Soviet Military Collaborators during World War IIby Mark R. Elliott
World War II, with its thirty million fatalities, exacted the largest human toll of any military conflict in history. The fighting also scattered nations as never before: estimates of civilians made homeless - forty million - are greater than for any other war. Europe alone had thirty million refugees. The Soviet Union, with more than twenty million dead and another twenty million displaced, witnessed the largest human upheaval of any country. While Siberia and Central Asia received twenty million civilians fleeing European Russia, Germany took well over eight million Soviet POWs and forced labourers. 1
The Wehrmacht overwhelmed the Red Army in the first months of fighting, taking hundreds of thousands of prisoners at a time: 300,000 in the battle of Smolensk in mid-July; an astounding 650,000 in the Kiev encirclement in late September. 2 In 1941, the Germans captured 3-4 million members of the Red Army; for the entire war, approximately 5.75 million. 3 The size of the captive population stemmed in part from the speed with which motorized Wehrmacht divisions devoured Soviet territory. The German Blitzkrieg advanced from the frontier in late June to the suburbs of Moscow by December 1941. The Germans benefited from Stalin's self-defeating standfast orders, which contributed to the needless capture of millions of Soviet soldiers. In addition, many soldiers disenchanted with the Soviet regime surrendered voluntarily. 4
Although a Soviet demographer claims that Red Army personnel "perished by the thousands," the deaths actually ran into the millions. Alfred Rosenberg, German commissioner for the Eastern European region, complained to Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel as early as February 1942 that of 3.6 million Soviet prisoners, "only several hundred thousand are fully capable of working. The overwhelming majority perished." 5 Belated, grudging improvements in prisoner treatment ultimately saved some souls from extinction, but fatalities in this lost Soviet army of POWs, mostly in the winter of 1941-2, still numbered 2-3 million. 6
Germany's inhumane treatment of millions of Soviet POWs ranks among the worst atrocities of the war. The disaster resulted from deliberate systematic destruction, neglect, and the lack of international protection for prisoners on the Eastern front. The Nazis methodically singled out special categories for extinction. The most certain to perish were Communist party members, military commissars, Jews, and the ill-defined category of intellectuals. 7
Given the Nazis' loathing of Slavs, being Russian or Ukrainian offered little protection. Camp commandants often refused to allow civilian donations of food to starving prisoners. This harsh treatment and the primitive conditions in POW compounds came as the first great shock to the population of the occupied regions. If starvation did not overcome the captives, lack of protection from the elements, physical abuse, or epidemics might. In the first year of fighting in the East, almost all prisoner compounds suffered at least 30 per cent fatalities, and in some the rate of attrition approached 95 per cent. 8
The lack of legal protection under existing international agreements also contributed to the plight of Soviet POWs. The USSR did not sign the 1929 Geneva Prisoner of War Convention, nor did it formally ratify the 1899 and 1907 Hague Conventions on Land Warfare. Soviet spokesmen claimed Moscow's adherence to the turn-of-the-century treaties and invoked all three in arguing German criminal responsibility for POW and civilian atrocities - but without mentioning the awkward lack of official accession in every case. 9
How much Soviet adherence to the Hague and Geneva conventions would have helped the POWs is open to question. By 1941 Hitler had amply demonstrated his willingness to disregard inconvenient treaties. Moreover, the Eastern races were not reckoned to be much superior to Jews. "As for the ridiculous hundred million Slavs," Hitler declared, "we will mold the best of them to the shape that suits us, and we will isolate the rest of them in their own pigsties, and anyone who talks about cherishing the local inhabitant and civilizing him goes straight off into a concentration camp!" 10
Heinrich Himmler, powerful chief of Nazi elite troops (SS), shared the Fuhrer's racial convictions. Der Untermensch (The Subhuman), a pamphlet partially written by Himmler, gives a plain statement of the Nazi opinion of Slavs: "Whether under the Tatars, or Peter, or Stalin, this people is born for the yoke." The subhuman, it was explained, resembled a human in certain anatomical respects, but in reality was more closely related to lower orders of the animal kingdom. His natural habitat was the swamp. 11
