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EUROPES LONGEST AND

BLOODIEST GUERILLA WAR


LITHUANIA, LATVIA & ESTONIA 1944 - 1953
Lithuanian forest brothers from the so-called "Vytis" military district.

EUROPES LONGEST AND BLOODIEST


GUERILLA WAR IN MODERN TIMES
THE BALTIC STATES 1944 1953
Text: Aage Myhre

Pictures: Mostly from the KGB Museum in Vilnius

Tell a Lithuanian that it was today, the 9th of May 1945, that his country was liberated and peace after
WWII restored. Tell him that this 2010 May it is 65 years since the Soviet Union and the Western world
defeated Hitler's Nazi regime, and that Lithuania since then has been a free, happy country in line with
what other European countries experienced after they were occupied in 1939 1940 and liberated in
1945. Do not be surprised if you get an angry and annoyed look back. For while we in the Western
world, in Russia and in other parts of the world joyfully could celebrate the liberation and the
recovered freedom after the World War, Lithuania, the other two Baltic states, and Ukraine were forced
to realize that one war had been replaced by a new, much bloodier and more protracted war, lasting
from 1944 to at least 1953. What we in the west celebrated in May 1945 was by Lithuanians and the
other occupied countries experienced only in 1990 1991.

The end of World War II saw Germany dramatically reduced in size. Before long

it was also divided into East and West. Germany's defeat meant that Poland

and Czechoslovakia returned to the map of Europe after a six-year absence.

But not so for Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Ukraine and northern East Prussia

(Kaliningrad) that all remained occupied by the USSR.

Western radio stations told us, who were lucky enough to grow up on the western side of the iron curtain, thoroughly about the
Hungarian uprising against the Soviet intervention in 1956, an uprising that resulted in 2,500 Hungarians and 700 Soviet soldiers
losing their lives.

Western television stations showed us in detail what happened when Czechoslovakia was invaded in 1968 by more than 200,000
troops from the Warsaw Pact countries Soviet Union, Poland, East Germany, Hungary and Bulgaria - with the outcome that 72 Czechs
and Slovaks were killed when they tried to resist.
However, we got almost nothing to know about the many, many times bloodier uprising against the Soviet that was happening right
outside our own front door, in the Baltic States, through nine long years from 1944 to 1953.

It is estimated that approximately 30,000 Balts and 100,000 Soviet soldiers died in this bloody guerrilla war when Estonians, Latvians
and Lithuanians withdrew into the woods to organize its powerful armed partisan resistance after the Soviet Union at the end of the
second World War, in 1944, pushed the German forces out, and Stalin decided to incorporate the Baltic States into his powerful
autocracy instead of giving these countries their freedom and independence back. Today we know that this tragic, involuntary
occupation and oppression was to last the whole 47 years, from 1944 to 1991.

Entering a Siberian Gulag (leaf from Eufrosinia Kersnovskaya's notebook). During the period 1940 1953

Stalins Soviet deported approximately 600,000 individuals from the Baltic States to Siberia.

Around 100,000 of them never returned to their homelands.


In addition to the 30,000 Balts who died in direct combats with the Red Army during this nine-year guerrilla war, comes all those who
died in or on their way to Siberia, all because of their resistance to the Soviet raids home in the Baltics. It is considered that Josef
Stalin was responsible for the deportation of not less than 600,000 Baltic people to the permafrost concentration camps and the gulag
prisons during these years, and that probably as many as 100,000 of them died during the stay or during the three-month journey
where they were stuffed into icy cold, miserable cattle wagons with thin straw mats as mattresses, and very limited food rations to
survive on during the long way to the cold hell, thousands of kilometres north and east.

We speak, in other words, about an almost unimaginable and too little known purges of totally 130,000 people from the Baltic States
during the very first years after the Second World War. But let us not forget that also the approximately 100,000 Soviet soldiers who
died were victims of the same madness that almost a quarter million people were exposed to by an inhuman despot, still by many is
regarded as a hero in Russia, Georgia and other former Soviet republics. The despot Adolf Hitler almost pales in comparison.

In comparison, 58,000 Americans died during the Vietnam War in the years 1960-75, and we were all fed with regular updates on how
the war evolved, almost minute by minute.

The distance between the free, western country of Sweden and Lithuania is less than 300 kilometres, shorter than the distance between
Vilnius and Klaipeda. But despite the short distance, there was remarkable little information that reached the West about the tragic
carnage that took place so close to our own front doors after the war.

We probably had enough to lick our wounds after five years of occupation and the World War II. Even today there are very
few people who know much about the bloody Baltic guerrilla war. This is, for example all my Norwegian Encyclopaedia gives
of information: "The armed resistance against the Soviet regime took the form of guerrilla groups in the forests (forest
brothers) and had a large scope. Only in 1953 the armed resistance ebbed out."

Lithuanias WWII: Torn apart by two super powers.


