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{{Infobox War Faction
{{Infobox_War_Faction
|name= Ukrainian Insurgent Army
|name= Ukrainian Insurgent Army
|war= [[World War II]]
|war= [[World War II]]
|image=[[Image:Flag of UPA.svg|center|200px|]]
|image=[[Image:Flag of UPA.svg|center|200px|]]
|caption=Flag of the UPA
|caption=Flag of the UPA
|active= 1943-1949 (Active insurgency) <br> 1949-1956 (Localised insurgency)
|active= 1943<ref> Ukrainska Povstanska Armiya by Mykola Lebed Munich </ref> <ref> ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'' by Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine </ref> - 1947 (active warfare) <ref>''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'' by Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine </ref> <ref> Ukrainian Insurgent Army . P.Sodol New York 1995</ref> <br> 1947- end of summer 1949 (Localized insurgency) <ref> ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'' by Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine </ref> <ref> http://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/display.asp?AddButton=pages\U\K\UkrainianInsurgentArmy.htm </ref> <ref> Ukrainian Insurgent Army . P.Sodol New York 1995</ref>
|leaders= Vasyl Ivakhiv, [[Dmytro Klyachkivsky]], [[Roman Shukhevych]], [[Vasyl Kuk]]
|leaders= Vasyl Ivakhiv, [[Dmytro Klyachkivsky]], [[Roman Shukhevych]], [[Vasyl Kuk]]
|area= primarily in territories of prewar [[Poland]], [[Romania]] and [[Czechoslovakia]] populated with Ukrainian majority, with raids as far east as Kiev region
|area= Primarily in territories of [[Volhynia]], [[Galicia (Eastern Europe)|Galicia]] and [[Carpathian Mountains|Carpathia]].
|strength= Depends on source estimates of armed personnel at maximum strength ranged from 25,000 to 100,000 {{Dubious|date=September 2008}}
|strength= Estimates of armed personnel at various times ranged from 15,000 - 100,000
|allies= temporary arrangements with Nazi Germany
|allies= temporary arrangements with Nazi Germany
|opponents= [[Nazi Germany|Nazi German]] [[Schutzstaffel|SS]], the [[Poland|Polish]] [[Armia Krajowa]],
|opponents= [[Nazi Germany|Nazi German]] [[Schutzstaffel|SS]], the [[Poland|Polish]] [[Armia Krajowa]],
[[Soviet partisans]], the [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[Red Army]], [[NKVD]]
[[Soviet partisans]], the [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[Red Army]], [[NKVD]]
|battles= mainly guerrilla activity
|battles= Mainly guerrilla activity
}}
}}


The '''Ukrainian Insurgent Army''' ({{lang-ua|Українська Повстанська Армія, '''''U'''krayins’ka '''P'''ovstans’ka '''A'''rmiya'', '''UPA'''}}) was the military formation<ref> [http://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/pages/U/K/UkrainianInsurgentArmy.htm Ukrainian Insurgent Army] Encyclopedia of Ukraine</ref> of the [[Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists]]- [[Bandera]] wing (the OUN-B), originally formed in [[Volhynia]] (north-western Ukraine) in spring-summer 1943, until being formally disbanded in early September, 1949. During its existence, the UPA fought a large variety of military forces, including Nazi German [[Wehrmacht]] and [[Waffen SS]], the Polish underground army ([[Armia Krajowa]]), and Soviet forces - including [[Soviet partisans]], the [[Red Army]], [[NKVD]], [[SMERSH]], [[MGB]] and [[MVD]]. From beginning of 1944, the UPA and OUN-B cooperated with the German Wehrmacht and [[Waffen SS]], [[Sicherheitspolizei|SIPO]] and [[Sicherheitspolizei|SD]] against the Soviets and Poles. <ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army Chapter 4 pp.193-199 Chapter 5 </ref>
The '''Ukrainian Insurgent Army''' ({{lang-ua|Українська Повстанська Армія, '''''U'''krayins’ka '''P'''ovstans’ka '''A'''rmiya'', '''UPA'''}}) was the military wing of the [[Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists]] [[Bandera]] faction (the OUN-B), originally formed in [[Volhynia]] (north-western Ukraine) in spring-summer 1943, which fought a guerrilla war during the [[Second World War]], and afterwards until being formally disbanded in early September, 1949. Some of its members, however, would continue operations until 1956. OUN declared that its primary purpose was to protect the interests of the Ukrainian population, and the UPA started out as a resistance group that grew into a [[guerrilla war|guerrilla army]].<ref>(Ukrainian) Українська Повстанська Армія - Історія нескорених - Львів, 2007 p.28</ref> During its existence, the UPA fought a large variety of military forces, including Nazi German [[Wehrmacht]] and [[Waffen SS]], the Polish underground army ([[Armia Krajowa]]) and Soviet forces - including [[Soviet partisans]], the [[Red Army]], [[NKVD]], [[SMERSH]], [[MGB]] and [[MVD]]. From late spring of 1944, the UPA and OUN-B - faced with Soviet advances - also cooperated with the German Wehrmacht and [[Waffen SS]], [[Sicherheitspolizei|Sipo]] and [[Sicherheitspolizei|SD]] against the Soviets and Poles.<ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army Chapter 4 pp.193-199 Chapter 5 </ref> The UPA nationalists played a significant role in the killing and ethnic cleansing of much of western Ukraine's Polish population.<ref name="DAVIES"> Norman Davies. (1996). ''Europe: a History''. Oxford: [[Oxford University Press]] </ref> In the last year of the war, the Polish-communist [[Armia Ludowa]] was massively attacked by the UPA.
The OUN-B and UPA played an important role in the killing and ethnic cleansing of much of western Ukraine's Polish population.<ref name="DAVIES"> Norman Davies. (1996). ''Europe: a History''. Oxford: [[Oxford University Press]] </ref>


After [[World War II]], the UPA remained active in [[People's Republic of Poland|Poland]] until 1947 and in the [[Soviet Union]] until 1949. According to 1988 work of historian [[Orest Subtelny]] among the anti-Nazi resistance movements it was unique, in that it had no significant foreign support. Its growth and strength was a reflection of the popularity it enjoyed among most Ukrainians.<ref name="Subtelny474">Subtelny, p. 474 {{cite book
After the end of [[World War II]], the UPA remained active and fought against [[People's Republic of Poland|Poland]] until 1947 and against the [[Soviet Union]] until 1949. It was particularly strong in the [[Carpathian Mountain]]s, entire [[Galicia (Eastern Europe)|Galicia]] and in [[Volyn]] - in western modern Ukraine. Among the anti-Nazi resistance movements it was unique in that it had no significant foreign support at all. Its growth and strength was a reflection of the popularity it enjoyed among the people of western Ukraine.<ref name="Subtelny474">Subtelny, p. 474 {{cite book
|title= Ukraine: A History
|title= Ukraine: A History
|last= Subtelny
|last= Subtelny
Line 30: Line 29:
|language= English
|language= English
|pages= 800
|pages= 800
}}</ref> While, 2004 work of [[Ukrainian Academy of Sciences]] conclude what outside of Western Ukraine, UPA support was minimal, and predominant majority of the Ukrainian population considered the OUN/UPA to have been collaborators with the German oppressors and supplied by them with arms and ammunitions from the beginning of the 1944. <ref name="UPA13_p180"> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/13.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 4], p. 180 and p.190-195</ref>
}}</ref> Outside of Western Ukraine, support was minimal, and the predominant majority of the Soviet (eastern) Ukrainian population considered the OUN/UPA to have been primarily collaborators with the Germans, remembering UPA alliances with German military authorities during the approach of the [[Lvov–Sandomierz Offensive]].<ref name="UPA13_p180"> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/13.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 4], p. 180</ref>


Another separate and independent UPA also existed in [[Volyn]] from December 1941 till July 1943. It was nominally formed earlier in late November 1941 and from spring 1942 was a most active Ukrainian nationalist armed group before the formal formation of UPA in spring 1943. This group belonged to political opponents of the [[OUN]](B) - OUN([[UNR]]), and allied itself politically and military with OUN(M). This grouping led by [[Taras Bulba-Borovets]] had links to the [[Ukrainian National Republic|UNR]] in exile. It was renamed the [[Ukrainian People's Revolutionary Army]] in July 1943 before being later partially and forcibly absorbed into the UPA of the OUN(B).<ref>[http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/ Організація українських націоналістів і Українська повстанська армія Chapter 3 p.118-153 </ref>
<small>(Note: Another separate, independent UPA also existed in [[Volyn]] from 1941 until July 1943. It was nominally formed earlier in late November 1941 and from spring 1942 was a most active Ukrainian nationalist armed group before the formal formation of UPA in spring 1943. This group belonged to political opponents of the [[OUN]](B) - OUN([[UNR]]), and allied itself politically with OUN(M). This grouping led by [[Taras Bulba-Borovets]] had links to the [[Ukrainian National Republic|UNR]] in exile. It was renamed the [[Ukrainian People's Revolutionary Army]] in July 1943 before being later partially and forcibly absorbed into the UPA of the OUN(B).<ref>[http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/ Організація українських націоналістів і Українська повстанська армія Chapter 3 p.118-153 ]</ref></small>


==Organization of UPA==
==Organization of the UPA==
[[Image:UPA.jpg|thumb|right|250px|UPA propaganda poster. OUN/UPA formal greetings is written in Ukrainian bold on two horizontal lines ''Glory to Ukraine (Glory to (her) Heroes)'']]
[[Image:UPA.jpg|thumb|right|250px|UPA propaganda poster. OUN/UPA formal greetings is written in Ukrainian bold on two horizontal lines ''Glory to Ukraine (Glory to (her) Heroes)'']]


UPA's command structure overlapped with that of the [[Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists|OUN]] in a sophisticated network that was highly centralized. The UPA was responsible for operations while the OUN was in charge of administrative duties; each had their own chain of command. The six main departments were military, political, security service, mobilization, supply, and the [[Ukrainian Red Cross]]. Despite the division between UPA and the OUN, there was overlap between OUN and UPA posts and the local OUN and UPA leader were frequently the same person. Organizational methods were borrowed and adapted from the German, Polish and Soviet military, while UPA units planned to be trained based on a modified Red Army field unit manual (draft developed by beginning of the 1944). <ref>[http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/ Організація українських націоналістів і Українська повстанська армія Chapter 4 </ref> The General Staff from end of 1943 consisted of operations, intelligence, training, logistics, personnel and political education departments. UPA's largest units, ''Kurins'', consisting of 500-700 soldiers,<ref name="UPA12_p169"> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/12.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 12], p. 169</ref> were equivalent to [[battalion]]s in a regular army, and its smallest units, ''Riys'' (literally bee swarm), with 8-10 soldiers,<ref name="UPA12_p169"/> were equivalent to [[squad]]s.<ref name="Zhukov"/> Occasionally, and particularly in Volyn, during some operations three or more ''Kurins'' would unite and form a ''Zahin'' or [[Brigade]].<ref name="UPA12_p169"/>
UPA's command structure overlapped with that of the [[Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists|OUN]] in a sophisticated centralized network. The UPA was responsible for operations while the OUN was in charge of administrative duties; each had their own chain of command. The six main departments were military, political, security service, mobilization, supply, and the [[Ukrainian Red Cross]]. Despite the division between UPA and the OUN, there was overlap between OUN and UPA posts and the local OUN and UPA leader were frequently the same person. Organizational methods were borrowed and adapted from the German, Polish and Soviet military, while UPA units planned to be trained based on a modified Red Army field unit manual.<ref name="Zhukov">Yuri Zhukov, [http://yurizhukov.com/doc/070900_Zhukov_UPA_Final.pdf "Examining the Authoritarian Model of Counter-insurgency: The Soviet Campaign Against the Ukrainian Insurgent Army"], ''Small Wars and Insurgencies'', v.18, no. 3, pp.439-466] </ref> The General Staff, formed at the end of 1943 consisted of operations, intelligence, training, logistics, personnel and political education departments. UPA's largest units, ''Kurins'', consisting of 500-700 soldiers,<ref name="UPA12_p169"> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/12.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 12], p. 169</ref> were equivalent to [[battalion]]s in a regular army, and its smallest units, ''Riys'' (literally bee swarm), with 8-10 soldiers,<ref name="UPA12_p169"/> were equivalent to [[squad]]s.<ref name="Zhukov"/> Occasionally, and particularly in Volyn, during some operations three or more ''Kurins'' would unite and form a ''Zahin'' or [[Brigade]].<ref name="UPA12_p169"/>


[[Image:Shukhewich.jpg|thumb|left|Roman Shukhevych]]UPA's leaders were: Vasyl Ivakhiv (spring – 13 of May 1943), [[Dmytro Klyachkivsky]], [[Roman Shukhevych]] (January 1944 until 1950)<ref>[http://www.dt.ua/3000/3150/54958/ Пастка для «Щура» 4 листопада одному з засновників УПА Дмитрові Клячківському виповнилося 95 років] in Ukrainian-Russian "Zerkalo Nedeli" Magazine</ref> and finally [[Vasyl Kuk]].
[[Image:Shukhewich.jpg|thumb|left|Roman Shukhevych]]UPA's leaders were: Vasyl Ivakhiv (spring – 13 of May 1943), [[Dmytro Klyachkivsky]], [[Roman Shukhevych]] (January 1944 until 1950)<ref>[http://www.dt.ua/3000/3150/54958/ Пастка для «Щура» 4 листопада одному з засновників УПА Дмитрові Клячківському виповнилося 95 років] in Ukrainian-Russian "Zerkalo Nedeli" Magazine</ref> and finally [[Vasyl Kuk]].
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In November 1943, UPA adopted a new structure, creating a Main Military Headquarters and three areas (group} commands: UPA-West, UPA-North and UPA-South. Three military schools for low-level command staff were also established.
In November 1943, UPA adopted a new structure, creating a Main Military Headquarters and three areas (group} commands: UPA-West, UPA-North and UPA-South. Three military schools for low-level command staff were also established.


UPA's membership is estimated to have consisted of 60% peasants of low to moderate means, 20-25% workers (primarily from the rural lumber and food industries), and 15% from the [[intelligentsia]] (students, urban professionals). The latter group provided a large portion of UPA's military trainers and officer corps.<ref name="Zhukov"> [http://yurizhukov.com/doc/070900_Zhukov_UPA_Final.pdf Yuri Zhukov, "Examining the Authoritarian Model of Counter-insurgency: The Soviet Campaign Against the Ukrainian Insurgent Army", ''Small Wars and Insurgencies'', v.18, no. 3, pp.439-466] </ref> Sixty percent of UPA's membership was from [[Galicia (Central Europe)|Galicia]] and 30% from [[Volyn]] and [[Polesia]]<ref> [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/12.pdf Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 12, p. 172] </ref>
[[Ukrainian Academy of Sciences]] data referred to spring 1944, mentioned what UPA predominantly composed from peasants (poor and moderate in wealth) from western Ukraine (60% from Galicia and 30% from in Volhynia and Podolia).
<ref> [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/12.pdf Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 12, p. 172] </ref>


The number of UPA fighters varied. A German [[Abwehr]] report from November 1943 estimated that UPA had 20,000 soldiers;<ref name> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14 ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 14], p. 188</ref> other estimates at that time placed the number at 40,000.<ref name=Magosci>{{cite book| author=Magoscy, R. | title=A History of Ukraine| location= Toronto | publisher= University of Toronto Press | year = 1996 }}</ref> By the summer of 1944, estimates of UPA membership varied from 25-30 thousand fighters<ref> Petro Sodol - Ukrainian Insurgent Army 1943-1949. Handbook. New – York 1994 p.28 </ref> up to 100,000 soldiers.<ref name=Magosci/>
By late 1943 and early 1944, the UPA controlled much of the territory of [[Volyn]], outside of the major cities, and was able to organize basic services for the villagers such as schools, hospitals, and the printing of newspapers{{Facts|date=September 2008}}.

The number of UPA fighters varied by source and time of estimation. A German [[Abwehr]] report from November 1943 estimated that UPA had 20,000 soldiers <ref> [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14 ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 4], p. 188</ref>; [[Paul Robert Magocsi]] in his 1996 work estimates at that time placed the number at 40,000.<ref name=Magosci>{{cite book| author=Magoscy, R. | title=A History of Ukraine| location= Toronto | publisher= University of Toronto Press | year = 1996 }}</ref>; By the mid of 1944 -time of OUN/UPA maximum strength ,[[Ukrainian Academy of Sciences]] and other scholars <ref> Petro Sodol - Ukrainian Insurgent Army 1943-1949. Handbook. New – York 1994 p.28 </ref> estimates of OUN/UPA membership not higher then 30 thousand fighters and mentioned what Nazi’s info about 80-90 thousand fighters as fantasy <ref>[http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14 ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 4], p. 169 and p.354</ref>; [[Paul Robert Magocsi]] in his 1996 work estimated such as high as 100,000 soldiers <ref name=Magosci/>;a similar figure to Magosci also appeared at 1952 OUN statement. <ref> [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14 ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 4], p. 169 </ref>


==The armaments of the UPA==
==The armaments of the UPA==


Initially, UPA used the weapons collected from the battlefields of 1939 and 1941. Later they bought weapons from peasants and individual soldiers, or captured them in combat. Some light weapons were brought in by deserting Ukrainian auxiliary policemen. In 1944 UPA were armed directly by German units but with Soviet arms. For the most part, the UPA used the light infantry weapons of Soviet and to a lesser extent German origin (for the lack of ammo). Many [[kurin]]s were equipped with light 51 mm and 82 mm [[Mortar (weapon)|mortars]]. During large-scale operations in 1943-1944, insurgent forces also used artillery (45 mm and 76.2 mm).<ref name=motyka148>Motyka, p. 148</ref>
Initially, UPA used the weapons collected from the battlefields of 1939 and 1941. Later they bought weapons from peasants and individual soldiers, or captured them in combat. Some light weapons were brought in by deserting Ukrainian auxiliary policemen. In 1944 UPA were armed directly by German units but with Soviet arms. For the most part, the UPA used the light infantry weapons of Soviet and to a lesser extent German origin (for the lack of ammo). Many [[kurin]]s were equipped with light 51 mm and 82 mm [[Mortar (weapon)|mortars]]. During large-scale operations in 1943-1944, insurgent forces also used artillery (45 mm and 76.2 mm).<ref name=motyka148>Motyka, p. 148</ref>
According to Polish historian Motyka data in 1943 a light Hungarian tank was used in Volyn.<ref>However it is not true that UPA had a Soviet [[T-35]] tank.</ref><ref name=motyka148/> In 1944 the Soviets captured from UPA a [[Polikarpov Po-2|U-2]] aircraft and 1 armored car and 1 personnel carrier. However, it was not stated that they were in operable condition, while no OUN/UPA documents noted the usage of such equipment.<ref>Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kyiv Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 p.585 </ref> By end of WWII in Europe from UPA by NKVD were captured 45 artillery systems (45 and 76.2 mm calibers) and 423 [[Mortar (weapon)|mortars]]. In the attacks against Polish civilians, axes, and pikes were used.<ref name=motyka148/> However, the light infantry weapon was the basic weapon used by the UPA.<ref>{{uk icon}} Українська Повстанська Армія - Історія нескорених - Львів, 2007 p.203</ref>
In 1943 a light Hungarian tank was used in Volyn.<ref>However it is not true that UPA had a Soviet [[T-35]] tank.</ref><ref name=motyka148/> In 1944 the Soviets captured from UPA a [[Polikarpov Po-2|U-2]] aircraft and 1 armored car and 1 personnel carrier. However, it was not stated that they were in operable condition, while no OUN/UPA documents noted the usage of such equipment.<ref>Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kyiv Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 p.585 </ref> By end of WWII in Europe from UPA by NKVD were captured 45 artillery systems (45 and 76.2 mm calibers) and 423 [[Mortar (weapon)|mortars]]. In the attacks against Polish civilians, axes, and pikes were used.<ref name=motyka148/> However, the light infantry weapon was the basic weapon used by the UPA.<ref>{{uk icon}} Українська Повстанська Армія - Історія нескорених - Львів, 2007 p.203</ref>


==UPA Background ==
==UPA Formation==
===1941===
===1941===

[[Image:Sam ukr.jpg‎|thumb|right|400px|“Act of Proclamation of Ukrainian State” signed by Stepan Bandera. Highlighted “The newly formed Ukrainian state will work closely with the National-Socialist Greater Germany, under the leadership of its leader Adolf HITLER which is forming a [[New Order (political system)|new order in Europe]] “ and The Ukrainian National Revolutionary Army which has been formed on the Ukrainian lands, will continue to fight with the ALLIED GERMAN ARMY against Moscovite occupation for the sovereign and united State and a [[New Order (political system)|new order]] in the whole world..]]
In a Memorandum from August, 14 1941 OUN (B) proposed to the Germans, to create a Ukrainian Army “which will join the German Аrmy ... until the latter will win”, in exchange for German recognition of an allied Ukrainian independent state<ref>Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army Chapter 1 p.69</ref> The Ukrainian Army was planned to have been formed on the basis of DUN (Detachments of Ukrainian nationalists - ''Druzhyny Ukrainskykh Natsiоnalistiv'') and specifically on the basis of the “Ukrainian legion”, at that time composed of two battalions “[[Nachtigall Battalion|Nachtigall]]” and “[[Roland Battalion|Roland]].” These two battalions were included in the Abwehr special regiment “Brandenburg-800”. These proposals however, were not accepted by the Germans, and by the middle of September 1941 the Germans began a campaign of repression against the most proactive OUN members.
In a Memorandum from August, 14 1941 OUN (B) proposed to the Germans, to create a Ukrainian Army “which will join the German Аrmy ... until the latter will win”, in exchange for German recognition of an allied Ukrainian independent state<ref>Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army Chapter 1 p.69</ref> The Ukrainian Army was planned to have been formed on the basis of DUN (Detachments of Ukrainian nationalists - ''Druzhyny Ukrainskykh Natsiоnalistiv'') and specifically on the basis of the “Ukrainian legion”, at that time composed of two battalions “[[Nachtigall Battalion|Nachtigall]]” and “[[Roland Battalion|Roland]].” These two battalions were included in the Abwehr special regiment “Brandenburg-800”. These proposals however, were not accepted by the Germans, and by the middle of September 1941 the Germans began a campaign of repression against the most proactive OUN members.