The Germans hindered their own war effort by treating Slavs much worse than other paws. The Wehrmacht developed elaborate propaganda to encourage desertion from the Red Army, but the prevailing Untermensch philosophy frequently prevented preferential treatment from being accorded to deserters over ordinary POWs. 12 Had it not been for substantial covert opposition to the destruction of Soviet captives, the death rate would have been even higher. Some German officials looked upon the question of decent treatment from a utilitarian perspective. Propaganda chief Joseph Goebbels and some of his coterie, for example, realized that Himmler's crudity in pamphlets like Der Untermensch would deeply insult Soviet captives and cripple Wehrmacht recruitment in POW camps. The Untermensch policy also alarmed intelligence specialist General Reinhard Gehlen, who argued that unless there was an end to the "subhuman" approach to Soviet civilians and paws, partisan warfare could not be controlled. 13 Also, General Ernst Koestring fought energetically for a more enlightened policy toward occupied Eastern territories. But Koestring became the head of the Osttruppen (Eastern troops of Soviet origin) too late to make more than cosmetic reforms in German treatment of Eastern units. Many commanders saved Soviet captives from the harsher regimen of POW camps and Nazi labour drafts by quietly diverting them into auxiliary units. In general, the greater the distance from Hitler, the greater the likelihood that German officials would regard the Soviet population under their control as a potential source of labour. Millions of paws perished, but the fraction that did survive benefited from individual captors within the Wehrmacht who were more utilitarian than racist. 14
Appalling conditions in the camps no doubt simplified matters for Wehrmacht recruiters, since the dangerous step of joining enemy ranks could appeal only to persons in the most hopeless of predicaments. On other occasions, the semblance of voluntary enlistment gave way to conscription. The captors simply handed out German uniforms, even weapons, and only the foolhardy refused. 15
Nazi Untermensch philosophy, which coldly anticipated POW mistreatment and starvation, was not the only official policy accelerating the rate of enlistment among Soviet captives. The Kremlin itself contributed to the movement by an ill-conceived decree that branded all captives as traitors simply for having been taken alive. That information only made POWs more susceptible to German suggestions that they take up arms against Stalin. 16
Osttruppen in German Ranks in World War II: Nationalities and Numbers
I. TROOPS IN GERMAN FRONTLINE UNITS
Unit and/or Nationality / Size and Date / Pawns 1
162nd Turkish Infantry Division2 / ?/June 1943-45; / 14/n36 Sumy Division (Ukrainian) / 10,000/1942-43 / 14/ n37
SS Halychyna (Galicia) Division (Ukrainians) / 17,000/April 1943- July 1944 / 14 n37
1st Ukrainian Division (reorganization of the above) / 10,000/fall 1944-May 1945 / 14/n37; 173/n36
1st ROA (Vlasov) Division 3 / 15-18,000/May 1945 / 84-85/n23,26
2nd ROA (Vlasov) Division 3 / 18,000/May 1945 / 85/n26
Russians / 310.000 4/December 1942 / 15/Gehlen, Service, 86; Gordon, "Partisan Warfare," 66,67; Thorwald, Illusion, 73; OSS, "Reichswehr," 6.
Estonians 5 / 10,000/December 1942 / 15/Ibid.
Latvians 5 104,000/December 1942 / 15/Ibid.
Lithuanians 5 / 36,800/December 1942 / 15/Ibid.
Crimean Tatars 10,000/December 1942 / 15/Ibid.
Kalmyks / 5,000/December 1942 / 15/Ibid.
North Caucasians / 15,000/December 1942 / 15/Ibid.
Georgians / 19,000/December 1942 / 15/Ibid.
Armenians / 7,000/December 1942 / 15/Ibid.
Azerbaidzhani Turks 2 / 36,500/December 1942 / 15/Ibid.
Other Turks 2 / 20,550 6 /December 1942 / 15/Ibid.
TOTAL FRONTLINE UNITS / Approximately 500,000 (excluding Balts) / 7 / 14-15/n23,26,36,37 1 Mark Elliott, Pawns of Yalta: Soviet Refugees and America's Role in Their Repatriation (University of Illinois Press, 1982). Text page(s) and sources with endnote numbers.
2 There is overlap among various Turkish units.
3 There is overlap between figures for Kaminskii and ROA troops.
4 This figure undoubtedly includes Ukrainians and probably Belorussians as well. Almost certainly this estimate encompasses some of the above division.
The employment of substantial numbers of Soviet prisoners in the German war effort began almost immediately after the surprise attack on the USSR, on 22 June 1941. German troop strength did not equal the Soviets' even at the outset of hostilities, and the Wehrmacht's dramatic advances could not change the fact that its early losses were costly, even if Red Army losses were costlier. The invader's casualties took on dimensions incomparably greater than in earlier campaigns. Up to the Battle of Moscow in December 1941, Wehrmacht progress went unchecked and victories were sweeping. Nevertheless, German losses for the summer and fall soared to 800,000. Hilfswillige (auxiliary volunteers) quickly became indisfensable, constituting up to 40 per cent of some support formations. 17
II. TROOPS IN GERMAN ANTI-GUERRILLA UNITS
Unit and/or Nationality / Size and Date / Pawns 1
Graukopf Battalion (Belorussia) / 10,0001? / 16/n40
Voskoboinikov unit 8 (Lokot, between Orel and Kursk) / 20,000/January 1942 / 16/n41
Kaminskii Brigade 8 (Lokot, Pripet Marshes, Berezina River region, Warsaw) / 10,000/1942-August 1944 / 16/n42,43
Rodionovites / ?/1943 / 16/n45
1st Cossack Division (Russians, Ukrainians) / 20,000/June 1944 / 14/n35
Osttruppen (France) (transferred from anti-guerrilla to combat units) / 115,500/fall 1943-summer 1944 / 17/n46; OSS, "Reichswehr," 7, 9,12; OSS Intelligence Report 52267, NA RG 226
TOTAL ANTI-GUERRILLA FORCES including units not enumerated above (most apparently Russian) / Approximately 500,000/December 1942 7 / 16/n39
TOTAL FRONTLINE AND ANTI-GUERRILLA FORCES / Approximately1,000,0007 19/n55
5 Balts fighting in German ranks were not Soviet citizens but were considered part of the Osttruppen forces. An unknown number of Western Ukrainian Osttruppen likewise had not been Soviet citizens in the interwar period.
6 Volga Tatars [sic], Kazakhs, Turkmen, and Tadzhiks.
7 It is likely that there is some overlap between the frontline and anti-guerrilla unit totals since Germany used some Osttruppen in both capacities. Conversely, it is unlikely that all Hiwis (auxiliary troops) are included in these estimates.
