The Ustaà ¡e Militia () was the military branch of the Ustaà ¡e, established by the fascist and genocidal regime of Ante Paveliàin the Independent State of Croatia (NDH), an Axis puppet state established from a large part of occupied Yugoslavia during World War II.
The militia went through a series of re-organisations during its existence, expanding to include all armed elements of the NDH government outside of the Croatian Home Guard, Navy, and Air Force. It amalgamated with the Home Guard in December 1944 and January 1945 to form the Croatian Armed Forces (Hrvatske oruà ¾ane snage, HOS), although the amalgamation did not result in a homogeneous organisation; former Ustaà ¡e militia officers dominated HOS's operations and held most command positions.
The Ustaà ¡e militia were responsible for some of the most egregious atrocities committed by the Ustaà ¡e regime during World War II, including playing a key role in the establishment and operation of about 20 concentration camps in the NDH. Its units included the Black Legion (Crna Legija), commanded by Jure Francetiàand Rafael Boban, and the Ustaà ¡e Defence Brigades, commanded by Vjekoslav LuburiÃÂ.
The Ustaà ¡e militia was created on 11 April 1941 when Marshal Slavko Kvaternik appointed a separate staff to control the various volunteer armed groups that had risen spontaneously throughout the NDH as the Yugoslav Army collapsed in the face of the Axis invasion. On 10 May 1941, Ante Paveliàissued a special order which detailed its formal organisation. However, some of the groups that formed early were irregular or "wild" Ustaà ¡e units that were not included in the formal organisation, which initially numbered 4,500. The number of irregular Ustaà ¡e across the NDH was reportedly as high as 25,000âÂÂ30,000. Both formal and irregular units were soon involved in atrocities against Serbs, Jews, Gypsies, and all alleged and actual opponents of the Ustaà ¡e regime.
The militia consisted mostly of volunteers, and only 25% of the officer corps were professionally trained. Members were indoctrinated in Ustaà ¡e ideology and committed to defending Paveliàand the Ustaà ¡e regime. Whilst Paveliàwas its titular commander-in-chief, he exercised no practical control over its military operations, as Ustaà ¡e formations and units in the field were placed under command of Home Guard or Axis forces.
The militia had a significant number of Muslims, although their numbers fell after mid-1943, and there were no Muslim militia leaders and few promoted to higher ranks. It also included the small Volksdeutsche militia (, EDM), which was created in July 1941 and grew to 1,500 regular and 1,200 reserve troops by June 1942. The main task of the EDM was to protect German communities in Yugoslavia, mainly in Slavonia and Syrmia.
In August 1941, the Ustaà ¡e Surveillance Service (Ustaà ¡ka nadzorna sluà ¾ba) was created to combat anti-Ustaà ¡e activities throughout the NDH. The Surveillance Service consisted of four elements: the Ustaà ¡e Police, Ustaà ¡e Intelligence Service, Ustaà ¡e Defence Brigades, and Personnel. The head of the Surveillance Service was appointed by and directly accountable to PaveliÃÂ.
In the first months after Independent State of Croatia has been established, most of Ustaà ¡e groups were not under centralized control: besides 4,500 regular Ustasha Corps troops, there were some 25,000-30,000 "Wild Ustasha" (hrv. "divlje ustaà ¡e"). The government-controlled press and the state officials encouraged these poorly organized and very aggressive groups to fight enemies of the regime. After mass crimes against Serb populace committed by Ustaà ¡e during the Summer months of 1941, the regime decided to blame all the atrocities to the irregular Ustaà ¡e - undisciplined, uncontrolled and paid for their service only with the booty; authorities even sentenced to death and executed publicly in August and September 1941 many of them for unauthorized killing and looting against Serbs and Gypsies. To put an end to Wild Ustasha uncontrolled activities, the central government used some 6,000 gendarmes and some 45.000 newly recruited members of "Domobranstvo" forces. In the rest of the war, some "village militias" (hrv. "seoske straà ¾e") composed of the Wild Ustaà ¡e remained.
The Wild Ustashe groups attracted criminal elements. This was recognised by Paveliàhimself - who in fact used these elements as a convenient scapegoat for actions ordered by the core of the Ustaà ¡e movement.