At the beginning of October 1941, during the first OUN Conference the OUN formulated its future strategy. This called for transferring part of its organizational structure underground, in order to avoid conflict with the Germans. It also refrained from open anti-German propaganda activities.<ref>Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army Chapter 2 P.92</ref> {{Dubious|date=June 2008}} At the same time, the OUN tried to infiltrate its own members into and create its own network within the German [[Auxiliary police]].
At the beginning of October 1941, during the first OUN Conference the OUN formulated its future strategy. This called for transferring part of its organizational structure underground, in order to avoid conflict with the Germans. It also refrained from open anti-German propaganda activities.<ref>Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army Chapter 2 P.92</ref> {{Dubious|date=June 2008}} At the same time, the OUN tried to infiltrate its own members into and create its own network within the German [[Auxiliary police]].


By the end of November 1941, both the “Ukrainian Legions” Roland and Nachtigall were disbanded and the remaining soldiers (approximately 650 persons) were given the option of signing a contract for military service after being transferred to Germany for further military training. At the same time (end of November 1941) the Germans started a second wave of repression in [[Reichskommissariat Ukraine]] specifically targeting OUN (B) members. Most of the captured OUN activists in [[Reichskommissariat Ukraine]] however, belonged to OUN (M) wing.
A captured German document of [[November 25]], [[1941]] ([[Nuremberg Trial]] O14-USSR) ordered: "It has been ascertained that the Bandera Movement is preparing a revolt in the [[Reichskommissariat]] which has as its ultimate aim the establishment of an independent Ukraine. All functionaries of the Bandera Movement must be arrested at once and, after thorough interrogation, are to be liquidated..."<ref>[http://www.infoukes.com/history/ww2/page-08.html InfoUkes: Ukrainian History - World War II in Ukraine<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>{{Verify credibility|date=October 2008}} By the end of November 1941, both the “Ukrainian Legions” Roland and Nachtigall were disbanded and the remaining soldiers (approximately 650 persons) were given the option of signing a contract for military service after being transferred to Germany for further military training. At the same time (end of November 1941) the Germans started a second wave of repression in [[Reichskommissariat Ukraine]] specifically targeting OUN (B) members. Most of the captured OUN activists in [[Reichskommissariat Ukraine]] however, belonged to OUN (M) wing.


===1942===
===1942===
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In July 1942 OUN (B) issued a statement in which it stated that the main enemy targeted was “Moscow”, while the Germans was ephemerally criticized for their policy concerning the Ukrainian independent state. Until December 1942, OUN(B)'s principal activity was propaganda and the development of its own underground network, while actions against the Germans were described at that time as undesirable and provocative.
In July 1942 OUN (B) issued a statement in which it stated that the main enemy targeted was “Moscow”, while the Germans was ephemerally criticized for their policy concerning the Ukrainian independent state. Until December 1942, OUN(B)'s principal activity was propaganda and the development of its own underground network, while actions against the Germans were described at that time as undesirable and provocative.


In December 1942 near [[Lviv]] the “Military conference of OUN(B)” was held. It resulted in the adoption of a policy for the accelerated growth for the establishment of OUN(B) Military forces. The Conference emphasised that “all combat capable population must support, under OUN banners, the struggle against the Bolsheviks enemy”.
In December 1942 near [[Lviv]] the “Military conference of OUN(B)” was held. It resulted in the adoption of a policy for the accelerated growth for the establishment of OUN(B) Military forces. The Conference emphasised that “all combat capable population must support, under OUN banners, the struggle against the Bolsheviks enemy”. On [[May 30]], [[1947]]<ref>[http://www.ukrnationalism.org.ua/publications/?n=674 Banderivtsi Nationalistic Portal (Бандерівці ідуть! in Націоналістичний портал)] {{uk icon}}</ref> the Main Ukrainian Liberation Council (Головна Визвольна Рада) adopted the date of [[October 14]], [[1942]] as the official day for celebrating UPA's creation.

==UPA's relations with Germany==
==UPA's relations with Germany==
===Hostilities===
===Hostilities===


Despite the stated opinions of [[Dmytro Klyachkivsky]] and [[Roman Shukhevych]] that the Germans were a secondary threat compared to their main enemies - the Soviet partisans and Poles, the Third Conference of [[Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists]] held near Lviv 17-21 February 1943, adopted the decision to commence open warfare against the Germans<ref>{{uk icon}} Організація українських націоналістів і Українська повстанська армія [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/11.pdf p.164]</ref> (OUN fighters had already attacked a German garrison earlier on February 7th of that year).<ref> [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14.pdf] p.181 </ref> Accordingly, the OUN (B) leadership on March 20, 1943 issued secret instructions ordering their members who had joined the German auxiliary police in 1941-1942 to desert with their weapons and to join the units of UPA in Volyn. This process often involved engaging in armed conflict with German forces trying to prevent them from doing so. The number of trained and armed soldiers deserting into the ranks of UPA was estimated as being between 4 to 5 thousand.<ref>{{uk icon}} Організація українських націоналістів і Українська повстанська армія [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/11.pdf p.165]</ref> Initially, the military formation of the OUN under Bandera's leadership was called the "military detachment of OUN (SD)" but after April 1943 UPA, the name "Ukrainska Povstanska Armiya" (UPA) was adopted as the official title.<ref> [http://warhistory.ukrlife.org/5_6_02_3.htm Ukrainian Insurgent Army and Military Formations of the OUN During World War II, by Ivan Mukovsky, 2002 (Ukrainian)] </ref>
According to visions of [[Dmytro Klyachkivsky]]y and [[Roman Shukhevych]], the main threat were Soviet partisans and Poles while actions against German should be conducted in form of “self defense for people”. Despite two attempts (In February and August 1943) by D.Stepnyak (OUN leader of Western Ukrainian Lands) to call for wide appraisal and active actions against Germans, majority of OUN/UPA leaders decide to act in form of “self defense for people”.
<ref>{{uk icon}} Організація українських націоналістів і Українська повстанська армія [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/11.pdf p.164 ]</ref> <ref>{{uk icon}} Організація українських націоналістів і Українська повстанська армія [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/13.pdf p.176 ]</ref> Such tactics expect maximum avoidance of clashes with Germans and expect actions only when they attack Ukrainian population or UPA units. <ref>{{uk icon}} Організація українських націоналістів і Українська повстанська армія [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/13.pdf p.178 ]</ref>


Anti-German actions were limited to situations where the Germans attacked the Ukrainian population or UPA units. <ref>{{uk icon}} Організація українських націоналістів і Українська повстанська армія [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/13.pdf p.178 ]</ref> Indeed, according to German Eastern Front General Ernst Kostring, UPA fighters "fought almost exclusively against German administrative agencies, the German police and the SS in their quest to establish an independent Ukraine controlled by neither Moscow nor Germany."<ref> ''Debriefing of General Kostring'' Department of the Army, [[3 November]] [[1948]], MSC - 035, cited in Sodol, Petro R., 1987, ''UPA: They Fought Hitler and Stalin'', New York: Committee for the World Convention and Reunion of Soldiers in the UIA, pg. 58. </ref>
Under German occupation, the UPA conducted hundreds of raids on police stations and military convoys. In the region of [[Zhytomyr]] insurgents were estimated by the German General-Kommissar Leyser to be in control of 80% of the forests and 60% of the [[Farmland (farming)|farmland]]. <ref name="Toynbee">{{cite book| author=Toynbee, T.R.V. | title=Survey of International Affairs: Hitler's Europe 1939-1945| location= Oxford | publisher= Oxford University Press | year = 1954 | pages = (page # missing)}}</ref> The UPA was able to send small groups of [[raid (military)|raid]]ers deep into eastern Ukraine.


According to the OUN/UPA, on [[May 12]], [[1943]] Germans attacked the town of Kolki using several [[SS-Divisions]] (SS units operated alongside the Nazi Army who were responsible for intelligence, central security, policing action, and mass extermination), where the Germans as well as insurgents suffered heavy losses.<ref> Yuriy Tys-Krokhmaluk, UPA Warfare in Ukraine. New York, N.Y. Society of Veterans of Ukrainian Insurgent Army Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 72-80823 P.58-59</ref> Soviet partisans reported the reinforcement of German auxiliary forces at Kolki for the end of April until the middle of May, 1943 <ref> Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kyiv Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 p, 384 p.391</ref>
OUN (B) leadership at March 20, 1943 issued secret instructions ordering their members who had joined the German auxiliary police in 1941-1943 to desert with their weapons and to join the units of UPA in Volyn. This process in some place involved engaging in armed conflict with German forces trying to prevent them from doing so. The number of trained and armed soldiers deserting into the ranks of UPA was estimated as being between 4 to 5 thousand.<ref>{{uk icon}} Організація українських націоналістів і Українська повстанська армія [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/11.pdf p.165]</ref>
Under German occupation, the UPA conducted hundreds of raids on police stations and military convoys. In the region of [[Zhytomyr]] the insurgents were estimated by the German General-Kommissar Leyser to be in control of 80% of the forests and 60% of the [[Farmland (farming)|farmland]]. {{Facts|date=September 2008}}. <ref name="Toynbee">{{cite book| author=Toynbee, T.R.V. | title=Survey of International Affairs: Hitler's Europe 1939-1945| location= Oxford | publisher= Oxford University Press | year = 1954 | pages = (page # missing)}}</ref> The UPA were able to send small groups of [[raid (military)|raid]]ers deep into eastern Ukraine.


In June 1943 German SS and police forces under the command of [[Erich von dem Bach|General von dem Bach-Zelewski]], chosen by Himmler and seen as an expert in anti-guerilla warfare, attempted to destroy UPA-North in Volyn during Operation "BB" (''Bandenbekämpfung'').<ref name=Anderson>James K. Anderson, Unknown Soldiers of an Unknown Army, ''Army'' Magazine, May 1968, p. 63 </ref>
According former UPA officer and Ukrainian Diaspora military historian L. Shankovskyy , the UPA had the following number of clashes with the Germans in mid to late 1943 in Volyn: in July, 35; in August, 24; in September, 15; October-November, 47. During the summer of 1943, according to post-war estimates, the Germans lost over 3,000 men killed or wounded while the UPA lost 1237 killed or wounded. <ref> {{cite book | author = L. Shankovskyy | title = History of Ukrainian Army (Історія українського війська) | location = Winnipeg | year = 1953 | pages = p.32 }} </ref>


According to the UPA/OUN reports, the initial stage of Operation “BB” (Bandenbekämpfung) under the command of Sturmbannführer SS [[General Platle]] and later under [[General Hintzler]] against the UPA had produced no results whatsoever. This catastrophic development was the subject of several discussions by Himmler's staff that resulted in [[Erich von dem Bach|General von dem Bach-Zelewski]] being sent to Ukraine and being responsible only to Hitler himself.<ref> Yuriy Tys-Krokhmaluk, UPA Warfare in Ukraine. New York, N.Y. Society of Veterans of Ukrainian Insurgent Army Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 72-80823 p.238-239 </ref>
However Erich Koch in his November 1943 report and New Year 1944 speech mentioned what “nationalistic bands in forests does not have any major threat” for Germans <ref name=""UPA14_p190> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 4, pg. 190]</ref>.


<!--Also, the “BB” operation were not conducted only against UPA.<ref> Blood, Philip W.Hitler's Bandit Hunters: The SS and the Nazi Occupation of Europe Potomac Books Inc. ISBN: 159797157X</ref> In August 1942, Hitler directed all German state institutions to assist Heinrich Himmler, the chief of the SS and the German police, in eradicating armed resistance in the newly occupied territories of Eastern Europe and Russia. The directive for "combating banditry" (Bandenbekampfung) became the third component of the Nazi regime's three-part strategy for German national security, with genocide (Endlosung der Judenfrage, or "the Final Solution of the Jewish Question") and slave labor (Erfassung, or "Registration of Persons to Hard Labor") being the better-known others. This is of questionable relevance to this article. Whether BB was limited to UPA or not doesn't matter, and doesn't deserve an entire paragraph. Let's stick to the article's subject, which is UPA. -->
Same information mentioned in top secret report as of January 21 1944 from famous soviet partisan commander General-Major Feodorov: “while acting from July 1943 till January 1944 in Volynskaya and Rovenskaya regions we did not seen any facts, when Ukrainian nationalists, excluding numerous brave reports in their own press, conduct any action against German occupants” <ref> Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kyiv Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 pp.425-431 </ref>


General Prutzmann, von dem Bach-Zelewski's successor as commander of the "BB" did not introduce any new methods in combating the UPA. The UPA-North grew steadily, and the Germans, apart from terrorizing the civilian population, were virtually limited to defensive actions.<ref> Yuriy Tys-Krokhmaluk, UPA Warfare in Ukraine. New York, N.Y. Society of Veterans of Ukrainian Insurgent Army Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 72-80823 p.242-243 </ref>
In general OUN and UPA actions on anti-German front do not play an important role in liberation of Ukrainian territory from Germans occupants.
[<ref name="UPA14_p199"> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 4], p. 199</ref>
Despite post war OUN/UPA propagandistic claims (1947) about UPA successes at anti-German front , they unable to prevent German deportation for slave works 500,000 of Ukrainians from west regions of Ukraine, nor “Ukrainian peoples looting” by Germans as far as OUN/UPA does not control German roads and especially railways communication network. [<ref name="UPA13_p180"> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/13.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 4], p. 180</ref>


According to post-war estimates, the UPA had the following number of clashes with the Germans in mid to late 1943 in Volyn: in July, 35; in August, 24; in September, 15; October-November, 47."<ref> Ukrainian Institute of Military History, [http://warhistory.ukrlife.org/5_6_02_3.htm ''Ukrainian Insurgent Army and Military Formations of the OUN During the Second World War'', Ivan Mukovsky, Oleksander Lysenko, #5-6, 2002]</ref> During the summer of 1943, according to post-war estimates, the Germans lost over 3,000 men killed or wounded while the UPA lost 1237 killed or wounded.<ref name="UPA14_p186"> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14 ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 14], p. 186</ref><ref> {{cite book | author = L. Shankovskyy | title = History of Ukrainian Army (Історія українського війська) | location = Winnipeg | year = 1953 | pages = p.32 }} </ref><ref> [http://warhistory.ukrlife.org/5_6_02_3.htm Ukrainian Insurgent Army and Military Formations of the OUN During World War II, by Ivan Mukovsky, 2002 (Ukrainian)] "...Ось сумна статистика тих боїв: у липні відбулося 35 сутичок, у серпні - 24, у вересні - 15; втрати повстанців становили 1237 бійців і старшин, ворожі втрати склали 3000 чоловік..." </ref> By the fall of 1943, UPA and German clashes declined, such that Erich Koch in his November 1943 report and New Year 1944 speech mentioned that “nationalistic bands in forests do not pose any major threat” for Germans <ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 4, pg. 190]</ref>.
While in a debriefing before U.S. authorities in 1948, a Committee of former German commanders on the Eastern front claimed that "the Ukrainian Nationalist movement formed the strongest partisan movement in the East, with the exception of the Russian Communists."<ref name="German_commanders">{{cite book| title=Russian Combat Methods in World War II| location= Washington, D.C. | publisher= U.S. Army Center of Military History | year = 1950| pages = 111 }}</ref>


UPA, fighting a two-front war against both the Germans and approaching Soviets (as well as Soviet partisans), did not focus all of its efforts against the Germans. Indeed, it considered the Soviets to be a greater threat. Adopting a strategy analogous to that of the [[Chetnik]] leader General [[Draža Mihailović]], <ref> [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/13.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 3], pp. 179-180 </ref> UPA held back against the Germans in order to better prepare itself for and engage in the struggle against the Communists. Because of this, although UPA managed to limit German activities to a certain extent, it failed to prevent the Germans from deporting approximately 500,000 people from Western Ukrainian regions and from economically exploiting Western Ukraine. <ref> [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/13.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 4], pp. 179-180 </ref> Due to its focus on the Soviets as the principal threat, UPA's anti-German struggle did not contribute significantly to the liberation of Ukrainian territories by Soviet forces. <ref> [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 4], pg. 199 </ref>


===Collaboration===
===Collaboration===
OUN under Bandera actively cooperate and acted in favors of Germans military and intelligence authorities before and few months after German invasion to Soviet Union in 1941 [<ref name="UPA1_"> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/1.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 1], p. 15-47</ref>


<!-- In November 1943, UPA battle groups "Black Forest" and "Makivka" defeated 12 German [[battalion]]s supported by the [[Luftwaffe|German air force]]. -->
In autumn 1943 some detachments of UPA attempted to find reapproachment with the Germans. Although doing so was condemned by an OUN/UPA order from [[November 25]], [[1943]], such actions were not halted<ref>[http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14.pdf p.190-194]</ref>
In autumn 1943 some detachments of UPA attempted to find reapproachment with the Germans. Although doing so was condemned by an OUN/UPA order from [[November 25]], [[1943]], such actions were not halted<ref>[http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14.pdf p.190-194]</ref> In early 1944 UPA forces in several Western regions OUN/UPA engaged in cooperation with the German Wehrmacht, [[Waffen SS]], [[Sicherheitspolizei|SIPO]] and [[Sicherheitspolizei|SD]].<ref>[http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14.pdf p.192]</ref>
In May 1944 the OUN submitted instructions to "switch the struggle, which was conducted against the Germans, completely into a struggle against the Soviets.".<ref name=""UPA14> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14 ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 14]</ref>
In early January-February 1944, UPA forces in some regions engaged in cooperation with the German Wehrmacht (as for instance with 4-th Tanks Army) . <ref>[http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14.pdf p.192-194 ]</ref> <!--<ref>Yaroslav Hrytsak, "History of Ukraine 1772-1999"</ref>--> In March, UPA detachments concluded a deal with Germans SD and SS in selected regions. In March-July a senior leader of OUN(B) in Galicia conducted negotiations with SD and SS officials, resulting in a German decision to supply UPA with arms and ammunitions. In May 1944, the OUN submitted instructions to "switch the struggle, which had been conducted against the Germans, completely into a struggle against the Soviets.".<ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14 ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 14]</ref>


However, in the winter and spring of 1944 it would be incorrect to state that there was a complete cessation of armed conflict between UPA and Nazi forces because UPA continued to defend Ukrainian villages against the repressive actions of the German administration.<ref>[http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14.pdf p.196]</ref> For example, on January 20th, 200 German soldiers on their way to the Ukrainian village of [[Pyrohivka]] were forced to retreat after a several-hours long firefight with a group of 80 UPA soldiers after having lost 30 killed and wounded.<ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14 ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 14, pg. 197]</ref>
In early 1944 UPA forces in several Western regions OUN/UPA engaged in cooperation with the German Wehrmacht, [[Waffen SS]], [[Sicherheitspolizei|SIPO]] and [[Sicherheitspolizei|SD]].<ref>[http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14.pdf p.192]</ref>
In early January-February 1944, UPA forces in some regions engaged in cooperation with the German Wehrmacht (as for instance with 4-th Tanks Army) . <ref>[http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14.pdf p.192-194 ]</ref> <!--<ref>Yaroslav Hrytsak, "History of Ukraine 1772-1999"</ref>--> In March UPA detachments concluded a deal with Germans SD and SS in selected regions. In March-July senior leader of OUN(B) in Galicia conducted negotiations with SD and SS officials, which has as a result German decision to supply UPA with arms and ammunitions.
However, in the winter and spring of 1944 it would be incorrect to state that there was a complete cessation of armed conflict between UPA and Nazi forces because UPA continued to defend Ukrainian villages against the repressive actions of the German administration.<ref>[http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14.pdf p.196]</ref> OUN/UPA report claimed that, on January 20th, 200 German soldiers on their way to the Ukrainian village of [[Pyrohivka]] were forced to retreat after a several-hours long firefight with a group of 80 UPA soldiers after having lost 30 killed and wounded.<ref name=""UPA14> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/14 ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 14, pg. 197]</ref> While Germans documents limited OUN/UPA activities to “looting the German soldiers”.


