Green Cadres
The Green cadres (Croatian: Zeleni kadar) was the name given to Croatian deserters from the Austro-Hungarian Army during World War I. After leaving the army, due to the harsh conditions of warfare and poor motivation, they hid in the woods, as outlaws. They numbered several tens-of-thousands and were operative in areas of Croatian territory and Syrmia. The groups subsisted in part on food and clothing supplied by sympathetic rural people, but also lived on income generated by robbing traders and rich farmers. General Stjepan Sarkotić got in February 1918 the order to get involved with the "Green cadres". The term Green cadres was previously unknown in the Austro-Hungarian army (as Green cadres referred to the bodyguards of the Emperor of Russia.[1]) The Croatian Committee was formed opposed to the Yugoslav Committee. Toward the end of the war was their number over 50,000 armed deserters in the woods.[2][3][4][5]
Afterwards, some of them claimed that they had only followed the orders of general Svetozar Boroević and would therefore not have been outlaws.
During World War II in Yugoslavia, there were Bosnian Muslim paramilitary units called "Green cadres" that supported the Axis powers.
Sources
- ^ http://www.napoleon-online.de/html/ru_1812leibdragoner.html
- ^ Istorija Jugoslavije, I. Božić, S. Ćirković, M. Ekmečić, V. Dedijer, Prosveta, Beograd 1972. - str. 399, 400
- ^ Ethnic nationalism and the fall of empires: central Europe, Russia, and the Middle East, 1914-1923, Aviel Roshwald, Routledge, 2001.
- ^ The national question in Yugoslavia: origins, history, politics, Ivo Banac, Cornell University Press, 1988.
- ^ Avantgarde des Widerstands: Modellfälle militärischer Auflehnung im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert, Band 1, Richard Georg Plaschka, Böhlau Verlag Wien, 2000.
Further reading
- Zeleni kadar (in Croatian)
- Vuković, Saša (2019). "Raspad Austro-Ugarske Monarhije i djelovanje zelenoga kadra u djelu Vučjak Miroslava Krleže" [The Dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the Activity of Green Cadre in Miroslav Krleža’s Vučjak] (PDF). Pro tempore (in Croatian) (14). Retrieved 31 August 2020.