8 There is overlap in the figures for these units.
At first the Germans used these Hilfswillige (or Hiwis) in noncombat roles: in paramilitary maintenance, supply, transport, engineer, and labour battalions. But before the summer was out, Red Army volunteers began to appear in regular Wehrmacht combat formations, even in small all-Soviet units under German command. 18
All this movement from POW compounds into Wehrmacht ranks had to be done discreetly, for Hitler's proscriptions were explicit. Commanders bent on circumventing early prohibitions against arming Soviet nationals took care to mislead headquarters. Rather than report all captured enemy personnel, shorthanded officers recruited a portion of their catch on the spot, concealed them among their troops, and bypassed prisoner compounds altogether. Some "all-German" units quietly admitted Soviet POWs up to a level of 10 or 15 per cent. In 1942 Hitler reluctantly recognized the presence of ex-Red Army prisoners in German uniforms as a fait accompli. Wary of racial contamination and even more so of redefection, he did, however, prohibit the formation of any large-scale collaborator forces from among Red Army prisoners. 19
This viewpoint prevailed until Nazi advances turned into retreats; and when the Germans began to ignore the original restrictions, they turned first to units of Soviet minority nationalities, thought to be more trustworthy than Russians. A number of such formations, all under German leadership, achieved division size, including a Cossack division within the regular army but supplied by the SS, a Turkish division, the Sumy (Ukrainian) Division, and a Galician (Ukrainian) SS division. Curiously, the Nazis exempted Cossacks - the Russian empire's frontier warriors of mixed ancestry - from Untermensch classification. Pulled from Soviet POW camps, they saw action in German ranks as early as 1941. The Wehrmacht deployed some Cossacks in front-line action, but more often assigned them to anti-partisan operations. The majority served in that capacity until well past the war's midpoint. 20
In the spring of 1943, Hitler authorized the formation of the 1st Cossack Division under General Helmut von Pannwitz. The division's six regiments numbered 20,000 by June 1944. Pannwitz's personal bodyguard of old Cossacks, with their imposing, if antiquated, uniforms, crisscrossed with munition belts, added a novel, even bizarre touch to twentieth-century total war. But the natives of Croatia, where the division first served, saw nothing quaint in the Cossacks' time-honoured ravaging of war zones. Achieving moderate success battling Tito's partisans, they seem to have been even more adept at plundering and pillaging. 21
Unlike the 1st Cossack Division, the 162nd Turkish Infantry Division maintained a fifty-fifty German-Osttruppen personnel ratio, an experiment that worked better than most. In late 1942 troop-training took place at Neuhammer in Silesia, instead of in occupied Soviet territory, since the Wehrmacht knew that ready knowledge of German mistreatment of the civilian population damaged Osttruppen morale. Primarily engaged in anti-partisan activity, the Turkish Division saw action from June 1943 in Croatia, Istria, and northern Italy. 22
The Wehrmacht's use of ex-Soviet Ukrainians included the 10,000-strong Sumy Division, which fought at Kharkiv and disintegrated at the Battle of StaIingrad in 1942-3. More is known about the SS Galidan Division (organized in April 1943 in the district of Galicia), under Soviet control from 1939 to 1941. Soviet forces badly mauled this formation of 11,000 Ukrainians in German uniform at the Battle of Brody in July 1944. A desperate Himmler permitted the unit's reorganization in the fall of 1944. After a stint in Slovakia, it made its way to Austria by the war's end.23 The Cossack, Turkish, and Ukrainian divisions accounted for only a fraction of the Soviet Union's national minorities in German uniform and not even all of these groups in enemy ranks. Altogether, at least a score of the USSR's ethnic groups could be found in substantial numbers dispersed in smaller units throughout the Wehrmacht, including Finns, Belorussians, Crimean and Volga Tatars, Kalmyks, North Caucasians, Georgians, Armenians, and Azerbaidzhanis.24
Russian collaborators did not play nearly as large a role in German combat ranks as did various Soviet minority nationalities. Probably well under half the total of nearly one million Soviet military collaborators were Russian. 25 Because of the Germans' special fear and loathing of them, Russian "volunteers" were recruited in quantity later than other Soviet nationalities, and were relegated to the least responsible positions. From 1941 until well into 1944, they were usually in support roles; when Russian combat units were formed, the Wehrmacht carefully scattered them throughout the ranks. When the German-sponsored Russian Liberation Army (ROA) under ex-Red Army General Andrei Vlasov finally did appear, it barely reached division strength by the war's end.