In a top secret memorandum, General-Major Brigadefuhrer Brenner wrote in mid-1944 to SS-Obergruppenfuhrer General [[Hans Prutzmann]], the highest ranking German SS officer in Ukraine, that “The UPA has halted all attacks on units of the German army. The UPA systematically sends agents, mainly young women, into enemy-occupied territory, and the results of the intelligence are communicated to Department 1c of the [German] Army Group” on the southern Front.<ref name=autogenerated6>http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/Gender.pdf</ref> By the autumn of 1944, the German press was full of praise for UPA for their Anti-Bolshevik successes, referring to the UPA fighters as "Ukrainian fighters for freedom"<ref> Martovych O. The Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA). – Munchen, 1950 p.20 </ref>
In a top secret memorandum, General-Major Brigadefuhrer Brenner wrote in mid-1944 to SS-Obergruppenführer General [[Hans Prutzmann]], the highest ranking German SS officer in Ukraine, that “The UPA has halted all attacks on units of the German army. The UPA systematically sends agents, mainly young women, into enemy-occupied territory, and the results of the intelligence are communicated to Department 1c of the [German] Army Group” on the southern Front.<ref name=autogenerated6>http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/Gender.pdf</ref> By the autumn of 1944, the German press was full of praise for UPA for their Anti-Bolshevik successes, referring to the UPA fighters as "Ukrainian fighters for freedom"<ref> Martovych O. The Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA). – Munchen, 1950 p.20 </ref>

After the front had passed, by the end of 1944 the Germans supplied OUN/UPA by air with arms and equipment. There even existed, in the region of [[Ivano-Frankivsk]], a small landing strip for German transport planes. Also transferred were some German prepared personnel to conduct terrorist and intelligence activities behind Soviet lines, as well as some OUN-B leaders. <ref>[http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/18.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', p.338 ]</ref>


After the front had passed, by the end of 1944 the Germans supplied OUN/UPA by air with arms and equipment. There even existed, in the region of [[Ivano-Frankivsk]], a small landing strip for German transport planes. Also transferred were some German prepared personnel to conduct terrorist and intelligence activities behind Soviet lines, as well as some OUN-B leaders. <ref>[http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/18.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', p.338 ]</ref>


==UPA and Poles==
==UPA and Poles==
{{more|From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia}}
{{rewrite}}
{{rewrite}}


UPA was active in the [[ethnic cleansing]] actions of ethnic Poles from areas of Ukrainian autonomous settlement through [[terrorism|terrorist acts]] and the mass-murder of Polish civilians.
UPA was active in the [[ethnic cleansing]] actions of ethnic Poles from areas of Ukrainian autonomous settlement through [[terrorism|terrorist acts]] and the mass-murder of Polish civilians.
Ukrainian and Polish historians conclude what UPA and OUN-B are responsible party and scale of OUN-B detachments and UPA units action is horrific while Poles tried to defend themselves; and losses amongst Ukrainian civilians does not symmetric to a Poles one.<ref> СПІЛЬНИЙ ВИСНОВОК УКРАЇНСЬКИХ ТА ПОЛЬСЬКИХ ІСТОРИКІВ ЗА ПІДСУМКАМИ ІХ-Х МІЖНАРОДНИХ НАУКОВИХ СЕМІНАРІВ (Варшава, 5-11 листопада 2001 р.) </ref>

[[Massacres of Poles in Volhynia|Ethnic cleansing operations against the Polish population]] began on a large scale in March 1943.<ref name> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://www.history.org.ua/oun_upa/oun/16.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 16, pg. 247-295] and lasted until end of 1944</ref>

[[Soviet partisan]]s in the [[Rivne]] region reported that terror actions committed by “nationalists” against the Polish population commenced in April 1943<ref> Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kyiv Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 p.391</ref>). Władysław Filar from the Polish [[Institute of National Remembrance]], an eyewitness to the massacres, claims that it is impossible to establish whether these events were ever planned. According to Polish historians, the decision to “clean Volyn from the Polish element” was adopted in February 1943 during the Third Conference of OUN(B). However, according to modern Ukrainian historians the ethnic cleansing was ordered [[Image:Bukowsko1946.jpg|thumb|right|170px|[[Bukowsko]] ([[Sanok County]]) village burned down by Ukrainian Insurgent Army on 5 April 1946.]]
by [[Dmytro Klyachkivsky]] and was adopted on a regional level by the OUN (B) and has a support from [[Roman Shukhevych]].<ref name=autogenerated5> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://www.history.org.ua/oun_upa/oun/16.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 16] </ref> Although in August 1943 UPA placed notices in every Polish village stating ''"in 48 hours leave beyond the [[Western Bug|Buh]] or the Sian river - otherwise Death,"''<ref name=autogenerated10> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://www.history.org.ua/oun_upa/oun/11.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 11, pg. 24] </ref> no known documents exist proving that the UPA-OUN made a decision to exterminate Poles in Volhynia.<ref name="FILAR">[http://www.lwow.home.pl/wolyn.html Antypolskie akcje nacjonalistów ukraińskich<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
[[Image:1946buko2.jpg|thumb|right|170px|Bukowsko village burned down by [[Ukrainian Insurgent Army|UPA]] Army on 5 April 1946.]]


[[Massacres of Poles in Volhynia|Ethnic cleansing operations against the Polish population]] began on a large scale in March 1943.<ref name="autogenerated7"> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://www.history.org.ua/oun_upa/oun/16.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 16, pg. 247-295] and lasted until end of 1944</ref>
Brutal methods such as beheading, disembowelling, and killing with knives and axes were employed against Polish villagers. In addition to the UPA, Ukrainian peasants also participated in the violence,<ref name=autogenerated10 /> and large groups of armed "bandit" marauders unaffiliated with UPA brutalized civilians.<ref> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11'' p 96]</ref> so the exact number of Poles killed specifically by UPA is unknown. The UPA also killed ethnic Ukrainians who did not cooperate with them, as well as those Ukrainians who had intermarried with Poles. In anti-Polish actions from autumn 1943 in Galicia, the UPA conducted cooperative actions with detachments of regiments of the Galician [[Image:1946nowo2.jpg|thumb|170px|left|[[Nowotaniec]] ([[Sanok County]]) village burned down by Ukrainian Insurgent Army on 5 April 1946. People displaced by attacking UPA Army.]]
Division.<ref name=autogenerated5 /> The estimates of the number of Poles murdered in Ukraine range from 100,000 to 500,000;<ref name="DAVIES"> Norman Davies. (1996). ''Europe: a History''. Oxford: [[Oxford University Press]] </ref> many more Poles left the area because of the UPA actions.


Brutal methods such as beheading, disembowelling, and killing with knives and axes were employed against Polish villagers. In addition to the UPA, Ukrainian peasants also participated in the violence,<ref name=autogenerated10> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://www.history.org.ua/oun_upa/oun/11.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 11, pg. 24] </ref> and large groups of armed "bandit" marauders unaffiliated with UPA brutalized civilians.<ref> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11'' p 96]</ref> so the exact number of Poles killed specifically by UPA is unknown. The UPA also killed ethnic Ukrainians who did not cooperate with them, as well as those Ukrainians who had intermarried with Poles{{Fact|date=September 2008}}. In anti-Polish actions from autumn 1943 in Galicia, the UPA conducted cooperative actions with detachments of regiments of the Galician Division.<ref name=autogenerated5> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://www.history.org.ua/oun_upa/oun/16.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 16] </ref> The estimates of the number of Poles murdered in Ukraine range from 100,000 to 500,000;<ref name="DAVIES"> Norman Davies. (1996). ''Europe: a History''. Oxford: [[Oxford University Press]] </ref> many more Poles left the area because of the UPA actions.
In post war time amongst some historians exist opinion that UPA's activities can be seen as a reaction to past [[History of Ukrainian minority in Poland|policies and actions]] of the inter-war Polish government, such as shutting down Ukrainian schools and churches or encouraging Polish settlement in the regions considered by OUN to be "ethnically Ukrainian". Some claims what in 1944 Polish-Ukrainian hatred was often provoked by Soviet forces, who used Poles as informants and in anti-Ukrainian destructive battalions, resulting in savage reprisals.<ref> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11'' pp.118-119]</ref>
[[Image:Łodzina 1946.jpg|thumb|right|170px|Łodzina (Gmina Sanok) village burned down by Ukrainian Insurgent Army on [[12 september]] 1946. People displaced by attacking UPA Army.]]
[[Image:Łodzina 1946.jpg|thumb|right|170px|Łodzina (Gmina Sanok) village burned down by Ukrainian Insurgent Army on [[12 september]] 1946. People displaced by attacking UPA Army.]]
The UPA's activities can be seen as a reaction to past [[History of Ukrainian minority in Poland|policies and actions]] of the inter-war Polish government, such as shutting down Ukrainian schools and churches or encouraging Polish settlement in the regions considered by OUN to be "ethnically Ukrainian". Some Ukrainian sources also claimed that Poles began massacring Ukrainian civilians in 1942<ref> [http://warhistory.ukrlife.org/5_6_02_3.htm Ukrainian Insurgent Army and Military Formations of the OUN During World War II, by Ivan Mukovsky, 2002 (Ukrainian)] За деякими українськими джерелами, винищення українців польськими екстремістами на землях, що межували з етнографічною польською територією (Грубешів, Холм, Володава та інші райони на захід від річок Буг і Сян), почалося з 1942 р. Жервами стали понад 2000 чоловік українців. </ref> Polish-Ukrainian hatred was often provoked by Soviet forces, who used Poles as informants and in anti-Ukrainian destructive battalions, resulting in savage reprisals.<ref> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11'' pp.118-119]</ref>
According to 1988 work of [[Subtelny, Orest]] UPA's actions were matched by similar actions by the Polish [[Armia Krajowa]] and by Polish police forces working for the Germans. The brutal conflict escalated out of control with many thousands of civilians being murdered by both Ukrainian and Polish forces.<ref name="Subtelny475">Subtelny, p. 475</ref> <!--Speaking of the escalation in violence, a former soldier in a Polish nationalist partisan unit stated <blockquote>
[[Image:Bukowsko1946.jpg|thumb|right|170px|[[Bukowsko]] ([[Sanok County]]) village burned down by Ukrainian Insurgent Army on 5 April 1946.]]
"The ethnic Ukrainians responded by wiping out an entire Polish colony, setting fire to the houses, killing those inhabitants unable to flee and raping the women who fell into their hands, no matter how old or how young...we retaliated by attacking an even bigger Ukrainian village and... killed women and children. Some of our men were so filled with hatred after losing whole generations of their family in the Ukrainian attacks that they swore they would take an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth...This was how the fighting escalated. Each time more people were killed, more houses burnt, more women raped."<ref> on Chapter Ethnicity, Memory, and Violence: Reflections on Special Problems in Soviet and East European Archives, by Jeffrey Burds, 2005, in ''Archives, Documentation, and the Institutions of Social Memory: Essays from the Sawyer Seminar'', Francis X. BLouin and William G. Rosenberg, eds. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press.</ref></blockquote> -->
[[Image:1946buko2.jpg|thumb|right|170px|Bukowsko village burned down by [[Ukrainian Insurgent Army|UPA]] Army on 5 April 1946.]]
However, accordingly to 2004 work by Gabriel N. Finder and Alexander V. Prusin, Poles constituted a significant threat to Ukrainian aspirations of hegemony in the region. Thus in Volhynia in March 1943 and then in Galicia in August of the same year the leadership of OUN-B initiated the forcible mass removal of the Polish population in which deserters from the Ukrainian police force in Volhynia played a conspicuous role. Violence generated by war and escalating to genocide became the tool of Ukrainian nationalist dreams, laying the foundations for a prospective – and chimerical – Ukrainian state on the basis of conquest, subjugation and, ultimately, the annihilation of Ukraine’s principal enemies in eastern Ukraine – Jews and Poles. <ref>Collaboration in Eastern Galicia: The Ukrainian police and the Holocaust Gabriel N. Finder; Alexander V. Prusin East European Jewish Affairs, Vol. 34, No. 2, Winter 2004, pp. 95–118 ISSN 1350-1674 (print); 1743-971X (online) </ref> Estimates of the death tolls from the retaliatory actions of the Polish [[Home Army]] forces include numbers such as 2,000 Ukrainian civilians<ref>J. Turowski, ''Pożoga. Walki 27 Wołyńskiej dywizji AK'', Warszawa 1990, p. 513</ref> or as high as 20 thousand in [[Volhynia]] alone{{facts}}.
[[Image:1946nowo2.jpg|thumb|170px|left|[[Nowotaniec]] ([[Sanok County]]) village burned down by Ukrainian Insurgent Army on 5 April 1946. People displaced by attacking UPA Army.]]


UPA's actions were matched by similar actions by the Polish [[Armia Krajowa]] and by Polish police forces working for the Germans. The brutal conflict escalated out of control with many thousands of civilians being murdered by both Ukrainian and Polish forces.<ref name="Subtelny475">Subtelny, p. 475</ref> Speaking of the escalation in violence, a former soldier in a Polish nationalist partisan unit stated <blockquote>
"The ethnic Ukrainians responded by wiping out an entire Polish colony, setting fire to the houses, killing those inhabitants unable to flee and raping the women who fell into their hands, no matter how old or how young...we retaliated by attacking an even bigger Ukrainian village and... killed women and children. Some of our men were so filled with hatred after losing whole generations of their family in the Ukrainian attacks that they swore they would take an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth...This was how the fighting escalated. Each time more people were killed, more houses burnt, more women raped."<ref> on Chapter Ethnicity, Memory, and Violence: Reflections on Special Problems in Soviet and East European Archives, by Jeffrey Burds, 2005, in ''Archives, Documentation, and the Institutions of Social Memory: Essays from the Sawyer Seminar'', Francis X. BLouin and William G. Rosenberg, eds. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press.</ref></blockquote> Estimates of the death tolls from the retaliatory actions of the Polish [[Home Army]] forces include numbers such as 2,000 Ukrainian civilians<ref>J. Turowski, ''Pożoga. Walki 27 Wołyńskiej dywizji AK'', Warszawa 1990, p. 513</ref> or as high as 20 thousand in [[Volhynia]] alone .<ref name="RFE"> [http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/05/4c935b0f-8009-48dc-93d8-95344832adc7.html Analysis: Ukraine, Poland Seek Reconciliation Over Grisly History], Jan Maksymiuk, RFE/RL, May 12, 2006 </ref>


==UPA's actions against the Soviet Union==
==UPA's war with the Soviet Union==
===Under German occupation===
===Under German occupation===
The total number of local [[Soviet Partisans]] acting in western Ukraine was never high, due to the region enduring only two years of Soviet rule (some places even less).<ref> Partisan Movement in Ukraine [http://www.vkpb.ru/gpw/guerrilla_ukr.shtml]</ref> Only towards the end of the war, in 1944 did the number and activity of Soviet Partisans in Ukraine increase.
The total number of local [[Soviet Partisans]] acting in western Ukraine was never high, due to the region enduring only two years of Soviet rule (some places even less).<ref> Partisan Movement in Ukraine [http://www.vkpb.ru/gpw/guerrilla_ukr.shtml]</ref> Only towards the end of the war, in 1944 did the number and activity of Soviet Partisans in Ukraine increase. UPA first encountered them in late 1942.


According to 1988 work of [[Subtelny, Orest]] in early 1943, the Soviet partisan leader [[Sydir Kovpak]] established himself and in the summer of 1943, well-armed with supplies delivered to secret airfields formed a group numbering several thousand men<ref name="Subtelny476">Subtelny, p. 476</ref>, while own [[Sydir Kovpak]] memoirs limited group strength to 1.5-1.8 thousand men and establishing to November 1941, which went deep into the [[Carpathians]]. Attacks by the German air force and military forced Kovpak to break up his force into smaller units In 1944 which were attacked by UPA units on way back. Famous Soviet [[intelligence (information gathering)|intelligence]] agent [[Nikolai Ivanovich Kuznetsov|Nikolai Kuznetsov]] was captured and executed by UPA membersm<ref>Ihor Sundiukov, "The Other Side of the Legend: Nikolai Kuznetsov Revisited", [[24 January]] [[2006]]. [http://www.day.kiev.ua/156087// Retrieved] on [[18 December]] [[2007]].</ref>
In early 1943, the Soviet partisan leader [[Sydir Kovpak]] established himself and in the summer of 1943, well-armed with supplies delivered to secret airfields formed a group numbering several thousand men<ref name="Subtelny476">Subtelny, p. 476</ref> which went deep into the [[Carpathians]]. Attacks by the German air force and military forced Kovpak to break up his force into smaller units In 1944 which were attacked by UPA units on way back. Famous Soviet [[intelligence (information gathering)|intelligence]] agent [[Nikolai Ivanovich Kuznetsov|Nikolai Kuznetsov]] was captured and executed by UPA members, after unwittingly entering their camp while wearing a Wehrmacht officer uniform.<ref>Ihor Sundiukov, "The Other Side of the Legend: Nikolai Kuznetsov Revisited", [[24 January]] [[2006]]. [http://www.day.kiev.ua/156087// Retrieved] on [[18 December]] [[2007]].</ref>


===Fighting the Soviet Army (1944-45)===
===Fighting the Soviet Army (1944-45)===


After the [[Red Army]] had liberated Ukraine from the Nazis,the UPA avoided clashes with the regular units of the Soviet military fearing their offensive action would annihilate them.<ref name="Perekrest"> Vladimir Perekrest, former NKVD officer, Source: FSB.ru [http://www.fsb.ru/history/autors/sokolovskaya.html] </ref> Soviet archival data shows that UPA attacks were focused on small units and groups of Soviet soldiers, often ending with killing of the captured and wounded. The UPA opposed the mobilization of able-bodied men into the Soviet Army through the extermination of whole families of those who joined.
With the liberation of Ukraine by the [[Red Army]], the UPA avoided clashes with the regular units of the Soviet military fearing their offensive action would annihilate them.<ref name="Perekrest"> Vladimir Perekrest, former NKVD officer, Source: FSB.ru [http://www.fsb.ru/history/autors/sokolovskaya.html] </ref> Instead, the UPA focused its energy on [[NKVD]] units and Soviet officials of all levels, from NKVD and military officers to the school teachers and postal workers attempting to establish Soviet administration.<ref name="Krohmaliuk">{{cite book| author=Krokhmaluk, Y. | title=UPA Warfare in Ukraine| location= New York | publisher= Vantage Press | year = 1972| pages = (page 242)}}</ref> Soviet archival data shows that UPA attacks were focused on small units and groups of Soviet soldiers, often ending with killing of the captured and wounded. The UPA opposed the mobilization of able-bodied men into the Soviet Army through the extermination of whole families of those who joined. The UPA also disrupted Soviet efforts at [[collectivization]].