Many of the partisans were young men returning to Lithuania from the West after WWII to fight for their beloved home country.
Here are three of them, with their official and nick names: K. Sirvys - "Sakalas", J. Luksa - "Skirmantas", B. Trumpys - "Rytis".
Very few Western partisans returned to the West. Almost all of them were killed by the Soviets.

Partisans, or "forest brothers" as they called themselves, were found in all three Baltic countries, but it was in Lithuania that the major
groupings were found. It was also here that the really huge death tolls came. It is considered that 22,000 partisans and 70,000 soldiers
from the Red Army and NKVD were killed in Lithuania alone, this in addition to the approximately 60,000 Lithuanians who died in
Siberia during the early post war years.

The Lithuanian partisans usually appeared in uniforms, with national insignias and identification of rank as like other nations'
armies. It is said that the Lithuanian soldiers always saved the last bullet for themselves; they knew all too well that torture, a symbolic
trial and execution by hanging, head shot or group execution awaited them if they were captured.

The post war Guerrilla War in Lithuania is normally divided into three different phases:

- The first phase lasted from July 1944 to May 1946, with violent skirmishes and casualties on both sides. More than 10,000 forest
brothers lost their lives in battles and skirmishes during these two years. Partisans captured during this period small towns from the
Soviet forces, local quisling units were disarmed and the occupants offices were destroyed. But the big losses meant that tactics had to
be changed.
- The second phase lasted from May 1946 until November 1948. The Lithuanian units were then divided into smaller groups that hid
in well-camouflaged bunkers. During this period a joint command was established for all Lithuanian forces fighting against the
occupying army. Contacts were also made contacts with the West in this period, but no help arrived.

- The final phase lasted until May 1953. And despite the brutal oppression and forced collectivization, around 2,000 partisans were
still active with their armed resistance against the occupation. During this period, they also worked extensively with informing the
Lithuanian people by publishing newspapers, books and leaflets. Circulation varied from a few hundred to 5,000. Such publications
lasted until 1959.

There were also parallel battles against Soviet forces in Estonia and in Latvia, but in much smaller scale. Only in Western Ukraine,
there was fighting in the same scale as in Lithuania.

The Forest Brothers often used cellars, tunnels or more complex

underground bunkers as their hideouts, such as the one depicted here.

The Baltic Partisan War came mostly to an end by May 1953, two months after Joseph Stalin died. But the last active resistance man
in Lithuania shot himself, rather than surrender, as late as 1965, and the last partisan did not come out from his hiding place before
1986, 42 years after the guerrilla war in the Baltics started.

In 1955, the Soviet-controlled 'Radio Vilnius offered amnesty to all the partisans who were still hiding in Lithuania's deep forests, and
in 1956 the KGB repeated a similar provision. Such amnesty-deals were of course meant only to lure the last forest brothers, so when
the famous partisan leader 'Hawk' was taken that the same year, he was immediately given a symbolic trial and executed. Hawk was
an American-born Lithuanian who had returned to his home country to fight the Soviet occupation.

Instead of giving themselves over to the Soviet occupiers, many chose to commit suicide, often by exploding a grenade right in their
own faces in order to destroy them so much that they would not be identifiable and thereby create a risk to their relatives' lives. Such
suicides occurred until around 1960. Many also managed to obtain false identity and get back into society without being detected.
Many of the Soviet Union's atrocities against the Baltic States have only come to light in earnest after 1991 when these countries
regained their freedom and independence. A large part of the archives that mentioned the said matters were, however, brought to
Moscow to prevent the World from having access to these highly revealing documents.

But, strangely, in 1994 a former KGB officer decided to go to the Lithuanian authorities with detailed information about how torture
and executions had taken place at the KGB headquarters in the Vilnius city centre. He told that there had been secret burials for the
victims, just on the outskirts of Vilnius. When the huge mass grave he had told about was found and opened, several hundred corpses
of partisans were discovered, all in Lithuanian uniforms, and all obviously tortured to death.

One can ask whether it was a fatal mistake for a small country like Lithuania to so aggressively a predominance they had to
understand they would not be able to defeat. Admittedly, there is a general perception that Lithuania thereby was avoiding most of the
russification that Stalin and later leaders implemented in all other Soviet republics. The Russians were simply too afraid of the
Lithuanians as a result of the strong opposition during the post-war years, hence the proportion of Russians in Lithuania today
represents only 6% of the population, compared to more than 30% in Latvia and around 25% in Estonia.

But the bloodshed in the Baltics, and the incredibly extensive deportations to Siberia, as a result of the partisan opposition, made that
these three countries lost too many of their best men and women. The hero status they may have achieved around the world never
became significantly large. We in the West did not know what really happened, and when we finally learned, far too many decades
have passed to achieve a proper attention for the heroes, the very guerrilla war, the deportations and the unbelievable sufferings the
Baltic people underwent on the Siberian permafrost during the 1940s and 1950s.

Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia have paid an extremely high price for their rebellion behaviours, and are unlikely ever to receive the
honour and the redress they deserve for their courage to fight the injustice they were subjected to during the ruthless Soviet period.

