Dragutin Keserović
vojvoda Dragutin Keserović | |
---|---|
File:Dragutin Keserović photo.jpg | |
Nickname(s) | Keser, Orel |
Born | Piroman, Obrenovac, Serbia | 21 November 1896
Died | 17 August 1945 Belgrade, Yugoslavia | (aged 48)
Buried | Unknown |
Allegiance | Kingdom of Serbia Kingdom of Yugoslavia Chetniks |
Service | Army |
Years of service | 1912–45 |
Rank | Lieutenant Colonel |
Unit |
|
Battles / wars | Macedonian front of World War I,
|
Awards |
Dragutin Keserović (Serbian Cyrillic: Драгутин Кесеровић; 21 November 1896 – 17 August 1945) was a Yugoslav Chetnik military commander holding the rank of lieutenant colonel and vojvoda during World War II.[1] Keserović was probably the most active commander of Mihailović's Chetniks in Serbia.[2]
Biography
1941
Immediately after the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941, then-Major Keserović joined the Pećanac Chetniks under the command of Kosta Pećanac, a World War I voivode. In August, Pećanac concluded a collaborationist agreement with the Germans. Keserović then transferred to the Chetniks of Draža Mihailović.[3]
Representatives of the Chetniks held meetings with representatives of the communist Partisan forces in the village of Bovan and made a plan to attack Kruševac.[4] According to this plan, it was agreed that the date of the attack would be 23 September 1941, that Kruševac would be blocked before the attack, that Keserović and his Chetniks would attack the town from the west and south across Bagdala, and that communists would attack from the north and east.[5]
According to post-war Yugoslav sources, the Partisan Rasina detachment and the Chetniks' commander Keserović agreed to attack Kruševac together, on 23 September 1941.[6] On 24 September, Keserović's Chetnik detachment attacked German troops in the Kruševac district, killing 23 soldiers.[3] The fighting between attacking rebels and the Axis garrison had lasted for four days when Kosta Pećanac personally, with a large force of his Black Chetniks, came to release the Axis garrison.[7] The post-war Yugoslav sources blamed Keserović for the failure of the attack on Kruševac.[8] These sources accuse Kesrović of attacking German garrison earlier than agreed and of halting the attack when Partisan communist forces joined the attack.[9] At the end of September, Chetniks and Partisans published a printed flyer against Kosta Pećanac and signed it People's Liberation Movement of Chetniks and Partisans (Template:Lang-sr).[10]
1942
According to some sources, Keserović protected a group of Jewish refugees hosted at the beginning of 1942 in the village of Dankoviće on Kopaonik.[11] On 1 February 1942 non-legalized Chetniks commanded by Keserović captured Aleksandrovac and disarmed some members of local Chetnik garrison which was legalized with Serbian puppet government. The remaining members of local garrison joined Keserović whose forces were chased by multiple detachments of legalized Chetniks until the end of February.[12]
Initially, the headquarters of Keserović's forces was in the village of Kupci, between Kruševac and Brus,[13] and later in the village of Kriva Reka, Brus, on Kopaonik. In August 1942, Mihailović issued his first orders that took a "definite position against the occupying powers".[14] These orders were British-inspired and included orders to prepare to sabotage the railways in occupied Serbia. After these orders, Keserović issued a general direction urging peasants in his area of operations to hide grain, livestock, and fodder from the occupying forces.[15] In August 1942, the joint Axis forces of German and Bulgarian troops attacked Major Keserović's Chetniks on Kopaonik and captured nine members of his headquarters; three of them were members of the British mission and were executed when they were leaving the village of Kriva Reka.[16] In 1942, he maintained communication with Nikolaj Velimirović.[17] Shortly before Italian capitulation in September 1943, Keserović raided two German railway transports and pushed back German attacks to Mihailović's headquarters.[18]
From 11–14 October 1942, the Military Commander in Serbia launched a large-scale Axis offensive against Mihailović's Chetniks under command of Keserović in the region around Kriva Reka on Kopaonik mountain.[19] The operation was a punitive expedition aimed against Mihailović's Chetniks, the chief target of German commanders who wanted to secure control of Serbia before important battles in North Africa.[20]
