vojvoda Kosta Pećanac | |
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Native name | Константин Миловановић |
Birth name | Konstantin Milovanović |
Nickname(s) | Pećanac |
Born | 1879 Dečani,Kosovo Vilayet,Ottoman Empire |
Died | May–June 1944 (aged 65) Nikolinac,German occupied territory of Serbia |
Place of burial | On the road betweenSoko Banja –Knjaževac |
Allegiance |
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Years of service | 1903–1912 1912–1918 1941–1944 |
Rank | vojvoda |
Battles / wars | |
Awards |
Konstantin "Kosta" Milovanović Pećanac (Serbian Cyrillic:Константин "Коста" Миловановић Пећанац; 1879–1944) was aSerbian andYugoslavChetnik commander (vojvoda) during theBalkan Wars,World War I andWorld War II. Pećanac fought on theSerbian side in both Balkan Wars and World War I, joining the forces ofKosta Vojinović during theToplica uprising of 1917. Between the wars he was an important leader of Chetnik veteran associations, and was known for his strong hostility to theYugoslav Communist Party, which made him popular in conservative circles. As president of the Chetnik Association during the 1930s, he transformed it into an aggressively partisan Serb political organisation with over half a million members. During World War II, Pećanaccollaborated with both theGerman military administration and theirpuppet government in theGerman-occupied territory of Serbia.[1]
Just before theAxis invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941, the Yugoslav government provided Pećanac with funds and arms to raise guerrilla units in southern Serbia,Macedonia andKosovo. He formed a detachment of about 300 men, mostly in theToplica river valley in southern Serbia, which avoided destruction during the invasion. In the first three months after the surrender, Pećanac gathered more troops from Serb refugees fleeing Macedonia and Kosovo. However,his Chetniks fought onlyAlbanian groups in the region, and did not engage the Germans. Following theuprising in the occupied territory in early July 1941, Pećanac quickly resolved to abandon resistance against the occupiers, and by the end of August had concluded agreements with the German occupation forces and the puppet government ofMilan Nedić to collaborate with them and fight thecommunist-ledPartisans. In July 1942, rival Chetnik leaderDraža Mihailović arranged for the Yugoslav government-in-exile to denounce Pećanac as a traitor, and his continuing collaboration with the Germans ruined what remained of the reputation he had developed in the Balkan Wars and World War I.
The Germans rapidly realised that Pećanac's Chetniks, whose numbers had grown to 8,000, were inefficient and unreliable, and even the Nedić government had no confidence in them. They were completely disbanded by March 1943. Pećanac was interned by the Nedić regime for some time, and was killed by agents of Mihailović in May or June 1944.
Kosta Milovanović was born in a village nearDečani in 1879, although some sources mistakenly identify the year as 1871. His father Milovan was a guardian of theVisoki Dečani monastery. Pećanac's father and his brother Milosav fought in theRusso-Turkish War of 1877–1878. In 1883, both of his parents were killed in an attack by Albanians on the monastery. After that point, Pećanac was looked after by his uncle in the village of Đurakovac nearPeć for an unknown amount of time.[2]
He arrived inSerbia in 1892 at the age of 14 and worked as amercenary. When he was 21, he was called up for army service and served in the engineer corps, becoming a reserve officer. He later worked with the border gendarmerie nearVranje as acorporal. Pećanac was discharged at some point for reasons unknown and later joined the Chetniks. While serving with them he was given the nickname "Pećanac", derived from the name of the town in which he grew up.[3]
In 1895, war broke out inMacedonia against theOttoman Empire. Pećanac joined theSerbian Chetnik Organization in 1903, and fought against theOttoman army in several significant battles including that of Šuplja Stena (nearPčinja) andČelopek (nearStaro Nagoričane).[4] Thedeacon of theVladika ofŽiča and commander (Serbo-Croatian:vojvoda,војвода)Jovan Grković-Gapon suggested awarding Pećanac the title ofvojvoda; at a Christmas-day meeting in 1904, Pećanac received the title at the age of 25. In the period between 1905 and 1907, he led several major battles against the Ottoman army in theSkopje region.[5] In 1908, Pećanac married Sofia Milosavljević from the town ofAleksinac. He went on to father four children with her.[6] In 1910, as the struggles in Macedonia intensified, he left his children and pregnant wife, and returned to the battlefield.[7]
In theFirst Balkan War, fought from October 1912 to May 1913, Pećanac was mobilised in the Serbian Third Army, holding the rank ofsergeant in theMorava Division. He took part in the defeat of the Albanians inMerdare, theBattle of Kumanovo and the capture ofMetohija.[7] During theSecond Balkan War, fought from 29 June to 10 August 1913, Pećanac is believed to have been stationed at the front at Kitka onOsogovo Mountain along theZletovska andBregalnica rivers. There, his division took part in theBattle of Bregalnica with theBulgarians. After the Bulgarian attacks failed, they sent parliamentarians to seek a truce, but the Serbian side refused and the fighting continued. After his division had endured six days of heavy fighting, the Bulgarians were defeated atGrljani nearVinica.[8]