In March 1944, UPA insurgents wounded front commander Army General [[Nikolai Vatutin]], who led the liberation of [[Kiev]].<ref name="Grenkevich,">{{cite book| author=Grenkevich, L., translated by David Glantz. | title=The Soviet Partisan Movement, 1941-1944: Critical analysis of | publisher= Routledge | year = 1999 | pages = 134}}</ref> <!--Several weeks later an NKVD battalion was annihilated by UPA near [[Rivne]]. This was responded to a full-scale counter-insurgency operation in the spring of 1944, initially involving 30,000 Soviet troops against the UPA in Volhynia. OR--> Estimates of OUN/UPA and Soviet casualties vary depending on the source. A letter to the state defense committee of the USSR, [[Lavrentiy Beria]] stated that in April 1944 clashes between Soviet forces and UPA resulted in 2018 killed and 1570 captured UPA fighters and only 11 Soviet killed and 46 wounded. Soviet archives show that a captured UPA member stated that he received a reports about UPA losses of 200 fighters while the Soviet forces lost 2,000.<ref name="UPA15_p213"> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/15.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 15], p. 213-214</ref> The first significant sabotage operations against communications of the Soviet Army before their offensive against the Germans was conducted by UPA in April-May 1944. Such actions were promptly stopped by the Soviet Army and NKVD troops, after which the OUN/UPA submitted an order to temporarily cease anti-Soviet activities and prepare for further struggle against the Soviets.<ref name=autogenerated2> Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kiev Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 pp.549-570</ref>
In March 1944, UPA insurgents mortally wounded front commander Army General [[Nikolai Vatutin]], who led the liberation of [[Kiev]].<ref name="Grenkevich,">{{cite book| author=Grenkevich, L., translated by David Glantz. | title=The Soviet Partisan Movement, 1941-1944: Critical analysis of | publisher= Routledge | year = 1999 | pages = 134}}</ref> Several weeks later an NKVD battalion was annihilated by UPA near [[Rivne]]. This began a full-scale operation in the spring of 1944, initially involving 30,000 Soviet troops against UPA in Volyn. Estimates of casualties vary depending on the source. A letter to the state defense committee of the USSR, [[Lavrentiy Beria]] stated that in spring 1944 clashes between Soviet forces and UPA resulted in 2018 killed and 1570 captured UPA fighters and only 11 Soviet killed and 46 wounded. Soviet archives show that a captured UPA member stated that he received a reports about UPA losses of 200 fighters while the Soviet forces lost 2,000.<ref name="UPA15_p213"> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/15.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 15], p. 213-214</ref> The first significant sabotage operations against communications of the Soviet Army before their offensive against the Germans was conducted by UPA in April-May 1944. Such actions were promptly stopped by the Soviet Army and NKVD troops, after which the OUN/UPA submitted an order to temporarily cease anti-Soviet activities and prepare for further struggle against the Soviets.<ref name=autogenerated2> Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kiev Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 pp.549-570</ref>


Despite heavy casualties during the initial clashes, the operation was inconclusive. New large scale actions of UPA, especially in [[Ternopil Oblast]], were launched in July-August 1944, when the Red Army advanced West.<!--<ref name=autogenerated2 /> By the autumn of 1944, UPA forces enjoyed virtual freedom of movement over an area of 160,000 square kilometres in size and home to over 10 million people and had established a shadow government.<ref name="Zhukov"> [http://yurizhukov.com/doc/070900_Zhukov_UPA_Final.pdf Yuri Zhukov, "Examining the Authoritarian
Despite heavy casualties on both sides during the initial clashes, the struggle was inconclusive. New large scale actions of UPA, especially in [[Ternopil Oblast]], were launched in July-August 1944, when the Red Army advanced West.<ref name=autogenerated2 /> By the autumn of 1944, UPA forces enjoyed virtual freedom of movement over an area of 160,000 square kilometers in size and home to over 10 million people and had established a shadow government.<ref name="Zhukov"> [http://yurizhukov.com/doc/070900_Zhukov_UPA_Final.pdf Yuri Zhukov, "Examining the Authoritarian
Model of Counter-insurgency: The Soviet Campaign Against the Ukrainian Insurgent Army", ''Small Wars and Insurgencies'', v.18, no. 3, pp.439-466] </ref> Find mainstream data -->
Model of Counter-insurgency: The Soviet Campaign Against the Ukrainian Insurgent Army", ''Small Wars and Insurgencies'', v.18, no. 3, pp.439-466] </ref>


Soviet archival data states that on [[October 9]], [[1944]] 1 NKVD Division, eight NKVD brigades, and an NKVD cavalry regiment with the total number of 26,304 NKVD soldiers stationed in Western Ukraine. In addition, 2 regiments with 1500 and 1200 persons, 1 battalion (517 persons) and three armored trains with 100 additional soldiers each, as well as 1 border guards regiment and 1 unit were starting to relocate there in order to reinforce them.<ref> According to Soviet archives, the NKVD units located in Western Ukraine were: the 9th Rifle division; 16, 20, 21, 25, 17, 18, 19, 23rd brigades; 1 cavalry regiment. Sent to reinforce them: 256, 192nd regiments; 1 battalion three armored trains (45, 26, 42). The 42nd border guard regiment and another unit (27th) were sent to reinforce them. From Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kiev Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 P.478-482 </ref>
In November 1944, [[Khrushchev]] launched the first of several large-scale Soviet assaults on UPA throughout western Ukraine, involving according to OUN/UPA estimates at least 20 [[NKVD]] combat divisions supported by artillery and armored units. They blockaded villages and roads and set forests on fire.<ref name="Krohmaliuk" /> Soviet archival data states that on [[October 9]], [[1944]] 1 NKVD Division, eight NKVD brigades, and an NKVD cavalry regiment with the total number of 26,304 NKVD soldiers stationed in Western Ukraine. In addition, 2 regiments with 1500 and 1200 persons, 1 battalion (517 persons) and three armored trains with 100 additional soldiers each, as well as 1 border guards regiment and 1 unit were starting to relocate there in order to reinforce them.<ref> According to Soviet archives, the NKVD units located in Western Ukraine were: the 9th Rifle division; 16, 20, 21, 25, 17, 18, 19, 23rd brigades; 1 cavalry regiment. Sent to reinforce them: 256, 192nd regiments; 1 battalion three armored trains (45, 26, 42). The 42nd border guard regiment and another unit (27th) were sent to reinforce them. From Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kiev Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 P.478-482 </ref>


During late 1944 and the first half of 1945, according to Soviet data, “Ukrainian nationalists” (all wings of OUN and UNR military and paramilitary formation) suffered approximately 89,000 killed, approximately 91,000 captured, and approximately 39,000 surrendered while the Soviet forces lost approximately 12,000 killed, approximately 6,000 wounded and 2,600 MIA. In addition, during this time, according to Soviet data “Ukrainian nationalists” actions resulted in the killing of 3,919 civilians and the disappearance of 427 others.<ref> Exact statistics casualties “Ukrainian nationalists” by the Soviets and Soviet casualties by “Ukrainian nationalists”, in specific time periods, according to data compiled by the NKVD of the Ukrainian SRR: during February - December 1944 UPA suffered the following casualties: 57,405 killed; 50,387 captured; 15,990 surrendered. During the period from [[January 1]], [[1945]] until [[May 1]], [[1945]] the following casualties were reported: 31,157 killed; 40,760 captured; 23,156 surrendered. The UPA's actions numbered 2,903 in 1944, and from [[January 1]], [[1945]] until [[May 1]], [[1945]] - 1,289. During February until December 1944 Soviet losses were: 9,521 "killed and hanged"; 3,494 wounded; 2,131 MIA; amongst them NKVD-NKGB suffered 401 killed and hanged, 227 wounded, 98 MIA and captured. From [[January 1]], [[1945]] until [[May 1]], [[1945]] the NKVD and Soviet Army troops suffered 2,513 killed, 2,489 wounded, 524 MIA and captured. Soviet Authorities personnel suffered 1,225 killed or hanged, 239 wounded, 427 MIA or captured. In addition, 3,919 civilians were killed or hanged, 320 wounded, and 814 MIA or captured. From Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kiev Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 pp.604-605 </ref> According to 1988 work of [[Subtelny, Orest]], despite the heavy losses, as late as summer 1945, many [[battalion|battalion-size]] UPA units still continued to control and administer large areas of territory in western Ukraine.<ref name=Subtelny367>[[Orest Subtelny]], ''[http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0802083900&id=HNIs9O3EmtQC&dq=0802083900 Ukraine: a history]'', pp. 489, University of Toronto Press, 2000, ISBN 0-8020-8390-0</ref> While in February 1945 OUN/UPA issued an order to liquidate kurins (battalions) and sotnya’s (companies) and to act predominantly by choty’s ([[platoon]]s).<ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/20.pdf] </ref>
During late 1944 and the first half of 1945, according to Soviet data, UPA suffered approximately 89,000 killed, approximately 91,000 captured, and approximately 39,000 surrendered while the Soviet forces lost approximately 12,000 killed, approximately 6,000 wounded and 2,600 MIA. In addition, during this time, according to Soviet data UPA actions resulted in the killing of 3,919 civilians and the disappearance of 427 others.<ref> Exact statistics of UPA casualties by the Soviets and Soviet casualties by UPA, in specific time periods, according to data compiled by the NKVD of the Ukrainian SRR: during February - December 1944 UPA suffered the following casualties: 57,405 killed; 50,387 captured; 15,990 surrendered. During the period from [[January 1]], [[1945]] until [[May 1]], [[1945]] the following casualties were reported: 31,157 killed; 40,760 captured; 23,156 surrendered. The UPA's actions numbered 2,903 in 1944, and from [[January 1]], [[1945]] until [[May 1]], [[1945]] - 1,289. During February until December 1944 Soviet losses were: 9,521 "killed and hanged"; 3,494 wounded; 2,131 MIA; amongst them NKVD-NKGB suffered 401 killed and hanged, 227 wounded, 98 MIA and captured. From [[January 1]], [[1945]] until [[May 1]], [[1945]] the NKVD and Soviet Army troops suffered 2,513 killed, 2,489 wounded, 524 MIA and captured. Soviet Authorities personnel suffered 1,225 killed or hanged, 239 wounded, 427 MIA or captured. In addition, 3,919 civilians were killed or hanged, 320 wounded, and 814 MIA or captured. From Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kiev Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 pp.604-605 </ref> Despite the heavy losses, as late as summer 1945, many [[battalion|battalion-size]] UPA units still continued to control and administer large areas of territory in western Ukraine.<ref name=Subtelny367>[[Orest Subtelny]], ''[http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0802083900&id=HNIs9O3EmtQC&dq=0802083900 Ukraine: a history]'', pp. 489, University of Toronto Press, 2000, ISBN 0-8020-8390-0</ref> In February 1945 UPA issued an order to liquidate kurins (battalions) and sotnya’s (companies) and to act predominantly by choty’s ([[platoon]]s).<ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/20.pdf] </ref>


=== Spring 1945- late 1946===
=== Spring 1945- late 1946===
{{more|Sluzhba Bezbeky}}
{{more|Sluzhba Bezbeky}}
After Germany surrendered in May 1945, the Soviet authorities turned their attention to insurgencies taking place in Ukraine and the Baltics. Combat units were re-organised and special forces were sent in. One of the major complications that arose was the local support the UPA had from the population, which became a priority for the Soviets. The UPA also disrupted Soviet efforts at [[collectivization]].
After Germany surrendered in May 1945, the Soviet authorities turned their attention to insurgencies taking place in Ukraine and the Baltics. Combat units were re-organised and special forces were sent in. One of the major complications that arose was the local support the UPA had from the population, which became a priority for the Soviets.
From areas of Ukrainian Nationalists activity were deported: officially Soviet archives state that between 1944 and 1952 a total of 182,543 people <ref>{{uk icon}}[http://www.uvkr.com.ua/ua/visnyk/visnyk2005/april2005/komar.html external link]</ref><ref> Theses include deported (1944-47): families of OUN/UPA members–– 15,040 families (37,145) persons; OUN/UPA underground families – 26,332 (77,791 persons) taken from: Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kiev Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 P.545-546 </ref> while according to 1988 work of [[Subtelny, Orest]] number only for 1944-47 may have been as high as to 500,000.<ref name="Subtelny489">Subtelny, p. 489</ref>
[[Image: Yastrebki.jpg|thumb|right|170px|Monument devoted to the fallen “yastrebki” (soviet anti-OUN/UPA freewill self-defense groups) volunteers. Chernovitska region. Ukraine]]


According Jeffrey Burds, Associate Professor of History, Northeastern University, mass arrests of suspected UPA informants or family members were conducted; between February 1944 and May 1946 over 250,000 people were arrested in Western Ukraine.<ref name=Burds97>Burds, p.97</ref>, ( Those arrested typically experienced beatings or other violence. Those suspected of being UPA members underwent torture. The many arrested women believed to be affiliating with UPA were subjected to torture, deprivation, and rape at the hands of Soviet security in order to "break" them and get them to reveal UPA members' identities and locations or to turn them into Soviet double-agents.<ref name=autogenerated6 /> Mutilated corpses of captured rebels were put on public display.<ref> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11''].</ref> While [[Ukrainian Academy of Sciences]] limited this number to approximately 28,000 “proponents of Ukrainian nationalists” <ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/22.pdf] [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/21.pdf] </ref> and “few facts of breaching the soviet low” were investigated and punished, while public execution of Nazi criminals and their collaborationists were a common in ex-occupied Soviet territories few years after WWII.
Areas of UPA activity were depopulated, the estimates on numbers vary, officially Soviet archives state that between 1944 and 1952 a total of 182,543 people <ref>{{uk icon}}[http://www.uvkr.com.ua/ua/visnyk/visnyk2005/april2005/komar.html external link]</ref><ref> Theses include deported (1944-47): families of OUN/UPA members–– 15,040 families (37,145) persons; OUN/UPA underground families – 26,332 (77,791 persons) taken from: Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kiev Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 P.545-546 </ref> while other sources indicate the number may have been as high as to 500,000.<ref name="Subtelny489">Subtelny, p. 489</ref> Mass arrests of suspected UPA informants or family members were conducted; between February 1944 and May 1946 over 250,000 people were arrested in Western Ukraine.<ref name=Burds97>Burds, p.97</ref> Those arrested typically experienced beatings or other violence. Those suspected of being UPA members underwent torture; (reports exist of some prisoners being burned alive). The many arrested women believed to be affiliating with UPA were subjected to torture, deprivation, and rape at the hands of Soviet security in order to "break" them and get them to reveal UPA members' identities and locations or to turn them into Soviet double-agents.<ref name=autogenerated6 /> Mutilated corpses of captured rebels were put on public display.<ref> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11''].</ref>


According Jeffrey Burds, Associate Professor of History, Northeastern University UPA responded to the Soviet methods by unleashing their own terror against Soviet activists, “suspected collaborators” and their families. This work was particularly attributed to the [[Sluzhba Bezbeky]] (SB). In a typical incident in Lviv region, in front of horrified villagers, UPA troops gouged out the eyes of two entire families suspected of reporting on insurgent movements to Soviet authorities, before hacking their bodies to pieces. Due to public outrage concerning these violent punitive acts, OUN/UPA stopped the practice of killing the families of collaborators by mid 1945. Other victims of OUN/UPA included Soviet activists sent to Galicia from other parts of the Soviet Union; heads of village Soviets, those sheltering or feeding Red Army personnel, and even people turning food in to collective farms. The effect of such terrorist acts was such that people refused to take posts as village heads, and until the late 1940s villages chose single men with no dependants as their leaders.<ref> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11'' pp. 106 - 110]</ref>
UPA responded to the Soviet methods by unleashing their own terror against Soviet activists, suspected collaborators and their families. This work was particularly attributed to the [[Sluzhba Bezbeky]] (SB), the anti-espionage wing of UPA. In a typical incident in Lviv region, in front of horrified villagers, UPA troops gouged out the eyes of two entire families suspected of reporting on insurgent movements to Soviet authorities, before hacking their bodies to pieces. Due to public outrage concerning these violent punitive acts, UPA stopped the practice of killing the families of collaborators by mid 1945. Other victims of UPA included Soviet activists sent to Galicia from other parts of the Soviet Union; heads of village Soviets, those sheltering or feeding Red Army personnel, and even people turning food in to collective farms. The effect of such terrorist acts was such that people refused to take posts as village heads, and until the late 1940s villages chose single men with no dependants as their leaders.<ref> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11'' pp. 106 - 110]</ref>


The UPA also proved to be especially adept at assassinating key Soviet administrative officials. According to NKVD data, between February 1944 and December 1946 11,725 Soviet officers, agents and collaborators were assassinated and 2,401 were "missing", presumed kidnapped, in Western Ukraine.<ref name=autogenerated4> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11'' pp. 113-114]</ref> In one [[Raion|county]] in [[Lviv Oblast|Lviv region]] alone, from August 1944 until January 1945 Ukrainian rebels killed ten members of the Soviet activ and a secretary of the county Communist party, and also kidnapped four other officials. UPA travelled at will throughout the area. In this county, there were no courts, no prosecutor's office, and the local NKVD only had three staff members.<ref name=autogenerated4 /> According to a 1946 report by Khrushchenv's deputy for West Ukrainian affairs A.A. Stoiantsev, out of 42,175 operations and ambushes against UPA by Destructive Battalions in Western Ukraine, only 10 percent had positive results - in the vast majority there was either no contact or the individual unit was disarmed and pro-Soviet leaders murdered or kidnapped.<ref> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11'' pg. 123]</ref> Morale amongst the NKVD in Western Ukraine was particularly low. Even within the dangerous context of Soviet state service in the late-Stalin era, West Ukraine was considered to be a "hardship post", and personnel files reveal higher rates of transfer requests, alcoholism, and nervous breakdowns and refusal to serve among NKVD field agents there at that time.<ref> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11'' pg. 120]</ref>
While [[Ukrainian Academy of Sciences]] and own [[Sluzhba Bezbeky]] (SB) captured documents depict what the terror and civil population extermination by [[Sluzhba Bezbeky]] (SB) appeared from the 1943 and not ended till total extermination of SB members in 1948-49. <ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/22.pdf] [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/21.pdf] </ref>


The first success of the Soviet authorities came in early 1946 in the Carpathians, which were blockaded from [[January 11]] until [[April 10]]. The UPA operating there ceased to exist as a combat unit.<ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/22.pdf] </ref> The continuous heavy casualties elsewhere forced the UPA to split into small units consisting of 100 soldiers. Many of the troops demobilized and returned home, when the Soviet Union offered three amnesties during 1947-1948<ref name="Perekrest" />
According Jeffrey Burds, Associate Professor of History, Northeastern University, between February 1944 and December 1946 11,725 Soviet officers, agents and collaborators were assassinated and 2,401 were "missing", presumed kidnapped, in Western Ukraine.<ref name=autogenerated4> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11'' pp. 113-114]</ref>, while [[Ukrainian Academy of Sciences]] and Soviet sources limit and distinct such numbers to 3-4 thousands of different government institution servicemen and 8-9 thousands of civilians. <ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/22.pdf] [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/21.pdf] </ref> In one [[Raion|county]] in [[Lviv Oblast|Lviv region]] alone, from August 1944 until January 1945 Ukrainian rebels killed ten members of the Soviet activ and a secretary of the county Communist party, and also kidnapped four other officials. UPA traveled at will throughout the area. In this county, there were no courts, no prosecutor's office, and the local NKVD only had three staff members.<ref name=autogenerated4 /> According to a 1946 report by Khrushchenv's deputy for West Ukrainian affairs A.A. Stoiantsev, out of 42,175 operations and ambushes against UPA by Destructive Battalions in Western Ukraine, only 10 percent had positive results - in the vast majority there was either no contact or the individual unit was disarmed and pro-Soviet leaders murdered or kidnapped.<ref> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11'' pg. 123]</ref> According Jeffrey Burds, Associate Professor of History, Northeastern University, morale amongst the NKVD in Western Ukraine was particularly low. Even within the dangerous context of Soviet state service in the late-Stalin era, West Ukraine was considered to be a "hardship post", and personnel files reveal higher rates of transfer requests, alcoholism, and nervous breakdowns and refusal to serve among NKVD field agents there at that time.<ref> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11'' pg. 120]</ref>


The first success of the Soviet authorities came in early 1946 in the Carpathians, which were blockaded from [[January 11]] until [[April 10]]. The UPA operating there ceased to exist as a combat unit.<ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/22.pdf] </ref> The continuous heavy casualties elsewhere forced the UPA to split into small units. Many of the troops demobilized and returned home, when the Soviet Union offered three amnesties during 1947-1948<ref name="Perekrest" />
By 1946, UPA was reduced to a core group of 5-10 thousand fighters, and large-scale UPA activity shifted to the Soviet-Polish border. Here, in 1947, they allegedly killed the Polish Communist deputy defense minister General [[Karol Świerczewski]]. In spring 1946, the OUN/UPA established contacts with the Intelligence services of France, Great Britain and the USA.<ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/23.pdf] </ref> Although the UPA obtained some help from the CIA and British intelligence during the latter phase of its struggle, the operation was betrayed by [[Kim Philby]]. After the huge winter 1945/46 operation by the NKVD, UPA/OUN fielded 479 units and had 3,735 fighters, according to an NKVD estimate from [[April 1]], [[1946]]. By [[January 1]], [[1947]] MGB estimated OUN and UPA as having 530 fighting units with 4,456 fighters.


=== The end of the UPA and OUN Resistance (1947-1955) ===
General Command of UPA issued an document which ordered to switch from “wide insurgent warfare to underground-conspiracy activities”. <ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/22.pdf] p.404 </ref>


The turning point in the struggle against the UPA came in 1947, when the Soviets established an intelligence gathering network within the UPA and shifted the focus of their actions from mass terror to infiltration and espionage. After 1947 the UPA's activity began to subside. On [[May 30]], [[1947]] Shukhevych issued instructions joining the OUN and UPA in underground warfare [http://warhistory.ukrlife.org/5_6_02_7.htm]. In 1947-1948 UPA resistance was weakened enough to allow the Soviets to begin implementation of large-scale [[collectivization]] throughout western Ukraine.<ref name="Zhukov">{{cite journal | first = Yuri | last = Zhukov | authorlink = Y. Zhukov | year = 2007| month = | title = Examining the Authoritarian Model of Counterinsurgency: The Soviet Campaign Against the Ukrainian Insurgent Army | journal = Small Wars and Insurgencies | volume = 18 | issue = 3 | pages = 439-466 | id = | url= http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~content=a785924288~db=all~order=page }}</ref> In 1948, the Soviet central authorities purged local officials who had mistreated peasants and engaged in "vicious methods". At the same time, Soviet agents planted within the UPA had taken their toll on morale and on the UPA's effectiveness. According to the writing of one slain Ukrainian rebel, "the Bolsheviks tried to take us from within...you can never know exactly in whose hands you will find yourself. From such a network of spies, the work of whole teams is often penetrated..." In November 1948, the work of Soviet agents led to two important victories against the UPA: the defeat and deaths of the heads of the most active UPA network in Western Ukraine, and the removal of "Myron", the head of the UPA's counterintelligence SB unit.<ref> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11'' pp. 125-130]</ref>
By 1946, UPA was reduced to a core group of 5-10 thousand fighters, and large-scale UPA activity shifted to the Soviet-Polish border (at Polish territory). Here, in 1947, they allegedly killed the Polish Communist deputy defense minister General [[Karol Świerczewski]]. In spring 1946, the OUN/UPA established contacts with the Intelligence services of France, Great Britain and the USA.<ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/23.pdf] </ref> Although the OUN/UPA obtained help from the CIA and British intelligence during the latter phase of its struggle, the operation was betrayed by [[Kim Philby]]. After the huge winter 1945/46 operation by the NKVD, UPA/OUN fielded 479 units and had 3,735 fighters, according to an NKVD estimate from [[April 1]], [[1946]]. By [[January 1]], [[1947]] MGB estimated OUN and UPA as having 530 fighting units with 4,456 fighters.


