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21st Waffen Mountain Division of the SSSkanderbeg

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21st Waffen Mountain Division of the SSSkanderbeg(1st Albanian)
Divisional symbol[a]
Active1 May – 1 November 1944
CountryGermany
BranchWaffen-SS
TypeMountain infantry
RoleAnti-partisan operations
SizeDivision(never reached divisional strength)
Part ofXXI Mountain Corps
Garrison/HQPrizren
Nickname(s)Skanderbeg
Engagements
Commanders
Notable
commanders
August Schmidhuber
Insignia
Identification
symbol
Albaniandouble-headed eagle

The21st Waffen Mountain Division of the SSSkanderbeg(1st Albanian)was a Germanmountain infantrydivisionof theWaffen-SS,the armed wing of the GermanNazi Partythat served alongside, but was never formally part of, theWehrmachtduring World War II. At the post-warNuremberg trials,the Waffen-SS was declared to be a criminal organisation due to its major involvement inwar crimesandcrimes against humanity.

The division was developed around the nucleus of an ethnicAlbanianbattalion which had briefly seen combat against theYugoslav Partisansin easternBosniaas part of the13th Waffen Mountain Division of the SSHandschar(1st Croatian).Therank-and-filewere mostly Muslim Albanians with a few hundred Catholic Albanians and mostly German andYugoslavVolksdeutsche(ethnic German)officersandnon-commissioned officers,it was given the titleSkanderbegaftermedievalAlbanian lordGeorge Kastrioti Skanderbeg,who defended theregion of Albaniaagainst theOttoman Empirefor more than two decades in the 15th century.

Skanderbegnever reached divisional strength, being at most abrigade-sizedformationof between 6,000 and 6,500 troops. In May 1944, members of the division arrested 281 Jews inPristinaand handed them over to the Germans, who transported them to theBergen-Belsen concentration camp,where many were killed. The division itself was better known for this action and for murdering, raping, and looting in predominantlySerbareas than for participating in combat operations on behalf of the Germanwar effort.Its only significant military actions took place during a German anti-Partisan offensive in theGerman occupied territory of Montenegroin June and July 1944. Following those operations, the unit was deployed as a guard force at thechromiummines inKosovo,where it was quickly overrun by the Partisans, leading to widespreaddesertion.Reinforced by GermanKriegsmarinepersonnel and with fewer than 500 Albanians remaining in its ranks, it was disbanded on 1 November 1944. The remaining members were incorporated into the7th SS Volunteer Mountain DivisionPrinz Eugen.After the war, divisional commanderSS-Brigadeführer und Generalmajor der Waffen-SSAugust Schmidhuberwas found guilty of war crimes by a court inBelgradeand executed in 1947.

History

[edit]

Background

[edit]
a male dressed in robes reviewing a parade of soldiers
TheMuftiofJerusalem,Mohammad Amin al-Husayni,reviewing soldiers of the 13th SS Division in November 1943. The division included an estimated 1,000 Albanians from Kosovo and the Sandžak who later formed the nucleus ofSkanderbeg.

On 7 April 1939, five months prior to the outbreak ofWorld War II,theKingdom of ItalyinvadedAlbania.The country was overrun in five days, and Italian KingVictor Emmanuel IIIaccepted the crown offered by theParliament of Albania.TheRoyal Albanian Armywas incorporated into theRoyal Italian Armyand aviceroywas appointed to administer the country as aprotectorate.[4]Following theAxisinvasion of Yugoslaviaon 6 April 1941,Italian Albaniawas expanded to include adjacent parts of theKingdom of Yugoslaviaincorporated mainly from the Yugoslavbanovinas(regional subdivisions) ofVardarandMorava.[5]Most ofKosovowas annexed to Albania, and in the beginning, Albanians living there enthusiastically welcomed the Italian occupation.[6]SomeKosovo Albanianseven suggested that Albanians were "AryansofIllyrianheritage ".[7]Although officially under Italian rule, the Albanians in Kosovo were given control of the region and encouraged to open Albanian-language schools,[8]which had been banned by the Yugoslav government.[9]The Italians also gave the inhabitants Albanian citizenship and allowed them to fly theflag of Albania.[8]The Royal Italian Army expelled most of the Serbs and Montenegrins that hadsettledKosovo during theinterwar period.[10]The Kosovo Albanians despised the Serbs for the oppression they had experienced at their hands during theBalkan Wars,World War I,and under Yugoslav rule.[11]They took advantage of their changed circumstances, attacked their Serb neighbours, and burned the homes of as many as 30,000 Serb and Montenegrin settlers.[8]