In late 1941, an Ustaà ¡e militia unit known as the Black Legion was formed mostly from Muslim and Croatian refugees from villages in eastern Bosnia, where the Chetniks and Partisans had already committed large-scale massacres. The Legion, which had a strength of between 1,000 and 1,500 men, created a fierce reputation in fighting against both Chetniks and Partisans, and was also responsible for large-scale massacres of Serb civilians. It was initially commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Jure FrancetiÃÂ, and later, after Francetiàwas killed by the Partisans in December 1942, by Major Rafael Boban. It became part of the HOS 5th Division in December 1944, with Boban promoted to general to command the division.
The other special force was the Ustaà ¡e Defence Brigades, commanded by Vjekoslav LuburiÃÂ, who quickly gained a reputation for extreme brutality. The Brigades ran the string of concentration camps established by the Ustaà ¡e regime. Like the Legion, they also fought the Chetniks and Partisans, and were responsible for large-scale atrocities against the Serb population.
On 18 March 1942, a law decree organised the armed forces into the Home Guard, Navy, and Air Force; the gendarmerie; and the Ustaà ¡e militia. By special decree on 26 June 1942, the gendarmerie, which had previously been part of the Home Guard, became part of the Ustaà ¡e militia and was placed under the command of a young Ustaà ¡e colonel, Vilko PeÃÂnikar. In July and August 1942, the militia took control of all armed forces of the NDH other than the Home Guard, Navy, and Air Force.
It then consisted of the regular militia, PaveliÃÂ's personal guard, the railroad security troops, the gendarmerie, the regular police, the Ustaà ¡e Surveillance Service, the Ustaà ¡e educational establishment, the Ustaà ¡e preparatory service, and the disciplinary court. The Ustaà ¡e Surveillance Service included the Ustaà ¡e Defence Brigades, which had been established in late 1941.
Following the dismissal of Marshal Kvaternik from his positions of Minister of the Army and commander-in-chief in October 1942, relations between the Ustaà ¡e militia and the Croatian Home Guard deteriorated further, to the detriment of the Home Guard.
In May 1943, the militia included about 30 regular battalions of varying strength. Twelve were deployed in the Italian zones of occupation, primarily in Zone III, while the remainder worked with the Home Guard light infantry and mountain brigades and the German-Croatian SS police. This pattern of deployment applied until the amalgamation of the Home Guard and militia in December 1944.
In June 1943, the Ustaà ¡e Surveillance Service was abolished, and its functions were transferred to the Ministry of Interior. However, the Ustaà ¡e Defence Brigades under Luburiàcontinued to operate independently. By September 1943, shortly after the Italian surrender, the Ustaà ¡e militia included 25 battalions (22,500 men), plus PaveliÃÂ's personal guard of about 6,000 men, the gendarmerie of about 18,000 men, and many smaller armed groups.
In October 1943, the German commander-in-chief in southeastern Europe, Generalfeldmarschall Maximilian von Weichs, made a proposal to the Wehrmacht operations staff which included the merging of the Ustaà ¡e militia into the Croatian Home Guard. The proposal effectively recommended removing the Ustaà ¡e from power as part of sweeping changes to the administration of the NDH. Although Hitler considered the proposal, he decided not to proceed with it due mainly to the additional German troops that would have been required to implement it.
On 1 December 1944, the Ustaà ¡e militia and the Croatian Home Guard were amalgamated and organised into 16 divisions across three corps. At the time, the militia consisted of about 76,000 officers and men. This figure did not include the Ustaà ¡e Defence Brigades, numbering about 10,000, who remained outside the armed forces. Ustaà ¡e members with appropriate experience, along with some professional military officers with strong loyalty to PaveliÃÂ, were placed in all key positions.
The new force was named the Croatian Armed Forces (Hrvatske oruà ¾ane snage, HOS), but the amalgamation only combined existing formations such as Ustaà ¡e militia brigades and Croatian Home Guard regiments as separate elements under divisional command. Uniforms, equipment, and supply appear to have remained as they were prior to the amalgamation. In March 1945, the Ustaà ¡a Defence Brigades were incorporated into the HOS.
