young guerrilla leader, Principe, the nephew of the man who had assassinated the Archduke of Austria in 1914, had formed and was leading a smaller but well trained Partisan Army. Another Partisan group functioned in Slovenia, and in Serbia, the Partisans gained in strength day by day. In every case, when the Germans attacked a Partisan group, it was like attacking a bank of mist. The Partisans fought as long as it was profitableâand then melted away into the hills and forests.
At the beginning of June, 1942, a year after he first began operations, Marshal Tito tested the strength of his main army against a full-fledged German offensive. The Nazis attacked him in Bosnia. His army withstood the German attack, and in places organized their own counter-offensive and drove back the Nazis. Bringing up more strength, the Germans cut off every avenue of escape.
Titoâs food was running low. He gathered his men, launched a heavy attack against one section of the German line, and broke through. His army, although almost without mechanization of any sort, moved with incredible speed. Before the Germans fully realized that he was out of their trap, Tito swung on their flank and attacked them from the rear. The attack was unanticipated and completely successful. The Germans had considered the Partisan Army trapped; and it was their experience that trapped armies surrendered. This one didnât. It lashed out at them and sent them reeling. Tito gave them no rest. He attacked again, routing them and cutting the important Sarajevo-Mostar railroad.
His liaison reported a powerful force of Krajina Partisans on his left flank, separated from him by almost a division of German troops. Tito marched his men twenty miles through the night, attacked the Germans at dawn, routed them, and effected a junction with the Krajina Partisans.
The men were their own supply column. They took food and ammunition from the German dead. The augmented force now drove north through Bosnia in the direction of Croatia. Garrison after garrison of German and Italian troops were surrounded, attacked and destroyed. By August, all of North Bosnia was liberated, cleansed of Fascist troops. The slogan, DEATH TO ALL FASCISTS! LIBERTY TO THE PEOPLE! ran like fire through Yugoslavia.
As Titoâs army fought its way north, it gained in strength. In Bosnia, he was re-enforced by thousands of Bosnian Partisans. Hardly resting, he launched a new campaign into Croatia, and again he was joined by thousands of fresh troops, Croatian Partisans this time. As if in answer to Tom Paineâs battle cry of the American Revolution, the country and the city came forth as one man to support him.
During the Croatian campaign, Titoâs force swept north almost to the Hungarian border, and there they were joined by a detachment of Hungarian anti-fascist guerrillas. From Croatia, they crossed into Slovenia, pursuing their campaign of liberation almost to the German border.
By the end of 1942, the Yugoslav Liberation Front Radio was able to announce to the world that half of Yugoslavia had been liberated from the Fascists and was now under the control of Partisan forces.
A miracle had come to pass, in a sense as great a miracle as that of Russia. A tiny country, conquered in ten days by the Nazis, had risen in its anger and driven the invader from half its land.
And throughout the democratic world, people, reading about the Partisan exploits, began to speak a magic and romantic nameâTito!
UNITED FRONT FOR LIBERTY
I N the late fall of 1942, in the town of Bihach, in the northwestern corner of Bosnia, a democratic Yugoslav assembly met. It called itself by a long and unwieldy name, âThe Anti-Fascist Assembly for the Peopleâs Liberation in Yugoslavia.â It included Communists, democratic leaders, trade unionists, peasant leaders, and churchmen. It met openly and proudly in liberated territory.
It did not presume to say that it constituted the government