001 p 69 a b Tomasevich 1975 p 70 Tomasevich 1975 pp 67 68 US Army 1986 p 50 US Army 1986 p 52 US Army 1986 p 57 US Army 1986 p 58 Tomasevich 1975 p 68 Tomasevich 1975 p 69 Tomasevich 1975 pp 71 72 Tomasevich 1975 pp 68 69 Tomasevich 1975 p 73 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 178 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 pp 178 229 a b Savic amp Ciglic 2002 p 8 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 179 Ciglic amp Savic 2007 p 32 38 a b Goss 2005 p 10 Weal 1998 p 29 Goss 2005 p 89 Vogel 2006 p 497 a b Weal 1998 p 25 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 208 Weal 1998 p 27 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 200 a b c Fatutta amp Covelli 1975 p 52 a b Edwards 2015 pp 173 174 Plowman 2013 p 24 a b Heaton 2006 Enrico Cernuschi Le operazioni aeronavali contro la Jugoslavia 6 8 aprile 1941 in Storia Militare no 242 p 30 a b c Enrico Cernuschi Le operazioni aeronavali contro la Jugoslavia 6 8 aprile 1941 in Storia Militare no 242 p 31 a b c Enrico Cernuschi Le operazioni aeronavali contro la Jugoslavia 6 8 aprile 1941 in Storia Militare no 242 p 33 a b Fatutta amp Covelli 1975 p 50 a b Niehorster 1998 p 66 Tomasevich 1975 p 57 a b Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 215 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 228 a b Fatutta amp Covelli 1975 p 49 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 213 a b Dizdar 2007 p 607 Dizdar 2007 p 592 Tomasevich 2001 p 51 Dizdar 2007 p 600 Ciglic amp Savic 2007 p 39 Ciglic amp Savic 2007 p 46 a b Mirosevic 2011 p 254 Whitely 2001 p 311 Fatutta amp Covelli 1975 p 51 a b Whitely 2001 p 312 a b Enrico Cernuschi Le operazioni navali contro la Jugoslavia 6 18 aprile 1941 on Storia Militare n 242 pp 20 to 39 Shores et al 1987 p 218 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 223 Krleza Brajkovic amp Mardesic 1972 p 240 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 224 Maior 2002 pp 65 66 Weal 2012 p 39 Statiev 2002 p 1111 Enrico Cernuschi Le operazioni aeronavali contro la Jugoslavia 6 8 aprile 1941 in Storia Militare no 242 p 32 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 222 US Army 1986 p 64 Geschichte p 325 Ciglic amp Savic 2007 p 32 Chesneau 1980 p 356 Whitely 2001 p 313 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1987 p 261 a b c US Army 1986 pp 63 64 Cohen 1996 pp 29 30 Dedijer 1956 p 9 Tomasevich 1975 pp 63 68 Terzic 1982 pp 383 388 sfn error no target CITEREFTerzic1982 help Cohen 1996 p 28 Tomasevich 2001 pp 204 207 Tomasevich 1975 p 52 53 Djilas Aleksa 1991 The Contested Country Yugoslav Unity and Communist Revolution 1919 1953 Harvard University Press p 138 ISBN 978 0 67416 698 1 a b Donia amp Fine 1994 p 156 Cohen 1996 p 29 Patriot or Traitor The Case of General Mihailovich Proceedings and Report of the Commission of Inquiry of the Committee for a Fair Trial for Draja Mihailovich 1978 Stanford California Hoover Institution Press Books Edit Ban Andras D 2004 Hungarian British Diplomacy 1938 1941 The Attempt to Maintain Relations Translated by Tim Wilkinson London Frank Cass ISBN 0714656607 Cervi Mario 1972 The Hollow Legions Mussolini s Blunder in Greece 1940 1941 Storia della guerra di Grecia ottobre 1940 aprile 1941 trans Eric Mosbacher London Chatto and Windus ISBN 0 70111 351 0 Chant Christopher 1986 The Encyclopedia of Codenames of World War II Routledge Chesneau Roger ed 1980 Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1922 1946 London England Conway Maritime Press ISBN 978 0 85177 146 5 Ciglic Boris Savic Dragan 2007 Dornier Do 17 The Yugoslav Story Operational Record 1937 1947 Belgrade Jeroplan ISBN 978 86 909727 0 8 Cohen Philip J 1996 Serbia s Secret War Propaganda and the Deceit of History Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 9780890967607 Giurescu Dinu C 2000 Romania in the Second World War 1939 1945 Boulder CO East European Monographs Hoffmann Peter 2000 1979 Hitler s Personal Security Protecting the Fuhrer 1921 1945 2nd ed Da Capo Press Goss Chris 2005 Dornier 17 In Focus Surrey UK Red Kite Air Research ISBN 0 9546201 4 3 Gretschko A A ed 1977 Geschichte des Zweiten Weltkrieges Vol 3 East Berlin Militarverlag der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik Klajn Lajco 2007 The Past in Present Times The Yugoslav Saga University Press of America ISBN 978 0 7618 3647 6 Loi Salvatore 1978 Le operazioni delle unita italiane in Jugoslavia 1941 