The Soviet authorities tried to win over the local population by making significant investments into Western Ukraine, and by setting up a quick dispatch groups in many regions to combat the UPA. According to one retired MVD major, by 1948 ideologically we had the support of most of the population.<ref name="Perekrest" /> The Soviets skillfully exploited Polish-Ukrainian ethnic friction by recruitiing Poles as informants. This contributed to the growing isolation of the UPA which was further helped by the Polish government implementing [[Operation Wisła]] in 1947. On [[September 3]], [[1949]] Shukhevych issued an order, liquidating UPA units and headquarters and integrating UPA's personnel into the OUN (B) underground.


The UPA's leader, [[Roman Shukhevych]], was killed during an ambush near [[Lviv]] on [[March 5]], [[1950]] (in an ironic turn of events, he died from his wounds on the same day that Stalin would die 3 years later). Although sporadic UPA activity continued until the mid 1950's, after Shukhevich's death the UPA rapidly lost its fighting capability. An assessment of UPA's manpower by Soviet authorities in [[April 17]], [[1952]] indicated that UPA/OUN had only 84 fighting units consisting of 252 persons. UPA's last commander, [[Vasyl Kuk]], was captured on May, 24 1954. Despite the existence of some insurgent groups, according to a report by the MGB of the Ukrainian SSR, the "liquidation of armed units and OUN underground was accomplished by the beginning of 1956".<ref>[http://warhistory.ukrlife.org/5_6_02_7.htm журнал "Воєнна історія" #5-6 за 2002 рік Війна після війни<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
=== The end of the UPA (1947-1949) ===


A controversy exists that there were [[NKVD units dressed as UPA fighters]]<ref name="Wilson">{{cite book| author=Wilson, A. | title=Virtual Politics: Faking Democracy in the Post-Soviet World| location= New Haven | publisher= [[Yale University Press]] | year = 2005 | pages = 15}}</ref> and committed atrocities in order to demoralize the [[civilian]] population.<ref>[http://ukrweekly.com/Archive/2002/300202.shtml Ukrainian Weekly, [[July 28]], [[2002]], written by Dr. [[Taras Kuzio]]] </ref> among these NKVD units were those composed of former UPA fighters working for the NKVD.<ref> Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kyiv Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 P 460-464, 470-477</ref> The [[Security Service of Ukraine]] (SBU) recently published information about 150 such special groups consisting of 1,800 people operated until 1954.<ref>[http://www.ukranews.com/eng/article/84498.html Ukranian News<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> One famous example of an ex-UPA turned MVD fighter was [[Bohdan Stashynsky]] who would then climb the ladder of MGB (and later KGB) hierarchy to become a foreign agent who assassinated the OUN chief [[Lev Rebet]] in 1957 and later [[Stepan Bandera]] in 1959.
According Jeffrey Burds, Associate Professor of History, Northeastern University, the turning point in the struggle against the UPA came in 1947, when the Soviets established an intelligence gathering network within the UPA and shifted the focus of their actions from mass terror to infiltration and espionage. After 1947 the UPA's activity began to calm down. On [[May 30]], [[1947]] Shukhevych issued instructions joining the OUN and UPA in underground warfare [http://warhistory.ukrlife.org/5_6_02_7.htm]. In 1947-1948 OUN/UPA resistance has weakened enough to allow the Soviets to begin implementation of large-scale [[collectivization]] throughout western Ukraine.<ref name="Zhukov">{{cite journal | first = Yuri | last = Zhukov | authorlink = Y. Zhukov | year = 2007| month = | title = Examining the Authoritarian Model of Counterinsurgency: The Soviet Campaign Against the Ukrainian Insurgent Army | journal = Small Wars and Insurgencies | volume = 18 | issue = 3 | pages = 439-466 | id = | url= http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~content=a785924288~db=all~order=page }}</ref> In 1948, the Soviet central authorities purged local officials who had mistreated peasants and engaged in "vicious methods". At the same time, Soviet agents planted within the OUN/UPA had taken their toll on morale and on the OUN/UPA's effectiveness. According to the writing of one slain Ukrainian rebel, "the Bolsheviks tried to take us from within...you can never know exactly in whose hands you will find yourself. From such a network of spies, the work of whole teams is often penetrated..." In November 1948, the work of Soviet agents led to two important victories against the UPA: the defeat and deaths of the heads of the most active OUN/UPA network in Western Ukraine, and the removal of "Myron", the head of the SB unit.<ref> [http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/agentura1.pdf Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", ''East European Politics and Societies v.11'' pp. 125-130]</ref>

The Soviet authorities tried to win over the local population by making significant investments into Western Ukraine, and by setting up a quick dispatch groups in many regions to combat the UPA. The end of OUN and UPA at Polish territory was helped by the Polish government implementing [[Operation Wisła]] in 1947. On [[September 3]], [[1949]] Shukhevych issued an order, liquidating UPA units and headquarters and integrating UPA's personnel into the OUN (B) underground.

On [[May 30]], [[1947]]<ref>[http://www.ukrnationalism.org.ua/publications/?n=674 Banderivtsi Nationalistic Portal (Бандерівці ідуть! in Націоналістичний портал)] {{uk icon}}</ref> the Main Ukrainian Liberation Council (Головна Визвольна Рада) adopted the date of [[October 14]], [[1942]] as the official day for celebrating UPA's creation.

The UPA's leader, [[Roman Shukhevych]], was killed during an ambush near [[Lviv]] on [[March 5]], [[1950]] . Although sporadic OUN underground activity continued until the mid 1950's. An assessment of OUN underground manpower by Soviet authorities in [[April 17]], [[1952]] indicated that OUN underground had only 84 fighting units consisting of 252 persons. Last head of UPA’s General Command , [[Vasyl Kuk]], was captured on May, 24 1954. Despite the existence of some insurgent groups, according to a report by the MGB of the Ukrainian SSR, the "liquidation of armed units and OUN underground was accomplished by the beginning of 1956".<ref>[http://warhistory.ukrlife.org/5_6_02_7.htm журнал "Воєнна історія" #5-6 за 2002 рік Війна після війни<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

A controversy exists that there were [[NKVD units dressed as UPA fighters]]<ref name="Wilson">{{cite book| author=Wilson, A. | title=Virtual Politics: Faking Democracy in the Post-Soviet World| location= New Haven | publisher= [[Yale University Press]] | year = 2005 | pages = 15}}</ref> and committed atrocities in order to demoralize the [[civilian]] population.<ref>[http://ukrweekly.com/Archive/2002/300202.shtml Ukrainian Weekly, [[July 28]], [[2002]], written by Dr. [[Taras Kuzio]]] </ref> were those composed of former UPA fighters working for the NKVD.<ref> Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kyiv Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 P 460-464, 470-477</ref> The [[Security Service of Ukraine]] (SBU) recently published information about 150 such special groups consisting of 1,800 people operated until 1954.<ref>[http://www.ukranews.com/eng/article/84498.html Ukranian News<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> While well known what such kind of “special group practice” was cancelled from March 1949 <ref> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/24.pdf] </ref>

One famous example of an ex-UPA turned MVD fighter was [[Bohdan Stashynsky]] who would then climb the ladder of MGB (and later KGB) hierarchy to become a foreign agent who assassinated the OUN chief [[Lev Rebet]] in 1957 and later [[Stepan Bandera]] in 1959.


Prominent people killed by the UPA insurgents during the anti-Soviet struggle included Metropolitan Oleksiy (Hromadsky) of the [[Ukrainian Autonomous Orthodox Church]] and pro-Soviet writer [[Yaroslav Halan]].<ref name="Perekrest" />
Prominent people killed by the UPA insurgents during the anti-Soviet struggle included Metropolitan Oleksiy (Hromadsky) of the [[Ukrainian Autonomous Orthodox Church]] and pro-Soviet writer [[Yaroslav Halan]].<ref name="Perekrest" />
Line 216: Line 192:
UPA periodicals contained ideological articles, informational reports and decrees, interesting facts from Ukrainian history and training materials as well as prose and poetry of Ukrainian underground members.
UPA periodicals contained ideological articles, informational reports and decrees, interesting facts from Ukrainian history and training materials as well as prose and poetry of Ukrainian underground members.
Over 130 periodicals appeared, 500 brochures, dozens of training manuals, memoirs, poetic collections, thousands of leaflets, appeals and responses were published.<ref>(Ukrainian) Українська Повстанська Армія - Історія нескорених - Львів, 2007 p.227</ref>
Over 130 periodicals appeared, 500 brochures, dozens of training manuals, memoirs, poetic collections, thousands of leaflets, appeals and responses were published.<ref>(Ukrainian) Українська Повстанська Армія - Історія нескорених - Львів, 2007 p.227</ref>
--->


==UPA and Soviet infiltration ==
==UPA and Soviet infiltration ==
{{POV|section|date=July 2008}}
{{Unreferencedsection|date=July 2008}}
From the beginning of 1944, the Soviets waged an active war against the UPA launching a large-scale assault against the Ukrainian underground in several directions, propaganda among the population; military operations; repression against members and their families. Soviet anti-insurgent propaganda was concentrated on discrediting and dividing the national liberation movement. Soviet propaganda emphasised their thesis on the treason and crimes of "Ukrainian-German nationalists" and their collaboration with "fascist invaders".
From the beginning of 1944, the Soviets waged an active war against the UPA launching a large-scale assault against the Ukrainian underground in several directions, propaganda among the population; military operations; repression against members and their families. Soviet anti-insurgent propaganda was concentrated on discrediting and dividing the national liberation movement. Soviet propaganda emphasised their thesis on the treason and crimes of "Ukrainian-German nationalists" and their collaboration with "fascist invaders".


Line 227: Line 202:
In 1944-1945 the NKVD carried out 26,693 operations against the Ukrainian underground. These resulted in the deaths of 22.474 Ukrainian soldiers and the capture of 62,142 prisoners. During this time the NKVD formed special groups known as ''spetshrupy'' made up of former Soviet partisans. The goal of these groups was to discredit the and disorganize the OUN and UPA. In August 1944 Sydir Kovpak was placed under NKVD authority. Posing as Ukrainian insurgents these special formations used violence against the civilian population of Western Ukraine. In June 1945 there were 156 such special groups with 1783 members.<ref name=autogenerated7>(Ukrainian) Українська Повстанська Армія - Історія нескорених - Львів, 2007 p.307-310</ref>
In 1944-1945 the NKVD carried out 26,693 operations against the Ukrainian underground. These resulted in the deaths of 22.474 Ukrainian soldiers and the capture of 62,142 prisoners. During this time the NKVD formed special groups known as ''spetshrupy'' made up of former Soviet partisans. The goal of these groups was to discredit the and disorganize the OUN and UPA. In August 1944 Sydir Kovpak was placed under NKVD authority. Posing as Ukrainian insurgents these special formations used violence against the civilian population of Western Ukraine. In June 1945 there were 156 such special groups with 1783 members.<ref name=autogenerated7>(Ukrainian) Українська Повстанська Армія - Історія нескорених - Львів, 2007 p.307-310</ref>


The Soviets used "extermination battalions" (''strybky'') recruiting secret collaborators in each population point. Attempts were made to place agents at all leading levels of the OUN and UPA.
The Soviets used"extermination battalions" (''strybky'') recruiting secret collaborators in each population point. Attempts were made to place agents at all leading levels of the OUN and UPA.


From December 1945-1946 15,562 operations were carried out in which 4,200 were killed and more than 9,400 were arrested. From 1944-1953,the Soviets killed 153,000 and arrested 134,000 members of the UPA. 66,000 Families (204,000 people) were forcibly deported to Siberia and half a million people were subject to repressions. In the same period Polish authorities deported 450,000 people.<ref name=autogenerated7 />--->
From December 1945-1946 15,562 operations were carried out in which 4,200 were killed and more than 9,400 were arrested. From 1944-1953,the Soviets killed 153,000 and arrested 134,000 members of the UPA. 66,000 Families (204,000 people) were forcibly deported to Siberia and half a million people were subject to repressions. In the same period Polish authorities deported 450,000 people.<ref name=autogenerated7 />--->


==UPA's relationships with Western Ukraine's Jews==


In contrast to the links between UPA and atrocities committed on Polish civilians, there is a lack of consensus among historians about the involvement of UPA in the massacre of western Ukraine's Jews. Numerous accounts ascribe to UPA a role in the tragic fate of the Ukrainian Jews under the German occupation.<ref name=EncHol>''Ukrainian Insurgent Army'' in the ''[[Encyclopaedia of the Holocaust]]'', Israel Gutman, editor-in-chief. New York: Macmillan, 1990. 4 volumes. ISBN 0-02-896090-4.</ref><ref name=Piotr>[[Tadeusz Piotrowski (sociologist)]], ''Ukrainian Collaboration'' in ''Poland's Holocaust: Ethnic Strife, Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic, 1918–1947'' pp. 220–59, McFarland & Company, 1998, ISBN 0-7864-0371-3</ref> Other historians, however, do not support the claims that UPA was involved in anti-Jewish massacres.<ref name=Subtelny367>[[Orest Subtelny]], ''[http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0802083900&id=HNIs9O3EmtQC&dq=0802083900 Ukraine: a history]'', University of Toronto Press, 2000, ISBN 0-8020-8390-0</ref><ref name="Himka">{{cite journal | first = John-Paul | last = Himka | authorlink = John-Paul Himka | year = | month = | title = War Criminality: A Blank Spot in the Collective Memory of the Ukrainian Diaspora | journal = Spaces of Identity | volume = 5 | issue = 1 | pages = 5-24 | id = | url= http://www.univie.ac.at/spacesofidentity/_Vol_5_1/_PDF/Himka.pdf |format=PDF}}</ref><ref> [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/index.htm Institute of History, Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, "Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and Ukrainian Insurgent Army] </ref>
==OUN-B/UPA's and “Jew’s question” at Ukraine ==
Despite that fact what by the time of UPA establishing at [[Reichskommissariat Ukraine]] (spring-summer 1943) and [[General Government]] (summer-winter 1943) almost all Jewish population of that areas were exterminated by Nazi’s with the notable assistance of Ukrainian militia and ''Ukrainian Auxiliary Police'' which filled by OUN-B proponents, were exist a different historical assessment of the Organization of the Ukrainian Nationalist and it members and proponents participation in the destruction of Ukrainian Jews under the German occupation.
Accordingly to documents presented to the International Military Tribunal confirmed by [[affidavit]] of the Major General Erwin Von Lahausen, [[Abwehr]] Division I Head, Ukrainian organizations (OUN) which are working with Amt [[Abwehr]] have same (as Nazi’s) “objectives”, namely, the Poles and the Jews <ref> IMT Vol III p.21</ref>. Such “objects” described as “all farms and dwelling of the Poles should go up in flames, and all Jews be killed” <ref> IMT Vol II p.448 </ref>.
OUN -B General Instruction adopted in 1941 “ Fights and activities during the war” stated “enemies to us are: moskali (Russians), Poles, Jews…” and thus them must be“… exterminated in fight, especially whom which protect regime: remove to their land, assassinate, predominantly intelligentsia… Jews assimilation is impossible.” [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/2.pdf], moreover, in minutes of OUN (B) July 1941 Conference of OUN (B) clear visible a plan for partially Jewish population extermination and “ghettoizetion”. Captured [[Sicherheitspolizei|SD]] and [[Sicherheitspolizei|SIPO]] reports till end of October 1941, which were presented at [[Nurmberg_Trial]] noted about active role especially of OUN -B groups in “communists and Jewish extermination” at [[Reichskommissariat Ukraine]] <ref> IMT Document 2693-PS, Vol. XXXVIII</ref>. In June 1943 report by SS- Gruppenfьhrer and General Lieutenant of the Police Fritz Katzmann called “The Solution of the Jewish Question in Galicia” noted the significant role of the Ukrainian police in the Jews extermination in 1941- early 1943 <ref> International Military Tribunal, Nurnberg, German, USA Exhibit 277, L-18. </ref> Numerous accounts ascribe to OUN-UPA a role in the tragic fate of the Ukrainian Jews under the German occupation.<ref name=EncHol>''Ukrainian Insurgent Army'' in the ''[[Encyclopaedia of the Holocaust]]'', Israel Gutman, editor-in-chief. New York: Macmillan, 1990. 4 volumes. ISBN 0-02-896090-4.</ref><ref name=Piotr>[[Tadeusz Piotrowski (sociologist)]], ''Ukrainian Collaboration'' in ''Poland's Holocaust: Ethnic Strife, Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic, 1918–1947'' pp. 220–59, McFarland & Company, 1998, ISBN 0-7864-0371-3</ref> <ref> Karel Berkhoff. Harvest of the Despair: Life and Death in the Ukraine under Nazi Rule. Cambridge / London: Harvard University Press </ref> <ref> "Themes for a Social History of War Experience and Collaboration," in The Politics of Retribution: World War II and Its Aftermath eds. István Deák, Jan Gross, and Tony Judt (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2000) </ref> <ref> Die faschistiche Okkupationspolitik in den zeituweilig besetzen Gebeiten der Sowijetunon (1941-1944) (Berlin: Deutscher Verlag der Wissrnschafen, 1991</ref>
While group of Northern-American historians, mostly with Ukrainian roots, do not support the arguments that UPA was involved in anti-Jewish massacres.<ref name=Subtelny367>[[Orest Subtelny]], ''[http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0802083900&id=HNIs9O3EmtQC&dq=0802083900 Ukraine: a history]'', University of Toronto Press, 2000, ISBN 0-8020-8390-0</ref><ref name="Himka">{{cite journal | first = John-Paul | last = Himka | authorlink = John-Paul Himka | year = | month = | title = War Criminality: A Blank Spot in the Collective Memory of the Ukrainian Diaspora | journal = Spaces of Identity | volume = 5 | issue = 1 | pages = 5-24 | id = | url= http://www.univie.ac.at/spacesofidentity/_Vol_5_1/_PDF/Himka.pdf }}</ref>


Unlike other Eastern European nationalist movements, antisemitism did not play a central role in Ukrainian nationalist ideology, notwithstanding the antisemitic rhetoric that was obligatory in all countries occupied by Nazi Germany. German documents of the period lead to the impression that extreme Ukrainian nationalists were indifferent to the plight of the Jews; they would either kill them or help them, whichever was more appropriate for their political goals.<ref name=autogenerated8> [http://www.zwoje-scrolls.com/zwoje16/text11.htm Ukrainian Collaboration in the Extermination of the Jews during the Second World War: Sorting Out the Long-Term and Conjunctural Factors] by John-Paul Himka, University of Alberta. Taken from ''The Fate of the European Jews, 1939-1945: Continuity or Contingency'', ed. Jonathan Frankel (New York, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), Studies in Contemporary Jewry 13 (1997): 170-89. </ref> Prior to the formation of UPA, in 1941-1942, when it was still working closely with Germany, the political organization from which it was formed, the [[Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists]], made numerous violently antisemitic statements. For example, in instructions to its members concerning how the OUN should behave during the war, it declared that "in times of chaos...one can allow oneself to liquidate Polish, Russian and Jewish figures, particularly the servants of Bolshevik-Muscovite imperialism" and further, when speaking of Russians, Poles, and Jews, to "destroy in the struggle, especially those, who defend the [Soviet] regime: send them to their lands, destroy them especially the intelligentsia...assimilation of the Jews is ruled out."<ref name="UPA2_p62"> Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, [http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/2.pdf ''Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army'', Chapter 2], pp.62-63</ref> Nevertheless, some Jews were protected by the OUN. According to a report to the Chief of the Security Police in Berlin dated [[March 30]], [[1942]], "...it has been clearly established that the Bandera movement provided forged passports not only for its own members, but also for Jews.".<ref name=autogenerated3> [http://www.iwp.edu/news/newsID.139/news_detail.asp Divide and Conquer: the KGB Disinformation Campaign Against Ukrainians and Jews. ''Ukrainian Quarterly'', Fall 2004. By Herbert Romerstein] </ref><ref name=autogenerated8 />
John-Paul Himka, a historian also with Ukrainian roots, has called this "a blank spot in the collective memory of the Ukrainian Diaspora." He states that this group does not so much ignore the Holocaust of the Ukrainian Jews, but denies the participation of Ukrainians in this crime against humanity.
However, according to a report to the Chief of the Security Police in Berlin dated March 30, 1942, "...it has been clearly established that the Bandera movement provided forged passports not only for its own members, but also for Jews." Such fact also confirmed by few survivors from Lviv Ghetto – they noted what ''Ukrainian Auxiliary Police'' Guards of Ghetto sold faked documents for most richest Jewish families, and some of them able to escape from ghetto, but after some of them were looted and killed by Ukrainian Police, while some returned to ghetto and executed. <ref> David Kahane, Lvov Ghetto Diary (Amherst: University of Massachussettes Press, 1990) </ref>


By early 1943 the OUN had entered into open armed conflict with Nazi Germany. In 1944, the OUN formally "rejected racial and ethnic exclusivity"<ref name=Subtelny367>[[Orest Subtelny]], ''[http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0802083900&id=HNIs9O3EmtQC&dq=0802083900 Ukraine: a history]'', p. 474, [[University of Toronto Press]], 2000, ISBN 0-8020-8390-0</ref> Despite the allegations of UPA's involvement in the killing of Jews and earlier anti-Jewish statements by the OUN, there were cases of Jewish participation within the ranks of UPA, some of whom held high positions. Jewish participation included fighters<ref> Leo Heiman, "We Fought for Ukraine - The Story of Jews Within UPA", ''Ukrainian Quarterly'' Spring 1964, pp.33-44. </ref> but was particularly visible among its medical personnel. These included Dr. Margosh, who headed UPA-West's medical service, Dr. Marksymovich, who was the Chief Physician of the UPA's officer school, and Dr. Abraham Kum, the director of an underground hospital in the Carpathians. One Ukrainian historian has claimed that almost every UPA unit included Jewish support personnel. The latter individual was the recipient of UPA's Golden Cross of Merit. Isolated reports of the Jewish families being sheltered by UPA have also surfaced.<ref name= Friedman>{{cite journal | author=Friedman, P. | title=Ukrainian-Jewish Relations During the Nazi Occupation, ''YIVO Annual of Jewish Social Science'' v. 12, pp. 259–96, 1958–59}} </ref> UPA's cooperation with Jews was extensive enough that, according to former head of the Office to Counter Soviet Disinformation at the [[United States Information Agency|USIA]], some Soviet propaganda works complained about Zionists "closely cooperating with" Bandera ringleaders.<ref name=autogenerated3 /> One can conclude that the relationship between UPA and Western Ukraine's Jews was complex and not one-sided.


