German losses in Yugoslavia in 1945

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Alex Yeliseenko
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German losses in Yugoslavia in 1945

#1

Post by Alex Yeliseenko » 20 Aug 2007, 17:19

Hallo all!

Any has data about German losses in territory of former Kingdom Yugoslavia last months wars - from January till May 1945? I speak only about territory of Yugoslavia.

Regards.

Alex.

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G. Trifkovic
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Re: German losses in Yugoslavia in 1945

#2

Post by G. Trifkovic » 20 Aug 2007, 23:19

Alex Yeliseenko wrote:Hallo all!

Any has data about German losses in territory of former Kingdom Yugoslavia last months wars - from January till May 1945? I speak only about territory of Yugoslavia.

Regards.

Alex.
Congratulations, You have just joined "the search for the Holy Grail"! :wink: If you find anything at all, please post it!

Cheers,

Gaius


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asiaticus
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#3

Post by asiaticus » 21 Aug 2007, 01:17

I think given the chaos of the time you are only going to get an approximation. Deduct the strength of the units at the end of the war from their strength at the begining of the year plus reinforcements if any.

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#4

Post by G. Trifkovic » 21 Aug 2007, 02:43

asiaticus wrote:I think given the chaos of the time you are only going to get an approximation. Deduct the strength of the units at the end of the war from their strength at the begining of the year plus reinforcements if any.
Could you point us to the sources, both primary and secondary, which include such figures for Heeresgruppe E/F?

Gaius

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Alex Yeliseenko
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Re: German losses in Yugoslavia in 1945

#5

Post by Alex Yeliseenko » 21 Aug 2007, 16:06

rommel_gaj wrote:
Alex Yeliseenko wrote:Hallo all!

Any has data about German losses in territory of former Kingdom Yugoslavia last months wars - from January till May 1945? I speak only about territory of Yugoslavia.

Regards.

Alex.
Congratulations, You have just joined "the search for the Holy Grail"! :wink: If you find anything at all, please post it!

Cheers,

Gaius
Dobro vas razumijem.

We here to solve sometimes and challenges. Hundreds people have received the help at this forum. " Never speak never ".

Sretno!

Alex.

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#6

Post by tenge » 18 Sep 2007, 23:40

Hello!
look into the http://www.vojska.net. There is lots of information about German losses in Yugoslavia.

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#7

Post by RichTO90 » 19 Sep 2007, 04:22

tenge wrote:Hello!
look into the http://www.vojska.net. There is lots of information about German losses in Yugoslavia.
Ivan's site is back! Excellent, great guy and great site! I urge everybody to check it out, a lot of very good information on a poorly recorded part of the war!

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Re: German losses in Yugoslavia in 1945

#8

Post by RichTO90 » 19 Sep 2007, 04:29

Alex Yeliseenko wrote:Hallo all!

Any has data about German losses in territory of former Kingdom Yugoslavia last months wars - from January till May 1945? I speak only about territory of Yugoslavia.

Regards.

Alex.
Best I can do for now Alex, hope it helps a bit.