1943 narrazione documenti The operations of Italian units in Yugoslavia 1941 1943 narrative documents in Italian Rome Italy Ministero della difesa Ministry of Defence OCLC 9194926 Macartney C A 1956 October Fifteenth A History of Modern Hungary 1929 1945 vol 1 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press Macartney C A 1957 October Fifteenth A History of Modern Hungary 1929 1945 vol 2 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press Miller Marshall Lee 1975 Bulgaria during the Second World War Stanford CA Stanford University Press Niehorster Leo W G 1998 The Royal Hungarian Army 1920 1945 Bayside New York Europa Books ISBN 978 1 891227 19 6 Novak Emilian E 1969 Limitations of Hungarian National Power in World War Two MA thesis University of North Texas 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 Redzic Enver 2005 Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Second World War Abingdon Frank Cass ISBN 0 7146 5625 9 Savic Dragan Ciglic Boris 2002 Croatian Aces of World War 2 London Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 84176 435 3 Schreiber Gerhard 2006 Germany Italy and South east Europe From Political and Economic Hegemony to Military Aggression Germany and the Second World War Volume III The Mediterranean South East Europe and North Africa 1939 1941 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 303 448 Shirer William L 2002 The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich A History of Nazi Germany London Random House ISBN 978 0 09 942176 4 Shores Christopher F Cull Brian Malizia Nicola 1987 Air War for Yugoslavia Greece and Crete 1940 41 London Grub Street ISBN 978 0 948817 07 6 Short Neil 2010 The Fuhrer s Headquarters Hitler s Command Bunkers 1939 45 Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84603 582 1 Terzic Velimir 1982a Slom Kraljevine Jugoslavije 1941 uzroci i posledice poraza The Collapse of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1941 Causes and Consequences of Defeat in Serbo Croatian Vol 1 Belgrade Yugoslavia Narodna knjiga OCLC 10276738 Terzic Velimir 1982b Slom Kraljevine Jugoslavije 1941 uzroci i posledice poraza The Collapse of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1941 Causes and Consequences of Defeat in Serbo Croatian Vol 2 Belgrade Yugoslavia Narodna knjiga OCLC 10276738 Keegan John ed 1989 The Times Atlas of the Second World War New York Harpercollins ISBN 978 0060161781 Thomas Nigel Mikulan Krunoslav 1995 Axis Forces in Yugoslavia 1941 45 New York Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 85532 473 3 Thomas Nigel Szabo Laszlo 2008 The Royal Hungarian Army in World War II Oxford United Kingdom Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84603 324 7 Tomasevich Jozo 1969 Yugoslavia during the Second World War in Vucinich Wayne S ed Contemporary Yugoslavia Twenty Years of Socialist Experiment Berkeley University of California Press pp 59 118 ISBN 978 05 200153 6 4 Tomasevich Jozo 1975 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 The Chetniks Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0857 9 Tomasevich Jozo 2001 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Occupation and Collaboration Vol 2 San Francisco Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 3615 4 Trevor Roper Hugh 1964 Hitler s War Directives 1939 1945 Viborg Norhaven Paperback ISBN 1 84341 014 1 US Army 1986 1953 The German Campaigns in the Balkans Spring 1941 A Model of Crisis Planning Department of the Army Pamphlet No 20 260 Washington D C United States Army Center of Military History OCLC 16940402 CMH Pub 104 4 Archived from the original on 19 June 2009 Retrieved 1 November 2010 Vogel Detlef 2006 German Intervention in the Balkans Germany and the Second World War Volume III The Mediterranean South East Europe and North Africa 1939 1941 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 449 556 Weal John A 1998 Junkers Ju 87 Stukageschwader of North Africa and the Mediterranean London Osprey ISBN 978 1 85532 722 1 Whitely M J 2001 Destroyers of World War Two An International Encyclopedia US Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 0 87021 326 7 Benson Leslie 2001 Yugoslavia A Concise History United Kingdom Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 1403913838 Edwards Robert J 2015 Tip of the Spear German Armored Reconnaissance in Action in World War II Stackpole Books ISBN 9780811763301 Plowman Jeffrey 2013 