Vlasov's army was inconsequential, but Russians did play an Important role in the German military effort - not on the front lines, but an anti-partisan warfare. Here their help was enlisted early and had some effect. Vlasov was fond of saying, "It takes a Russian to beat a Russian." He never got a real chance to prove it, but a substantial number of Germans appreciated the sentiment, as demonstrated by their liberal recruitment of Russian paws to fight Soviet partisans. The Soviet territory Germany conquered proved too vast for effective occupation, especially since the forests and swamps of northern Ukraine and Belorussia served as perfect guerrilla bases. The Wehrmacht quickly turned to native collaborators to help counter Soviet resistance behind the lines. By the end of 1942, the Wehrmacht employed about a half million ex-Red Army men in its anti-guerrilla operations, most of whom were Russian. 26
In Belorussia, the Graukopf Battalion (so named for its commander's gray hair) numbered 10,000 at one point. 27 The Germans found an especially efficient collaborator in engineer Voskoboinikov, who ran Lokot, a town of 6,000 and region of 100,000. His territory - between Orel and Kursk - ultimately encompassed 1.7 million inhabitants, which he controlled with 20,000 men and twenty-four tanks. In exchange for local autonomy he killed partisans, collected taxes, and paid regular tribute in provisions. Moscow so feared the experiment that parachutists were sent in to kill him, which they did in January 1942. 28
After Voskoboinikov's death, the Kaminskii Brigade, the most notorious of all the anti-partisan units, commandeered the Lokot base. In the next nineteen months Bronislav Kaminskii, an engineer like his predecessor, expanded operations into the Pripet Marshes and the forests along the Biarezina River, finally commanding 10,000 troops with as many camp followers. 29 Widely known for his brutal treatment of captured partisans, he vied in cruelty with the SS in suppressing the 1944 Warsaw uprising. An emigre wrote, "The Kaminsky [sic] brigade has the most sinister reputation among the Russians and was highly valued by Himmler." 30 Somehow, the brutality of his brigands exceeded what even the Germans would tolerate. Kaminskii was shot by the SS in August 1944. 31
The troops under Gil-Blazhevich, alias Rodionov, were nearly as infamous. Poles and Jews especially had reason to dread the appearance of Rodionov' s men. But one act set Rodionov apart from Kaminskii in notoriety: his redefection in 1943, after the tide had turned against the Germans. Moscow rewarded this erstwhile traitor with the Order of the Red Star for the overnight creation of a "partisan region" in northeast Belorussia. It has not, however, advertised the postwar fate of Rodionov's followers, which was imprisonment at best. 32
Line-crossing was not an isolated phenomenon. Soviet redefectors, either unaware of the harsh reception awaiting them, or dreading it less than remaining in Wehrmacht ranks, multiplied in proportion to German defeats. Hitler, viewing the large-scale defection and revolts of 1942-3 as confirmation of his low opinion of Eastern nationalities, ordered Osttruppen units disbanded or transferred to another front. Some collaborators, especially Hiwis, remained on the Eastern front, scattered throughout the German army (up to twelve per company), but the great majority was moved to other parts of occupied Europe in the early fall of 1943.33 They were dispersed widely, from the fjords of Norway to the islands of Greece. Earlier, Soviet nationals in German uniform had seen service even farther south, in Libya. The tides of war now scattered Osttruppen in every direction: to Norway, Denmark, Holland, Belgium, Luxemburg, and France; into Yugoslavia, Greece, and Crete; and, as the war concluded, into Italy, Austria, and Germany. 34
In 1943 France became the destination for more Osttruppen than any other country. There were 115,500 dug in by D-Day, 6 June 1944.35 Allied forces were dismayed to find former Soviet soldiers among captured Germans. American intelligence had amassed voluminous data on the Osttruppen - not only head counts, but also precise knowledge of unit movements, current locations, even troop morale, but this information rarely filtered down to front-line units, who were bewildered to encounter German paws who could not speak German. 36
If American and British officers knew anything at all about the "volunteer" units, they mistakenly labeled them as part of Vlasov's army, which received the most publicity and the least combat experience, boasted of more and amounted to less, than most ex-Soviet contingents in Wehrmacht ranks. Throughout most of the war, influential Nazis viewed this movement merely as propaganda. Serious consideration for anti-Stalinist Russians in a viable military capacity came only as a last-minute act of desperation. 37
The organization and training of Russian forces under Vlasov's authority did not begin until November 1944, and only one division ever became operational. Pieced together from Russian battalions, recent POW recruits, and the remnants of Kaminskii's guerrillas, the 15,000-strong formation fought briefly and ineffectively along the Oder River in mid-April 1945, then moved south against German orders. In a bizarre ending too incredible for fiction, these Vlasovites helped Czech partisans drive the Nazis out of Prague on 6-8 May and then surrendered to the U.S. Third Army, beginning on 10 May. 38
Soviet collaborator forces under Vlasov were thus inconsequential, but at the same time no nation in Hitler's path provided the Wehrmacht with as many recruits as did the Soviet Union. Certainly, its citizens did not find the black logic of Nazism any more appealing than other Europeans. On the contrary, the Slavs, whom Hitler dismissed as subhumans, had more to fear from Germany's racial determinism than any group save the Jews. Rather than any positive attraction to Wehrmacht enlistment, large-scale military collaboration on the Eastern front stemmed from the size of the Soviet POW pool to begin with, the absolute wretchedness and brutality of their incarceration, and the grievances of many who had suffered under Stalin's rule.
If all the diverse auxiliary and fighting formations are included, close to one million Soviet soldiers served in German ranks in World War 11. 39 This "army of the damned," as an American documentary styled it, amounted to the largest military defection in history.40
In terms of ethnic distribution of Soviet nationals abroad in World War II, the displaced were least likely to have been Russians. This was the case for Ostarbeiter, paws, military collaborators, non-returners, and those ultimately repatriated. The largest contingent of displaced persons was Ukrainian. They accounted for 52.6 per cent of all non-returners who had held Soviet citizenship prior to World War II, whereas in 1939 they constituted only 16.5 per cent of the Soviet population. In comparison, Russians amounted to 14 per cent of the postwar emigration yet made up 58.1 per cent of the total Soviet population in 1939.41
There are three main reasons for the disproportionately large non-Russian, especially Ukrainian, representation among Soviet nationals abroad. First, Ukrainians were charged with, and persecuted for, "bourgeois nationalism" more often than Russians, particularly during Stalin's purges of the 1930s. This made Ukrainians and other minorities less hostile to Berlin than Moscow, at least initially, before German occupation policies took their toll. Second, the Germans occupied the entire Ukraine, whereas only a portion of the Russian population had to endure German occupation. 42 Third, Wehrmacht Army Group North, in direct control of the Germans' one major region of Russian population, vigorously resisted deportations to the Reich because forced labour drafts fueled the partisan movement. But in the south, the army had less control over occupation policy; consequently, Nazi manhunts netted hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians.