When World War II ended, the West chose to forget Lithuania

The historic meeting near the end of World War II, the Yalta Conference, became fatal for Lithuania.

It involved three key allied leaders. Left to right: Winston Churchill, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom;

Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States; and Joseph Stalin, Premier of the Soviet Union.

For several years after World War the Balts believed that the U.S. and other Allied powers would come to their rescue and help to free
them from the Soviet occupation. This was fatal.

The partisan leaders were familiar with the Atlantic Charter, which was signed by Churchill and Roosevelt 12 August 1941 aboard the
U.S. cruiser Augusta in Newfoundland, a charter later acceded to on 1 January 1942 by all countries involved in the war against
Germany and Japan - including the Soviet Union. This declaration stated that all territorial changes resulting from the war would only
take place after the population's own desires, and that any people should have the right freely to choose their form of government.

What the Baltic people did not know, was that their case head was not at all discussed when the British Prime Minister, Winston
Churchill, the U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Soviet leader Josef Stalin in February 1945 met in the city of Yalta on the
Black Sea to lay the conditions for peace and the post-war period. The Baltic States were totally forgotten; but they did not know
about it, and therefore continued the impossible fight against the evil superior force until 1953.

It has been speculated that Roosevelt's failing health may have been the reason why Stalin so easily got the upper hand at the Yalta
Conference. The outcome was, in any case, very tragic for the Baltic States, and only in 2005 the American president, George W. Bush
came here to apologise on behalf of the United States. Russias President, Vladimir Putin, was also asked to apologise for the atrocities
against the Baltic States in the years after Yalta. But Russia still considers that they 'liberated' the Baltics and sees no reason to excuse
themselves. It went even so far that Putin declared Lithuania's President Valdas Adamkus 'persona non grata' after the latter refused to
come to Moscow to participate in Russias anniversary celebration of the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany on 9 May 2005.

In the years after WWII a number of Lithuanian agents were amazingly capable of getting in and out of the country several times, and
in December 1947 a full delegation travelled to Western Europe to present their case to the Pope and to Western governments. But no
countries or leaders dared go into conflict with Stalin's Soviet Union, and Lithuanians call for help was largely met with deaf ears.

Though not quite. Both U.S. and UK intelligence agencies gave their orders to see what might be done to create secret anti-communist
organizations and operations behind the Iron Curtain. They also helped to organise the radio stations 'Radio Liberty' and 'Radio Free
Europe', which for many years thereafter conveyed useful information to the Baltics. In 1951 came the 'Voice of America' on air, and
thus gave hundreds of thousands of Baltic war refugees in the United States a voice back to their home countries at the Baltic Sea.

Unfortunately, the success of the Western intelligence services and their 'relief efforts' very much failed, which in retrospect largely is
attributed to the British intelligence officer Kim Philby, the man who in reality was a Soviet spy who unfortunately contributed so
actively to the killing of tens of thousands of Baltic people.

The intelligence organizations' attempts to help the Baltic States irritated Stalin violently, and he therefore imposed increasingly tough
measures against the uprisings. His NKVD (later renamed the KGB) had more or less free hands to exercise extensive torture against
individuals and groups believed being in league with the partisans. Vague suspicions were enough to allow use of cruel torture
methods. Many were hanged or shot without any real form of litigation. A huge number of relatives and family members of the
partisans were sent to slave labour camps in Siberia. All private farms were incorporated into collective farms to prevent them from
continuing to provide food to the partisans, and many farmers were deported to Siberia. The West's attempts to help got quite the
reverse effect. Tyranny had triumphed, and our close neighbours on the Baltic Sea's south coast were once again suffering in a most
cruel way.
One of the many killed Lithuanian partisans, Juozas Luksa

"Skirmantas", "Daumantas", after his death on the 4th of September 1951.

Photo: KGB

Few in the West know that Lithuania 500 years ago was considered Europe's largest country, stretching from the Baltic to the Black
Sea. Few in our today's West know the proud and honourable cultural history of the Baltic countries, or that these countries were
economically fully on par with Scandinavia until World War II, and few know about the heroic guerrilla war these three nations fought
against the mighty Soviet Union after WWII.

During five world war years, the Baltic area became the incredibly bloody and sad battlefield where Stalin and Hitler pushed each
other back and forth, with fatal and almost incomprehensible destruction and murders of hundreds of thousands innocent people as
result. It was here that the Holocaust saw its very worst outcome on Earth, when 95% of the large Jewish population of Lithuania was
exterminated. It was here that Europe's longest and bloodiest guerrilla war and the ensuing mass deportations to Siberia took place
through more than a decade during and after WWII.

Hundreds of thousands of our closest neighbours died just outside our own front door (or were deported to the gulag camps in the
permafrost of Siberia). These terrible things happened only 300 kilometres away from Lithuanias closest Western coast, at the same
time as we westerners celebrated our new freedom and the beginning of the new era we today know as the proud Western World.

Didnt we know, or did we prefer not to know?

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