- Raid on Drvar
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Raid on Drvar Part of the Yugoslav Front of World War II
Tito with the British mission in Drvar, days before the raid.Date May 25 – July 3, 1944 Location Near Drvar, Bosnia Result Yugoslav Partisans victory Belligerents
Germany
Independent State of Croatia
ChetniksAllies:
Yugoslav PartisansCommanders and leaders Lothar Rendulic
Kurt Rybka
Momčilo ĐujićJosip Broz Tito Strength some 3,500 German troops, several thousand collaborationist troops One infantry brigade
(at the LZ)Casualties and losses Partisan claims:
788 killed
881 wounded
50 missing
German claims:
789 killed
929 wounded
57 missingPartisan claims:
500 killed
1,000 wounded
2,000 civilian casualtiesGerman claims:
approximately 6,000 civilians and soldiers killedThe Raid on Drvar (Croatian, Serbian, Bosnian: Desant na Drvar), codenamed Operation Rösselsprung (German for "knight's move"), was an attack by the Waffen-SS and the Luftwaffe that aimed to disrupt the command structure of the Yugoslav Partisans by eliminating their Supreme Headquarters, and capturing their commander, Marshal Josip Broz Tito. The offensive took place in May and June, 1944.
The operation is generally known as the Seventh anti-Partisan Offensive, or the Seventh Enemy Offensive (Sedma neprijateljska ofenziva/ofanziva) in Yugoslav sources. Despite the name, "Raid on Drvar", the offensive was much wider than the airborne raid on the HQ, as it also included a combined Axis attack on Partisan positions in Bosnia designed to take advantage of the command disruption. This attack included local collaborationist forces, the Independent State of Croatia and the Chetnik movement.
Contents
Background
The Partisan General Staff headquarters were in the hills near Drvar, Bosnia at the time (in today's Bosnia and Herzegovina). Representatives of the Allies were also present. Randolph Churchill (son of Winston Churchill) and the novelist, Evelyn Waugh, were at Tito's headquarters at the time of the attack.
Otto Skorzeny was involved in planning of the operation and was supposed to command it but gave up on it after his visit to Zagreb where he realized that the operation's secrecy was compromised. In addition to their own intricate network, the Partisans were provided with intelligence by the British and knew that the Axis would launch an offensive operation around Tito's birthday, but they did not know that it was to be an airborne assault. Orders received by the Partisan units, 48 hours before the air raid commenced, were to block all roads leading from Bosanski Petrovac and Ključ to Drvar and to stall or slow any Axis movement coming from those areas. In addition, strong Partisan formations were positioned southeast of Drvar. Whole Partisan brigades and divisions were moved from northwestern Krajina to Ključ and Bosanski Petrovac. Only one Partisan company of Tito's Escort Battalion was left defending the cave.
Operation
At 5:00am the parachute and glider German SS and paratroopers fought their way to Tito's cave HQ and exchanged heavy gunfire resulting in numerous casualties on both sides.[1] In addition,formations of the Croatian Ustaše flocked to the firefight in support of the Germans, also attempting to capture Marshal Tito. By the time German forces had penetrated to the cave, however, Tito had already fled the scene and escaped: a train was waiting for him that took him to Jajce town.
There were fewer than 100 Partisans in the town when the operation started. Most of the Partisan troops were dispersed in the surrounding area. The students of the Partisan Officer's School, around 60 of them, joined in a fight, sometimes taking arms from fallen German troops, prevented a flanking attempt by the German paratroopers. This proved to be crucial for saving the foreign guests (giving them more time for escape) that were hosted by Tito. When elements of the Partisan 6th Lika Division arrived at the battlefield, the air raid was already a disaster and the brigade was ordered to wipe out the remaining Axis troops in the area and to evacuate the wounded and civilians, since it was already known that the Axis tanks and infantry were approaching Drvar from north west.
It would appear that Tito and his staff were prepared for a quick escape. The commandos were only able to retrieve Tito’s Marshal's uniform, which was later displayed in Vienna. After fierce fighting in and around the village cemetery, the Germans were able to link up with mountain troops. By that time, Tito, his British guests and Partisan staff were fêted aboard the British Royal Navy destroyer HMS Blackmore and her captain Lt. Carson, RN.
Aftermath
According to a German report XV. Gebirgs-Korps suffered 213 killed, 881 wounded, and 51 missing. The same reports, claimed that 6,000 Partisans were killed.[2] In addition to that, 500th SS Parachute Bataillon was virtually annihilated, suffering losses of some 71 percent of its effecitves (576 KIA, 48 WIA)[3] The Partisans denied suffering such losses and reported they lost around 500 men and had over 1,000 wounded, mainly due to heavy bombing by the Luftwaffe. Moreover, Partisan reports claimed over 2,000 civilians were killed by German troops around Drvar, that were likely counted among the alleged 6,000 dead fighters reported by the SS.