Dramatic as the story of Vlasov and other military collaborators may be, altogether they accounted for only a fraction of Soviet nationals caught up in the German war effort. Millions more, civilians as well as paws, had no choice but to work in the Reich's factories and fields. In 1942 alone, the Nazi invaders commandeered two million Soviet nationals to work throughout German-occupied Europe. 43 For the war as a whole, Germany mobilized between 2.8 and 7 million Soviet forced labourers, with nearly 6 million a likely figure. 44 More than 0.75 million died from mistreatment and wretched conditions. 45
In looking at repatriation statistics, it is important to note that the majority of Soviet citizens returned to the USSR did not collaborate with the Germans. Red Army men captured in Wehrmacht ranks accounted for only 17 per cent (about 900,000 of 5,236,130) of Soviet citizens going home after World War II. Even among military repatriates, collaborators constituted less than one-third (29 per cent, or 900,000 of 3,100,000) of the total. 46 That is to say, approximately 71 per cent of surviving Red Army paws had refused to join German ranks despite vigorous recruitment and horrendous camp conditions. Of five million repatriates, 83 per cent were not collaborators - unless forced labour is defined as collaboration; that, to be sure, is unthinkable.
Without question, the collaborator phenomenon included those who were anti-Semitic and who treated Jews and others condemned to death by the Germans despicably. Some did not share their captors' racial perversions, preferred life to death in POW camps, and fought against Stalin rather than Hitler. Simply put, a Soviet soldier in German ranks did not necessarily constitute a Soviet soldier sympathetic to the German cause. Without an ounce of sympathy for the opportunistic, ruthless Rodionovs and Kaminskiis, it must also be pointed out that other Soviet soldiers chose German uniforms to avoid starvation or a bullet in the head. It is essential, then, to differentiate among the collaborators. The word pawns was chosen by this author for the title of his study of Soviet displacement and repatriation in World War II in order to emphasize the plight of so many who, caught between the likes of Hitler and Stalin, had scarcely a prayer or a choice.47
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Notes:1 Andrei Amalrik, "Victims of Yalta," Harper's, May 1979, 91-2; Boris L. Dvinov, Politics of the Russian Emigration (Santa Monica, 1955),5; Mark Elliott, "The Repatriation Issue in Soviet-American Relations, 1944-1947" (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Kentucky, 1974), 10-21; Nancy Eubank, The Russians in America (Minneapolis, 1973),74; Edward A. Raymond, "The Juridical Status of Persons Displaced from Soviet and Soviet-Dominated Territory" (Ph.D. dissertation, American University, 1952), 172. 100 Part I: 2. Collaboration and Resistance
2 Alexander Dallin, German Rule in Russia, 1941-1945 (New York, 1957), 69; Albert Seaton, The Russo-German War, 1941-45 (London, 1971), 125, 130; Boris Shub, The Choice (New York, 1950), 50; Sven Steenberg, Vlasov (New York, 1970),4.
3 Amalrik, "Victims," 91; V. P. Artiemev, "Crime and Punishment in the Soviet Armed Forces," Military Review, 42 (November 1962): 73; Dallin, German Rule, 69, 417, 427; Dvinov, Politics, 38; Eugene Kulischer, The Displacement of Population in Europe (Montreal, 1943), 152; Norman Luxenburg, "Solzhenitsyn, Soviet Literature and the Returned POWs Issue" (paper presented at the Midwest Slavic Conference, Cleveland, Ohio, 2 May 1975), 4; Vladimir Petrov, My Retreat from Russia (New Haven, 1950), 274-5; Shub, Choice, 63.
4 Mikhail M. Koriakov, ['11 Never Go Back: A Red Army Officer Talks (New York, 1948), 128-9. A powerful Soviet novel depicting these disasters is Konstantin Simonov's The Living and the Dead (New York, 1962).
5 Boris Urlanis, Wars and Population (Moscow, 1971), 172, 176. See also Dallin, German Rule, 417; Shub, Choice, 63.
6 Jay Warren Baird, "German Home Propaganda, 1941-1945, and the Russian Front" (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Colorado, 1966),27; Patricia Blake, "Solzhenitsyn: An Artist Becomes an Exile," Time, 25 February 1974, 39; Dallin, German Rule, 426; Edward L. Hornze, Foreign LAbor in Nazi Germany (Princeton, N.J., 1967),80; Petrov, Retreat from Russia, 274-5; Janusz Sawczuk, Hitlerowskie obozy jenieckie w Lambinowicach w latach 1939-1945 (Cieszyn, 1974), 226-7; Alexander Werth, Russia at War, 1941-1945 (New York, 1964), 703.
7 The Fate of a Man (Moscow, 1957), 25-6; Dallin, German Rule, 418.
8 Oleg Animisov, The German Occupation in Northern Russia during World War II: Political and Administrative Aspects (New York, 1954), 28-9; Dallin, German Rule, 418.