Operation Kopaonik was part of a larger plan of the Axis forces to disarm Chetnik units.[21] The Military Commander in Serbia prepared a list of 24 Chetnik officers to be arrested by the 7th SS Volunteer Mountain Division Prinz Eugen, one of them being Keserović.[22] Keserović was probably the most active commander of Mihailović's Chetniks in Serbia.[23] This operation was the first large-scale engagement of the 7th SS Volunteer Mountain Division Prinz Eugen under command of Artur Phleps, who personally commanded the Axis forces during Operation Kopaonik. The SS division had three regiments: two infantry and one artillery regiment.[24] The German forces were also supported by several Bulgarian battalions of 1,000 men, and 300 men from the Russian Protective Corps.[25][26] Keserović was informed about the attack and successfully retreated units of his detachment.[27]
1943
In January 1943, Axis forces launched Case White, a combined strategic offensive aimed at destroying the Yugoslav Partisan resistance in the neighboring Independent State of Croatia. Two corps of Chetniks were sent from occupied Serbia to support Chetnik formations that had participated on the Axis side in the offensive and had been defeated by the Partisans following the latter's crossing of the Neretva River. These corps were led by Keserović and Predrag Raković and totaled 2,000 men. By early May 1943, Mihailović became aware of the German intention to capture him and decided to return to German-occupied Serbia.[28] Based on his orders, the two corps of Chetniks led by Keserović and Predrag Raković came from German-occupied Serbia to the area of Bijelo Polje in the Italian governorate of Montenegro to escort him back to Serbia.[29]
In 1943, the British sub-mission was established in Keserović's headquarters.[30] According to Chetnik officer Milan Deroc, the name of the British Liaison Officer (BLO) at Keserović's headquarters was Major Bob Wade.[31] By mid-1943, the differences between the British and the Chetniks had become "too serious and too pervasive".[32] Almost without exception, the British reports were unfavorable to the Chetniks as a fighting force. The Chetniks too were unhappy with the British. Keserović issued directives to a brigade under his control to keep information from a British liaison officer visiting his area of operations, and to provide no information to him about the actual situation, but to provide only a positive perspective on the Chetniks, and to discount the Partisans as a resistance force in occupied Serbia.[32]
According to the German Foreign Office representative for the Balkans, Hermann Neubacher, Keserović concluded a formal "armistice agreement" with the Germans in his area of operations in the German-occupied territory of Serbia in late 1943. Such agreements were negotiated by at least four other senior Chetnik commanders in the occupied territory at this time. These agreements ensured that the Chetniks in these areas were safe from the Germans while they continued to fight the Partisans, provided with limited ammunition by the Germans, provided with medical assistance, including having their wounded treated in German hospitals, allowed freedom of movement, and allowed to forcibly recruit manpower in their areas of responsibility.[33] These agreements also required the affected Chetniks to cease operations against the collaborationist puppet regime in the occupied territory, and effectively neutralized these Chetniks as far as the Germans were concerned.[34] On 30 November 1943, Keserović reported to Mihailović that the Germans had offered him cooperation, arms, and ammunition, which he allegedly refused. He denied having any connection with the Germans.[35]
1944
One of the elite Chetnik military units which would bear the biggest burden of defense from Tito's advancing communist forces was the Rasina-Toplica Corps Group, commanded by Keserović.[36] This unit was established on 11 May 1944 by the Chetnik Supreme Command.[37]
In July, the Germans initiated Operation Trumpf against the Partisans in the southern parts of German-occupied Serbia. This was a combined operation with Bulgarian troops, Serbian quisling formations, and Chetnik forces commanded by Radoslav Račić. Račić's Fourth Group of Shock Corps from western Serbia were reinforced by the Rasina-Kopaonik Group of Shock Corps commanded by Keserović. The total Chetnik forces involved in this operation exceeded 10,000 men, and the Chetniks were supplied with ammunition and some arms by the Germans.[38]