Following the disastrous end to theSerbian campaign in late 1915, Pećanac escaped toCorfu along with the retreating Serbian army and government, and ultimately joined theSalonika front. In 1915, Pećanac had received various medals for his "merit in fighting" including three gold medals for bravery, one for military virtue, and theOrder of the Star of Karađorđe (4th Class) for his service in World War I and possibly also for his prior military accomplishments.[9]
In September 1916, the Serbian High Command sent then-Lieutenant Pećanac by air toMehane (south-west ofNiš in theToplica region) to prepare a guerrilla uprising in support of a planned Allied offensive. There, Pećanac contacted several groups of guerrillas, known ascomitadji. Pećanac joined forces with local leader Kosta Vojinović, and they both established headquarters onMount Kopaonik. Rivalry quickly developed between the two leaders, mainly because Pećanac only had orders to prepare to support the planned Allied offensive, but Vojinović was conducting operations that might result in pre-emptive action by the Bulgarian occupation forces. Matters came to a head in January – February 1917 when the Bulgarians began conscripting local Serbs for military service. At a meeting of guerrilla leaders to discuss whether they should commence a general uprising, Pećanac was outvoted. However, events had overtaken the leaders, and they were essentially joining a popular uprising that was already underway. Afterguerrillas under Pećanac's command engaged the Bulgarians, he was hailed as a leader of the resistance, although he had serious reservations about the eventual outcome once the Bulgarians andAustro-Hungarians committed large numbers of troops to subdue the uprising. The guerrillas were closing on Niš in early March when the occupying forces went on the offensive. Pećanac advised his fighters to hide out in the woods and mountains, while Vojinović ordered his to fight to the death. By 25 March, the uprising had been crushed.[10] Pećanac's participation in the rebellion came at a great personal cost; three of his children died whilst in Bulgarian internment.[11]
In April 1917, Pećanac re-emerged with his guerrillas, attacking a railway station, destroying a bridge and raiding a Bulgarian village on the border. Pećanac avoided a further offensive by the occupation forces in July by disappearing into the mountains once again. After emerging for a short time, in September–October 1917 Pećanac again dispersed his guerrillas and infiltrated theAustro-Hungarian occupied zone, where he remained in hiding until mid-1918.[12] During his period in hiding, he met with the Kosovar Albanian leaderAzem Galica to discuss joint actions against the occupation forces.[13]
Pećanac was the most prominent figure in the Chetnik movement during theinterwar period.[14] During the1920 Constitutional Assembly elections for the newly createdKingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, Prime MinisterNikola Pašić sent Pećanac to theSandžak with orders to intimidate the local Muslim population in the hope of keeping the turnout low.[15] In the same year, attempts by the Yugoslav government to disarm and conscript Kosovo Albanians were met by revolts. Pećanac was sent to Kosovo to form detachments made up of local Serbs to fight the rebels. This resulted in rebel attacks on Serb villages.[16]
Pećanac had a leading role in theAssociation against Bulgarian Bandits, an organisation that arbitrarily terrorised Bulgarians in theŠtip region.[14] He also served as a commander with theOrganization of Yugoslav Nationalists (ORJUNA).[17] In 1922, after the failed assassination of a prominentPeople's Radical Party member in theDeževa district, the authorities sent Pećanac and his Chetniks to fightJusuf Mehonjić, who was behind the attempted assassination, and his unit of outlaws. In this action, Pećanac's Chetniks killed 28 Muslim inhabitants of the village of Starčevići nearTutin. They failed to catch Mehonjić, and ultimately Mehonjić's unit defeated Pećanac's Chetniks in a battle.[18] Pećanac was present as a member of parliament at the assassination ofCroatian Peasant Party (HSS) leaderStjepan Radić and HSS deputies Pavle Radić andĐuro Basariček on 20 June 1928. Prior to the shooting, he was accused by HSS deputyIvan Pernar of being responsible for a massacre of 200 Muslims in 1921.[19]
Pećanac became the president of the Chetnik Association in 1932.[20] By opening membership of the Chetnik Association to new younger members that had not served in World War I, he grew the organisation during the 1930s from a nationalist veterans' association focused on protecting veterans' rights to an aggressively partisan Serb political organisation with 500,000 members throughout theKingdom of Yugoslavia.[21] During this period, Pećanac formed close ties with thefar-rightYugoslav Radical Union government ofMilan Stojadinović.[22] Pećanac was known for his hostility to theCommunist Party of Yugoslavia, which made him popular with conservatives, especially those in Stojadinović's party.[23][24]