Order of battle
Allied order of battle
- 6th Lika Division (around 3,500 men)[citation needed]
- Tito Escort Battalion
- Partisan Officer School cadets
- Balkan Air Force
(among other formations)
Axis order of battle
- Wehrmacht
- Regimental Kampfgruppe, 373rd (Croatian) Infantry Division Tiger-Division
- reinforced Reconnaissance Battalion, 373rd (Croatian) Infantry Division Tiger-Division
- reinforced Reconnaissance Battalion, 369th (Croatian) Infantry Division Devil's-Division
- 1st Regiment, Brandenburg Division (without 3rd Battalion)
- Platoon Kampfgruppe, Brandenburg Division
- 92nd Grenadier Regiment (motorized)
- 54th Mountain Reconnaissance Battalion
- Panzer-Abteilung 202
- Schutzstaffel (SS)
- 500th SS Parachute Battalion
- Kampfgruppe of the 1st Parachute Regiment, 1st Airborne Division
- Sonderkommando (special unit) Zawadil
- Regimental Kampfgruppe, 7th SS Volunteer Mountain Division Prinz Eugen
- 13th SS Volunteer Mountain Regiment Artur Phleps, 7th SS Volunteer Mountain Division Prinz Eugen
- 7th SS Volunteer Mountain Reconnaissance Battalion (motorized), 7th SS Volunteer Mountain Division Prinz Eugen
- 105th SS Reconnaissance Battalion
- 500th SS Parachute Battalion
- Luftwaffe
- approximately 100 aircraft
- 1st Home Guard Regiment, 2nd Home Guard Jäger Brigade
- Bosnian Krajiški Chetnik Corps
- 1st Bosnian Corps 'Gavrilo Princip'
- 501st Dinarski Chetnik Corps
- 502nd Dinarski Chetnik Corps
See also
- Yugoslav Partisans
- Yugoslav Front
- Croatian Armed Forces (NDH)
- Seven anti-Partisan offensives
- Lothar Rendulic
- Resistance during World War II
- Anti-partisan operations in World War II
References
- ^ pp. 343-376, Eyre
- ^ BA/MA, RH24-15/59 XV. Geb.AK an Pz.AOK 2 (7. Juni 1944) Cited in Klaus Schmider:Partisanenkrieg in Jugoslawien 1941-1944. Mittler, Hamburg 2002, ISBN 3-8132-0794-3, p. 385
- ^ Charles D. Melson: „Red Sun: A German Airborne Raid, May 1944.“ In: Journal of Slavic Military Studies, Vol. 13, No. 4 (December 2000), S. 101 - 126. S. 116 Footnote 66
Sources
- Eyre, Wayne, Lt.Col., (Canadian Army), Operation RÖSSELSPRUNG and The Elimination of Tito, May 25, 1944: A Failure in Planning and Intelligence Support, The Journal of Slavic Military Studies, Volume 19, Number 2, June 2006 , pp. 343–376(34), Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group
Further reading
- Eyre, Wayne D., Lt.Col., (Canadian Army), OPERATION RÖSSELSPRUNG AND THE ELIMINATION OF TITO, 25 MAY 1944: A FAILURE IN PLANNING AND INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT, USMC COMMAND AND STAFF COLLEGE, MCCDC, QUANTICO, VA, 2002
External links
Yugoslav Front Overview Participants People 1941:
1942:
1943:
- Battle of the Neretva (Fourth Offensive)
- Battle of the Sutjeska (Fifth Offensive)
1944:
- Sixth Offensive
- Raid on Drvar (Seventh Offensive)
- Operation Halyard
- Belgrade Offensive
- Kosovo Operation
1945:
- Syrmian Front
- Battle on Lijevča field
- Bar massacre
- Battle of Poljana
Macedonia:
Strategic bombing:
- Partisans
- People's Liberation Army of Macedonia (Partisan faction in Macedonia)
- Soviet Union (limited involvement, 1944-45)
- Bulgaria (limited involvement, 1944-45)
- National Liberation Movement (limited involvement, 1944-45)
- Royal Yugoslav Army (limited involvement, 1941)
- Chetniks (nominally Allied, lost official Allied support in 1943)
- Germany
- Italy (1941-43)
- Albania (1941-44)
- Hungary (1941-44)
- Bulgaria (1941-44)
- Independent State of Croatia (NDH)
- Croatian Armed Forces (HOS)
- Ustaše Militia (including the Black Legion)
- Croatian Home Guard
- Air Force of the Independent State of Croatia
- Croatian Air Force Legion
- Nedić regime
- Serbian State Guard
- Serbian Volunteer Corps
- Pećanac Chetniks
- Russian Corps
- Slovene Axis supporters
- White Guards
- Slovenian Home Guard
- Legion of Death
- Upper Carniola Home Guard
- Slovene National Security Force
- Montenegro
- Lovćen Brigade (Zelenaši movement, 1942-44)
- Montenegrin People's Army (former members of the Chetnik movement, 1945)
- Josip Broz Tito
- Milovan Đilas
- Aleksandar Ranković
- Kosta Nađ
- Peko Dapčević
- Koča Popović
- Petar Drapšin
- Svetozar Vukmanović Tempo
- Arso Jovanović
- Sava Kovačević †
- Ivan Gošnjak
- Draža Mihailović
- Ilija Trifunović-Birčanin
- Dobroslav Jevđević
- Maximilian von Weichs
- Alexander Löhr
- Edmund Glaise von Horstenau
- Mario Roatta
- Ante Pavelić
- Dido Kvaternik
- Milan Nedić
- Kosta Pećanac
- Sekule Drljević
- Leon Rupnik
Categories:- Seven anti-Partisan offensives
- World War II Eastern European Theatre
- Military operations of World War II involving Germany
- Battles involving the Independent State of Croatia
- German World War II special forces
- Conflicts in 1944
- 1944 in Yugoslavia
- Military raids
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