Albania remained occupied by Italy until its surrender to theAlliesin September 1943.[12]In August of that year, faced with the imminent collapse of the Italianwar effort,Germanydeployed the2nd Panzer Armyto the Balkans to take over areas previously occupied by Italy. One of the Italian areas seized by the Germans wasAlbania,where theXXI Mountain CorpsofGeneraloberst[b]Lothar Rendulic's 2nd Panzer Army had been deployed. AWehrmachtplenipotentiary general, and a special representative ofHeinrich Himmler,SS-Brigadeführer und Generalmajor der Waffen-SS und Polizei[c]Josef Fitzthum,were both based in the Albanian capital ofTirana.The Germans took control of all Albanian forces that had been collaborating with the Italians prior to their capitulation, including theBalli Kombëtar,ananti-communistandnationalistmilitia.The Germans strengthened the Albanian army and gendarmerie, but quickly decided those troops were unreliable.[14]That year, a number of Albanians from Kosovo and theSandžakregion were recruited into the13th Waffen Mountain Division of the SSHandschar(1st Croatian),a Waffen-SS division composed largely ofBosnian MuslimsandCroatswith mostly German officers, that operated in thepuppetIndependent State of Croatia(Croatian:Nezavisna Država Hrvatska, NDH). A key recruiter amongst Albanians for the Waffen-SS wasSS-Standartenführer[d]Karl von Krempler.For about six months the division included about 1,000 ethnic Albanians from Kosovo and the Sandžak who made up the 1st Battalion of the 2nd Regiment (I/2), which later became the 1st Battalion of the 28th Regiment (I/28).[15][16][17]The division later recruited a further 500 men from the Sandžak.[18]TheMufti of Jerusalem,Haj Amin al-Husseiniassisted in organising and recruiting Muslims into the Waffen-SS and other units.[19][20]The Mufti also visited in order to bless and inspect the 13th SS Division,[21]during which he used theNazi salute.[22]

The formation of an Albanian Waffen-SS division was Fitzthum's idea, initially opposed by the German Foreign Ministry representative for the BalkansHermann Neubacher,and also by the head of theReich Security Main OfficeSS-Obergruppenführer und General der Polizei[e]Ernst Kaltenbrunner,who influenced Himmler to shelve it. But the Albanian government supported the idea; in the face of increasing difficulties Himmler soon changed his mind, and in February 1944 the idea receivedAdolf Hitler's approval.[23]

Formation

[edit]

In February 1944, Hitler approved the creation of an AlbanianWaffen-SSdivision that was to serve only inside Kosovo,[9]and was intended to protect ethnic Albanians but remain under German control.[23]It was meant to be one of three Muslim Waffen-SS divisions serving in theBalkans,the other two being the 13th SS Division and the23rd Waffen Mountain Division of the SSKama(2nd Croatian).[24][25]Himmler's goal was to expand Waffen-SS recruiting in the Balkans and form twocorpsof two divisions each, with one corps to operate in the region ofBosniain the Independent State of Croatia and the other in Albania. These corps would then be combined with theVolksdeutsche7th SS Volunteer Mountain DivisionPrinz Eugenand together would form a Balkan Waffen-SS mountain army of five divisions.[26] In March 1944,Bedri Pejani,the chairman of theSecond League of Prizren,an organisation created after the Italian surrender to advance the interests of Kosovo Albanians, proposed to Hitler that a force of 120,000–150,000 Kosovo Albanian volunteers be raised to fight theYugoslavandAlbanianpartisans. Pejani asked the German leadership to give the Albanians equipment and supplies to fight the communist insurgency, and requested the expansion of the borders of the German puppet state of Albania at the expense of theGerman occupied territory of Serbiaand theGerman occupied territory of Montenegro.These requests were not fulfilled.[14][27]Nevertheless, in April 1944, Himmler ordered the establishment of the new Albanian volunteer division that Hitler had authorised.[12]It was subsequently named after the medieval Albanian warriorSkanderbeg.[28]By this point, the Germans and some members of the Albanian puppet government believed that about 50,000 ethnic Albanians could be recruited to join the Waffen-SS.[29]The Germans had initially envisioned a force of 10,000–12,000 men for the Albanian SS division.[23]Himmler saw the Muslim Albanians as a potential source of manpower in Germany's war against the Yugoslav Partisans,[12]who faced significant difficulties in recruiting Kosovo Albanians to join their ranks.[9][11]