In late August 1944, a US Office of Strategic Services mission led by Colonel Robert H. McDowell was parachuted into a Chetnik-controlled area of occupied Serbia to join Mihailović's headquarters, gather general intelligence and establish contacts with representatives of pro-Western forces in Hungary, Bulgaria, and Romania. One member of the mission was Lieutenant Ellsworth Kramer. Kramer was quickly detached to Keserović. Since the situation of the Chetniks seriously deteriorated soon after the mission's arrival, most of McDowell's time was dedicated to the problems faced by the Chetniks, and little if any contact with potential allies in neighboring countries was undertaken.[39]
On 1 September 1944, Keserović proclaimed general mobilization.[40] In October 1944, when the Red Army entered occupied Serbia from Bulgaria, some of Keserović's troops met them and briefly occupied the town of Kruševac in central Serbia alongside them. However, within days, the Soviet troops disengaged from the Chetniks and demanded they disarm, threatening to use force if they did not. Keserović reported this to Mihailović on 19 October and refused the ultimatum, withdrawing towards the Ibar River valley with a small detachment of about 500 men. Two of his brigades were disarmed by the Red Army. Those taken into custody included Kramer, who was subsequently released.[41] Keserović himself barely escaped being captured and turned over to the Partisans.[42]
During the attack by Chetniks on Axis forces in Tuzla in December 1944, Keserović commanded the right column of the Chetnik forces, while the left column was commanded by Mihailović.[43] In late 1944, Keserović released a captured member of the enemy forces whose name was Alija Izetbegović (who would in 1996 became the first President of Bosnia and Herzegovina), based on intervention by a group of Serbs who informed him that Izetbegović's grandfather had saved the lives of 40 Serbs[44] in 1914 during an anti-Serb pogrom that followed the Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand.
Terror tactics against Partisans and their supporters
In his area of responsibility in occupied Serbia, Keserović used terror tactics against Partisans, their families, and sympathizers, drawing up lists of people and ordering them to be killed. To carry out these killings, special units known as "black trojkas" were trained and deployed, often using knives to kill their victims.[45]
Capture, trial, and death
Keserović was captured by the Partisans[when?] and placed on trial. During the trial, he blamed the Chetnik Supreme Command for most of the actions he was charged with and asserted that he was just carrying out orders.[46] The claim that Keserović denounced Mihailović as collaborator and had broken with him was untrue.[47]
Awards and recognitions
References
- ^ D. Trbojević, Cersko-majevička grupa korpusa pukovnika Dragoslava Račića, published 2001.
- ^ (Karchmar 1973, p. 287): "Probably the most active Mihailovic commander in Serbia was Keserovic, who, with relatively small forces, ... "Operation Kopaonik" with several Bulgarian battalions and large forces from the SS- " 45 ✓ Division "Prinz Eugen" to wipe out this ..."
- ^ a b Tomasevich 1975, pp. 124, 127 & 145.
- ^ (Perović 1961, p. 61)
- ^ (Perović 1961, p. 61)
- ^ Vojnoistorijski institut (Belgrade, Serbia) (1965). Zbornik Dokumenta. p. 93.
... и четнички командант Кесеровић били су се договорили да 23. септембра 1941. заједнички нападну Крушевац.
- ^ (Karchmar 1973, p. 212): "The fighting went on for four days, but Krusevac was too well-defended, and Pecanac himself with a large force of cetniks came to its relief."
- ^ (Perović 1961, p. 63):"Напад није успео углавном због издаје Кесеровића и његових четника. "
- ^ (Perović 1961, p. 63)
- ^ (Glišić & Borković 1975, p. 319)
- ^ (Димитријевић 2007, p. 176)
- ^ (Dimitrijević 2020, p. 120)
- ^ Tokovi revolucije. Institut za istoriju radničkog podreta Srbije. 1978. p. 282.
За своју базу Кесеровић је изабрао Купце, село на путу Крушевац - Брус.
- ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 201–202.
- ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 202.
- ^ Небојша Озимић; Александар Динчић (2014). ПРИПАДНИЦИ ЈУГОСЛОВЕНСКЕ ВОЈСКЕ У ОТАЏБИНИ У НАЦИСТИЧКОМ КОНЦЕНТРАЦИОНОМ ЛОГОРУ НА ЦРВЕНОМ КРСТУ У НИШУ (1941-1944). Народни музеј, Ниш. p. 14.