When the Italians reoccupied Zones II and III in 1941, they assumed control of about one-third of the territory of the NDH, and ordered all Ustaà ¡e militia units (whom they accused of excesses against the Serb population of the NDH) and most Home Guard units to withdraw from those zones. The NDH government protested vigorously, but the Italians would not relent, and used auxiliary Chetnik units to maintain the peace in those zones instead. By September 1942, no more than about 1,000 Ustaà ¡e militia members were in Zone II, and they were under close Italian command and supervision.
In mid-1942, the Germans took full command of any NDH troops operating with them north of the German-Italian demarcation line.
In mid-1941, the Ustaà ¡e militia consisted of 5,000 men, which increased by late 1941 to 16,000 soldiers. In the second half of 1942, its units numbered 42,000. After the capitulation of Italy in September 1943, the Ustaà ¡e militia was reorganized. By late 1943, it grew in size to around 55,000 soldiers, organized into nine brigades, three regiments, 48 battalions, and several independent units. There was another reorganization in the 1st half of 1944. The Ustaà ¡e militia size increased to 76,000 soldiers.
The Ustaà ¡e militia recruited ethnic Croats, Muslims, and Germans in its ranks. An estimated 30% of the Ustaà ¡e militia membership was made up of Muslims. Among units stationed in Bosnia and Herzegovina, their share was slightly above 50%, but formed a small part of the officer corps. In July 1943, the Ustaà ¡e Headquarters issued an order to fill the ranks of the new SS Handschar Division with Muslims serving in its army. Several elite units were excluded from the order, such as PaveliÃÂ's personal guard.
Ethnic Germans within the Ustaà ¡e militia were organized in the "German ethnic group militia" ( or ). Its battalions and other units, the last of which was formed in early 1943, numbered around 4,700 officers and soldiers. Their reorganization began in September 1942. By 1 May 1943, all of those units were incorporated into the Waffen-SS or German police within the NDH.
Until September 1942, the Ustaà ¡e militia was filled exclusively with volunteers. Since then, the Croatian Home Guard conscripts were given an option to carry out their obligatory military service in the Ustaà ¡e militia units too. The recruitment of minors was initially not allowed, although their presence, mostly refugees, was not unusual. In December 1944, the Ustaà ¡e Headquarters allowed the recruitment of minor volunteers from the age of 16.
The Ustaà ¡e militia was different in almost all respects from the mostly conscripted Croatian Home Guard. While the Home Guard was poorly equipped and subject to mass desertions from late 1942 onwards, the Ustaà ¡e militia consisted of young, well equipped and indoctrinated volunteers who were loyal to Paveliàand the NDH. Although they were ill-disciplined, they liked to fight and were tough combat soldiers. It was not until mid-1944 that Ustaà ¡e militia units began to suffer from significant numbers of desertions, although these were never on the scale suffered by the Home Guard. As a result of their greater reliability, Ustaà ¡e militia units were used on the flanks of suspect Home Guard units fighting Partisans in order to discourage mass desertions during action.
The Ustaà ¡e militia committed many abuses and atrocities against the NDH's Serb population. In May 1941, in the town of Glina, 50 kilometres from Zagreb, militia members herded about 260 locals into a church, killed them and set the church on fire. By September 1941, over 118,000 Serbs had been expelled from the NDH, many Orthodox churches had been destroyed or desecrated, and many of the Orthodox clergy had been killed or expelled. The militia used promises of conversion to gather Serb peasants so they could be killed more easily.
In late July 1942, all concentration camps in the NDH were officially transferred from the Ministry of Interior to the Ustaà ¡e Surveillance Service, which had been running the camps since August 1941. There were about 20 large and medium-sized camps, the largest of which was a cluster of facilities near the confluence of the Sava and Una rivers at Jasenovac. The camps there were notorious for their brutality, barbarism and large number of victims. Even after the Service was disestablished in January 1943, Vjekoslav Luburiàremained in charge of the camps through most of the war.
In August 1942, elements of the Ustaà ¡e militia, along with Croatian Home Guard and German forces, conducted a major anti-Partisan operation in Syrmia. During this offensive, Ustaà ¡e militia units perpetrated large-scale atrocities against the Serb population. Along with German units, they sent thousands of Serb civilians, including women and children, as well as some Partisans, to the concentration camps at Jasenovac, Sisak, Stara Gradià ¡ka, and Zemun.
The rank insignia of commissioned officers.
The rank insignia of non-commissioned officers and enlisted personnel.
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