== Aftermath ==
It has proven to be difficult to ascribe the particular numbers of Jews to have been killed specifically by OUN-B/UPA. Ukrainians fought in many German military and paramilitary forces such as the ''Ukrainian Auxiliary Police'' , Schutzmannschaftsbataillons and military formation under [[Schutzstaffel|SS]] and [[Sicherheitspolizei|SD]] and [[Sicherheitspolizei|SIPO]] command. However should be noted what on initial stage of UPA formation (late March – beginning of April 1943), it was absorbed from 4 to 6 thousands of ''Ukrainian Auxiliary Police'' as from [[Reichskommissariat Ukraine]], as from [[General Government]]. Also many high ranked UPA commanders (as also a [[Roman Shukhevych]]) served in under German command in same areas (Ukraine, Belarus) and in a same time were [[Holocaust]] actions taken place. In 1944 OUN/UPA absorbed most of failed to retreat with Nazi’s members of different collaborators formations in including those who served in SS and SD. <ref> Martin Dean, Collaboration in the Holocaust: Crimes of the Local Police in Belorussia and Ukraine, 1941-1944 (London: Macmillan, 1999), </ref>
[[Image:100 0810.JPG|thumb|right|Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and other UPA graves in the [[Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the USA|Ukrainian Orthodox]] Cemetery in [[South Bound Brook, New Jersey]].]]


[[Image:Former UPA and SS-Galizien members in Berezhany 2006.jpg|thumb|right|Former UPA and UNA members with Plast Scout Organization pose for photos shortly after the Anniversary of the UPA ceremony in Berezhany, Ukraine]]


[[Image:The Monument to the Victims of Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA-OUN) Simferopol, Ukraine. 2007..jpg|thumb|Monument to the Victims of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, [[Simferopol]], Ukraine]]

According to 1988 work of [[Subtelny, Orest]] in 1944, the OUN formally "rejected racial and ethnic exclusivity"<ref name=Subtelny367>[[Orest Subtelny]], ''[http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0802083900&id=HNIs9O3EmtQC&dq=0802083900 Ukraine: a history]'', p. 474, [[University of Toronto Press]], 2000, ISBN 0-8020-8390-0</ref> , however in late 1944 in UPA commanders reports were used Nazi’s propaganda words construction - “Jew-Communist-Bolsheviks”. <ref>http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/Gender.pdf </ref>.

Ukrainian Diaspora media <ref> ''Ukrainian Quarterly'' Spring 1964, or 1969 </ref> presented few cases of Jewish participation within the ranks of UPA, claim some of whom held high positions. These included Dr. Margosh, who headed UPA-West's medical service, Dr. Marksymovich, who was the Chief Physician of the UPA's officer school, and Dr. Abraham Kum, the director of an underground hospital in the Carpathians.

However, accordingly to 2004 work by Gabriel N. Finder and Alexander V. Prusin, violence generated by war and escalating to genocide became the tool of Ukrainian nationalist dreams, laying the foundations for a prospective – and chimerical – Ukrainian state on the basis of conquest, subjugation and, ultimately, the annihilation of Ukraine’s principal enemies in eastern Ukraine – Jews and Poles. <ref>Collaboration in Eastern Galicia: The Ukrainian police and the Holocaust Gabriel N. Finder; Alexander V. Prusin </ref>


== Aftermath ==
[[Image:100 0810.JPG|thumb|right|Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and other UPA graves in the [[Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the USA|Ukrainian Orthodox]] Cemetery in [[South Bound Brook, New Jersey]].]]


According to [[Columbia University]] professor John Armstrong "If one takes into account the duration, geographical extent, and intensity of activity, the UPA very probably is the most important example of forceful resistance to an established Communist regime prior to the decade of fierce Afghan resistance beginning in 1979...the Hungarian revolution of 1956 was, of course, far more important, involving to some degree a population of nine million...however it lasted only a few weeks. In contrast, the more-or-less effective anti-Communist activity of the Ukrainian resistance forces lasted from mid-1944 until 1950.".<ref> John Armstrong, ''Ukrainian Nationalism'', 3rd edition. Englewood, Colorado: Ukrainian Academic Press, 1990. ISBN 0872877558 (2nd edition: New York: Columbia University Press, 1963) pp.223-224 </ref>
According to [[Columbia University]] professor John Armstrong "If one takes into account the duration, geographical extent, and intensity of activity, the UPA very probably is the most important example of forceful resistance to an established Communist regime prior to the decade of fierce Afghan resistance beginning in 1979...the Hungarian revolution of 1956 was, of course, far more important, involving to some degree a population of nine million...however it lasted only a few weeks. In contrast, the more-or-less effective anti-Communist activity of the Ukrainian resistance forces lasted from mid-1944 until 1950.".<ref> John Armstrong, ''Ukrainian Nationalism'', 3rd edition. Englewood, Colorado: Ukrainian Academic Press, 1990. ISBN 0872877558 (2nd edition: New York: Columbia University Press, 1963) pp.223-224 </ref>
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Attempts to reconcile the two groups of veterans have made little progress. An attempt to hold a joint parade in [[Kiev]] in May, 2005, to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the end of [[World War II]], proved unsuccessful. The assessment of the historical role of UPA remains a controversial issue in Ukrainian society, although [[President of Ukraine|Ukrainian president]] [[Viktor Yushchenko]] joined several public Ukrainian organizations in calls for reconciliation, pensions, and other benefits for UPA veterans that would equate them in status with the veterans of the [[Soviet Army]], and aid the understanding of their role in the chaotic times of UPA operations. In 2007, president Yushchenko awarded the title "[[Hero of Ukraine]]", the country's highest honour to UPA leader [[Roman Shukhevych]].
Attempts to reconcile the two groups of veterans have made little progress. An attempt to hold a joint parade in [[Kiev]] in May, 2005, to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the end of [[World War II]], proved unsuccessful. The assessment of the historical role of UPA remains a controversial issue in Ukrainian society, although [[President of Ukraine|Ukrainian president]] [[Viktor Yushchenko]] joined several public Ukrainian organizations in calls for reconciliation, pensions, and other benefits for UPA veterans that would equate them in status with the veterans of the [[Soviet Army]], and aid the understanding of their role in the chaotic times of UPA operations. In 2007, president Yushchenko awarded the title "[[Hero of Ukraine]]", the country's highest honour to UPA leader [[Roman Shukhevych]].

[[Image:Former UPA and SS-Galizien members in Berezhany 2006.jpg|thumb|right|Former UPA and UNA members with Plast Scout Organization pose for photos shortly after the Anniversary of the UPA ceremony in Berezhany, Ukraine]]


Recently, attempts to reconcile former [[Armia Krajowa]] and UPA soldiers have been made by both the Ukrainian and Polish sides. Individual former members UPA have expressed their readiness for mutual apology. Some of the past soldiers of both organisations have met and asked for forgiveness for the past misdeeds.<ref>[http://www.wprost.pl/ar/?O=46245 Wprost 24 - Pojednanie na cmentarzu<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
Recently, attempts to reconcile former [[Armia Krajowa]] and UPA soldiers have been made by both the Ukrainian and Polish sides. Individual former members UPA have expressed their readiness for mutual apology. Some of the past soldiers of both organisations have met and asked for forgiveness for the past misdeeds.<ref>[http://www.wprost.pl/ar/?O=46245 Wprost 24 - Pojednanie na cmentarzu<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
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In late 2006 the [[Lviv]] city administration announced the future transference of the tombs of [[Stepan Bandera]], [[Yevhen Konovalets]], [[Andriy Melnyk]] and other key leaders of [[Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists|OUN]]/UPA to a new area of [[Lychakivskiy Cemetery]] specifically dedicated to Ukrainian nationalists.<ref>[http://www.khpg.org/en/index.php?id=1161553853 Information website of the Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
In late 2006 the [[Lviv]] city administration announced the future transference of the tombs of [[Stepan Bandera]], [[Yevhen Konovalets]], [[Andriy Melnyk]] and other key leaders of [[Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists|OUN]]/UPA to a new area of [[Lychakivskiy Cemetery]] specifically dedicated to Ukrainian nationalists.<ref>[http://www.khpg.org/en/index.php?id=1161553853 Information website of the Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

[[Image:The Monument to the Victims of Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA-OUN) Simferopol, Ukraine. 2007..jpg|thumb|Monument to the Victims of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, [[Simferopol]], Ukraine]]


Without waiting for official Kiev notice, many regional authorities have already decided to approach the UPA history on their own. In many western cities and villages monuments, memorials and plaques to the leaders and troops of the UPA have been erected, including a monument to Stepan Bandera himself which opened in October 2007. In response to this, many eastern provinces responded with opening of memorials to their victims, the first one of which opened in [[Simferopol]], [[Crimea]] in September 2007.<ref>Lenta.ru В Крыму открыт монумент жертвам бандеровцев 14.September 2007. [http://www.lenta.ru/news/2007/09/14/monument/ Retrived] [[2 April]] [[2008]].</ref>
Without waiting for official Kiev notice, many regional authorities have already decided to approach the UPA history on their own. In many western cities and villages monuments, memorials and plaques to the leaders and troops of the UPA have been erected, including a monument to Stepan Bandera himself which opened in October 2007. In response to this, many eastern provinces responded with opening of memorials to their victims, the first one of which opened in [[Simferopol]], [[Crimea]] in September 2007.<ref>Lenta.ru В Крыму открыт монумент жертвам бандеровцев 14.September 2007. [http://www.lenta.ru/news/2007/09/14/monument/ Retrived] [[2 April]] [[2008]].</ref>
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* [[Ukrainian Military Organization]]
* [[Ukrainian Military Organization]]


==Footnotes==
==References==
{{reflist|2}}
{{reflist|2}}


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* [http://www.infoukes.com/upa/ Chronicle of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army]
* [http://www.infoukes.com/upa/ Chronicle of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army]


{{World War II}}
[[Category:Anti-communism]]
[[Category:Anti-communism]]
[[Category:Guerrilla organizations]]
[[Category:Guerrilla organizations]]
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[[Category:Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists]]
[[Category:Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists]]


[[be-x-old:Украінская Паўстанцкая Армія]]
[[de:Ukrajinska Powstanska Armija]]
[[de:Ukrajinska Powstanska Armija]]
[[es:Ejército Insurgente Ucraniano]]
[[es:Ejército Insurgente Ucraniano]]
[[eo:Ukraina Ribela Armeo]]
[[eo:Ukraina Ribela Armeo]]
[[it:Esercito Insurrezionale Ucraino]]
[[fr:Armée insurrectionnelle ukrainienne]]
[[fr:Armée insurrectionnelle ukrainienne]]
[[it:Esercito Insurrezionale Ucraino]]
[[be-x-old:Украінская Паўстанцкая Армія]]
[[no:UPA (geriljahær)]]
[[no:UPA (geriljahær)]]
[[nn:UPA]]
[[nn:UPA]]

Revision as of 09:07, 19 November 2008

Ukrainian Insurgent Army
LeadersVasyl Ivakhiv, Dmytro Klyachkivsky, Roman Shukhevych, Vasyl Kuk
Dates of operation1943-1949 (Active insurgency)
1949-1956 (Localised insurgency)
Active regionsPrimarily in territories of Volhynia, Galicia and Carpathia.
Alliestemporary arrangements with Nazi Germany
OpponentsNazi German SS, the Polish Armia Krajowa, Soviet partisans, the Soviet Red Army, NKVD
Battles and warsMainly guerrilla activity

The Ukrainian Insurgent Army ([Українська Повстанська Армія, Ukrayins’ka Povstans’ka Armiya, UPA] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help)) was the military wing of the Organization of Ukrainian NationalistsBandera faction (the OUN-B), originally formed in Volhynia (north-western Ukraine) in spring-summer 1943, which fought a guerrilla war during the Second World War, and afterwards until being formally disbanded in early September, 1949. Some of its members, however, would continue operations until 1956. OUN declared that its primary purpose was to protect the interests of the Ukrainian population, and the UPA started out as a resistance group that grew into a guerrilla army.[1] During its existence, the UPA fought a large variety of military forces, including Nazi German Wehrmacht and Waffen SS, the Polish underground army (Armia Krajowa) and Soviet forces - including Soviet partisans, the Red Army, NKVD, SMERSH, MGB and MVD. From late spring of 1944, the UPA and OUN-B - faced with Soviet advances - also cooperated with the German Wehrmacht and Waffen SS, Sipo and SD against the Soviets and Poles.[2] The UPA nationalists played a significant role in the killing and ethnic cleansing of much of western Ukraine's Polish population.[3] In the last year of the war, the Polish-communist Armia Ludowa was massively attacked by the UPA.

After the end of World War II, the UPA remained active and fought against Poland until 1947 and against the Soviet Union until 1949. It was particularly strong in the Carpathian Mountains, entire Galicia and in Volyn - in western modern Ukraine. Among the anti-Nazi resistance movements it was unique in that it had no significant foreign support at all. Its growth and strength was a reflection of the popularity it enjoyed among the people of western Ukraine.[4] Outside of Western Ukraine, support was minimal, and the predominant majority of the Soviet (eastern) Ukrainian population considered the OUN/UPA to have been primarily collaborators with the Germans, remembering UPA alliances with German military authorities during the approach of the Lvov–Sandomierz Offensive.[5]

(Note: Another separate, independent UPA also existed in Volyn from 1941 until July 1943. It was nominally formed earlier in late November 1941 and from spring 1942 was a most active Ukrainian nationalist armed group before the formal formation of UPA in spring 1943. This group belonged to political opponents of the OUN(B) - OUN(UNR), and allied itself politically with OUN(M). This grouping led by Taras Bulba-Borovets had links to the UNR in exile. It was renamed the Ukrainian People's Revolutionary Army in July 1943 before being later partially and forcibly absorbed into the UPA of the OUN(B).[6]

Organization of the UPA

File:UPA.jpg
UPA propaganda poster. OUN/UPA formal greetings is written in Ukrainian bold on two horizontal lines Glory to Ukraine (Glory to (her) Heroes)

UPA's command structure overlapped with that of the OUN in a sophisticated centralized network. The UPA was responsible for operations while the OUN was in charge of administrative duties; each had their own chain of command. The six main departments were military, political, security service, mobilization, supply, and the Ukrainian Red Cross. Despite the division between UPA and the OUN, there was overlap between OUN and UPA posts and the local OUN and UPA leader were frequently the same person. Organizational methods were borrowed and adapted from the German, Polish and Soviet military, while UPA units planned to be trained based on a modified Red Army field unit manual.[7] The General Staff, formed at the end of 1943 consisted of operations, intelligence, training, logistics, personnel and political education departments. UPA's largest units, Kurins, consisting of 500-700 soldiers,[8] were equivalent to battalions in a regular army, and its smallest units, Riys (literally bee swarm), with 8-10 soldiers,[8] were equivalent to squads.[7] Occasionally, and particularly in Volyn, during some operations three or more Kurins would unite and form a Zahin or Brigade.[8]

File:Shukhewich.jpg
Roman Shukhevych

UPA's leaders were: Vasyl Ivakhiv (spring – 13 of May 1943), Dmytro Klyachkivsky, Roman Shukhevych (January 1944 until 1950)[9] and finally Vasyl Kuk.

In November 1943, UPA adopted a new structure, creating a Main Military Headquarters and three areas (group} commands: UPA-West, UPA-North and UPA-South. Three military schools for low-level command staff were also established.

UPA's membership is estimated to have consisted of 60% peasants of low to moderate means, 20-25% workers (primarily from the rural lumber and food industries), and 15% from the intelligentsia (students, urban professionals). The latter group provided a large portion of UPA's military trainers and officer corps.[7] Sixty percent of UPA's membership was from Galicia and 30% from Volyn and Polesia[10]

The number of UPA fighters varied. A German Abwehr report from November 1943 estimated that UPA had 20,000 soldiers;[11] other estimates at that time placed the number at 40,000.[12] By the summer of 1944, estimates of UPA membership varied from 25-30 thousand fighters[13] up to 100,000 soldiers.[12]

The armaments of the UPA

Initially, UPA used the weapons collected from the battlefields of 1939 and 1941. Later they bought weapons from peasants and individual soldiers, or captured them in combat. Some light weapons were brought in by deserting Ukrainian auxiliary policemen. In 1944 UPA were armed directly by German units but with Soviet arms. For the most part, the UPA used the light infantry weapons of Soviet and to a lesser extent German origin (for the lack of ammo). Many kurins were equipped with light 51 mm and 82 mm mortars. During large-scale operations in 1943-1944, insurgent forces also used artillery (45 mm and 76.2 mm).[14] In 1943 a light Hungarian tank was used in Volyn.[15][14] In 1944 the Soviets captured from UPA a U-2 aircraft and 1 armored car and 1 personnel carrier. However, it was not stated that they were in operable condition, while no OUN/UPA documents noted the usage of such equipment.[16] By end of WWII in Europe from UPA by NKVD were captured 45 artillery systems (45 and 76.2 mm calibers) and 423 mortars. In the attacks against Polish civilians, axes, and pikes were used.[14] However, the light infantry weapon was the basic weapon used by the UPA.[17]

UPA Formation

1941

In a Memorandum from August, 14 1941 OUN (B) proposed to the Germans, to create a Ukrainian Army “which will join the German Аrmy ... until the latter will win”, in exchange for German recognition of an allied Ukrainian independent state[18] The Ukrainian Army was planned to have been formed on the basis of DUN (Detachments of Ukrainian nationalists - Druzhyny Ukrainskykh Natsiоnalistiv) and specifically on the basis of the “Ukrainian legion”, at that time composed of two battalions “Nachtigall” and “Roland.” These two battalions were included in the Abwehr special regiment “Brandenburg-800”. These proposals however, were not accepted by the Germans, and by the middle of September 1941 the Germans began a campaign of repression against the most proactive OUN members.

At the beginning of October 1941, during the first OUN Conference the OUN formulated its future strategy. This called for transferring part of its organizational structure underground, in order to avoid conflict with the Germans. It also refrained from open anti-German propaganda activities.[19] [dubious ] At the same time, the OUN tried to infiltrate its own members into and create its own network within the German Auxiliary police.

A captured German document of November 25, 1941 (Nuremberg Trial O14-USSR) ordered: "It has been ascertained that the Bandera Movement is preparing a revolt in the Reichskommissariat which has as its ultimate aim the establishment of an independent Ukraine. All functionaries of the Bandera Movement must be arrested at once and, after thorough interrogation, are to be liquidated..."[20][unreliable source?] By the end of November 1941, both the “Ukrainian Legions” Roland and Nachtigall were disbanded and the remaining soldiers (approximately 650 persons) were given the option of signing a contract for military service after being transferred to Germany for further military training. At the same time (end of November 1941) the Germans started a second wave of repression in Reichskommissariat Ukraine specifically targeting OUN (B) members. Most of the captured OUN activists in Reichskommissariat Ukraine however, belonged to OUN (M) wing.

1942

At the Second OUN(B) conference held in April 1942 the policies for the “creation, build-up and development of Ukrainian political and future military forces”, “action against partisan activity supported by Moscow” were adopted. The primary enemy targeted were the Soviet partisans. German policy was also criticized.[21] [dubious ]

In July 1942 OUN (B) issued a statement in which it stated that the main enemy targeted was “Moscow”, while the Germans was ephemerally criticized for their policy concerning the Ukrainian independent state. Until December 1942, OUN(B)'s principal activity was propaganda and the development of its own underground network, while actions against the Germans were described at that time as undesirable and provocative.

In December 1942 near Lviv the “Military conference of OUN(B)” was held. It resulted in the adoption of a policy for the accelerated growth for the establishment of OUN(B) Military forces. The Conference emphasised that “all combat capable population must support, under OUN banners, the struggle against the Bolsheviks enemy”. On May 30, 1947[22] the Main Ukrainian Liberation Council (Головна Визвольна Рада) adopted the date of October 14, 1942 as the official day for celebrating UPA's creation.