9 Heinz L. Ansbacher, "The Problem of Interpreting Attitude Survey Data: A Case Study of the Attitude of Russian Workers in Wartime Germany," Public Opinion Quarterly 14 (Spring 1950): 126; Dallin, German Rule, 445; George Ginsburgs, "Laws of War and War Crimes on the Russian Front during World War II: The Soviet View," Soviet Studies, 11 (January 1960): 254; Alexander Pronin, "Guerrilla Warfare in the German-Occupied Soviet Territories, 1941-1944" (Ph.D. diss., Georgetown University, 1965),36-7; Aron N. Trainin, Hitlerite Responsibility under Criminal Law (London, n.d. [1945]), 34-5, 47. The Nazi perspective is at least as self-serving: see Albrecht, "The Legal Situation Existing between Germany and the Soviet Union," appendix I of German Camps for Russian and Polish War Prisoners, by Adolph Westhoff, National Archives Record Group (hereafter cited as NA RG) 338, Foreign Military Studies, P-046. Albrecht was chief of the legal branch of the German foreign office.
10 Quoted in Baird, "Home Propaganda," 25-30. See also Hornze, Foreign Labor, 79; U. S. Chief of Counsel for the Prosecution of Axis Criminality, Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression (Washington, D.C., 1946),8:646; EUCOM, Historical Division, "Displaced Persons" (Carlisle Barracks, Pa., Military Historical Research Collection, 1947),6; and Jurgen Thorwald, The Illusion: Soviet Soldiers in Hitler's Army (New York, 1975), 32-3.
11 Baird, "Home Propaganda," 40-1. See also International Military Tribunal, Trial of the Major War Criminals (Nuremberg, 1947-9), 29:122; and Alan Clark, Barbarossa, The Russian-German Conflict, 1941-45 (New York, 1965), 205.
12 John Buchsbaum, "German Psychological Warfare on the Eastern Front: 1941-1945" (Ph.D. dissertation, Georgetown University, 1960), 97-8; Shub, Choice, 63-4. For more on German attitudes toward Russians, see "The German Concept of the Russian Mind," in Buchsbaum, "Psychological Warfare," 73-85; Francis Sampson, "Paratrooper Padre," American Ecclesiastical Review 116 (February 1947): 118.
13 Baird, "Home Propaganda," 29, 39-4l.
14 Ibid., 28; Viacheslav Naumenko, Velikoe predatelstvo (New York, 1970), 2:381; Thorwald, Illusion, 181-2; Office of Strategic Services (055), "Use of Soviet Citizens in the Reichswehr," 5, NA RG 59, no. 2297, 13 December 1944; Hans von Herwarth, "Memoirs: 1904-1945" (unpublished manuscript), 229, 231-4; Ernst Koestring, "The People of the Soviet Union," 20-1, NA RG 338, C-035; ass, "Reichswehr," 1, 9, 11; Hans Seraphim, "Eastern Nationals as Volunteers in the German Army," iv, 95, NA RG 338, C-043; Maj. Gen. Alfred Toppe et al., "Political Indoctrination of War Prisoners," 64, NA RG 338, P-Ol8d; Interrogation Report of General Ernst Koestring, 30-31 August 1945, p. 7, 9, NA RG 165, Shuster Mission. For a description of these interrogations, see Oron J. Hale, "World War II Documents and Interrogations," Social Science 47 (Spring 1972): 75-8l.
15 George Fischer, "The New Soviet Emigration," Russian Review 8 (January 1949): 11; Roy A. Medvedev, Let History Judge: The Origins and Consequences of Stalinism (New York, 1971), 467; ass, "Reichswehr," 17-18.
16 Mark R. Elliott, Pawns of Yalta: Soviet Refugees and America's Role in Their Repatriation (Urbana, m., 1982), 168-71; Burton, "The Vlasov Movement," 14; Dvinov, Politics, 51; Ft. Dix interviews, NA RG 59, 711.62114/8-1045.
17 Animisov, German Occupation, 26; ass, "Reichswehr," 12; Seaton, Russo-German War, 175.
18 Baird, "Home Propaganda," 29; Alexander Dallin, "Portrait of a Collaborator: Oktan," Survey, no. 35 Oanuary-March 1961): 117; Alexander Dallin and Ralph Mavrogordato, "Rodionov: A Case-Study of Wartime Redefection," American Slavic and East European Review, 18 (February 1959): 25; Reinhard Gehlen, The Service: The Memoirs of Reinhard Gehlen (New York, 1972), 73-92; Koestring Interrogation, 8; ass, "Reichswehr,"9; Wladirnir W. Posdnjakoff, "German Counterintelligence Activities in Occupied Soviet Union 1941145," 63, NA RG 338, P-I22; Toppe et al., "Indoctrination," 22.
19 Gary Howard Gordon, "Soviet Partisan Warfare, 1941-1944: The German Perspective" (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Iowa, 1972),63; Koestring Interrogation, 7-8; Koestring, "People"; ass, "Reichswehr," 1; Posdnjakoff, "German Counterintelligence," 179.
20 Ibid., 92; Gordon, "Partisan Warfare," 62; Herwarth, "Memoirs," 235.
21 Alexander von Bosse, "The Cossack Corps," 6,8, 17, NA RG 338, P-064; Koestring, "People," 12; ass, "Reichswehr," 17; Steenberg, Vlasov, 116-18, 124; Toppe et al., "Indoctrination," 63.