German Casualties in the Balkans
The personnel records for German forces in the Balkans in World War II are fairly complete. (See above for the casualties reported in the initial invasion.) The reports include personnel casualties for the occupation forces for every ten-day period from 22 June to 20 December 1941. Irregular periodic casualty reports of the German occupation forces in the Balkans and Greece from 15 January to 21 October 1942 and 20 January to 28 February 1943 are also extant. Finally, ten-day reports for the Second Panzer Army from September 1943 when it began anti-Partisan operation in the Balkans under command of AG F, to December 1944 when it was reassigned to the direct control of OKH are available. From these reports it is possible to recreate the greater part of the German loss experience in anti-partisan operations in the Balkans.
The initial German casualties, incurred in the invasion of Yugoslavia and Greece between 6 and 27 April 1941 were 932 KIA, 3,773 WIA, and 257 MIA. Then from 28 April to 22 June the occupation forces recorded no casualties. However, severe losses were incurred in the airborne assault on the island of Crete (20 – 31 May 1941). German losses were: Luftwaffe 1,032 KIA, 1,632 WIA, 2,097 MIA; Army (5. Gebirgs-Division) 321 KIA, 488 WIA, 324 MIA. The 5,894 lost in the battle for Crete accounted for 54.29 percent of the Germans total loss in the campaign.
From 22 June to 31 August 1941 German casualties were 67 KIA and 112 WIA, and average of just over 2.6 casualties per day. During this period popular uprisings erupted sporadically in areas occupied by the Axis forces – 7 July in Serbia, 13 July in Montenegro, 22 July in Slovenia, and 27 July in Croatia, Bosnia, and Herzegovina. All of these uprisings were suppressed with savage force. However, by early September 1941 the Partisan movement had taken strong hold in western Serbia and established its headquarters in Uzice (thus it was known as the ‘Uzice Republic’). The first major German anti-Partisan offensive, spearheaded by the 342. Infanterie-Division drawn from France, was directed against the Uzice Republic and lasted from about 1 September 1941 to 20 December 1941. On 29 November the Germans captured Uzice, and the Partisans withdrew to northeastern Montenegro and then to eastern Bosnia. German casualties totaled 149 KIA, 325 WIA, and 194 MIA, an increase to an average of nearly six casualties per day.
After a short lull the German offensive resumed. From 15 to 29 January 1942 the 342. and 718. Divisions, reinforced by Croatian troops, attacked Partisan positions in Bosnia. They lost 25 KIA, 131 WIA and 1 MIA (about 10.5 casualties per day), but again forced the Partisans to retreat, this time further south to Foca. Secondary operations in Bosnia continued from 16 February to 20 March, resulting in another 37 KIA, 67 WIA, and 45 MIA (about 4.5 casualties per day).
Then, from 21 March to 21 October 1942, the Germans and their Allies continued to harry the Partisans, driving them from one enclave to another. Although the Partisans had some successes, usually against the German Croatian, Bulgarian, or Italian Allies, they continued to suffer heavy casualties. Partisan losses for 1942 have been estimated as 24,700 KIA, 31,200 MIA (including 4,194 DOW), and 6,300 MIA. The Germans also reported counting 45,692 Partisans or suspected Partisans killed (including executed prisoners) from 22 June 1941 to 23 July 1942. German losses to the end of the year were 295 KIA, 596 WIA, and 45 MIA, for a total of 320 KIA, 727 WIA, and 46 MIA for the year. German casualties in anti-Partisan operations through the end of 1942 were 573 KIA, 1,231 WIA, and 291 MIA, a pinprick compared to the losses on the Eastern Front (according to different sources, the Wehrmacht KIA on the Eastern Front, through the end of summer 1942, were between 376,290 and 501,884).
Another short lull occurred as both the Partisans and the Axis forces paused to recover and consolidate. Then, from 20 January to 28 February 1943, the Germans began an all-out effort to eliminate the Partisan forces in Fall Weiss I. Four German and Allied divisions (SS-Prinz Eugen, 369. Croat, 717., and 718.), with the support of the two available armored battalions in the Balkans, seized Partisan positions in western Bosnia and Croatia, and forced the partisans to withdraw south again to Montenegro. German losses were 385 KIA, 1,001 WIA, and 102 MIA, a major increase (an average of 39.7 casualties per day) over similar periods in 1942.