UPA's relations with Germany

Hostilities

Despite the stated opinions of Dmytro Klyachkivsky and Roman Shukhevych that the Germans were a secondary threat compared to their main enemies - the Soviet partisans and Poles, the Third Conference of Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists held near Lviv 17-21 February 1943, adopted the decision to commence open warfare against the Germans[23] (OUN fighters had already attacked a German garrison earlier on February 7th of that year).[24] Accordingly, the OUN (B) leadership on March 20, 1943 issued secret instructions ordering their members who had joined the German auxiliary police in 1941-1942 to desert with their weapons and to join the units of UPA in Volyn. This process often involved engaging in armed conflict with German forces trying to prevent them from doing so. The number of trained and armed soldiers deserting into the ranks of UPA was estimated as being between 4 to 5 thousand.[25] Initially, the military formation of the OUN under Bandera's leadership was called the "military detachment of OUN (SD)" but after April 1943 UPA, the name "Ukrainska Povstanska Armiya" (UPA) was adopted as the official title.[26]

Anti-German actions were limited to situations where the Germans attacked the Ukrainian population or UPA units. [27] Indeed, according to German Eastern Front General Ernst Kostring, UPA fighters "fought almost exclusively against German administrative agencies, the German police and the SS in their quest to establish an independent Ukraine controlled by neither Moscow nor Germany."[28]

Under German occupation, the UPA conducted hundreds of raids on police stations and military convoys. In the region of Zhytomyr insurgents were estimated by the German General-Kommissar Leyser to be in control of 80% of the forests and 60% of the farmland. [29] The UPA was able to send small groups of raiders deep into eastern Ukraine.

According to the OUN/UPA, on May 12, 1943 Germans attacked the town of Kolki using several SS-Divisions (SS units operated alongside the Nazi Army who were responsible for intelligence, central security, policing action, and mass extermination), where the Germans as well as insurgents suffered heavy losses.[30] Soviet partisans reported the reinforcement of German auxiliary forces at Kolki for the end of April until the middle of May, 1943 [31]

In June 1943 German SS and police forces under the command of General von dem Bach-Zelewski, chosen by Himmler and seen as an expert in anti-guerilla warfare, attempted to destroy UPA-North in Volyn during Operation "BB" (Bandenbekämpfung).[32]

According to the UPA/OUN reports, the initial stage of Operation “BB” (Bandenbekämpfung) under the command of Sturmbannführer SS General Platle and later under General Hintzler against the UPA had produced no results whatsoever. This catastrophic development was the subject of several discussions by Himmler's staff that resulted in General von dem Bach-Zelewski being sent to Ukraine and being responsible only to Hitler himself.[33]


General Prutzmann, von dem Bach-Zelewski's successor as commander of the "BB" did not introduce any new methods in combating the UPA. The UPA-North grew steadily, and the Germans, apart from terrorizing the civilian population, were virtually limited to defensive actions.[34]

According to post-war estimates, the UPA had the following number of clashes with the Germans in mid to late 1943 in Volyn: in July, 35; in August, 24; in September, 15; October-November, 47."[35] During the summer of 1943, according to post-war estimates, the Germans lost over 3,000 men killed or wounded while the UPA lost 1237 killed or wounded.[36][37][38] By the fall of 1943, UPA and German clashes declined, such that Erich Koch in his November 1943 report and New Year 1944 speech mentioned that “nationalistic bands in forests do not pose any major threat” for Germans [39].

UPA, fighting a two-front war against both the Germans and approaching Soviets (as well as Soviet partisans), did not focus all of its efforts against the Germans. Indeed, it considered the Soviets to be a greater threat. Adopting a strategy analogous to that of the Chetnik leader General Draža Mihailović, [40] UPA held back against the Germans in order to better prepare itself for and engage in the struggle against the Communists. Because of this, although UPA managed to limit German activities to a certain extent, it failed to prevent the Germans from deporting approximately 500,000 people from Western Ukrainian regions and from economically exploiting Western Ukraine. [41] Due to its focus on the Soviets as the principal threat, UPA's anti-German struggle did not contribute significantly to the liberation of Ukrainian territories by Soviet forces. [42]

Collaboration

In autumn 1943 some detachments of UPA attempted to find reapproachment with the Germans. Although doing so was condemned by an OUN/UPA order from November 25, 1943, such actions were not halted[43] In early 1944 UPA forces in several Western regions OUN/UPA engaged in cooperation with the German Wehrmacht, Waffen SS, SIPO and SD.[44] In early January-February 1944, UPA forces in some regions engaged in cooperation with the German Wehrmacht (as for instance with 4-th Tanks Army) . [45] In March, UPA detachments concluded a deal with Germans SD and SS in selected regions. In March-July a senior leader of OUN(B) in Galicia conducted negotiations with SD and SS officials, resulting in a German decision to supply UPA with arms and ammunitions. In May 1944, the OUN submitted instructions to "switch the struggle, which had been conducted against the Germans, completely into a struggle against the Soviets.".[46]

However, in the winter and spring of 1944 it would be incorrect to state that there was a complete cessation of armed conflict between UPA and Nazi forces because UPA continued to defend Ukrainian villages against the repressive actions of the German administration.[47] For example, on January 20th, 200 German soldiers on their way to the Ukrainian village of Pyrohivka were forced to retreat after a several-hours long firefight with a group of 80 UPA soldiers after having lost 30 killed and wounded.[48]

In a top secret memorandum, General-Major Brigadefuhrer Brenner wrote in mid-1944 to SS-Obergruppenführer General Hans Prutzmann, the highest ranking German SS officer in Ukraine, that “The UPA has halted all attacks on units of the German army. The UPA systematically sends agents, mainly young women, into enemy-occupied territory, and the results of the intelligence are communicated to Department 1c of the [German] Army Group” on the southern Front.[49] By the autumn of 1944, the German press was full of praise for UPA for their Anti-Bolshevik successes, referring to the UPA fighters as "Ukrainian fighters for freedom"[50]

After the front had passed, by the end of 1944 the Germans supplied OUN/UPA by air with arms and equipment. There even existed, in the region of Ivano-Frankivsk, a small landing strip for German transport planes. Also transferred were some German prepared personnel to conduct terrorist and intelligence activities behind Soviet lines, as well as some OUN-B leaders. [51]

UPA and Poles

UPA was active in the ethnic cleansing actions of ethnic Poles from areas of Ukrainian autonomous settlement through terrorist acts and the mass-murder of Polish civilians.

Ethnic cleansing operations against the Polish population began on a large scale in March 1943.[52]

Brutal methods such as beheading, disembowelling, and killing with knives and axes were employed against Polish villagers. In addition to the UPA, Ukrainian peasants also participated in the violence,[53] and large groups of armed "bandit" marauders unaffiliated with UPA brutalized civilians.[54] so the exact number of Poles killed specifically by UPA is unknown. The UPA also killed ethnic Ukrainians who did not cooperate with them, as well as those Ukrainians who had intermarried with Poles[citation needed]. In anti-Polish actions from autumn 1943 in Galicia, the UPA conducted cooperative actions with detachments of regiments of the Galician Division.[55] The estimates of the number of Poles murdered in Ukraine range from 100,000 to 500,000;[3] many more Poles left the area because of the UPA actions.

File:Łodzina 1946.jpg
Łodzina (Gmina Sanok) village burned down by Ukrainian Insurgent Army on 12 september 1946. People displaced by attacking UPA Army.

The UPA's activities can be seen as a reaction to past policies and actions of the inter-war Polish government, such as shutting down Ukrainian schools and churches or encouraging Polish settlement in the regions considered by OUN to be "ethnically Ukrainian". Some Ukrainian sources also claimed that Poles began massacring Ukrainian civilians in 1942[56] Polish-Ukrainian hatred was often provoked by Soviet forces, who used Poles as informants and in anti-Ukrainian destructive battalions, resulting in savage reprisals.[57]

Bukowsko (Sanok County) village burned down by Ukrainian Insurgent Army on 5 April 1946.
Bukowsko village burned down by UPA Army on 5 April 1946.
File:1946nowo2.jpg
Nowotaniec (Sanok County) village burned down by Ukrainian Insurgent Army on 5 April 1946. People displaced by attacking UPA Army.

UPA's actions were matched by similar actions by the Polish Armia Krajowa and by Polish police forces working for the Germans. The brutal conflict escalated out of control with many thousands of civilians being murdered by both Ukrainian and Polish forces.[58] Speaking of the escalation in violence, a former soldier in a Polish nationalist partisan unit stated

"The ethnic Ukrainians responded by wiping out an entire Polish colony, setting fire to the houses, killing those inhabitants unable to flee and raping the women who fell into their hands, no matter how old or how young...we retaliated by attacking an even bigger Ukrainian village and... killed women and children. Some of our men were so filled with hatred after losing whole generations of their family in the Ukrainian attacks that they swore they would take an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth...This was how the fighting escalated. Each time more people were killed, more houses burnt, more women raped."[59]

Estimates of the death tolls from the retaliatory actions of the Polish Home Army forces include numbers such as 2,000 Ukrainian civilians[60] or as high as 20 thousand in Volhynia alone .[61]

UPA's war with the Soviet Union

Under German occupation

The total number of local Soviet Partisans acting in western Ukraine was never high, due to the region enduring only two years of Soviet rule (some places even less).[62] Only towards the end of the war, in 1944 did the number and activity of Soviet Partisans in Ukraine increase. UPA first encountered them in late 1942.

In early 1943, the Soviet partisan leader Sydir Kovpak established himself and in the summer of 1943, well-armed with supplies delivered to secret airfields formed a group numbering several thousand men[63] which went deep into the Carpathians. Attacks by the German air force and military forced Kovpak to break up his force into smaller units In 1944 which were attacked by UPA units on way back. Famous Soviet intelligence agent Nikolai Kuznetsov was captured and executed by UPA members, after unwittingly entering their camp while wearing a Wehrmacht officer uniform.[64]

Fighting the Soviet Army (1944-45)

With the liberation of Ukraine by the Red Army, the UPA avoided clashes with the regular units of the Soviet military fearing their offensive action would annihilate them.[65] Instead, the UPA focused its energy on NKVD units and Soviet officials of all levels, from NKVD and military officers to the school teachers and postal workers attempting to establish Soviet administration.[66] Soviet archival data shows that UPA attacks were focused on small units and groups of Soviet soldiers, often ending with killing of the captured and wounded. The UPA opposed the mobilization of able-bodied men into the Soviet Army through the extermination of whole families of those who joined. The UPA also disrupted Soviet efforts at collectivization.

In March 1944, UPA insurgents mortally wounded front commander Army General Nikolai Vatutin, who led the liberation of Kiev.[67] Several weeks later an NKVD battalion was annihilated by UPA near Rivne. This began a full-scale operation in the spring of 1944, initially involving 30,000 Soviet troops against UPA in Volyn. Estimates of casualties vary depending on the source. A letter to the state defense committee of the USSR, Lavrentiy Beria stated that in spring 1944 clashes between Soviet forces and UPA resulted in 2018 killed and 1570 captured UPA fighters and only 11 Soviet killed and 46 wounded. Soviet archives show that a captured UPA member stated that he received a reports about UPA losses of 200 fighters while the Soviet forces lost 2,000.[68] The first significant sabotage operations against communications of the Soviet Army before their offensive against the Germans was conducted by UPA in April-May 1944. Such actions were promptly stopped by the Soviet Army and NKVD troops, after which the OUN/UPA submitted an order to temporarily cease anti-Soviet activities and prepare for further struggle against the Soviets.[69]

Despite heavy casualties on both sides during the initial clashes, the struggle was inconclusive. New large scale actions of UPA, especially in Ternopil Oblast, were launched in July-August 1944, when the Red Army advanced West.[69] By the autumn of 1944, UPA forces enjoyed virtual freedom of movement over an area of 160,000 square kilometers in size and home to over 10 million people and had established a shadow government.[7]

In November 1944, Khrushchev launched the first of several large-scale Soviet assaults on UPA throughout western Ukraine, involving according to OUN/UPA estimates at least 20 NKVD combat divisions supported by artillery and armored units. They blockaded villages and roads and set forests on fire.[66] Soviet archival data states that on October 9, 1944 1 NKVD Division, eight NKVD brigades, and an NKVD cavalry regiment with the total number of 26,304 NKVD soldiers stationed in Western Ukraine. In addition, 2 regiments with 1500 and 1200 persons, 1 battalion (517 persons) and three armored trains with 100 additional soldiers each, as well as 1 border guards regiment and 1 unit were starting to relocate there in order to reinforce them.[70]

During late 1944 and the first half of 1945, according to Soviet data, UPA suffered approximately 89,000 killed, approximately 91,000 captured, and approximately 39,000 surrendered while the Soviet forces lost approximately 12,000 killed, approximately 6,000 wounded and 2,600 MIA. In addition, during this time, according to Soviet data UPA actions resulted in the killing of 3,919 civilians and the disappearance of 427 others.[71] Despite the heavy losses, as late as summer 1945, many battalion-size UPA units still continued to control and administer large areas of territory in western Ukraine.[72] In February 1945 UPA issued an order to liquidate kurins (battalions) and sotnya’s (companies) and to act predominantly by choty’s (platoons).[73]

Spring 1945- late 1946

After Germany surrendered in May 1945, the Soviet authorities turned their attention to insurgencies taking place in Ukraine and the Baltics. Combat units were re-organised and special forces were sent in. One of the major complications that arose was the local support the UPA had from the population, which became a priority for the Soviets.

Areas of UPA activity were depopulated, the estimates on numbers vary, officially Soviet archives state that between 1944 and 1952 a total of 182,543 people [74][75] while other sources indicate the number may have been as high as to 500,000.[76] Mass arrests of suspected UPA informants or family members were conducted; between February 1944 and May 1946 over 250,000 people were arrested in Western Ukraine.[77] Those arrested typically experienced beatings or other violence. Those suspected of being UPA members underwent torture; (reports exist of some prisoners being burned alive). The many arrested women believed to be affiliating with UPA were subjected to torture, deprivation, and rape at the hands of Soviet security in order to "break" them and get them to reveal UPA members' identities and locations or to turn them into Soviet double-agents.[49] Mutilated corpses of captured rebels were put on public display.[78]

UPA responded to the Soviet methods by unleashing their own terror against Soviet activists, suspected collaborators and their families. This work was particularly attributed to the Sluzhba Bezbeky (SB), the anti-espionage wing of UPA. In a typical incident in Lviv region, in front of horrified villagers, UPA troops gouged out the eyes of two entire families suspected of reporting on insurgent movements to Soviet authorities, before hacking their bodies to pieces. Due to public outrage concerning these violent punitive acts, UPA stopped the practice of killing the families of collaborators by mid 1945. Other victims of UPA included Soviet activists sent to Galicia from other parts of the Soviet Union; heads of village Soviets, those sheltering or feeding Red Army personnel, and even people turning food in to collective farms. The effect of such terrorist acts was such that people refused to take posts as village heads, and until the late 1940s villages chose single men with no dependants as their leaders.[79]

The UPA also proved to be especially adept at assassinating key Soviet administrative officials. According to NKVD data, between February 1944 and December 1946 11,725 Soviet officers, agents and collaborators were assassinated and 2,401 were "missing", presumed kidnapped, in Western Ukraine.[80] In one county in Lviv region alone, from August 1944 until January 1945 Ukrainian rebels killed ten members of the Soviet activ and a secretary of the county Communist party, and also kidnapped four other officials. UPA travelled at will throughout the area. In this county, there were no courts, no prosecutor's office, and the local NKVD only had three staff members.[80] According to a 1946 report by Khrushchenv's deputy for West Ukrainian affairs A.A. Stoiantsev, out of 42,175 operations and ambushes against UPA by Destructive Battalions in Western Ukraine, only 10 percent had positive results - in the vast majority there was either no contact or the individual unit was disarmed and pro-Soviet leaders murdered or kidnapped.[81] Morale amongst the NKVD in Western Ukraine was particularly low. Even within the dangerous context of Soviet state service in the late-Stalin era, West Ukraine was considered to be a "hardship post", and personnel files reveal higher rates of transfer requests, alcoholism, and nervous breakdowns and refusal to serve among NKVD field agents there at that time.[82]

The first success of the Soviet authorities came in early 1946 in the Carpathians, which were blockaded from January 11 until April 10. The UPA operating there ceased to exist as a combat unit.[83] The continuous heavy casualties elsewhere forced the UPA to split into small units consisting of 100 soldiers. Many of the troops demobilized and returned home, when the Soviet Union offered three amnesties during 1947-1948[65]

By 1946, UPA was reduced to a core group of 5-10 thousand fighters, and large-scale UPA activity shifted to the Soviet-Polish border. Here, in 1947, they allegedly killed the Polish Communist deputy defense minister General Karol Świerczewski. In spring 1946, the OUN/UPA established contacts with the Intelligence services of France, Great Britain and the USA.[84] Although the UPA obtained some help from the CIA and British intelligence during the latter phase of its struggle, the operation was betrayed by Kim Philby. After the huge winter 1945/46 operation by the NKVD, UPA/OUN fielded 479 units and had 3,735 fighters, according to an NKVD estimate from April 1, 1946. By January 1, 1947 MGB estimated OUN and UPA as having 530 fighting units with 4,456 fighters.

The end of the UPA and OUN Resistance (1947-1955)

The turning point in the struggle against the UPA came in 1947, when the Soviets established an intelligence gathering network within the UPA and shifted the focus of their actions from mass terror to infiltration and espionage. After 1947 the UPA's activity began to subside. On May 30, 1947 Shukhevych issued instructions joining the OUN and UPA in underground warfare [8]. In 1947-1948 UPA resistance was weakened enough to allow the Soviets to begin implementation of large-scale collectivization throughout western Ukraine.[7] In 1948, the Soviet central authorities purged local officials who had mistreated peasants and engaged in "vicious methods". At the same time, Soviet agents planted within the UPA had taken their toll on morale and on the UPA's effectiveness. According to the writing of one slain Ukrainian rebel, "the Bolsheviks tried to take us from within...you can never know exactly in whose hands you will find yourself. From such a network of spies, the work of whole teams is often penetrated..." In November 1948, the work of Soviet agents led to two important victories against the UPA: the defeat and deaths of the heads of the most active UPA network in Western Ukraine, and the removal of "Myron", the head of the UPA's counterintelligence SB unit.[85]

The Soviet authorities tried to win over the local population by making significant investments into Western Ukraine, and by setting up a quick dispatch groups in many regions to combat the UPA. According to one retired MVD major, by 1948 ideologically we had the support of most of the population.[65] The Soviets skillfully exploited Polish-Ukrainian ethnic friction by recruitiing Poles as informants. This contributed to the growing isolation of the UPA which was further helped by the Polish government implementing Operation Wisła in 1947. On September 3, 1949 Shukhevych issued an order, liquidating UPA units and headquarters and integrating UPA's personnel into the OUN (B) underground.

The UPA's leader, Roman Shukhevych, was killed during an ambush near Lviv on March 5, 1950 (in an ironic turn of events, he died from his wounds on the same day that Stalin would die 3 years later). Although sporadic UPA activity continued until the mid 1950's, after Shukhevich's death the UPA rapidly lost its fighting capability. An assessment of UPA's manpower by Soviet authorities in April 17, 1952 indicated that UPA/OUN had only 84 fighting units consisting of 252 persons. UPA's last commander, Vasyl Kuk, was captured on May, 24 1954. Despite the existence of some insurgent groups, according to a report by the MGB of the Ukrainian SSR, the "liquidation of armed units and OUN underground was accomplished by the beginning of 1956".[86]

A controversy exists that there were NKVD units dressed as UPA fighters[87] and committed atrocities in order to demoralize the civilian population.[88] among these NKVD units were those composed of former UPA fighters working for the NKVD.[89] The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) recently published information about 150 such special groups consisting of 1,800 people operated until 1954.[90] One famous example of an ex-UPA turned MVD fighter was Bohdan Stashynsky who would then climb the ladder of MGB (and later KGB) hierarchy to become a foreign agent who assassinated the OUN chief Lev Rebet in 1957 and later Stepan Bandera in 1959.

Prominent people killed by the UPA insurgents during the anti-Soviet struggle included Metropolitan Oleksiy (Hromadsky) of the Ukrainian Autonomous Orthodox Church and pro-Soviet writer Yaroslav Halan.[65]

In 1951 CIA covert operations chief Frank Wisner estimated that some 35,000 Soviet police troops and Communist party cadres had been eliminated by guerrillas affiliated with the Ukrainian Insurgent Army in the period after the end of World War II.[91] Official Soviet figures for the losses inflicted by all types of "Ukrainian nationalists" during the period 1944-1953 referred to 30,676 persons; amongst them were 687 NKGB-MGB personnel, 1,864 NKVD-MVD personnel, 3,199 Soviet Army, Border Guards, and NKVD-MVD troops, 241 communist party leaders, 205 komsomol leaders and 2,590 members of self-defense units. According to Soviet data the remaining losses were among civilians, including 15,355 peasants and kolkhozniks.[92] Soviet archives state that between February 1944 and January 1946 the Soviet forces conducted 39,778 operations against the UPA, during which they killed a total of 103,313, captured a total of 8,370 OUN members and captured a total of 15,959 active insurgents.[93]

UPA and Soviet infiltration

From the beginning of 1944, the Soviets waged an active war against the UPA launching a large-scale assault against the Ukrainian underground in several directions, propaganda among the population; military operations; repression against members and their families. Soviet anti-insurgent propaganda was concentrated on discrediting and dividing the national liberation movement. Soviet propaganda emphasised their thesis on the treason and crimes of "Ukrainian-German nationalists" and their collaboration with "fascist invaders".