22 Koestring Interrogation, 8; Seraphim, "Eastern Nationals," iii, 36-37, 41; Thorwald, Illusion, 77.
23 Yaroslav J. Chyz, "Ukrainians in America, Political Attitudes and Activities," vol. 10 (American Council for Nationalities Service, Box 5, Minneapolis, 1953); University of Minnesota Immigration History Research Center, Koestring Interrogation, 8; Volodymyr Kubijovyc, ed., Ukraine: A Concise Encyclopedia (Toronto, 1971), 2:1087-8; Steenberg, Vlasov, 163; Thorwald, Illusion, 233-4.
24 Elliott, Pawns, 15.
25. Thorwald, Illusion, 228.
26. Gordon, "Partisan Warfare," 66, 148.
27 Ibid., 64; Steenberg, Vlasov, 52-62.
28 Posdnjakoff, "German Counterintelligence," 81; Steenberg, Vlasov, 76-7; Donald B. Vought, "An Inquiry into Certain Aspects of the Soviet Partisan Movement 1941- 1944" (M.A. thesis, University of Louisville, 1963), 148.
29 Alexander Dallin, "The Kaminsky Brigade: A Case-Study of Soviet Defection," in Revolution and Politics in Russia: Essays in Memory of B.I. Nicolaevsky, ed. Alexander and Janet Rabinowitch (Bloomington, Ind., 1972), 227; " 'Haunted Forests': Enemy Partisans behind the Front," 11, NA RG 338, C-037; Vladimir D. Samarin, Civilian Life under the German Occupation, 1942-1944 (New York, 1954), 58; John J. Stephan, The Russian Fascists: Tragedy and Farce in Exile, 1925-1945 (New York, 1978), 27; Vought, "Inquiry," 149.
30 Dvinov, Politics, 57.
31 Clark, Barbarossa, 394; Paul Petelchuk, "The National Alliance of Russian Solidarists: A Study of a Russian Freedom Movement Group" (Ph.D. dissertation, Syracuse University, 1970), 76-7; Seaton, Russo-German War, 456; Steenberg, Vlasov, 79-80, 170-1; Thorwald, Illusion, 243.
32 Aleksei I. Briukhanov, Vot kak eto bylo: o rabote misii po repatriatsii sovetskikh grazhdan. Vospominaniia sovetskogo of its era (Moscow, 1958), 12-13; Dallin and Mavrogordato, "Rodionov"; Col. P.Z. Kalinin, "Uchastie sovetskikh voinov v partizanskom dvizhenii Belorussii," Voenno-istoricheskii zhurnal, no. 10 (October 1962): 34-7; Alexander Solzhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago (New York, 1973), 1:257; Steenberg, Vlasov, 106-10.
33 Dallin and Mavrogordato, "Rodionov," 30; Dallin and Mavrogordato, "The Soviet Reaction to Vlasov," World Politics 8 (April 1956): 320; Kalinin, "Uchastie," 347; Koestring Interrogation, 8-9; ass, "Reichswehr," 1, 9, 13, 16; Seraphim, "Eastern Nationals," 93-6; Wilfried Strik-Strikfeldt, Against Stalin and Hitler: Memoir of the Russian Liberation Movement, 1941-1945 (London, 1970), 174; A. V. Tishkov, "Predatel pered sovetskim sudom," Sovetskoe gosudarstvo i pravo, no. 2 (February 1973): 93; Toppe et al., "Indoctrination," 66. Herwarth unconvincingly downplays the defections as a cause for the transfers; see his "Memoirs," 267.
34 OSS, "Reichswehr," 11-12; Seraphim, "Eastern Nationals," 91; Solzhenitsyn, Gulag, 1: 246.
35 OSS, "Reichswehr," 7, 9, 12; OSS Intelligence Report 52267, NA RG 226.
36 OSS files, NA RG 226 and 59. See, for example, ass, "Reichswehr," 4.
37 Dvinov, Politics, 82; John Erickson, The Road to Stalingrad: Stalin's War with Germany (New York, 1975),322,331; George Fischer, "General Vlasov's Official Biography," Russian Review 8 (October 1949): 299; Albert Seaton, The Battle for Moscow, 1941-1942 (New York, 1971), 167, 204; Steenberg, Vlasov, 21-8. For Vlasov's biography, also consult Robert B. Burton, "The Vlasov Movement of World War II: An Appraisal" (Ph.D. dissertation, American University, Washington, D.C., 1963); Paul Carrell, Hitler Moves East 1941-1943 (London, 1964), 430-1, 439-41; Mark Elliott, "Andrei Vlasov: Red Army General in Hitler's Service," Military Affairs 46 (April 1982): 84-7; Institute for the Study of the USSR, Who Was Who in the USSR (Metuchen, N.J., 1972), 588; B. Osokin, Andrei Andreevich Vlasov: kratkaia biografiia (New York, 1966); Petrov, Retreat, 274-300; Michael Schatoff [sic), Bibliografiia osvoboditelnogo dvizheniia narodov Rossii v gody vtoroi mirovoi voiny (1941-1945) (New York, 1961); Strik-Stikfeldt, Against Stalin and Hitler; Thorwald, Illusion. For hostile Soviet accounts of Vlasov's career, see Yuri Bondarev, "A Russian View," in The Last Circle (Moscow, 1974), 66; Jean Taratuta, "Tell Me Who Your Friend Is," in ibid., 114; P.A. Zhilin, "How A. Solzhenitsyn Sang of the Vlasovites' Betrayal," in ibid., 104-7; Tishkov, "Predatel," 91-2.