Casualties for the period from 1 March to 1 September 1943 have not been discovered. However, it is possible to derive a reasonable estimate of what those casualties must have been by subtracting the total known losses suffered by OB-Southeast (AG E) in the Balkans as of 28 February 1943 (2,211 KIA, 6,493 WIA, 974 MIA) from the losses of AG E as given up to 31 October 1943 (2,775 KIA, 7,067 WIA, and 1,938 MIA and another 15 KIA and 74 WIA in the recapture of Cos and Samos in October). The result – 549 KIA, 500 WIA, and 964 MIA for an aggregate total of 2,013 – is probably close to the actual losses incurred. Given that Fall Weiss 1 was immediately followed by Weiss 2 and Schwartz (Black), which lasted until the end of June, an additional 2,000 or more casualties could easily have been incurred at only one-half of the daily average rate found in Weiss 1 (39.7 casualties per day over 122 days would have been over 4,800 casualties). However, the distribution of the KIA, WIA, and MIA is more difficult to explain, but is likely a result of various casualty recalculations and redistributions that were a normal part of the statistical compilations of the Wehrmacht, as well as the brutal nature of the anti-Partisan war itself.
In any case, it appears that the first eight months of 1943 represented a major increase in the German casualties in the Balkans. After losing fewer than 3,700 men in the 16 months of anti-Partisan operations from the end of June 1941 to the end of October 1942, the Germans lost nearly the same number of casualties (3,590) in the first eight months of 1943. However, the intensity of the Partisan War in the Balkans had only begun to increase.
In September 1943 the Second Panzer Army took over command of anti-Partisan operations in the Balkans. Intense fighting occurred during September and October, especially after the capitulation of Italian forces to the Allies on 8 September 1943. German, Bulgarian and Croatian forces took over the former Italian territories in the Balkans. Some of the Italian forces went over to the Partisans and some went over to the Axis, but the majority was disarmed and interned by the Germans, most of those who resisted disarmament were executed. By the end of the year the German Second Panzer Army had incurred a further 1,622 KIA, 4,807 WIA, and 928 MIA, doubling the losses of the first eight months of 1943 in just four months at the end of the year. Units under the direct command of AG F lost an additional 6 KIA, 20 WIA, and 8 MIA. Partisan losses for 1943 were 48,378 KIA, 61,730 WIA (including 7,923 DOW) and 5,423 MIA.
The intensity of operations remained high in the early part of 1944. From 1 January to 20 May the losses of the Second Panzer Army were 1,899 KIA, 5,218 WIA, and 3,985 MIA. Units under AG F lost 145 KIA, 276 WIA, and 43 MIA in the same period. Then, the last major German attempt to crush the Partisans occurred on 25-27 May 1944 when a combined airborne and armored assault, code-named Fall Rösselsprung (Operation Knight’s Move) was directed on the village of Drvar. The Germans were attempting to decapitate the Partisan command by capturing or killing Tito (Josip Broz) the commander of the General Staff of the National Liberation Partisan Detachments of Yugoslavia. The total of the Second Panzer Army losses in the operation, its preliminaries and aftermath (the period from 21 May to 10 June) were 620 KIA, 1,869 WIA, and 285 MIA. Partisan casualties are unknown, but were severe as well. However, Tito made good his escape and established a new headquarters on the island of Vis in the Adriatic Sea. Losses in AG F units were 30 KIA, 74 WIA, and 6 MIA.
From 11 June to 30 November 1944, when the German Second Panzer Army was transferred from the command of OB Southeast and AG F to OKH and AG XXXX, it lost an additional 2,384 KIA, 8,181 WIA, and 3,110 MIA in battles with the Partisans. AG F losses from 11 June to the end of 1944 were 377 KIA, 1,193 WIA, and 554 MIA. Losses suffered by AG E in the withdrawal from Greece, 1 October to 31 December 1944 were 2,876 KIA, 9,637 WIA, and 3,823 MIA. Overall, it appears that the German losses in the anti-Partisan War in the Balkans in 1944 were 8,331 KIA, 26,448 WIA, and 11,806 MIA. Partisan losses for the year were 80,650 KIA, 147,650 WIA (including 8,066 DOW), and 5,600 MIA.
German losses in OB Southeast from 1 January to 20 April 1945 were 5,678 KIA, 20,110 WIA, and 8,638 MIA. Partisan losses in 1945 were 72,925 KIA, 130,000 WIA (including 7,800 DOW), and 7,800 MIA. However, it may be correct to say that the Partisan War in the Balkans ceased to be an insurgency sometime in September and October of 1944. From that time it assumed more and more of the attributes of a conventional conflict – indeed, in November 1944 the Partisans fielded the first of two armored brigades against the Germans (see above).
Consolidated reports on German losses in the Balkans from April 1941 to May 1945 may also be found. One states that casualties in the Balkans from the invasion of Yugoslavia to the end of the war included 24,267 KIA, and 12,050 MIA. Another (found in the same document) states that casualties in OB Southeast (i.e., the Balkans including Greece) were 19,235 KIA, 55,069 WIA, and 14,805 MIA for a total of 89,109. No reason was given for the discrepancy between these two figures. However, the Heeresartz made a more precise count, reporting that as of 20 April 1945, a total of 22,370 KIA, 70,064 WIA, and 24,620 MIA (a total of 117,054) had been lost in OB Southeast. That would mean that the 43,422 casualties incurred by the Second Panzer Army from 1 September 1943 to 30 November 1944 accounted for 34 percent of all of the casualties incurred by OB Southeast for the entire war.