On 17 April 1944, the Albanian battalion of the 13th SS Division was transferred via rail directly from combat in Bosnia to Kosovo to form part of the new Albanian division.[f]The head of Waffen-SS recruitment, SS-ObergruppenführerGottlob Berger,reported to Himmler that the Albanians "... were quite sad about leaving."[31]Himmler himself expected "great usefulness" from the unit since the Albanians that fought in the 13th SS Division had proven to be "highly motivated and disciplined" in the fight against the Partisans in the NDH.[32]After the war, Bosnian Muslim former members of the 13th SS Division stated that while with the division the Albanians had shot unarmed civilians and were "very brutal".[17]

On 23 May, Fitzthum noted the failure of the Albanian units that had been used in operations against the Partisans. He reported that he had dissolved four Albanian battalions organised by the Wehrmacht, describing most Albanian army and gendarmerie officers as "totally corrupt, unusable, undisciplined and untrainable."[14][g]The Germans found that Kosovo Albanians were more cooperative than Albanians from Albania-proper.[14]This was mainly because they feared a return to Yugoslav rule.[9]Thus, many of the division's recruits were Kosovo Albanians, although some were refugees from Albania-proper. The quality of most of these recruits was poor, and only between 6,000 and 6,500 were considered suitable to receive training.[12][34]Those that were accepted were a combination of about 1,500 formerRoyal Yugoslav Armyprisoners of war,elements of the failed Albanian army and gendarmerie, volunteers from both pre-war and expanded Albania, and conscripts from families that had more than two sons.[23]Unlike the Albanians in the Handschar division, who received extensive training in France and then Neuhammer training grounds in Germany, the new recruits underwent a very short training period of only six weeks.[35]The Albanians may have joined for a range of reasons, including access to modern weapons and military training, to help revise the borders of Albania, revenge, and even the opportunity for looting.[36]

The enlistment of Albanian civilians was organised in close cooperation with the Albanian puppet government.[32]In June 1944, Neubacher successfully displaced Pejani, whom he considered "insane".[36]The Albanian Minister of the Interior and new chairman of the Second League of Prizren,Xhafer Deva,was a key factor in recruiting Albanians for the new division. Fitzthum, who had developed a close friendship with Deva, noted that the right-wing and anti-Serb politician was vital for German recruitment efforts.[36]In contrast to the 13th SS Division, the use of Islam as an incentive to join the Waffen-SS disappeared completely from the German agenda, while the utilisation of ethnic tensions became much more important. No fieldimamis documented in the new division and ideological training was avoided entirely, because the Germans feared that such instruction would upset their new recruits.[36]According to Nazi propaganda, the division was to source its manpower exclusively from Muslim Albanians, but the reality was different.[37]While the vast majority of the division's Albanians wereBektashiorSunni Muslims,"several hundred"Albanian Catholicsalso served in the division.[38]

Operations

[edit]

May–August 1944

[edit]

The division was founded as the21. Waffen-SS Gebirgsdivision der SS Skanderbeg (albanische Nr.1)[39][40]on 1 May 1944,[41]as part of the XXI Mountain Corps. Most or all of the division's officers,non-commissioned officers(NCOs), and specialists were German,[23][29]and were mainly provided by the 7th and 13th SS Divisions, which noticeably weakened those formations.[42]The divisional artillery regiment was formed from the 1st Albanian Artillery Regiment.[41]The division was placed under the command of SS-StandartenführerAugust Schmidhuber,[43]who was promoted to SS-Oberführer[h]in June.[40]Members took a religious oath using theQuran,pledging "jihadagainst unbelievers. "[44][45]The division was originally equipped with captured Italian Carro ArmatoM15/42 tanks,which proved to be unreliable.[46]Its garrison was located in the town ofPrizren.[47]

a tank with riveted hull and turret
The division was supplied with captured Italian Carro Armato M15/42 tanks, but they proved to be unreliable.