38 Dallin, "Kaminsky," 227; Dvinov, Politics, 109; Koestring Interrogation, 11; Petelchuk, "National Alliance," 86; Solzhenitsyn, Gulag, 1: 258-9; Tishkov, "Predatel," 95-6.
39 All but a few estimates, and the great majority of the most believable ones, run between 0.75 and 1 million. Furthermore, two Germans intimately involved in Osttruppen activities, Vlasov's interpreter, Capt. Wilfried Strik-Strikfeldt, and Koestring, both set the number at one million. Some figures probably include old tsarist emigres and Baltic nationals, whose homelands were independent prior to World War II. But these minor sources of inflated calculations cannot be compared to Germany's systematic, wholesale underestimates, which the Wehrmacht used to hide the extent of Soviet collaboration from a wary Hitler and which makes many approximations conservative. George Fischer, Soviet Opposition to Stalin: A Case Study in World War II (Cambridge, Mass., 1952), 108, cites 0.5 to 1 million; Tappe et al., "Indoctrination," 33, cites 0.75 million; Eugene Lyons, Our Secret Allies, the Peoples of Russia (New York, 1953), 243, claims 0.8 million, as does David Footman in his introduction to Strik-Strikfeldt, Against Stalin and Hitler, 4, and Kubijovyc, Ukraine, 2: 1986-87, Gerald Reitlinger, The House Built on Sand: The Conflicts of German Policy in Russia, 1939-1945 (New York, 1960),99; Frederick Wyle, "Memorandum on Statistical Data on Soviet Displaced Persons" (Harvard Project on the Soviet Social System, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.), cites 0.8 to 1 million; Thorwald, Illusion, 228, records 0.9 to 1 million. The figure of one million is cited by Army of the Damned (CBS, 1962), by Hans de Weerd, "Operation Keelhaul," Ukrainian Review 2 (December 1955): 26, by A.I. Romanov, Nights Are Longest There: Smersh from the Inside (Boston, 1972), 127, by Steenberg, Vlasov, 104, and by Strik-Strikfeldt, Against Stalin and Hitler, 49. Burton, "Vlasov," iv, and Posdnjakoff, "German Counterintelligence," 179-80, both say more than one million; Ernst Koestring, General Ernst Koestring (Frankfurt -am- Main, 1966),324, says at least one million.
40 CBS, 1962. Audio-Brandon Co. rental.
41 The percentages are based on the following calculations: 150,000 Ukrainians and 40,000 Russians among 285,000 non-returners from pre-1939 Soviet territories. This excludes an estimated 220,000 refugees from the annexed Baltic states. Warren W. Eason, "Demography," in Handbook of Soviet Social Science Data, ed. Ellen Mickiewicz (New York, 1973),58; Alex Inkeles and Raymond A. Bauer, The Soviet Citizen (Cambridge, Mass., 1959), 39; Eugene Kulischer to Robert Feldmesser, 13 August 1953, "Estimated Ethnic Composition of USSR Migratory Gains and Losses 1939-1951," Harvard Project on the Soviet Social System, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.
42 Walter Kolarz, Russia and Her Colonies (New York, 1952), 11; and Ivan Bahryany, "Why I Do Not Want to Go 'Home,''' Ukrainian Quarterly 2, no. 3 (Spring 1946): 236; John Panchuk to Gallan, 10 June 1945, folder 5, John Panchuk papers, Immigration History Research Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; Animisov, German Occupation, 29-30.
43 E.A. Brodskii, Vo imia pobedy ruui fashizmom: antifashistskaia borba sovetskikh liudei v gitlerovskoi Germanii (1941-1945) (Moscow, 1970), 10; G.A. Kumanev, "Sovetskaia istoriografiia ob uchastii grazhdan SSR v antifashistskom dvizhenii soprotivleniia v Evrope," in Vtoraia mirovaia voina i sovremennost, ed. P.A. Zhilin (Moscow, 1972), 262.
44 Baird, "Home Propaganda," 30, claims 2.8 million; Werth, Russia at War, 701, says "nearly 3 million"; International Military Tribunal, Trial, 41: 186, and Petrov, Retreat, 274-5, both say five million; Kumanev, "Sovetskaia istoriografiia," 262, claims almost six million by 1944; Thorwald, Illusion, 216, gives six million; Steenberg, Vlasov,174, reports 6-7 million.
45 Amalrik, "Victims," 94; Dallin, German Rule, 451-2.
46 Michael K. Roof and Frederick A. Leedy, "Population Redistribution in the Soviet Union, 1939-1956," Geographical Review 49 (April 1959): 211, say "five million plus"; George Ginsburgs, "Soviet Union and the Problem of Refugees and Displaced Persons, 1917-1956," American Journal of International Law 51 (April 1957): 348, cites 5,115,709; Mikhail I. Semiriaga, Sovetskie liudi v evropeiskom soprotivlenii (Moscow, 1970), 327, quoting Gen. Golikov in Pravda (Moscow), 4 October 1945, says 5,200,000; Malcolm Proudfoot, European Refugees, 1939-52 (Evanston, Ill., 1956), 212, cites 5,213,000; Eugene Kulischer, Europe on the Move: War and Population Changes, 1917-47 (New York, 1948), 308, cites 5,236,000; "Repatriation of Soviet Citizens," International Labour Review 52 (November 1945): 533, records 5,236,130; Fischer, Soviet Opposition, 111, says 5,326,445. See also Dallin, German Rule, 427; A. Nemirov, Dorogi i vstrechi (Munich, 1947), 39.
47 Elliott, Pawns of Yalta.