Notes: (sorry they get lost cuting and pasting, I hope it remains obvious what they apply to.

The casualty reports for 22 June to 20 December 1941 and 15 January to 21 October 1942 may be found in the records of the Twelfth Army, Tätigkeitsberichte (Activity reports) in NARA RG242, T312, R462, F0379-0402 and R465, F3239~, R466, and R467, ~F3707. Second Panzer Army losses may be found in T313, R196, F2602~. Losses by theater and army from 10 July 1943 to the end of the war may also be found in NARA RG 242, T78, R414, Der Heeresartz im Oberkommando des Heeres (Surgeon General of the High Command of the Army).
This total includes the reported losses of the Second and Twelfth Army. A later report of the Twelfth Army appears to contradict its earlier figures, however the increase was apparently caused by adding the losses of the 5. Gebirgs-Division on Crete.
Many different counts of German losses exist and there is some dispute as to exactly how many were suffered in the assault on Crete. The figures given here are from an analysis of the operations of the Twelfth Army prepared for the German Army General Staff and may be found in NARA RG242, T312, R469, F8671 and F8681. It appears that the Luftwaffe losses on Crete include flying personnel as well as the parachute infantry (who were part of the Luftwaffe rather than the Heer). Christopher Shores, et al, Air War for Yugoslavia, Greece and Crete 1940-41 (Grub Street: London, 1987) state that Luftwaffe aircrew losses were 75 KIA, 127 WIA, and 236 MIA.
NARA RG242, T312, R465, F3379.
See NARA RG242, T77, R826, F2114~, Zentralststistik der Menschenverluste im Kriege, 30 August 1944, which compares the KIA figures accumulated by the Heeresartz versus those of the Wehrersatzdienststellen (Military Replacement Office).
Overall losses of AG E in the occupation of Greece, Crete, and the Aegean Islands are difficult to assess since they overlap in part with the losses incurred in the Balkans prior to 31 October 1943. However, from 31 October 1943 to 30 September 1944 they were 1,932 KIA, 4,414 WIA, and 1,671 MIA. It appears likely that these include the losses incurred in retaking the island of Leros from the British and Italians in November 1943 – 242 KIA, 660 WIA, and 155 MIA.
Major Percy Schramm, Foreign Military Studies, MS# P-011, German Statistical Systems, (Historical Division: HQ US Army, Europe, ND). p.118
Ibid., p. 131.

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#9

Post by Mark V. » 19 Sep 2007, 08:30

Very impressive post, Rich. I don't think I ever come across such an exhaustive overview of the subject and I've been also looking it for years, especially after the confusion with Overmans figures. Thanks a lot.

For a comparison: according to Deutsche Dienststelle the total number of German soldiers KIA in Yugoslavia is 73.000 though the number also includes the very high fatalities among the German soldiers after the end of the war.

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#10

Post by G. Trifkovic » 19 Sep 2007, 09:45

Mr. RichTO90,

thank you very much for such a detailed statistical overview.

Cheers,

Gaius

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#11

Post by RichTO90 » 19 Sep 2007, 16:05

Mark V. wrote:For a comparison: according to Deutsche Dienststelle the total number of German soldiers KIA in Yugoslavia is 73.000 though the number also includes the very high fatalities among the German soldiers after the end of the war.
Thanks for the kind words. I wrote that up a couple of years ago when we were investigating the use of armor - and specifically light armor - in various contingency-type operations. I rather expect that the Heersarzt figures are probably closest, but since they end as of 20 April they do not include the losses of the last 20-odd days of the war and do not include reconciliations (Nachmeldungen and such) for much of 1945 when heavy losses were being suffered. Given that probably 90+ percent of the MIA were probably dead and that at least a proportion of the over 70,000 WIA were probably fatally wounded and eventually died of those wounds (15 percent would not be unreasonable as a supposition), then I think that 73,000 is probably as accurate a figure as any other.

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