Collaboration in the German-occupied Soviet Union explained

A large number of Soviet citizens of various ethnicities collaborated with Nazi Germany during World War II. It is estimated that the number of Soviet collaborators with the Nazi German military was around 1 million.

Aftermath of the German invasion

Mass collaboration ensued after the German invasion of the Soviet Union of 1941, Operation Barbarossa.[1] The two main forms of mass collaboration in the Nazi-occupied territories were both military in nature. It is estimated that anywhere between 600,000 and 1,400,000 Soviets (Russians and non-Russians) were “military collaborators” with the Wehrmacht in some way either as Hiwis (or Hilfswillige) or in some other capacity, including 275,000 to 350,000 "Muslim and Caucasian”. [2] Ahead of the subsequent implementation of the more oppressive administrative methods by the SS. As much as 20% of the German manpower (when including Hiwis) in Soviet Russia was composed of former Soviet citizens, about half of whom were ethnic Russians.[3] The Ukrainian collaborationist forces comprised an estimated 180,000 volunteers serving with units scattered all over Europe.[4] The second type of mass collaboration was the formation of indigenous security formations (majority ethnic Russian) running into hundreds of thousands and possibly more than 1 million (250,000 volunteers in the East Legions alone). Military collaboration – wrote Alex Alexiev – took place in truly unprecedented numbers suggesting that, more often than not, the Germans were perceived at first as the lesser of two evils compared to the USSR by the non-Russian citizens of the Soviet Union.[5]

Russian collaborationism

White émigré military formations

Vlasov Movement

RONA and Lokot Autonomy

See main article: Kaminski Brigade and Lokot Autonomy.

The Russian Liberation People's Army (Русская освободительная национальная армия, РОНА; in Latin, RONA), later reformed as SS Sturmbrigade "RONA" and nicknamed the "Kaminski Brigade" after its commander, SS-Brigadefuhrer Bronislav Kaminski, was a collaborationist force originally formed from a Nazi-led militia unit in the "Lokot Republic" (Lokot Autonomy), a small puppet regime set up by the Germans to see if a Russian puppet government would be reliable. Kaminski and the leader of the government and the founder of "", Konstantin Voskoboinik, killed by partisans in 1942, formed a unit that had a strength of 10,000—15,000. As the Red Army advanced, the Kaminski troops were forced to retreat into Belarus, and then into Poland in 1944. There, the RONA was reorganized into an SS brigade, the majority of whom were Russians, with the rest comprising other Soviet ethnicities including Ukrainians, Belarusians and Azerbaijanis.[7] In August, 1,700 brigade troops under Major Yuri Frolov were sent to Warsaw to quell an uprising. During it, the RONA troops became infamous for their atrocities, committing murder, rape, and theft. Some were reported to have left the combat zone with carts full of stolen goods. About 400 soldiers were lost in combat, including Frolov.

At the end of August, Bronislav Kaminski was killed. His death was surrounded with mystery as, while official records state that he was killed by Polish partisans, it is believed that Kaminski was executed by the SS. The reasons are thought to be his unit's war crimes and/or now that Heinrich Himmler supported the Russian Liberation Army of General Andrey Vlasov, he wanted to eliminate a potential rival. The rest of the brigade was reformed into the 29th SS Waffen Grenadier Division "RONA", which was disbanded in November 1944. Its remaining 3,000–4,000 members were sent to join Vlasov's army.[8]

Other

Ukrainian collaborationism

See main article: Ukrainian collaboration with Nazi Germany.

Political formations

Ukrainian police and military formations

Belarusian collaborationism

See main article: Byelorussian collaboration with Nazi Germany.

Generalbezirk Weißruthenien

Other

See main article: Ostlegionen.

Cossacks

Eastern Europe and Asia

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Edele, Mark . Stalin's Defectors: How Red Army Soldiers Became Hitler's Collaborators, 1941-1945 . Oxford University Press . 2017 . 126 . 978-0198798156 .
  2. Audrey L. Alstadt (2013). "The Azerbaijani Turks: Power and Identity under Russian Rule". p. 187.
  3. Web site: Operation 'Barbarossa' And Germany's Failure In The Soviet Union . 2022-09-14 . Imperial War Museums . en.
  4. Book: Foreign Volunteers of the Wehrmacht 1941-45 . Osprey . 1983 . Carlos Caballero Jurado . 0850455243 . 29 . Alfredo Campello, David List.
  5. Book: Soviet Nationalities in German Wartime Strategy, 1941–1945 . The Rand Publications Series . MDA 903-80-C-0224 . 15 July 2014 . Director of the Net Assessment, Office of the Secretary of Defense . 1982 . vi, 26–27, 34 . 0833004247 . PDF file, direct download.
  6. Vlasov and the Russian Liberation Movement. Cambridge University Press, 1987, 370 pp., 1-87012871
  7. Book: Drobyazko . S. . Восточные легионы и казачьи части в Вермахте . Karashchuk . A. . 2001 . Moscow . 3–4 . ru . Eastern legions and Cossack units in the Wehrmacht.
  8. Web site: RONA Brigade, Warsaw Uprising . 2014-06-14 . 2011-07-22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110722115516/http://www.warsawuprising.com/paper/rona.htm . dead .
  9. Web site: The OUN (Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists) . 2 . CIA.
  10. Web site: 10 myths about the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA): who and why stigmatized UPA members as "the Nazi henchmen" . 10 May 2017 . uacrisis.org.