The division was to be responsible for security in Kosovo, including transport routes, the defence of economically important objects such as thechrome oremines inKukësandĐakovica,as well as offensive action against Yugoslav Partisans operating in the region. Men who had already served in the 13th SS Division were also deployed as guards at a concentration camp inPristina.[48]Early on, it became clear that most of the division's Muslim Albanian members seemed to be interested only in settling scores with their Christian Serb adversaries, who became the target of numerous atrocities.[12]In order to put a stop to the crimes, the Germans had to disarm battalions of the division in the towns ofPećand Prizren and arrest the Albanian officers, with one commanding officer even being sent to prison in Germany.[23]On 14 May 1944,[49]members of the division raidedJewishhomes in Pristina, arrested 281 Jews and handed them over to the Germans, who sent them to theBergen-Belsen concentration camp,where many were killed.[50]The historianNoel Malcolmdescribes this event as "the most shameful episode in Kosovo's wartime history."[51]The division was later involved in a massacre of Albanian partisans.[52]It was also responsible for the expulsion of up to 10,000 Slavic families from Kosovo as new Albanian settlers arrived from the poor areas of northern Albania.[53]The arrival of these Albanians was encouraged by Italian authorities, and it is estimated that as many as 72,000 Albanians were settled or re-settled in Kosovo during the war.[8]Between 28 May and 5 July 1944, the division apprehended a total of 510 Jews, communists and other anti-fascists and turned them over to the Germans. It also carried out retaliatory hangings of suspected saboteurs.[32]

In June 1944,Skanderbegengaged in large-scale field manoeuvres in eastern Montenegro.[54]InAndrijevica,the division summarily executed more than 400Orthodox Christiancivilians.[55]It participated in Operations Endlich (Finally) and Falkenauge (Hawkeye)[42]in June and July, as well asOperation Draufgänger(Daredevil),[40]the first phase ofOperation Rübezahl,which ran from 5 to 22 August.[56]During Operation DraufgängerSkanderbegwas the main force used by the Germans.[57]These operations were focused on the destruction of strong Partisan forces in theĐakovica,Peć andMokra Goraareas.[42]During the operation on 28 July 1944, the division together with the 7th SS Volunteer Mountain Division Prinz Eugen,massacred around 550 Serb villagersin the settlement ofVelika,inPlav,Montenegro.[58]By the end of Operation Draufgänger, more than 400 men of the division had deserted or otherwise gone missing.[33]According to Neubacher, the division was carelessly committed to fighting in the early stages of its training and performed poorly.[23]Between 18 and 27 August, the division fought the Partisans in and aroundDebarbut failed to capture the city.[59]During the summer of 1944, Deva was sidelined within the League. Fitzthum was so concerned about the impact that this would have on the development of the division that he wrote to Himmler.[36]By the end of August 1944, the Germans had decided that the division was only of use for basic guarding duties.[60]Some members were charged with guardingchromiummines near Kosovo before the area was overrun by the Partisans. In the ensuing clashes, one of the division's regiments lost more than 1,000 men and many Albanians deserted.[40]Some of the desertions occurred after a Partisan offensive northeast ofGusinje.[23]Army Group Ereported that the division's performance showed that it had "absolutely no military value."[40]

September–November 1944

[edit]

On 1 September 1944, members of the division stationed inTetovoandGostivarmutinied, killing their German officers and NCOs.[61]By this time, the division numbered fewer than 7,000 men, less than one third of its intended strength.[29]Within two months of its initial deployment, 3,500 had deserted. Himmler brought in 3,000–4,000Kriegsmarine(German navy) personnel from Greece to make up the numbers, but this had little effect on the division's fighting ability.[12][62][63]The desertions were mainly caused by Germany's defeats, serious shortfalls in food and equipment, as well as from observing constant overflights by theUnited States Army Air Force,Allied propaganda, and the approaching end of Germany's military hegemony in the Balkans. Further reasons for the escalating number of desertions included the news that both Bulgaria and Romania had joined the Allies,Josip Broz Tito's amnesty which ended on 15 September, and a demand by Albania'sParty of Labourthat fighting-age men join theNational Liberation Front.[64]