Shortly before the Axis invasion of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in April 1941, Pećanac was requested by theYugoslav Ministry of the Army and Navy to prepare for guerrilla operations and guard the southern area of Serbia, Macedonia, and Kosovo from pro-Bulgarians and pro-Albanians rebels. He was given money and weapons, and managed to arm several hundred men in theToplica River valley in southern Serbia. Pećanac's force remained intact after the German occupation of Serbia and supplemented its strength from Serb refugees fleeing Macedonia and Kosovo. Pećanac's detachments fought against Albanian bands in the early summer of 1941.[20] At this time and for a considerable time after, only detachments under Pećanac were identified by the term "Chetnik".[25] With the rise of the communistPartisans, Pećanac gave up any interest in resistance and by late August reached agreements with both the Serbianpuppet government and the German authorities to carry out attacks against the Partisans.[25][26]
While he was concluding arrangements with the Germans, on 18 August 1941 Pećanac received a letter fromDraža Mihailović requesting an agreement be reached where Pećanac would control the Chetniks south of theWestern Morava River while Mihailović would control the Chetniks in all other areas.[27] Pećanac declined his request and suggested that he might offer Mihailović thechief of staff position and recommended Mihailović's detachments disband and join his detachments. In the meantime, Pećanac had arranged for the transfer of several thousand of his Chetniks to the Serbian Gendarmerie to act as German auxiliaries.[28]
On 27 August, Pećanac issued an open "Proclamation to the Dear People", in which he portrayed himself as a defender and protector of Serbs and called "on detachments that have been formed without his approval" to come together under his command. He demanded that individuals hiding in the forests immediately return to their homes and that acts of sabotage against the occupiers cease or the perpetrators would face death.[29]
In September 1941, some of Pećanac's subordinates broke ranks to join with the Partisans in fighting the Germans and their Serbian auxiliaries. In the Kopaonik region, a previously loyal subordinate of Pećanac began attacking local gendarmerie stations and clashing with armed bands of Albanian Muslims. By the end of October, the Germans decided to stop arming the "unreliable" elements within Pećanac's Chetniks, and attached the remainder to their other Serbian auxiliary forces.[30] On November 16, the German occupiers held a meeting inNiš between representatives of theSerbian puppet government and prominent Albanian collaborators fromKosovo to stop the continuation of ethnic and religious violence between collaborationist groups. The Albanian side blamed the Serbian side for instigating the conflict, citing the involvement of Pećanac's men in theBattle of Novi Pazar. Pećanac was forced to answer to the quisling government's Minister of InteriorMilan Aćimović and a German representative. He said that his commander Mešan Đurović had possibly participated in the attack and banned him from attacking Albanian forces in the region. In return, the Germans guaranteed that Albanian forces would not enter Serbian territory as often.[31]
On 7 October 1941, Pećanac sent a request toMilan Nedić, the head of the Serbian puppet government, for stronger organisation, supplies, arms, salary funds, and more. Over time, his requests were fulfilled and a Germanliaison officer was appointed at Pećanac's headquarters to help coordinate actions. According to German data, on 17 January 1942 a total of 72 Chetnik officers and 7,963 men were being provided for by the SerbianGendarmerie Command. This fell short of the maximum authorised size of 8,745 men and included two or three thousand of Mihailović's Chetniks who were legalised in November 1941.[25] In the same month, Pećanac sought permission from the Italians for his forces to move into easternMontenegro, but was refused over Italian concerns that the Chetniks would move into the Sandžak.[32]
In April 1942, the German Commanding General in Serbia,General der Artillerie (General)Paul Bader, issued orders giving unit numbers C–39 to C–101 to the Pećanac Chetnik detachments, which were put under the command of the local German division or area command post. These orders also required the deployment of a German liaison officer with all detachments engaged in operations, and limited their movement outside their assigned area. Supply of arms and ammunition was also controlled.[33] In July 1942, Mihailović arranged for the Yugoslav government-in-exile to denounce Pećanac as a traitor.[34] His continuing collaboration ruined what remained of the reputation he had developed in the Balkan Wars and World War I.[35]
The Germans soon found that Pećanac's units were inefficient, unreliable, and of little military use. Pećanac's Chetniks regularly clashed and had rivalries with other German auxiliaries, such as theSerbian State Guard andSerbian Volunteer Command, as well as with Mihailović's Chetniks.[36] The Germans and the puppet government commenced disbanding them in September 1942, and all but one were dissolved by the end of 1942. The last detachment was dissolved in March 1943. Pećanac's followers were dispersed to other German auxiliary forces, German labour units, and prisoner-of-war camps. Many deserted to join Mihailović. Nothing is known of Pećanac's activities in the months that followed except that he was interned for some time by the Serbian puppet government.[37]
Accounts of Pećanac's capture and death vary. According to one account, Pećanac, four of his leaders and 40 of their followers were captured by forces loyal to Mihailović in February 1944. All were killed within days except Pećanac, who remained in custody to write his war memoirs before being executed on 5 May 1944.[36] Another source states he was assassinated on 6 June 1944 by Chetniks loyal to Mihailović.[38]