У исто време Бугари и Немци су са другом групом изводили акцију и против четника мајора Драгутина Кесеровића на Копаонику и успели су да заробе девет припадника штаба, од тога три Енглеза, које су на крају стрељали на излазу из села Крива Река
- ^ (Џомић 2009, p. 107) :"Немци су, рецимо, евидентирали да је свештеник Миливоје Мандић из Александровца био веза између Влади- ке Николаја и четничких команданата Драгутина Кесеровића и Богдана Гордића."
- ^ Brandes, Detlef. Veröffentlichungen des Collegium Carolinum. R. Olderbourg Verlag. p. 368.
...kurz vor der Bekanntgabe der Kapitulation Italiens hatte Keserovic, Mihailovics Kommandeur im Kopaonik-Gebirge, zwei Eisenbahnzüge überfallen und war ein deutscher Angriff auf Mihailovics Hauptquartier zurückgeschlagen worden.
- ^ (Ailsby 2004, p. 161): "In October 1942, the division took part in its first large-scale military operation, against Serbian forces under one of Mihailovic's commanders, Major Dragutin Keserovic, in the Kopaonik Mountains in the region of Kriva Reka.
- ^ (Djordjević 1997, p. 47):"For this reason, Mihailovich's detachments became the chief target of the occupying forces. The bloody punitive expedition of October, 1942 in the vicinity of Kriva Reka, where Keserovich's headquarters were located, was an expression of the German commands intention to strengthen its control over Serbia on the eve of the decisive confrontation in North Africa, ...."
- ^ (Glišić 1970, p. 128): "Ова акција SS дивизије "Принц Еуген" је била повезана са разоружањем четничких одреда. Војни заповедник Србије предао јој је и списак од 24 четничка официра .....Међу њима се налазио и Кесеровић."
- ^ (Glišić 1970, p. 128): "Војни заповедник Србије предао јој је и списак од 24 четничка официра .....Међу њима се налазио и Кесеровић."
- ^ (Karchmar 1973, p. 287): "Probably the most active Mihailovic commander in Serbia was Keserovic, who, with relatively small forces, ... "Operation Kopaonik" with several Bulgarian battalions and large forces from the SS- " 45 ✓ Division "Prinz Eugen" to wipe out this ..."
- ^ (Popović 1986, p. 160)
- ^ (Popović 1986, p. 160)
- ^ (Kovbasko 1971, p. 73)
- ^ (Glišić 1970, p. 128): "Keserović je, izgleda, bio obavešten o ovom napadu pa se sa svojim odredima povukao"
- ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 247–250.
- ^ (Plećaš & Dimitrijević 2004, p. 285):"У оваквој ситуацији, Михајловић је решио да се врати у Србију; позвао је Раковића и Кесеровића да га у Санџаку прихвате."
- ^ (Williams 2003, p. 129):"...to the British sub-mission established in 1943 with Major Dragutin Keserović, Mihailovićs commander in the Kopaonik area..."
- ^ (Deroc 1997, p. 140):"Major R.P. (Bob) Wade became Keserovic's British Liaison Officer (BLO)."
- ^ a b Tomasevich 1975, p. 299.
- ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 323–325, 330.
- ^ Roberts 1987, p. 157.
- ^ Vojno-istoriski glasnik. 1978. p. 123.
Tako, komandant Rasinskog korpusa major Dragutin Keserović (»Orel«) 30. novembra 1943. izveštava da mu Nemci nude saradnju, oružje i municiju, ali da on to, navodno, odbija i da u narodu demantuje sve vesti o ma kakvoj vezi sa njima
- ^ (Dimitriǰević & Nikolić 2004, p. 415)
- ^ (Dimitriǰević & Nikolić 2004, p. 415)
- ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 408.
- ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 379.
- ^ Bagdala. Književni klub "Bagdala". 1968. p. 30.
1 септембар. Четнички командант расинско-топличке групе корпуса, потпуковник Драг. Р. Кесеровић штампао је плакат „По зив за општу
- ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 393.
- ^ Roberts 1987, p. 261.
- ^ (Latas & Dželebdžić 1979, p. 398)
- ^ (Izetbegović 2005, p. 23):"Međutim, jedna grupa Srba je došla da intervenira kod tadašnjeg komandanta pukovnika Keserovića. On je bio načelnik Glavnog Štaba. Tad su mi izneli taj podatak da je moj djed spasio 40 Srba i da bi bio dužan da vrati milo za drago. I zahvaljujući toj okolnosti ja sam bio oslobođen."
- ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 259–260.
- ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 462–463.
- ^ (Ford 1992, p. 118):"The charge that Dragutin Keserovic had broken with Mihailovich and denounced him as a collaborator was untrue."
- ^ Biography in the Serbian Cyrillic alphabet[permanent dead link]
Sources
- Ailsby, Christopher (June 2004). Hitler's renegades: foreign nationals in the service of the Third Reich. Spellmount.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Deroc, Milan (1997). By the Pen, the Sword, and Dagger: Biography of Captain Derok, a Leader of the 1941 Uprising in German Occupied Serbia. Ed. Marie-Renée Morin.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Dimitrijević, Bojan B. (2020). Vojska Nedićeve Srbije oružane snage srpske vlade 1941-1945 (3 ed.). Službeni glasnik. ISBN 978-86-519-1811-0.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Dimitrijevic, Vladimir (2007). Оклеветани светац: Владика Николај и србофобија [The Slandered Saint: Bishop Nikolai and Serbophobia]. ЛИО. ISBN 978-86-83697-40-3.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Dimitriǰević, Boǰan; Nikolić, Kosta (2004). Đeneral Mihailović: biografija. Институт за савремену историју (Belgrade, Serbia).
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Djordjević, Dimitrije (1997). Scars and Memory: Four Lives in One Lifetime. East European Monographs. ISBN 978-0-88033-368-9.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Džomić, Velibor V. (2009). Србска црква, Љотић и љотићевци [Ljotić and the Serbian Church]. Štampar "Makarije".
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Glišić, Venceslav; Borković, Milan (1975). Komunistička partija Jugoslavije u Srbiji 1941-1945: 1941-1942. Rad.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Glišić, Venceslav (1970). Teror i zločini nacističke Nemačke u Srbiji 1941-1944. Rad.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Izetbegović, Alija (2005). Alija Izetbegović - dostojanstvo ljudskog izbora. OKO. ISBN 978-9958-43-113-5.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Karchmar, Lucien (1973). Draz̆a Mihailović and the Rise of the C̆etnik Movement, 1941-1942. Department of History, Stanford University.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Kovbasko, Budimka (1971). Kriva reka: (kopaonička). Istorijski arhiv; Brue, Zajodnica kulture.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Kumm, Otto (1978). Vorwärts, Prinz Eugen!: Geschichte d. 7. SS-Freiwilligen-Division "Prinz Eugen". Munin. ISBN 978-3-921242-34-6.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Latas, Branko; Dželebdžić, Milovan (1979). Četnički pokret Draže Mihailovića 1941-1945. Beogradski izdavačko-grafički zavod.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Milovanović, Nikola (1991). Draža Mihailović. Belgrade: Pegaz.
{{cite book}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|coauthors=
(help); Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Perović, Milivoje (1961). Južna Srbija. Nolit.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Plećaš, Neđeljko; Dimitrijević, Bojan (2004). Институт за савремену историју (Belgrade, Serbia) (ed.). Ratne godine. Institut za savremenu istoriju.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Popović, Jovo (1986). Vješala za generale. Stvarnost.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Roberts, Walter R. (1987). Tito, Mihailović and the Allies: 1941–1945. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-0773-0.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Tomasevich, Jozo (1975). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: The Chetniks. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0857-9.
{{cite book}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|coauthors=
(help); Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Williams, Heather (2003). Parachutes, Patriots and Partisans: The Special Operations Executive and Yugoslavia, 1941-1945. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. ISBN 978-1-85065-592-3.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Ford, Kirk (1992). OSS and the Yugoslav resistance, 1943-1945. Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-0-89096-517-7.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help)
- 1896 births
- 1945 deaths
- People from Obrenovac
- Serbian soldiers
- Chetnik personnel of World War II
- Serbian people of World War II
- Royal Yugoslav Army personnel of World War II
- Serbian anti-communists
- Executed military personnel
- Executed Serbian people
- People executed by Yugoslavia by firing squad
- Recipients of the Order of Karađorđe's Star
- Serbian collaborators with Nazi Germany