By the beginning of October 1944, the division's strength had fallen to about 4,900 men, fewer than 1,500 of whom were fit for combat.[40]Between April and October, 3,425 had deserted, constituting over half the division's strength. Schmidhuber reported that even the 697 members of the battalion that had served in the 13th SS Division had deserted.[65]The unit was blighted by shortages of equipment and armaments, and a lack of German staff to train new recruits, as demonstrated by the fact that over the summer and autumn only a single battalion had been readied for combat.[32]Schmidhuber held his men in contempt, and he, his superiors, and Fitzthum attempted to justify their failure to create an effective security force by denigrating the Albanians' culture and military reputation.[66][67]Schmidhuber also linked the failure of the division to the lack of time for proper military training, ideological training and the absence of suitable instructors.[68]Later, less-involved members of the Wehrmacht stated that the principal issue regarding the unit's reliability may have been that the Germans did not work closely with the Albanians at the local level.[66]In mid-October, the division was engaged in heavy fighting aroundĐakovica.[42]It also aided the Wehrmacht in its orderly withdrawal from Kosovo, covering the Wehrmacht's flanks and engaging the Partisans.[32][59]By this time, desertions had significantly affected the division's strength, and its 86 officers and 467 NCOs were left with a force of only 899 men, about half of whom were Albanian.[69]On 24 October,GeneraloberstAlexander Löhr,the commander of Army Group E, ordered that all Albanian members of the division be disarmed and released.[29]Between 19 September and 23 October, 131 anti-fascist guerrillas had been shot or hanged by members of the division acting on Schmidhuber's orders.[70]

On 1 November 1944, the division was disbanded.[40]Kosovo Albanians took up arms against the Partisans upon learning that the region would not be unified with Albania after the war, despite earlier Partisan promises. Atrocities occurred when 30,000 Partisans were sent to Kosovo to quell Albanian resistance in the region.[28]Between 3,000 and 25,000 Kosovo Albanians were killed in the ensuing violence.[71][i]

Aftermath and legacy

[edit]

The remaining German troops and former naval personnel were reorganised as the regimentalKampfgruppeSkanderbegunder the command of SS-ObersturmbannführerAlfred Graf. The unit withdrew from the Kosovo region in mid-November along with the rest of the German troops in the area.[29]Many Serbs and Montenegrins then took revenge against the region's ethnic Albanians, especially collaborators and those who had been members of the division.[73]In his strongly apologetic history of the 7th SS Division, which he commanded at the time,[74]Otto Kummwrote thatKampfgruppe SkanderbegreachedLjubovijaon theDrinariver, it was placed under the command of the 7th SS Division, which was securing the river crossings in that area.[75]According to Kumm, theKampfgruppeheld the towns ofZvornikandDrinjačaduring the first half of December 1944 as part of the Ljubovija bridgehead. It withdrew across the Drina and fought its way north, towardsBrčkoon theSavariver, where it relieved the Wehrmacht forces holding the town.[76]In late December, theKampfgruppe's assault gun battery was committed to theSyrmian FrontatVinkovci.[77]The remainder of theKampfgruppewas deployed toBijeljina.[77]

In January 1945,[78]the handful of naval personnel that survived[69]were transferred to the32nd SS Volunteer Grenadier Division 30 Januar,[40]and the remnants of the former division were reorganised as II Battalion of the 14th SS Volunteer Mountain Infantry Regiment of the 7th SS Division. On 21 January 1945, Schmidhuber was promoted to SS-Brigadeführer und Generalmajor der Waffen-SSand placed in command of the 7th SS Division.[78]After the war, he was found guilty of war crimes and hanged.[79]In February 1945, the battalion was disbanded altogether and its remaining manpower was assigned to the German police regiment nearZagreb.[29][j]

The division itself was considered to have been a military failure.[81]Not one of its members was awarded anIron Crosswhile serving in it.[82]Schmidhuber and the staff of XXI Mountain Corps blamed the division's failure solely on the Albanian personnel. Schmidhuber claimed that Albanians had stagnated culturally since Skanderbeg's time in the fifteenth century, and both he and the corps staff claimed that the Albanians had not developed national or state traditions. Schmidhuber argued that the legend of Albanian military achievements was just asaga.[66]Further, he claimed that "[w]ith a light mortar you can basically chase him [the Albanian] around the world. During the attack he goes only as far as he finds something to steal or sack. For him, the war is over when he captures a goat, a ploughshare or the wheel of a sewing machine."[83]Fitzthum was one of the harshest critics of their soldiers. Fitzthum complained to Hitler personally: 'For the currently existing Albanian formations an alteration in the future cannot be expected to be brought about even by thorough training. They will never become a serious and employable troop'. Fitzthum went as far as saying that "the Albanian soldier is undisciplined and cowardly".[33]Fitzthum additionally angrily wrote to Himmler, that one battalion dissolved after being attacked by a few planes and the rest just disappeared.[23]Professor Paul Mojzes writes that the division was better known for committing atrocities against Serbs than it was for contributing to the German war effort.[84]Its role in deporting Jews from Kosovo has been challenged by the Albanian historian Shaban Sinani, who claims that the division did not participate in any deportations on the Germans' behalf.[85]It was reported that some soldiers from the division deserted the division to join the partisan unit led by Gani Kryeziu after refusing to fight it.[86]