From 1944 through the 1950s initially frontal sections of the Red Army and SMERSH were directed against the UPA. Later the function of fighting the UPA fell to the NKVD.

In 1944-1945 the NKVD carried out 26,693 operations against the Ukrainian underground. These resulted in the deaths of 22.474 Ukrainian soldiers and the capture of 62,142 prisoners. During this time the NKVD formed special groups known as spetshrupy made up of former Soviet partisans. The goal of these groups was to discredit the and disorganize the OUN and UPA. In August 1944 Sydir Kovpak was placed under NKVD authority. Posing as Ukrainian insurgents these special formations used violence against the civilian population of Western Ukraine. In June 1945 there were 156 such special groups with 1783 members.[52]

The Soviets used"extermination battalions" (strybky) recruiting secret collaborators in each population point. Attempts were made to place agents at all leading levels of the OUN and UPA.

From December 1945-1946 15,562 operations were carried out in which 4,200 were killed and more than 9,400 were arrested. From 1944-1953,the Soviets killed 153,000 and arrested 134,000 members of the UPA. 66,000 Families (204,000 people) were forcibly deported to Siberia and half a million people were subject to repressions. In the same period Polish authorities deported 450,000 people.[52]--->

UPA's relationships with Western Ukraine's Jews

In contrast to the links between UPA and atrocities committed on Polish civilians, there is a lack of consensus among historians about the involvement of UPA in the massacre of western Ukraine's Jews. Numerous accounts ascribe to UPA a role in the tragic fate of the Ukrainian Jews under the German occupation.[94][95] Other historians, however, do not support the claims that UPA was involved in anti-Jewish massacres.[72][96][97]

Unlike other Eastern European nationalist movements, antisemitism did not play a central role in Ukrainian nationalist ideology, notwithstanding the antisemitic rhetoric that was obligatory in all countries occupied by Nazi Germany. German documents of the period lead to the impression that extreme Ukrainian nationalists were indifferent to the plight of the Jews; they would either kill them or help them, whichever was more appropriate for their political goals.[98] Prior to the formation of UPA, in 1941-1942, when it was still working closely with Germany, the political organization from which it was formed, the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists, made numerous violently antisemitic statements. For example, in instructions to its members concerning how the OUN should behave during the war, it declared that "in times of chaos...one can allow oneself to liquidate Polish, Russian and Jewish figures, particularly the servants of Bolshevik-Muscovite imperialism" and further, when speaking of Russians, Poles, and Jews, to "destroy in the struggle, especially those, who defend the [Soviet] regime: send them to their lands, destroy them especially the intelligentsia...assimilation of the Jews is ruled out."[99] Nevertheless, some Jews were protected by the OUN. According to a report to the Chief of the Security Police in Berlin dated March 30, 1942, "...it has been clearly established that the Bandera movement provided forged passports not only for its own members, but also for Jews.".[100][98]

By early 1943 the OUN had entered into open armed conflict with Nazi Germany. In 1944, the OUN formally "rejected racial and ethnic exclusivity"[72] Despite the allegations of UPA's involvement in the killing of Jews and earlier anti-Jewish statements by the OUN, there were cases of Jewish participation within the ranks of UPA, some of whom held high positions. Jewish participation included fighters[101] but was particularly visible among its medical personnel. These included Dr. Margosh, who headed UPA-West's medical service, Dr. Marksymovich, who was the Chief Physician of the UPA's officer school, and Dr. Abraham Kum, the director of an underground hospital in the Carpathians. One Ukrainian historian has claimed that almost every UPA unit included Jewish support personnel. The latter individual was the recipient of UPA's Golden Cross of Merit. Isolated reports of the Jewish families being sheltered by UPA have also surfaced.[102] UPA's cooperation with Jews was extensive enough that, according to former head of the Office to Counter Soviet Disinformation at the USIA, some Soviet propaganda works complained about Zionists "closely cooperating with" Bandera ringleaders.[100] One can conclude that the relationship between UPA and Western Ukraine's Jews was complex and not one-sided.

Aftermath

File:100 0810.JPG
Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and other UPA graves in the Ukrainian Orthodox Cemetery in South Bound Brook, New Jersey.
File:Former UPA and SS-Galizien members in Berezhany 2006.jpg
Former UPA and UNA members with Plast Scout Organization pose for photos shortly after the Anniversary of the UPA ceremony in Berezhany, Ukraine
File:The Monument to the Victims of Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA-OUN) Simferopol, Ukraine. 2007..jpg
Monument to the Victims of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Simferopol, Ukraine

According to Columbia University professor John Armstrong "If one takes into account the duration, geographical extent, and intensity of activity, the UPA very probably is the most important example of forceful resistance to an established Communist regime prior to the decade of fierce Afghan resistance beginning in 1979...the Hungarian revolution of 1956 was, of course, far more important, involving to some degree a population of nine million...however it lasted only a few weeks. In contrast, the more-or-less effective anti-Communist activity of the Ukrainian resistance forces lasted from mid-1944 until 1950.".[103]

During the following years the UPA was however officially taboo in the Soviet Union, and mentioned only as a terrorist organization. After Ukraine gained independence in 1991, there have been heated debates to award former UPA members official recognition as legitimate combatants, with accompanying pensions and benefits due to war veterans. UPA veterans have also striven to hold parades and commemorations of their own, especially in Western Ukraine. This, in turn, led to opposition from the Soviet Army veterans and some Ukrainian politicians particularly from the south and east of the country. Neighbouring governments in Russia and Poland have also reacted negatively.

Attempts to reconcile the two groups of veterans have made little progress. An attempt to hold a joint parade in Kiev in May, 2005, to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the end of World War II, proved unsuccessful. The assessment of the historical role of UPA remains a controversial issue in Ukrainian society, although Ukrainian president Viktor Yushchenko joined several public Ukrainian organizations in calls for reconciliation, pensions, and other benefits for UPA veterans that would equate them in status with the veterans of the Soviet Army, and aid the understanding of their role in the chaotic times of UPA operations. In 2007, president Yushchenko awarded the title "Hero of Ukraine", the country's highest honour to UPA leader Roman Shukhevych.

Recently, attempts to reconcile former Armia Krajowa and UPA soldiers have been made by both the Ukrainian and Polish sides. Individual former members UPA have expressed their readiness for mutual apology. Some of the past soldiers of both organisations have met and asked for forgiveness for the past misdeeds.[104] Restoration of graves and cemeteries in Poland, where fallen UPA soldiers were placed have been agreed to by the Polish side.[105]

In late 2006 the Lviv city administration announced the future transference of the tombs of Stepan Bandera, Yevhen Konovalets, Andriy Melnyk and other key leaders of OUN/UPA to a new area of Lychakivskiy Cemetery specifically dedicated to Ukrainian nationalists.[106]

Without waiting for official Kiev notice, many regional authorities have already decided to approach the UPA history on their own. In many western cities and villages monuments, memorials and plaques to the leaders and troops of the UPA have been erected, including a monument to Stepan Bandera himself which opened in October 2007. In response to this, many eastern provinces responded with opening of memorials to their victims, the first one of which opened in Simferopol, Crimea in September 2007.[107]

On January 10, 2008 President of Ukraine Viktor Yushchenko submitted a draft law "On the official Status of Fighters for Ukraine’s Independence in 20s-90s of the 20th century". Under the draft, persons who took part in political, guerrilla, underground and combat activities for the freedom and independence of Ukraine from 1920-1990 as part of the:

  • Ukrainian Military Organization (UVO)
  • Karpatska Sich
  • OUN
  • UPA
  • Ukrainian Main Liberation Army,

as well as persons who assisted these organizations shall be recognized as war veterans.[108]

In 2007, the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) set up a special working group to study archive documents of the activity of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) and Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) in order to make public original sources. [109]

See also

References

  1. ^ (Ukrainian) Українська Повстанська Армія - Історія нескорених - Львів, 2007 p.28
  2. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army Chapter 4 pp.193-199 Chapter 5
  3. ^ a b Norman Davies. (1996). Europe: a History. Oxford: Oxford University Press
  4. ^ Subtelny, p. 474 Subtelny, Orest (1988). Ukraine: A History. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 800. ISBN 0802083900.
  5. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 4, p. 180
  6. ^ Організація українських націоналістів і Українська повстанська армія Chapter 3 p.118-153
  7. ^ a b c d e Yuri Zhukov, "Examining the Authoritarian Model of Counter-insurgency: The Soviet Campaign Against the Ukrainian Insurgent Army", Small Wars and Insurgencies, v.18, no. 3, pp.439-466] Cite error: The named reference "Zhukov" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  8. ^ a b c Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 12, p. 169
  9. ^ Пастка для «Щура» 4 листопада одному з засновників УПА Дмитрові Клячківському виповнилося 95 років in Ukrainian-Russian "Zerkalo Nedeli" Magazine
  10. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 12, p. 172
  11. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 14, p. 188
  12. ^ a b Magoscy, R. (1996). A History of Ukraine. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  13. ^ Petro Sodol - Ukrainian Insurgent Army 1943-1949. Handbook. New – York 1994 p.28
  14. ^ a b c Motyka, p. 148
  15. ^ However it is not true that UPA had a Soviet T-35 tank.
  16. ^ Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kyiv Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 p.585
  17. ^ Template:Uk icon Українська Повстанська Армія - Історія нескорених - Львів, 2007 p.203
  18. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army Chapter 1 p.69
  19. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army Chapter 2 P.92
  20. ^ InfoUkes: Ukrainian History - World War II in Ukraine
  21. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army Chapter 2 P.95-97.
  22. ^ Banderivtsi Nationalistic Portal (Бандерівці ідуть! in Націоналістичний портал) Template:Uk icon
  23. ^ Template:Uk icon Організація українських націоналістів і Українська повстанська армія p.164
  24. ^ [1] p.181
  25. ^ Template:Uk icon Організація українських націоналістів і Українська повстанська армія p.165
  26. ^ Ukrainian Insurgent Army and Military Formations of the OUN During World War II, by Ivan Mukovsky, 2002 (Ukrainian)
  27. ^ Template:Uk icon Організація українських націоналістів і Українська повстанська армія p.178
  28. ^ Debriefing of General Kostring Department of the Army, 3 November 1948, MSC - 035, cited in Sodol, Petro R., 1987, UPA: They Fought Hitler and Stalin, New York: Committee for the World Convention and Reunion of Soldiers in the UIA, pg. 58.
  29. ^ Toynbee, T.R.V. (1954). Survey of International Affairs: Hitler's Europe 1939-1945. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. (page # missing).
  30. ^ Yuriy Tys-Krokhmaluk, UPA Warfare in Ukraine. New York, N.Y. Society of Veterans of Ukrainian Insurgent Army Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 72-80823 P.58-59
  31. ^ Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kyiv Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 p, 384 p.391
  32. ^ James K. Anderson, Unknown Soldiers of an Unknown Army, Army Magazine, May 1968, p. 63
  33. ^ Yuriy Tys-Krokhmaluk, UPA Warfare in Ukraine. New York, N.Y. Society of Veterans of Ukrainian Insurgent Army Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 72-80823 p.238-239
  34. ^ Yuriy Tys-Krokhmaluk, UPA Warfare in Ukraine. New York, N.Y. Society of Veterans of Ukrainian Insurgent Army Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 72-80823 p.242-243
  35. ^ Ukrainian Institute of Military History, Ukrainian Insurgent Army and Military Formations of the OUN During the Second World War, Ivan Mukovsky, Oleksander Lysenko, #5-6, 2002
  36. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 14, p. 186
  37. ^ L. Shankovskyy (1953). History of Ukrainian Army (Історія українського війська). Winnipeg. pp. p.32. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  38. ^ Ukrainian Insurgent Army and Military Formations of the OUN During World War II, by Ivan Mukovsky, 2002 (Ukrainian) "...Ось сумна статистика тих боїв: у липні відбулося 35 сутичок, у серпні - 24, у вересні - 15; втрати повстанців становили 1237 бійців і старшин, ворожі втрати склали 3000 чоловік..."
  39. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 4, pg. 190
  40. ^ Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 3, pp. 179-180
  41. ^ Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 4, pp. 179-180
  42. ^ Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 4, pg. 199
  43. ^ p.190-194
  44. ^ p.192
  45. ^ p.192-194
  46. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 14
  47. ^ p.196
  48. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 14, pg. 197
  49. ^ a b http://www.history.neu.edu/fac/burds/Gender.pdf
  50. ^ Martovych O. The Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA). – Munchen, 1950 p.20
  51. ^ Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, p.338
  52. ^ a b c Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 16, pg. 247-295 and lasted until end of 1944 Cite error: The named reference "autogenerated7" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  53. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 11, pg. 24
  54. ^ Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", East European Politics and Societies v.11 p 96
  55. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 16
  56. ^ Ukrainian Insurgent Army and Military Formations of the OUN During World War II, by Ivan Mukovsky, 2002 (Ukrainian) За деякими українськими джерелами, винищення українців польськими екстремістами на землях, що межували з етнографічною польською територією (Грубешів, Холм, Володава та інші райони на захід від річок Буг і Сян), почалося з 1942 р. Жервами стали понад 2000 чоловік українців.
  57. ^ Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", East European Politics and Societies v.11 pp.118-119
  58. ^ Subtelny, p. 475
  59. ^ on Chapter Ethnicity, Memory, and Violence: Reflections on Special Problems in Soviet and East European Archives, by Jeffrey Burds, 2005, in Archives, Documentation, and the Institutions of Social Memory: Essays from the Sawyer Seminar, Francis X. BLouin and William G. Rosenberg, eds. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press.
  60. ^ J. Turowski, Pożoga. Walki 27 Wołyńskiej dywizji AK, Warszawa 1990, p. 513
  61. ^ Analysis: Ukraine, Poland Seek Reconciliation Over Grisly History, Jan Maksymiuk, RFE/RL, May 12, 2006
  62. ^ Partisan Movement in Ukraine [2]
  63. ^ Subtelny, p. 476
  64. ^ Ihor Sundiukov, "The Other Side of the Legend: Nikolai Kuznetsov Revisited", 24 January 2006. Retrieved on 18 December 2007.
  65. ^ a b c d Vladimir Perekrest, former NKVD officer, Source: FSB.ru [3]
  66. ^ a b Krokhmaluk, Y. (1972). UPA Warfare in Ukraine. New York: Vantage Press. pp. (page 242).
  67. ^ Grenkevich, L., translated by David Glantz. (1999). The Soviet Partisan Movement, 1941-1944: Critical analysis of. Routledge. p. 134.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  68. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 15, p. 213-214
  69. ^ a b Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kiev Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 pp.549-570
  70. ^ According to Soviet archives, the NKVD units located in Western Ukraine were: the 9th Rifle division; 16, 20, 21, 25, 17, 18, 19, 23rd brigades; 1 cavalry regiment. Sent to reinforce them: 256, 192nd regiments; 1 battalion three armored trains (45, 26, 42). The 42nd border guard regiment and another unit (27th) were sent to reinforce them. From Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kiev Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 P.478-482
  71. ^ Exact statistics of UPA casualties by the Soviets and Soviet casualties by UPA, in specific time periods, according to data compiled by the NKVD of the Ukrainian SRR: during February - December 1944 UPA suffered the following casualties: 57,405 killed; 50,387 captured; 15,990 surrendered. During the period from January 1, 1945 until May 1, 1945 the following casualties were reported: 31,157 killed; 40,760 captured; 23,156 surrendered. The UPA's actions numbered 2,903 in 1944, and from January 1, 1945 until May 1, 1945 - 1,289. During February until December 1944 Soviet losses were: 9,521 "killed and hanged"; 3,494 wounded; 2,131 MIA; amongst them NKVD-NKGB suffered 401 killed and hanged, 227 wounded, 98 MIA and captured. From January 1, 1945 until May 1, 1945 the NKVD and Soviet Army troops suffered 2,513 killed, 2,489 wounded, 524 MIA and captured. Soviet Authorities personnel suffered 1,225 killed or hanged, 239 wounded, 427 MIA or captured. In addition, 3,919 civilians were killed or hanged, 320 wounded, and 814 MIA or captured. From Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kiev Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 pp.604-605
  72. ^ a b c Orest Subtelny, Ukraine: a history, pp. 489, University of Toronto Press, 2000, ISBN 0-8020-8390-0 Cite error: The named reference "Subtelny367" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  73. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army [4]
  74. ^ Template:Uk iconexternal link
  75. ^ Theses include deported (1944-47): families of OUN/UPA members–– 15,040 families (37,145) persons; OUN/UPA underground families – 26,332 (77,791 persons) taken from: Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kiev Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 P.545-546
  76. ^ Subtelny, p. 489
  77. ^ Burds, p.97
  78. ^ Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", East European Politics and Societies v.11.
  79. ^ Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", East European Politics and Societies v.11 pp. 106 - 110
  80. ^ a b Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", East European Politics and Societies v.11 pp. 113-114
  81. ^ Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", East European Politics and Societies v.11 pg. 123
  82. ^ Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", East European Politics and Societies v.11 pg. 120
  83. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army [5]
  84. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army [6]
  85. ^ Jeffrey Burds (1997). "Agentura: Soviet Informants' Networks & the Ukrainian Underground in Galicia, 1944-48", East European Politics and Societies v.11 pp. 125-130
  86. ^ журнал "Воєнна історія" #5-6 за 2002 рік Війна після війни
  87. ^ Wilson, A. (2005). Virtual Politics: Faking Democracy in the Post-Soviet World. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 15.
  88. ^ Ukrainian Weekly, July 28, 2002, written by Dr. Taras Kuzio
  89. ^ Ivan Bilas. Repressive-punishment system in Ukraine. 1917-1953 Vol.2 Kyiv Lybid-Viysko Ukrainy, 1994 ISBN 5-325-00599-5 P 460-464, 470-477
  90. ^ Ukranian News
  91. ^ Simpson, Christopher (1988). "Guerrillas for World War III". - America's recruitment of Nazis, and its disastrous effect on our domestic and foreign policy. Collier Books / Macmillan. p. 148. ISBN 978-0020449959. {{cite book}}: External link in |chapterurl= (help); Unknown parameter |chapterurl= ignored (|chapter-url= suggested) (help)
  92. ^ http://history.org.ua/oun_upa/upa/24.pdf p.439
  93. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 21, pp. 385-386 [7]
  94. ^ Ukrainian Insurgent Army in the Encyclopaedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, editor-in-chief. New York: Macmillan, 1990. 4 volumes. ISBN 0-02-896090-4.
  95. ^ Tadeusz Piotrowski (sociologist), Ukrainian Collaboration in Poland's Holocaust: Ethnic Strife, Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic, 1918–1947 pp. 220–59, McFarland & Company, 1998, ISBN 0-7864-0371-3
  96. ^ Himka, John-Paul. "War Criminality: A Blank Spot in the Collective Memory of the Ukrainian Diaspora" (PDF). Spaces of Identity. 5 (1): 5–24. {{cite journal}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |month= (help)
  97. ^ Institute of History, Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, "Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and Ukrainian Insurgent Army
  98. ^ a b Ukrainian Collaboration in the Extermination of the Jews during the Second World War: Sorting Out the Long-Term and Conjunctural Factors by John-Paul Himka, University of Alberta. Taken from The Fate of the European Jews, 1939-1945: Continuity or Contingency, ed. Jonathan Frankel (New York, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), Studies in Contemporary Jewry 13 (1997): 170-89.
  99. ^ Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Chapter 2, pp.62-63
  100. ^ a b Divide and Conquer: the KGB Disinformation Campaign Against Ukrainians and Jews. Ukrainian Quarterly, Fall 2004. By Herbert Romerstein
  101. ^ Leo Heiman, "We Fought for Ukraine - The Story of Jews Within UPA", Ukrainian Quarterly Spring 1964, pp.33-44.
  102. ^ Friedman, P. "Ukrainian-Jewish Relations During the Nazi Occupation, YIVO Annual of Jewish Social Science v. 12, pp. 259–96, 1958–59". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  103. ^ John Armstrong, Ukrainian Nationalism, 3rd edition. Englewood, Colorado: Ukrainian Academic Press, 1990. ISBN 0872877558 (2nd edition: New York: Columbia University Press, 1963) pp.223-224
  104. ^ Wprost 24 - Pojednanie na cmentarzu
  105. ^ A.Przewoźnik: w Polsce nie można stawiać pomników UPA
  106. ^ Information website of the Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group
  107. ^ Lenta.ru В Крыму открыт монумент жертвам бандеровцев 14.September 2007. Retrived 2 April 2008.
  108. ^ Yushchenko pushes for official recognition of OUN-UPA combatants
  109. ^ SBU to study archive documents on activity of Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists / News / NRCU

Sources

External links