War in the Balkans The Battle for Greece and Crete 1940 1941 Pen and Sword ISBN 9781781592489 Jowett Philip 2000 Italian Army 1940 1945 Vol 1 Osprey ISBN 9781855328648 Donia Robert J Fine John V A 1994 Bosnia and Hercegovina A Tradition Betrayed C Hurst amp Co Publishers ISBN 9781850652113 Krleza Miroslav Brajkovic Vladislav Mardesic Petar 1972 Pomorska enciklopedija in Serbo Croatian Vol 2 Jugoslavenski leksikografski zavod Maior George Cristian 2002 The Danube European security and cooperation at the beginning of the 21st century Enciclopedica Pub House ISBN 9789734503971 Weal John 2012 The Danube European security and cooperation at the beginning of the 21st century Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1841762869 Articles Edit Barefield Michael R May 1993 Overwhelming Force Indecisive Victory The German Invasion of Yugoslavia 1941 Fort Leavenworth Kansas School of Advanced Military Studies United States Army Command and General Staff College Archived from the original on 8 April 2013 Dizdar Zdravko 2007 Bjelovarski ustanak od 7 do 10 travnja 1941 Casopis Za Suvremenu Povijest in Croatian Vol 3 Hrvatski institut za povijest pp 581 609 Dedijer Vladimir 1956 Sur l armistice germano yougoslave 7 avril 1941 Peut on dire qu il y eut reellement un armistice Revue d histoire de la Deuxieme Guerre mondiale 6 23 1 10 Fatutta F Covelli L 1975 1941 Attack on Yugoslavia The International Magazine of Armies and Weapons Vol 4 no 15 17 Lugano Switzerland Hadzi Jovancic Perica Losing the Periphery The British Foreign Office and Policy Towards Yugoslavia 1935 1938 Diplomacy amp Statecraft 31 1 2020 65 90 Jovanovich Leo M 1994 The War in the Balkans in 1941 East European Quarterly 28 1 105 29 Krzak Andrzej 2006 Operation Marita The Attack Against Yugoslavia in 1941 The Journal of Slavic Military Studies 19 3 543 600 doi 10 1080 13518040600868123 S2CID 219625930 Lennox Dyer T May 1997 Operational Analysis German operations against Yugoslavia 1941 Newport Rhode Island Joint Military Operations Department Naval War College Archived from the original on 8 April 2013 Mirosevic Franko 2011 Dubrovnik i dubrovacki kotar od Banovine Hrvatske do talijanske reokupacije od rujna 1939 do rujna 1941 Radovi Zavoda Za Povijesne Znanosti HAZU U Zadru in Croatian Vol 53 pp 243 279 Pavlowitch Stevan K 1982 How Many Non Serbian Generals in 1941 East European Quarterly 16 4 447 52 Zajac Daniel L May 1993 The German Invasion of Yugoslavia Insights For Crisis Action Planning And Operational Art in A Combined Environment Fort Leavenworth Kansas School of Advanced Military Studies United States Army Command and General Staff College Archived from the original on 8 April 2013 Zivotic Aleksandar 2011 Cetnicke jedinice Vojske Kraljevine Jugoslavije u Aprilskom ratu The Chetnik units of the Yugoslav Army in April War 1941 Istorija 20 Veka in Serbian 29 39 47 doi 10 29362 ist20veka 2011 1 ziv 39 47 Statiev Alexander October 2002 Antonescu s Eagles against Stalin s Falcons The Romanian Air Force 1920 1941 The Journal of Military History 66 4 1085 1113 doi 10 2307 3093265 JSTOR 3093265 Web Edit Heaton Colin D 12 June 2006 Invasion of Yugoslavia Waffen SS Captain Fritz Klingenberg and the Capture of Belgrade During World War II HistoryNet Retrieved 5 April 2021 Niehorster Leo 2013a Balkan Operations Italian Order of Battle Italian Army 5th April 1941 Leo Niehorster Retrieved 5 April 2021 Niehorster Leo 2013b Balkan Operations Italian Order of Battle Italian Second Army 5th April 1941 Leo Niehorster Retrieved 5 April 2021 Niehorster Leo 2013c Balkan Operations Italian Order of Battle Italian Albanian High Command 5th April 1941 Leo Niehorster Retrieved 5 April 2021 Niehorster Leo 2013d Balkan Operations Italian Order of Battle Italian Commander of Troops in Zara 5th April 1941 Leo Niehorster Retrieved 5 April 2021 Further reading EditBurgwyn H James 2005 Empire on the Adriatic Mussolini s Conquest of Yugoslavia 1941 1943 Enigma Williams Heather 2003 Parachutes Patriots and Partisans The Special Operations Executive and Yugoslavia 1941 1945 C Hurst amp Co ISBN 1 85065 592 8 Portals Military of Germany World War IIInvasion of Yugoslavia at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Texts from Wikisource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Invasion of Yugoslavia amp oldid 1148327015, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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