The post-warNuremberg trialsmade the declaratory judgement that the Waffen-SS was a criminal organisation due to its major involvement in war crimes and crimes against humanity, including the killing of prisoners-of-war and atrocities committed in occupied countries.[87]Excluded from this judgement were those who were conscripted into the Waffen-SS and had not personally committed war crimes and crimes against humanity.[88]

During theKosovo Warof 1998–1999, the American journalistChris Hedgesalleged that someKosovo Liberation Armyleaders were directly descended from members of the division and were ideologically influenced by it.[89]Malcolm has challenged this claim.[90]

Insignia

[edit]

The division's identification symbol, used on its vehicles, was a black Albaniandouble-headed eagle.[1][3][2]Despite its short existence, a collar patch depicting the goat-crested helmet of Skanderbeg was designed and manufactured for the division, but it was withdrawn from service after a trial as it was unrecognisable from a distance. As a result, officers of the division wore the collar patch with the SS runes, and enlisted ranks wore a plain black collar patch.[91]Photographs exist of a machine-woven cuff band with the titleSkanderbeg,[40]but this was awarded to the 14th SS VolunteerGebirgsjägerRegiment of the 7th SS Division in the latter part of 1944, and not to this division.[92]Albanian members of the division wore an arm shield on their upper left arm depicting a black Albanian double-headed eagle on a red shield with black backing.[93][94]Many of the division's Muslim members wore traditional grey-colouredskull capswith the SS eagle and death's head on the front instead of the standard SS field cap.[3]Others wore the traditional Albanian highlander hat, theqeleshe.[59]

Order of battle

[edit]

The principal units of the division andorder of battlewere:[41]

  • 50th WaffenGebirgsjäger(Mountain Infantry) Regiment of the SS (1st Albanian) (I, II, III battalions)
  • 51st WaffenGebirgsjägerRegiment of the SS (2nd Albanian) (I, II, III battalions)
  • 21st SSReconnaissanceBattalion (fourcompanies)
  • 21st SSFreiwilligen(Volunteer)Panzerjäger(Anti-tank) Battalion (three companies)
  • 21st SSGebirgs(Mountain) Artillery Regiment (four battalions)
  • 21st SSFreiwilligenPioneerBattalion (three companies)
  • 21st SSFeldersatz(Replacement) Battalion
  • 21st SSFreiwilligenSignalsBattalion (three companies)
  • 21st SS Mountain Supply Troop

See also

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^This symbol (exactly as depicted) is described by Keegan and Bishop as the divisional badge,[1][2]and by Littlejohn as the "official vehicle sign of the division".[3]
  2. ^Equivalent to aU.S. Armygeneral.[13]
  3. ^Equivalent to a U.S. Armybrigadier general.[13]
  4. ^Equivalent to a U.S. Armycolonel.[13]
  5. ^Equivalent to a U.S. Armylieutenant general.[13]
  6. ^Neubacher reported that about 4,000 Albanians had served in the 13th SS Division. The historians Xavier Bougarel, Alexander Korb, Stefan Petke and Franziska Zaugg observe that this estimate seems "overly high" given there was only one Albanian battalion in that division.[30]
  7. ^In a report to Himmler, Fitzthum wrote that, "[f]or the currently existing Albanian formations an alteration in the future cannot be expected to be brought about even by thorough training. They will never become a serious and employable troop." Despite the Germans trying to depict them as "the perfect Albanian warrior", Fitzthum argued that the Albanians from Kosovo and the northern part of Albania proper had a completely different conception of warfare than the Germans and were not familiar with fighting in large units or against artillery.[33]
  8. ^This rank had no U.S. Army equivalent. It was senior to acolonelbut junior to abrigadier general.[13]
  9. ^Some Albanian sources place the number of deaths at between 36,000 and 47,000, but according to Malcolm, such claims are greatly exaggerated.[72][73]
  10. ^According to George H. Stein, the men from II Battalion fought with the 7th SS Division until February 1945, when they were sent north to defend theOder–Neisse line.[80]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^abKeegan 1970,p. 139.
  2. ^abBishop 2012,p. 143.
  3. ^abcLittlejohn 1994,p. 10.
  4. ^Lemkin 2008,pp. 99–100.
  5. ^Lemkin 2008,pp. 260–261.
  6. ^Judah 2002,p. 27.
  7. ^Yeomans 2006,p. 31.
  8. ^abcdRamet 2006,p. 141.
  9. ^abcdJudah 2002,p. 28.
  10. ^Tomasevich 2001,p. 151.
  11. ^abMojzes 2011,p. 95.
  12. ^abcdefWilliamson 2004,p. 128.
  13. ^abcdeNiehorster 2018.
  14. ^abcdTomasevich 2001,p. 153.
  15. ^Lepre 1997,pp. 48–49.
  16. ^Tomasevich 2001,pp. 498–499.
  17. ^abBougarel et al. 2016,p. 266.
  18. ^International Crisis Group 8 April 2005,p. 5.
  19. ^Lepre 1997,pp. 31–33.
  20. ^Hoare 2013,p. 53.
  21. ^Cymet 2012,p. 199.
  22. ^Fisk 2005,p. 358.
  23. ^abcdefghiFischer 1999,p. 185.
  24. ^Longerich 2011,p. 677.
  25. ^Shrader 2003,p. 172.
  26. ^Lepre 1997,p. 223.
  27. ^Bougarel et al. 2016,p. 267.
  28. ^abJudah 2000,p. 132.
  29. ^abcdefTomasevich 2001,p. 154.
  30. ^Bougarel et al. 2016,pp. 266, 283.
  31. ^Lepre 1997,p. 165.
  32. ^abcdeMotadel 2014,p. 232.
  33. ^abcBougarel et al. 2016,p. 270.
  34. ^Bougarel et al. 2016,pp. 267, 270.
  35. ^Alonso, Kramer & Rodrigo 2019,p. 278,279.
  36. ^abcdeBougarel et al. 2016,p. 268.
  37. ^Alonso, Kramer & Rodrigo 2019,p. 278.
  38. ^Bishop 2012,p. 107.
  39. ^Stein 1984,p. 184.
  40. ^abcdefghiWilliamson 2012a,p. 38.
  41. ^abcNafziger 1992,p. 21.
  42. ^abcdKaltenegger 2008,p. 69.
  43. ^Williamson 2012b,p. 18.
  44. ^Simeunović & Dolnik 2013,p. 94.
  45. ^Bartrop 2017,p. 16.
  46. ^Cappellano & Battistelli 2012,p. 42.
  47. ^Elsie 2010,p. 261.
  48. ^Alonso, Kramer & Rodrigo 2019,p. 279.
  49. ^Perez 2013,p. 27.
  50. ^Malcolm 1998,p. 310;Fischer 1999,p. 187;Judah 2002,p. 29;Elsie 2010,p. 261;Kane 2014,p. 288.
  51. ^Malcolm 1998,p. 213.
  52. ^Dorril 2002,p. 387.
  53. ^Poulton 2003,pp. 127–128.
  54. ^Frank 2010,pp. 84–85.
  55. ^Morrison 2009,p. 65.
  56. ^Beraud 2021,p. 90.
  57. ^Tomasevich 1975,p. 410.
  58. ^Kasojevic July 2021.
  59. ^abcKane 2014,p. 288.
  60. ^Fischer 1999,p. 224.
  61. ^Kaltenegger 2008,p. 251.
  62. ^Kaltenegger 2008,p. 65.
  63. ^Williamson 2012b,p. 19.
  64. ^Bougarel et al. 2016,pp. 270–271.
  65. ^Bougarel et al. 2016,p. 271.
  66. ^abcFischer 1999,p. 186.
  67. ^Judah 2002,pp. 28–29.
  68. ^Alonso, Kramer & Rodrigo 2019,pp. 279–280.
  69. ^abBishop 2003,p. 71.
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  88. ^Ginsburgs & Kudriavtsev 1990,p. 244.
  89. ^Hedges May 1999.
  90. ^Malcolm 5 May 1999.
  91. ^Littlejohn 1994,p. 9.
  92. ^Kaltenegger 2008,p. 89.
  93. ^Littlejohn 1994,pp. 9–10.
  94. ^Lumsden 2009.

References

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